Japanese teenager beats Ding Ning at Asian Champs

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Hirano Miu of Japan celebrates after winning a quarterfinal match against Ding Ning of China at the 23rd ITTF Asian Table Tennis championships in Wuxi, east China's Jiangsu Province, April 14, 2017. Hirano Miu won 3-2. (Xinhua/Yang Lei)

Japanese teenager Miu Hirano was too excited to stand on her feet after beating world No. 1 Ding Ning of China to reach the women's singles semifinals  Friday at the Asian Table Tennis Championships.

The 17-year-old sensation came back from two sets down and rallied to win the fourth 16-14 to drug the match into full sets.

Trailing 3-1 in the decisive fifth set, Hirano managed to tie 4-4 and never looked back, nailing two match points on 10-8 before wrapping it up 3-11, 12-14, 11-9, 16-14, 12-10.

It has been the first time that the world No. 11 beat a Chinese paddler. Last October, Hirano became the first non-Chinese World Cup winner on the absence of the whole Chinese team.

"I can't believe that I beat the Olympic champion. It's like a dream," said the birthday girl. "The victory is the best birthday gift ever!"

"Trailing early in the match, I just told myself, OK, you were losing it, so why not going all out," she added.

Asked about her long term target as a professional table tennis player, Hirano said she wants an Olympic gold medal at the coming 2020 Games in Tokyo.

"Gold of singles or team event? Well, I want both," she added.

Hirano is not the top-rated Japanese female paddler in the sport's governing body ITTF's world rankings with Kasumi Ishikawa, Mima Ito, also 17, and Hitomi Sato in top 10.

Grand Slam winner and top seed here, Ding Ning, admitted that she'd underestimated the teenage girl.

"I thought I was the better player on court, but the rival's performance, especially her receiving, came much better than my imagination.

"She'd nothing to lose and she got lucky. I was just not able to win at the end of the day," said the 26-year-old.

Ding's exit followed an unexpected third-round falling of men's singles No. 1 seed Ma Long, also a Grand Slam winner of Olympics, World Championships and World Cup, beaten 11-9, 11-8, 6-11, 11-6 by South Korea's 27-year-old Jeong Sang Eun in the morning.

 

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