New Straits Times

RESTORING SHINE WITHOUT SUN

No superstar, but China eager to atone for ‘worst Olympic flop’

- SHANGHAI

China’s Sun Yang posing on the podium after he won the men’s 200m freestyle gold at the Rio Olympic Games on Aug 8, 2016.

CHINA are missing banned superstar Sun Yang but they will take a record contingent to Tokyo seeking a strong showing with their own Olympics just months away.

The world’s most populous country topped the medals table at Beijing 2008 but then slumped to third behind the United States and Britain at Rio 2016, their worst Olympic performanc­e in two decades with 26 gold.

The disappoint­ment was summed up in a tweet by the state-run Xinhua news agency which said: “No gold for CHN gymnasts, Team China have suffered the worst Olympic flop at Rio 2016.”

At the Tokyo Games, which were pushed back a year by the coronaviru­s and will finally open on July 23, China will have a giant squad of 777 athletes and staff, their largest contingent at an overseas Olympics.

But if they are to improve on Rio, China will have to do it without their biggest star.

Controvers­ial swimmer Sun, a triple Olympic gold medallist, was banned last month for more than four years after a second doping violation.

In his absence, China do not have an internatio­nally recognised big name, but the country will still anticipate hoovering up gold medals in diving, table tennis and weightlift­ing.

Chinese media has branded its divers a “Dream Team” capable of carting off all eight gold medals in the sport.

There are also high hopes for the women’s volleyball side, led by star spiker Zhu Ting, and in the swimming pool with Zhang Yufei.

Chinese media dubbed the 23year-old Zhang Yufei “the new butterfly queen” after she soared at the National Championsh­ips in May, winning five gold and a silver.

China’s performanc­es at the Olympics and place in the medals table are always a source of national pride, but there is added spice this time because of the fierce historical rivalry between China and Japan.

Moreover, because of the year’s delay to the Tokyo Olympics, there is just six months between the Summer Games in Japan and Winter Games in Beijing.

The 2022 Olympics in the Chinese capital will come into sharp view immediatel­y after Tokyo, especially when it comes to how organisers will deal with the coronaviru­s.

Sports blogger Ma Bowen is confident that China will come second in the medals table in Tokyo, behind the United States, partly because Chinese athletes will feel more at home in the familiar surroundin­gs of Japan than they did in Rio.

“Because the Winter Olympics are right on our doorstep, China will want good results (in Tokyo) to drive everyone’s enthusiasm for sport,” added Bowen.

Like all athletes, China’s competitor­s have been badly disrupted by the coronaviru­s, restricted to national tournament­s and training in secure “bubbles” in the lead-up to Tokyo.

State media has, however, been keen to give the impression that they are gamely ploughing on with limited impact to their preparatio­ns.

Because of repeated obstacles thrown up by the virus, there will be particular interest in the women’s football team.

The “Steel Roses” endured a tortuous qualifying campaign that saw them quarantine­d and training in a hotel corridor in Australia in the earliest days of the pandemic.

After repeated delays and rescheduli­ng, they finally sealed a last-ditch spot in Tokyo in April after defeating South Korea in extra time in a tense play-off.

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AFP PIC

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