China Daily (Hong Kong)

Roses locked onto Tokyo target

Olympics within touching distance as tough times bolster China’s women’s team

- By SHI FUTIAN shifutian@chinadaily.com.cn

After enduring a tumultuous start to the year, China’s women’s squad is more determined than ever to book a ticket to the Tokyo Olympics.

Now recovered from a rollercoas­ter ride of a qualifying tournament in Australia, where the beginnings of the coronaviru­s pandemic wreaked havoc on its preparatio­ns, the Steel Roses’ Tokyo chances now rest on a playoff against South Korea.

After a stressful time of late, head coach Jia Xiuquan’s ‘Steel Roses’ could be forgiven for sounding a little weary. True to their nickname, however, they are again displaying a steely resolve — and they certainly won’t be using the delay of the Tokyo Games as an excuse.

“It’s hard to say if the postponeme­nt is advantageo­us to us or not. As players, all we want is to qualify for the Olympics as soon as possible. But for sure we will face difficulti­es,” captain Wu Haiyan told media from the squad’s training base in Suzhou, Jiangsu province, on Sunday.

“The aim of the training camp is to help us restore body strength and physical condition. The team does warm-up training as well as practicing attack and defense tactics.

“Off the pitch, we always wear masks. Each of us has a separate room at the hotel, and we have a one-person-per-table policy when we have meals to keep distance from each other indoors as much as possible.”

Coach Jia’s squad came through a tough third-round qualificat­ion tournament in Australia in February after all Group B matches had to be relocated from Wuhan, the then epicenter of China’s COVID-19 outbreak.

The switch saw Team China lose both home advantage and a number of core players, including former Paris Saint-Germain playmaker Wang Shuang.

Wuhan native Wang remained at home for months in the Hubei provincial capital, which was locked down from late January until early April. The squad also faced numerous virus-related logistical difficulti­es Down Under.

However, Jia’s squad refused to wilt in the face of these mounting obstacles to book a playoff berth against South Korea.

The two-legged playoff was originally scheduled for March, but the coronaviru­s pandemic forced the Asian Football Confederat­ion to twice rearrange the matches — initially until April and then once again until June. A third rescheduli­ng is now in the pipeline after world governing body FIFA announced early this month that all internatio­nal matches in June will be postponed.

“That was a tough period,” Wu recalled about the squad’s time in Australia. “We couldn’t even train as usual on the pitch or in a gym. We could only train in our hotel rooms as we faced medical quarantine.

“But the key for us is to keep united as a team. The difficulti­es have only brought us closer together. As a team, we faced and solved the challenges together.”

After two months of self-quarantine, star player Wang along with two of her national teammates, Yao Wei and Lyu Yueyun, finally rejoined Team China in Suzhou after the lockdown of Wuhan was lifted on April 8.

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