Tuesday, August 12, 2008

Sports
Olympics
Perfect gold for hosts
Afp, Beijing
China's men's gymnastics team won Olympic gold here Tuesday with a barnstorming performance that sparked wild celebrations from an adoring home crowd and was rated "perfect" by their notoriously demanding coach.A Chinese team boasting three world champions powered to the Olympic team title for the second time following victory in Sydney in 2000, making amends for a disappointing fifth place in Athens four years ago.Red-hot favourites going into the competition, China finished on 286.125 points, 7.25 points ahead of arch-rival Japan on 278.875, while an injury-weakened US team put in a gutsy effort to take bronze on 275.85."We performed perfect today, everyone was excellent," Chinese head coach Huang Yubin said through an interpreter.Huang, who has drilled the team relentlessly in the quest for gold at his home Olympics, joked that his hair had gone white under the pressure of preparing the squad for the Beijing Games."This is a big competition and it's being held in China, so there was a lot of pressure to perform at our best," he said.With eight nations contesting the final, China was paired with defending Olympic team champions Japan as the squads went through the six men's apparatus.Led by world champion individual title holder Yang Wei, the Chinese came out to a deafening roar in the 18,000 capacity National Indoor Stadium, where the flag-waving crowd was expecting nothing less than gold.An early hiccup when Chen Yibing stumbled on the final run of his floor exercise routine left China trailing Japan by half a point at the end of the first round but did not disrupt the team's momentum.There were then boos from the stands after Huang Xu received a disappointing 14.75 on pommel horse before the world champion on the apparatus Xaio Qin stepped up to put the hosts 0.4 points ahead of Japan at the end of round two.China's depth of talent allowed them to call on the rings world champion Chen Yibing to extend the lead in the next round, when he whipped the crowd into a frenzy pumping his fists after a 16.575 point display.However, the injury-weekend US team showed it would not be a walkover for the Chinese when it took the overall lead at the end of the third of six rounds.Written off as medal prospects in the absence of Athens individual champion Paul Hamm and his brother Morgan, the US led China by 0.825 points at the halfway mark.The Amercian men then built on their momentum when they took to the high bar, where a spectacular one-handed swinging rotation by Justin Spring had chants of "U-S-A, U-S-A" ringing around the stadium.Proudly wearing his bronze medal, Jonathan Horton admitted his team had been stung by the criticism and had a point to prove."I wish more people believed in us," he said. "It felt like the only people that believed in us was us."But whenever their rivals threatened to rein them in, the Chinese lifted, with Li Xiopeng pulling off a 16.775 vault to put China 1.575 points ahead at the end of the fourth round.The hosts extended their lead in the next after US gymnast Joey Hagerty stumbled, then landed heavily, on the floor exercise.Heading into the final round, the Chinese looked unbeatable, leading the United States by 5.2 points and Japan by 6.9, huge margins under the new gymnastics scoring system, where routines are no longer marked out of 10.The United States were in silver medal position but poor pommel horse routines from Kei Wen Tan and Raj Bhavsar allowed Japan to finish second after a strong team performance on the high bar.Japanese coach Koji Gushiken said his team had produced some beautiful gymnastics but needed to close the gap with CHina."We will learn from the Chinese and we will be up for the next challenge," he said.China's dominance was such that the last gymnast to perform on high bar, Zou Kai, needed only 8.725 to clinch the gold. He scored 15.975 to set off a round of foot-stamping and cheering in stands.
One of several CNG filling stations between Kanchpur Bridge and Jatrabari of the capital which BNP big shots built on the Kutubkhali canal, drastically reducing Dhaka's drainage capability. PHOTO: STAR
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