Shanghai Daily News
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Chinese men's table tennis team coach Liu Guoliang
(left) and world No.2 Ma Lin (right) along with a team staff peruse through the
draw list of the world championship in Shanghai yesterday.(Photo: Shanghai
Daily)
Chinese coaches warned their players against complacency after the draw for
the upcoming World Table Tennis Championship was announced in Shanghai
yesterday.
Most of the top-ranked players have been excluded from the preliminary
qualifers which is scheduled to take off this weekend.
The men's singles fixtures mean local favorite Wang Liqin, the 2001 World
Championship winner, will not face serious challenge until a possible
quarterfinal clash with compatriot veteran Kong Linghui.
Another Chinese title hopeful Wang Hao and South Korea's Ryu Seung-min will
be looking for a rematch of last year's Athens Olympic final in which Ryu
outclassed Wang Hao. A win for Wang Hao will send him through to the final four.
European stars, including defending champion Werner Schlager of Austria
and Swedish veteran Jan-Ove Waldner, along with Chinese Taipei's Chuan
Chih-yuan, will battle it out for the other semifinal berths.
Another Chinese star player Ma Lin will be eying one of the final four berths
if he manages to fend off German ace Timo Boll and fellow Chinese Liu Guozheng.
China is keen to regain the men's singles title and is unlikely to face any
severe test until the later stages of the championship but Chinese coaches are
aware of possibilities of early upsets.
"In the first two rounds, most of our players will play qualifiers and that's
dangerous if we take victories for granted," said Liu Guoliang, the head coach
of the men's team.
"Our opponents will have already played two or more matches in the qualifying
while some of our players may be struggling to find their pace. That's why we
need to focus on the initial rounds rather than look at the quarterfinal and
semifinal clashes right now."
The preliminary rounds will get underway on Saturday while most Chinese
players will not see any action until the main draw which begins on Monday.
Chinese women's coach Lu Yuansheng is hoping for a quick recovery of his star
player, Olympic champion Zhang Yining, who is battling a shoulder strain.
"Zhang began full training today," said Lu, who arrived in Shanghai last
Sunday along with the rest of the Chinese team. "I am not particularly worried
about her physical condition. If she get through the opening rounds, her game
will take off."
Democratic People's Republic of Korea's Kim Hyang-mi, the runner-up to Zhang
in Athens, and Japan's Aya Umemura are Zhang's biggest rivals.
Besides Zhang, China can still rely on veteran paddler and defending champion
Wang Nan, who will have to fend off South Korea's World No.10 Kim Kyung-ah.
Besides the coveted singles titles, there are other three trophies on offer
at the blue-ribbon event, namely the men's and women's doubles as well as the
mixed doubles. Wang Liqin and teammate Yan Sen are favorites to retain their
men's doubles title, while China has traditionally been dominant in the women's
doubles.