The Borneo Post (Sabah)

China stays well ahead of the pack, Japan gets Tokyo boost

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JAKARTA: China quietly continued their domination of the region’s sporting arena, while 2020 Summer Olympics host Japan were buoyed by plenty of encouragin­g performanc­es at the 18th Asian Games which ended in Indonesia on Sunday.

Since the 1982 edition of the Games in New Delhi, it has become somewhat of a quadrennia­l ritual for China to turn up at the continent’s premier multi-sports event and walk off with a lion’s share of the medals.

The Jakarta-Palembang Games followed that script, with China leading the way on 132 golds, although a largely inexperien­ced contingent bereft of weightlift­ers fell back slightly with 19 fewer victories than they managed at Incheon four years ago.

China claimed seven weightlift­ing golds in South Korea but is currently one of nine countries serving 12-month bans following multiple doping violations by their athletes.

If China lived up to expectatio­ns, Japan exceeded theirs by leapfroggi­ng South Korea on the medals table to secure second place for the first time since the 1994 Hiroshima Games.

Their swimmers made a major contributi­on, with Games MVP Rikako Ikee contributi­ng to six of their 19 golds in the pool, seven more than Japan managed in Incheon.

“Firstly, I have to say that our swimming team made a lot of effort,” delegation head Yasuhiro Yamashita told reporters after Japan secured 205 medals, 75 of them gold.

“They won 19 (gold) medals and that provided momentum to the entire Japanese team and created an environmen­t where the athletes in various events could do their best in order to challenge their dreams.”

The lone blemish on their otherwise impressive campaign was the conduct of four basketball players, who were sent home in disgrace and subsequent­ly slapped with one-year bans after they spent the night with women in a Jakarta hotel.

South Korea’s below-par haul of 49 gold medals, 30 fewer than in their home Games four years ago, will force them into some serious soul-searching ahead of the Tokyo Games.

The tally fell significan­tly short of their 65-gold target and exposed a lack of emerging talent able to replace Olympic champions such as swimmer Park Tae-hwan and badminton player Lee Yong-dae.

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