Team members of China attend the victory ceremony of the
volleyball women's match against Japan at Doha Asiad, Qatar, yesterday. China
won the match 3-1. -Xinhua
The Chinese women volleyballers waltzed through the Asiad gold medal match
against Japan, beating their arch rivals 22-25, 25-10, 25-23 and 25-16 to take
home their third consecutive Asiad's gold medal in Doha yesterday.
It is the fourth time for the two Asian powerhouses to meet in Asiad's final,
with their last head-to-head final in Seoul in 1986when China bagged the gold
medal.
Due to a slow start and a string of spike errors, China opened the final 1-5.
Japan took the chance to continue its ascendency from 8-2 to 12-5 with quick
attacks and sound defense.
Though the Chinese women managed to catch up 11-16 with dreadful spikes of
their ace hitters Yang Hao and Xu Yunli, the Japanese women, which have always
been regarded mentally strong, stunted the Chinese bombardment with unyielding
defense and kept leading from 17-12 to 19-13.
The Chinese women bounced back to run off four straight points for 17-19
before the Japanese took the set 25-22.
The Chinese spikers came back to life and launched a brilliant attacking wave
from the start of the second set with a 6-2 lead and extended the winning
momentum to tie the scoreboard 1-1 by easily taking the second 25-10.
China took early leads 8-5 and 11-6 in the third set before Japan surged back
14-14 with astonishing performance of its wing hitters Araki Eeika and Takahashi
Miyuki.
The two sides fought fiercely in the rest time and exchanged lead eight times
to a 22-22 tie. Yet, the Chinese did not let the opener replayed and sealed the
set 25-23 with an unanswered spike.
The Japanese still did not give up in the last set and they once caught an
8-8 tie. However, China, the World Cup and Olympic dual champions, showed their
world-class caliber to seal the match 25-16.
Earlier, Chinese Taipei downed Thailand in straight sets in the bronze medal
match to take its first Asian Games' medal.
South Korea, the silver medalist of 2002 Busan Asiad, beat Kazakhstan 25-20,
25-22 and 25-14 in a pride-saving match to finish fifth in the nine-team
tournament, while Vietnam downed Mongolia in the 7th-8th playoff.