BEIJING, Aug. 12 (Xinhua) -- To the Chinese shooter,
this medal seemed too late.
Tan Zongliang has been shooting for over two decades
and competed in four Olympic Games.
But for the first time, the 37-year-old veteran saw
the national flag hoisted on the Olympic arena for him.
"I have trained for 23 years, 16 of which I spent on
the national team. I devoted all my best years to the sport. This time, I felt
myself closest to the gold," said the man from east China's Shandong Province
who seized a bronze medal in men's 50-meter pistol.
"It is a little embarrassing and cruel that I only
got a bronze. But if this Olympics is my last...I have no regret," said the
normally jocose man who suddenly became emotional.
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Coming from the kite-making city of Weifang, Tan
started practicing shooting when he was in middle school and entered the
Shandong provincial team two years later.
In 1993, he was selected into the national shooting
squad and snatched the gold medal in the 50-meter pistol and silver of the air
pistol at the National Games in the same year.
Recognized as one of China's ace shooters, he had won
numerous gold medals. Even in the 2002 World Cup Final when he had a fever at
39.5 degrees Centigrade, the marksman still was crowned in the 50-meter
pistol.
But he could never break the spell casted on his
Olympic dream.
In 1996, the then 25-year-old Tan competed in the
10-meter air pistol at Atlanta Olympics, but just ended up sixth.
Four years later, he rallied to Sydney, finishing
11th in the qualification round of air pistol event and was shut out of the
final.
In Athens, the scholarly man with glasses vied in
both air pistol and 50-meter pistol events. His places were ninth and tenth.
"I was the Monkey King," he smiled bitterly.
In the classic Chinese fiction, the omnipotent Monkey
King could never broke a spell that made his head ache from time to time.
Indeed. In the competition of men's 10-meter air
pistol on Saturday, when the 22-year-old fledging shooter Pang Wei surprised the
field by winning the gold, nobody noticed the disappointment written on the face
of this heartbroken shooter, who once again stopped in the qualification
round.
"It was the heaviest blow to me. I asked myself, 'why are you always letting everybody down'?"