1975 Southeast Asian Peninsular Games

The 1975 Southeast Asian Peninsular Games, officially known as the 8th Southeast Asian Peninsular Games, was a Southeast Asian multi-sport event held in Bangkok, Thailand from 9 to 16 December 1975. This was the third time Thailand hosted the games, and its first time since 1967. Previously, Thailand also hosted the 1959 inaugural games.[1] South Vietnam, Cambodia and Laos, which only sent token squads made up of military personnel to previous games, declined to participate due to internal political problems. The games is the last games to bear the Southeast Asian Peninsular Games name, before it was renamed the Southeast Asian Games in the next edition of the games. The games was opened and closed by Bhumibol Adulyadej, the King of Thailand at the Suphalachasai Stadium. The final medal tally was led by Thailand, followed by host Singapore, Burma and Malaysia.

8th Southeast Asian Peninsular Games
Host cityBangkok, Thailand
Nations participating4
Sport(s)18
Opening ceremony9 December
Closing ceremony16 December
Officially opened byBhumibol Adulyadej
King of Thailand
Ceremony venueSuphachalasai Stadium

The games

Participating nations


Sports

Medal table

[2]

Key

  *   Host nation (Thailand)

  *   Host nation (Thailand)

RankNationGoldSilverBronzeTotal
1 Thailand (THA)*804539164
2 Singapore (SIN)384249129
3 Burma (BIR)28353396
4 Malaysia (MAS)274951127
Totals (4 nations)173171172516


gollark: Making prizes more available wouldn't really do anything bad other than hurt trading value of existing ones.
gollark: It probably would, though.
gollark: I have no idea how many there are. I don't see how people would be particularly hurt by prizes becoming easier to get.
gollark: Changes which upset lots of people are bad. So are status quos which upset people. We have a bad status quo.
gollark: Well, I suggested it.I may have been joking.

References

  1. Percy Seneviratne (1993) Golden Moments: the S.E.A Games 1959-1991 Dominie Press, Singapore ISBN 981-00-4597-2
  2. "Medal Tally". Archived from the original on 6 September 2017. Retrieved 27 October 2016.
Preceded by
Singapore
Southeast Asian Peninsular Games
Bangkok

VIII Southeast Asian Peninsular Games (1975)
Succeeded by
Kuala Lumpur


This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.