South Korea won nine gold medals, more than any other teams on the ninth
day of the Asian Games on Sunday, to close in on the second place on the medal
tally with 37 gold medals, only one less than Japan.
Japan snatched only four, three of which from the track and field, to remain
second with 38 gold medals, but still far behind leaders China, who collected
seven on the day to raise their gold tally to 110.
South Korea showed their dominance in taekwondo and men's Greco-Roman
wrestling, winning six from a possible eight. They also took one each from
bowling, cycling and fencing.
Japan was the biggest winner in track and field, taking three out of 10 on
offer. China and host Qatar had two golds apiece, while Kazakhstan, Saudi Arabia
and Iran claimed one each.
China finished 1-2 in the women's 100m hurdles, with Liu Jing beating
defending champion Feng Yun for the gold.
"I am very, very excited to get the gold medal. I have been waiting for this
for eight years," said 29-year-old Liu, who won silver at the Bangkok Asiad in
1998.
China's Huang Xiaoxiao, who finished fifth in the world championships last
year, blew away the rest of the field to claim the women's 400m hurdles title in
55.41.
Two former Kenyan athletes shone for their adopted country and host Qatar,
winning two gold medals on Sunday.
Mubarak Hassan Shami won the men's marathon in 2 hours 12 minutes 44 seconds,
dashing South Korea's dream of winning a fifth successive marathon gold in as
many Asiad. Daham Najm Bashair won a second for Qatar in the 1,500m.
"Everybody in Kenya is running, is running faster, everyone wants gold," said
Shami. "If I was in Kenya, maybe I would not be able to run for the country."
The all-conquering Chinese divers looked sharp in the first day of the
competition by taking both gold medals from synchronized diving. World Cup
winners Wang Feng/He Chong won the men's 3-metersynchronized diving while in the
women's 10m synchronized platform competition, Jia Tong/Chen Ruolin met no
challenge at all as there were only three pairs competing in the event.
Olympic champion Chen Zhong shattered South Korea's dream of sweeping the
taekwondo gold medals, winning the women's over 72kg gold. China also won in the
men's individual sabre by Wang Jingzhiand in the men's Greco-Roman wrestling by
Jiao Huanfeng.
Chinese soccer suffered another blow on Sunday. Following their men's
quarter-final loss to Iran on Saturday, the Chinese women, the Asian Cup
champion earlier this year, was eliminated 3-1 by DPR Korea, who scored two
goals in the extra time after both sides were deadlocked at 1-1 at the end of 90
minutes.
It was a sweet revenge for the DPR Korea who lost 1-0 to China in a
controversial Asian Cup semifinal. After the game, DPR Korea has improved their
record with China to eight wins, three draws and one loss since 2001.
Elsewhere, Chinese women's volleyball team beat Chinese Taipei in the
semifinal. They will vie for the Asian Games title against Japan for the fourth
time.