The table tennis tournament at the Beijing Paralympics finished group
stages and quarterfinal matches yesterday. 15 Chinese competitors secured their
semifinal berths in 10 different classes.
Both men and women players in the Paralympic table tennis game are divided
into 10 classes depending on their disabilities. The smaller the number is, the
more severe their disabilities are. Classes 6 to 10 are for standing competitors
while classes 1 to 5 are for players seated on wheelchairs.
In women's competition, 2-time Paralympics class 5 gold medalist Ren Guixiang
and the Athens Paralympics team event gold winner Gu Gai defeated their last
group opponents with clean 3-0s, and reached the semifinal with unbeaten
records.
Zhou Ying, Li Qian and Liu Jing for women's class 4, class 3 and class 1-2,
each won a semifinal position for China after Tuesday's competitions.
In men's 9-10 class, Chinese Ma Lin and Ge Yang both went into the semifinals
after defeating their quarterfinal opponents Esa Miettinen from Finland and
2-time Paralympic champions Bourdonnaye by 3-0s, respectively.
In the same class, Athens Paralympics silver medalist Swedish Fredrik
Andersson upset the then-gold-medalist Fraczyk Stanislaw in the 1/8 final and
roared into the semifinal after taking over Spanish Jose Manuel Ruiz in a tight
competition.
Chinese Li Manzhou from men's class 8 will compete with his teammate Chen
Gang on Wednesday in the semifinals, while Ye Chaoqun will take on Mitchell
Seidenfeld from the United States in men's class 7.
Feng Panfeng from class 3 and Zhang Yan from class 4-5 are the only two
Chinese survivors in men's sitting competitions. Both edged their opponents,
South Korean Kim Young-Gun and Tommy Urhaug from Norway respectively, by 3-2.
German competitor Rainer Schmidt from men's class 6 continued his good luck
on Tuesday. He edged British Dave Wetherill with only a tiny advantage.
"I never beat Rosenmeier by 3-0. This is the first time," Schmidt said after
the match. "The only chance for me to get into the final round is to beat him
3-0, and I was 7-3 down in the third set. I told myself I have to do it."
After four matches in his group, Schmidt and Wetherill got both the same
points as well as set differences. But according to the rule, when set
differences were the same, the competitors' positions should be judged by the
divided number of their sets against and sets for.
Schmidt won 7 sets and lost 3, while Wetherill won 8 but lost 4. Schmidt thus
edged Wetherill in the group and will take on Peter Rosenmeier from Danmark on
Wednesday in the semifinals.
Women's individual competitions will see five gold medals on Thursday,
including the class 10, while the gold medals for women's class 9, 8 and 6-7 as
well as men's games will be decided on Friday.
The team event will begin on Saturday.