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Olympic champion hurdler Liu Xiang
undergoes intensive training at Er'sha Island training base in south
China's Guangdong Province Nov. 10, 2006. Liu Xiang is preparing for the
upcoming Doha Asian Games to be held from Dec. 1 to 15.(Xinhua
Photo) Photo Gallery
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By Sportswriter Gao Peng
BEIJING, Nov. 16 (Xinhua) -- With few athletes of
calibre like China's Liu Xiang, attention will be focusing on the men's 110
meters hurdles world record holder when track and field events get underway at
the Dec. 1-15 Asian Games in Doha.
The 23-year-old Liu, who shattered the world record
when he clocked 12.88 seconds at an IAAF meet in Lausanne last July, is looking
to round off his sizzling season in style with a second Asian Games gold.
Four years ago, he scored a runaway victory in the
110m hurdles, clocking a games record of 13.27, bettering compatriot Li Tong's
1994 mark of 13.30.
"The Asian Games is of great importance," said Liu,
who is training in South China's Guangzhou, the host city of the 2010 Asian
Games. "My goal is simple - winning the gold."
Despite starting as the overwhelming favorite, Liu
was warned against complacency because in a technical event like the hurdles,
anything is possible.
"It's the end of the season but we still have to work
hard," said Liu's coach Sun Haiping. "If I have to, I will make Liu train until
his head spins."
Liu, who won the IAAF Performance of the Year Award
last week, headlines a 41-strong Chinese squad which also includes teenager
Huang Haiqiang, who grabbed gold in the high jump at the world junior
championships in Beijing last August, and Asian women's pole vault record holder
Gao Shuying.
China won 14 gold medals at the Busan games, roughly
a third of the gold medals on offer in track and field. Having Liu and Huangin
its ranks, China is expected to walk away with the most gold medals again in
Doha.
But if anybody other than Liu Xiang could produce a
world class performance, Japan's Olympic hammer throw champion Koji Murobushi
tops the list.
The 32-year-old veteran, who was unbeaten this
season, is aiming for a third straight Asiad gold to emulate his father,
Shigenobu, who won the title for five times in a row.
The Japanese headed home with only two gold medals in
track and field at the Busan Asiad. But, this time, they are looking to redeem
their position as a regional powerhouse.
Japan is pinning gold-medal hopes on marathon, where
it will be represented by Tsuyoshi Ogata, the 2005 world bronze medal winner,
and Atsushi Fujita.
The men's 4x100m relay is a traditional Japanese
strength, and Shingo Suetsugu, the men's 200m bronze medalist at the 2003 world
championships, looks set to defend his Asian Games title.
The hosts and their neighbors, however, cannot be
neglected.
Buying in African talents in the past four years have
put the Gulf states of Qatar and Bahrain on the map of world athletics. Former
Kenyan two-time world 3,000 steeplechase champion Saif Saaeed Shaheen now
competes for Qatar, while Bahrain's Maryam Yusuf Jamal became the first Asian
woman from outside of China to win a World Cup event after the Ethiopian-born
runner had unleashed a blistering last lap to run away with the women's 1500 min
Athens in September.
As a matter of fact, west Asia was already a force to
be reckoned with in Busan 2002, where Saudi Arabia surprised all by claiming
seven gold medals in track and field.
The west Asians are very likely to hit new heights
when the Asian Games return to this region for the first time since Iran played
host in 1974. Anyhow, competing in heat is routine for them.