China Daily (Hong Kong)

Brash Qiu looks forward to Rio

Teenage Chinese star ready to move on from London disappoint­ment

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silver behind David Boudia of the US.

British sensation Thomas Daley grabbed the bronze.

Speaking during his visit to Omega House as one of the brand's global ambassador­s, Qiu was impressed by his main two rivals' “remarkable” performanc­es, but he was unhappy with Daley's pre-Olympic comment that stated: “Qiu is like a robot”.

He also attacked reporters who echoed Daley's thoughts.

“This is a pure misunderst­anding about us (Chinese divers),” he said. “We are not like what the foreign media say. We also have to have academic lessons apart from daily training. We have our lives. We also have to eat and sleep. We go out shopping and have fun. Everyone is the same as those foreign athletes.”

Coming into the final as the favorite, Qiu made some fine dives but was far from perfect.

On Sunday, it was Doudia who performed more like a robot as he performed some flawless routines before clinching the gold.

The 2011 world champion Qiu, who is labeled as “Mr Full Mark”, he only performed to 80 percent of his ability in London.

“I'm sorry to let people down. I only played 80 percent of my best. I would be great if I was a robot at that moment,” he said with a smile.

China won six gold medals in London, at first losing the men's 3-meter springboar­d to spoil its bid for a sweep of the eight gold medals, and then coming up short in the last diving event at the Games.

After failing to win gold at his debut Olympics, Qiu rested his head against the wall behind the diving boards, but he refused to cry.

“I did not think it was the worst moment of my career,” he said.

“It is just part of life. You win and you lose. It's OK. I rested against the wall right after the scoreboard showed the result because I needed some time to calm myself down.”

Still young and energetic, Qiu is looking forward to the Rio Olympics — and even beyond.

“I will try to improve my difficulty and get mentally stronger. I will not let (the sport) go if I compete at the 2016 Games,” he said.

“I like the fierce competitiv­eness in the 10m platform. It's more thrilling to win a tight match, isn't it?”

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