Special report:
2008 Olympic
Games
by sportswriter Zhang
Rongfeng
BEIJING, Aug. 4 (Xinhua) -- The archery powerhouse
South Korean was fully prepared for the Olympic gold medals, said woman archer
Joo Hyun- Jung after training session at the Olympic Green Archery Field on
Monday.
"I have prepared for everything very well because
it's the Olympics. I've prepared myself physically by exercising and eating the
right food. My body is in very good condition," said 26-year-old Joo.
On South Korea's biggest rivals during the Games, Joo
said: "people say that the biggest rivals may be the Chinese team because this
is in China."
At the Athens Games, Chinese women team finished
second to South Korea just by one point in the final.
In regarding to the women's individual gold medal,
Joo is optimistic for South Korea's chance.
"I feel like I can win, but it depends on the
conditions. Fifty percent is ability and 50 percent is good fortune," said Joo.
The defending champion Park Sung-Hyun, a quiet person
by nature, would not allow the attention and glamour get to her head.
On defending her individual title from the Athens
2004 Olympic Games, Park just hedged the topic.
"I'm not focused on the gold medal. I just want to do
my best," said Park, who won double gold medals, individual and team, at the
Athens Games.
For South Korea's female archers, Olympic gold medals
are like family heirlooms -- passed down from one generation of competitors to
the next.
South Korea's women have created one of the great
Olympic dynasties by winning every archery gold medal since the 1984 Games in
Los Angeles.
They are heavy favorites to extend their streak to
seventh consecutive Games in Beijing.
Park Sung-hyun and Yoon Ok-hee, who set a 12-arrow
world record of 119 points in May, are expected to vie for gold in the
individual event, while in the women's team competition South Korea appear
untouchable.