Arab Times

Time catches up with Chinese legend ‘Super Dan’

China’s superstar continues to defy expectatio­ns

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SHANGHAI, Aug 29, (AFP): Lin Dan’s defeat in the World Championsh­ip final has prompted fresh conjecture that the Chinese super star could soon call time on his brilliant career.

The 33-year-old “Super Dan” said after losing Sunday’s showdown to Denmark’s Viktor Axelsen in Glasgow that he would immediatel­y return for China’s National Games and then play at next month’s Japan Open.

“After that I have no plans,” said Lin, indicating he might soon call it a day. “It will be difficult to play in the World Championsh­ips at 34.”

But the two-time Olympic and fivetime world champion, regarded widely Twitter-like Weibo, where he has 3.75 million followers, said he lost the final to Old Father Time rather than his Danish opponent.

“The best players will always lose to time/age in the end. Even in defeat Lin Dan deserves to be honoured and respected. You will always be Super Dan,” said one.

But many were more concerned with Lin’s love life which has made more headlines than his badminton in the past year.

The once skyhigh popularity of the tattooed shuttler — it is rare for Chinese athletes to have tattoos — has never recovered fully despite Lin apologisin­g in November last year for an affair with a model while his wife and former badminton starlet Xie Xingfang was pregnant.

Observers said Lin showed his advancing years had slowed him in the defeat to world number three Axelsen.

“We all hoped to see Super Dan continue his legacy, but objectivel­y speaking there’s a 10-year age gap between the two players, think about the extra effort that has to be put in,” commentato­r Tong Kexin said on state television after the defeat.

Many people expected Lin to retire after last summer’s Rio Olympics, where he surrendere­d his title and lost the bronze-medal match to Axelsen.

But a reply Lin gave to Chinese media offers an insight into why he continues to defy expectatio­ns.

Asked in 2014 what he would say in a retirement speech if given only one minute, he answered: “I would say ‘I don’t want to go’ and repeat it for 60 seconds.”

Axelsen China’s Lin Dan returns against South Korea’s Son Wan Ho during their semi-final men’s singles match during the 2017 BWF World Championsh­ips

of badminton at Emirates Arena in Glasgow on Aug 26. (AFP)

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