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by Sportswriter Wang Zijiang
ATHENS, Aug. 27 (Xinhuanet) -- Liu Xiang won it and history's been made.
The 21-year-old claimed the gold medal of the glamorous men's 110m hurldes
before a capacity crowd of 70,000 at the Olympic Stadium in the 28th Olympic
Games here on Friday.
He clocked a stunning 12.91 seconds to equal the world record set by
Britain's Collin Jackson in 1993.
Terrence Trammell of the United States, silver medalist at both the Sydney
Olympics and last year's world championships, won the silver in 13.18.
Defending champion Anier Garcia of Cuba took the bronze in 13.20.
It is the first gold Chinese men's athlete has ever won from the track and
field in the Olympics history.
China has won over 100 gold medals from the summer Olympic Games since 1984
but their male athletes only got one medal from Olympics' most popular sport.
That was high jumper Zhu Jianhua's bronze in the 1984 Los Angeles Games.
The Shanghai native, with his father a truck driver and mother an
out-of-work housewife, loved sports when he was very little.
"He kept running and jumping everyday and never sat there quietly," his
mother Ji Fenhua recalled.
Liu was selected to the Junior Sports School of Putuo District of Shanghai
to practice jumping as a fourth grader in the primary school. But after a bone
test showing that he will not be able tobecome a tall man, Liu was asked to give
up sports one year later,although he had won the national champion at that
level.
His parents also wanted him to study computer engineering or some other
profession befitting his middle-class Shanghai upbringing, but Liu decided to go
on.
"I told my mother that I would compete in the Olympics in the future," Liu
said.
The year of 1998 was a turning point for Liu's career, when he attracted
coach Sun Haiping's attention as a 15-year-old jumper.
Sun was a well known hurdle coach who had nurtured Asian champion Chen
Yanhao and he believed a star was born at the first sight of Liu.He visited
Liu's parents serveral times and finally persuaded them to let Liu transfer to
the 110m hurdles.
After only three years, Liu launched his career in style in the IAAF Grand
Prix in Lausanne in 2001 by breaking the world youth and Asian record with a
time of 13.12.
And in the next two years leading to the Olympic Games, he has won titles
at the Asian championships, the World University Games and the Asian Games.
But the first warning he sent to the world was his bronze-winning feat at
the world indoor championships in Birmingham, England, last year.
He went on to capture the bronze in the world outdoor championships in
Paris to record a surprise season in 2003.
In 2004, Liu came back stronger and more confident. He won thesilver in the
world indoor championships in Budapest in March.
Two months later, he proved the winner in a race against American great
Allen Johnson in the IAAF Grand Prix in Osaka, Japan, where he clocked a new
Asian record and world's season besttime of 13.06 seconds.
He went on to win two Johnson-absent races in Lille, France, onJune 26 and
Zagreb, Croatia, three days later. He put up an exciting show at the Golden Gala
meet in Rome on July 3, when he and Johnson clocked an identical time of 13.11.
Race officials hadto examine a photo finish to declare Johnson the winner.
Liu did a better job of clearing the hurdles than Johnson, but Johnson's
stronger start ended up making the difference. The race boosted Liu 's optimism
for the Olympics, although Johnson bettered his season best time by 0.01 second
in Lausanne, Switzerland, on July 6.
The world has put the Olympics a Johsnon-Liu duel but surprisingly Johnson crashed
out of the Games after falling at the ninth hurdle at round 2.
Johnson's early exit paved the way for Liu's win. He finally took the gold
and put a Chinese man's name on the record book. Enditem
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