DOHA, Dec. 13 (Xinhua) -- Both China and South Korea
stunned their opponents respectively on Wednesday to set up their fourth final
clash in the men's volleyball tournament at the Asian Games.
China have won all three head-to-head finals in 1986,
1990 and 1998.
Zhou Jian'an, newly appointed head coach of China,
explained the Doha journey as if climbing over three high mountains before the
championship.
China tramped over Kazakhstan 25-21, 25-20, 24-26,
25-20 on Monday. And their semifinal win over Saudi Arabia proved to be even
tougher as China, second seed of the tournament, had to spend one hour and 39
minutes to tame their high-spirit rivals 25-20, 25-11, 23-25, 22-25 and 15-13.
With the cheering of more than 100 fans who danced
and sung with drumbeats at the stands, the Saudi players, despite the loss of
the first two sets, fought bravely to win back the following two sets.
However, China, who had a jinx of losing game after
early ascendency, released themselves from the curse with sound defense and
strong will, taking the decider 15-13.
The spikes of Saudi hitters Al Bakhet Ahmed A and Al
Makawni Yassir M, who contributed their team 15 and 13 points respectively, have
posed a great challenge to China's defense, but their shine were overshadowed by
China's Shen Qiong and captain Sui Shengsheng, who scored 20 and 17 points
respectively.
"This is a very tough match and I'm glad my players
finally win under high pressure," said coach Zhou Jian'an, "We were making
preparations to play Japan all the time and we didn't expect Saudi Arabia will
win the semifinal."
In another semifinal, defending champion South Korea
beat host Qatar 25-27, 25-21, 25-22 and 25-16 in front of more than 2,000 local
fans.
The hosts are expected to win their first Asian Games
volleyball medal on their own soil when they face Saudi Arabia on Thursday in
the third-place playoff.
In other two matches of the day, Japan stormed for a
straight-set victory over Kazakhstan and will compete for the fifth place on
Thursday against Iran, the silver medalist of 2002 Busan Asiad, who downed
Bahrain 3-1 on Wednesday.
Saudi Arabia and Bahrain entered the quarterfinals as
top finishers of Pool A and Pool B in preliminaries, while hosts Qatar directly
made the last eight with five world championship participants, namely China,
Japan, South Korea, Iran and Kazakhstan.
The final will be held on Thursday at the Al-Rayyan
Indoor Hallin northwestern suburb of Doha.