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The ceremony took place along the Pearl River on Haixinsha Island, mark it the first time in history that an Asian Games ceremony was held outside the main Games stadium. In front of 30,000 spectators, [ 1 ] it lasted four hours, featured about 6,000 performers, [ 2 ] with at least 40,000 of fireworks . [ 3 ]
On October 13, 2010, Wan Qingliang, mayor of Guangzhou at the time, officially revealed in a press conference that the total cost of staging the Asian Games and Asian Para Games was about ¥122.6 billion ($18.37 billion), with ¥109 billion spent on the city's infrastructure, ¥6.3 billion on the venues and some ¥7.3 billion spent on the Games ...
2006 Asian Games opening ceremony; 2010 Asian Games opening ceremony; 2011 Asian Winter Games opening ceremony; 2014 Asian Games opening ceremony; 2017 Asian Winter Games Parade of Nations; 2018 Asian Games opening ceremony; 2022 Asian Games opening ceremony
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Football at the 2010 Asian Games was held in Guangzhou, Guangdong, China from 7 to 25 November 2010. The opening match was played 5 days prior to the opening ceremony. In this tournament, 24 teams played in the men's competition, and 7 teams participated in women's competition. Age limit for the men teams was under-23, same as the age limit in ...
Pages in category "2010 Asian Games" The following 10 pages are in this category, out of 10 total. ... 2010 Asian Games closing ceremony; 2010 Asian Games opening ...
Originally, the Commonwealth Games gold medalist Azhar Hussain was nominated to carry the flag, but a conflict with his training schedule forced the officials to nominate the country's field hockey captain, Zeeshan Ashraf instead. [4] Pakistan's president, Asif Ali Zardari, attended the opening ceremony as a guest of the Chinese. [citation needed]
The 2010 Asian Games, also known as the XVI Asiad, was a multi-sport event held in Guangzhou, China from 12 to 27 November 2010. The event saw 9,704 athletes from 45 National Olympic Committees (NOCs) competing in 476 events in 42 sports. [ 1 ]