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Chinese gymnasts maintain all-win record in Asiad team events

0 CommentsPrint E-mail Xinhua, November 15, 2010
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Chinese women gymnasts stormed to the Asiad team gold on Sunday, completing the hosts' sweep of team titles for a consecutive 10th time in the supreme athletes' gathering of the continent.

China's world-beating men already had the team title in pocket, won on Saturday, and the women's gold allows them to maintain a 100 percent record on team events since Chinese delegation first entered the Asian Games in 1974.

Tiny Chinese girls accumulated 234.150 points on all four apparatuses, leaving sliver-medalists Japan a far second in 223.250. The bronze went to Uzbekistan in 207.950.

"We did quite well in general despite some mistakes," China women's coach Lu Shanzhen said. "The result is not a surprise."

Although the Olympic and Asiad champions had a faulty third-place performance at last month's world championships, it is not a problem for them to repeat victory in Guangzhou as only four sides assembled enough competitors for team event.

Huang Qiushuang, who impressed the worlds as a new face, stole the limelight as she acquired the highest all-round score of 59.000. She also topped the vault qualifiers and came second on floor and uneven bars as Sunday's competition also determined finalists for five individual events.

The hosts had a flying start with solid performance on uneven bars despite captain Jiang Yuyuan's tumble on landing.

He Kexin, dubbed "uneven bars princess", wooed judges and spectators on her speciality with her acrobatic signature flip, scoring a best-of-day 16.100. Her difficulty score reached an amazing 7.2, which few gymnasts in the world can manage.

He fell off the bar in the Rotterdam worlds, snapping her stunning 15 successive wins in all tournaments. But she did not allow herself to make the same mistake on home turf.

While the world champion-studded team did not present their best, they were just too powerful for other sides. Aiming at a clean sweep of all golds, they clinched the highest score on each apparatus.

Jiang, who acquired a silver medal and China's best result on women's all-around in Rotterdam, had her worst day and slipped up in three of the four exercises. She was unable to hold back her tears after the rotation of floor on which she also misplayed.

The 18-year-old still placed fifth in all-round, enough to enter the final. However, with three teammates ranking above her and a maximum two from each team able to qualify, she can not turn up on Monday unless two fellow Chinese withdraw.

China is by far the most successful squad in the women's event. With a total of 89 medals, they have more than all other teams combined.

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