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China's rider Alex Hua Tian rides on his
horse "Chico" during eventing dressage competition held at the Hong Kong
Olympic Equestrian Venue (Sha Tin) in the Olympic co-host city of Hong
Kong, south China, Aug. 9, 2008. (Xinhua Photo) Photo Gallery>>> |
HONG KONG, Aug. 9 (Xinhua) -- Alex Hua Tian made
history on Saturday evening as he rode confidently on his horse Chico into the
Olympic dressage arena in Hong Kong, drawing applause from over 10,000
spectators at the Shatin Equestrian Venue.
Hua was the first Chinese rider ever to compete in
Olympic equestrian events, and contributed a key part to China's attending all
the 28 major sport categories, too. At the age of 18, the Eton College student
was the youngest FEI (International Equestrian Federation)-registered rider to
have gone through the four-star level.
Hua managed to signal for Chico to perform elegantly,
although the German horse was a bit shy at first.
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China's rider Alex Hua Tian rides on his
horse "Chico" during eventing dressage competition held at the Hong Kong
Olympic Equestrian Venue (Sha Tin) in the Olympic co-host city of Hong
Kong, south China, Aug. 9, 2008. (Xinhua Photo) Photo Gallery>>> |
Hua said he was satisfied with the overall
performance of Chico, considering that it had not been long for him and horse to
train together.
Hua said he expected the horse, which had primarily
trained for jumping tests, will get better in cross-country and jumping parts of
the eventing competitions.
Born in 1989 to a Chinese father and a British
mother, the handsome young man started riding at the age of four and started
training at the age of ten. Just four years later, he became a registered FEI at
the unprecedented age of 14. He qualified for the Olympics as a Chinese rider.
With a promising prospect in a sport that has been
new to China, Hua was widely recognized as "one in 1.3 billion" and compared to
the 110-meter hurdler Liu Xiang.
His parents and other family members were in Hong
Kong to watch his performance.
Cheng Qing, head of the Chinese Olympic equestrian
team, said China was hoping for a breakthrough in eventing -- possibly by Hua --
as it was far behind the western riders in the disciplines of dressage and
jumping.
China sent six riders and seven horses to compete in equestrian Olympics, with four of the riders in jumping, one in dressage. Hua was the best among them at No. 21 in the latest FEI world event rider rankings.
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