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Tian Jia (R) and Wang Jie of China
celebrate after scoring during the Women's Quarterfinal - Match 47 between
Wang Jie/Tian Jia of China and Doris Schwaiger/Stefanie Schwaiger of
Austria of the Beijing 2008 Olympic Games beach volleyball event in
Beijing, China, Aug. 17, 2008. Wang Jie/Tian Jia of China beat Doris
Schwaiger/Stefanie Schwaiger of Austria 2-0. (Xinhua
Photo) Photo
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Tian Jia of China retrieves the ball
during the Women's Quarterfinal - Match 47 between Wang Jie/Tian Jia of
China and Doris Schwaiger/Stefanie Schwaiger of Austria of the Beijing
2008 Olympic Games beach volleyball event in Beijing, China, Aug. 17,
2008. (Xinhua Photo) Photo Gallery>>> |
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Wang Jie (R) and Tian Jia of China pose
for a photo after winning the Women's Quarterfinal - Match 47 between Wang
Jie/Tian Jia of China and Doris Schwaiger/Stefanie Schwaiger of Austria of
the Beijing 2008 Olympic Games beach volleyball event in Beijing, China,
Aug. 16, 2008.(Xinhua Photo) Photo
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BEIJING, Aug. 17 (Xinhua) -- China's Tian Jia/Wang
Jie continued their creation of history for China's Olympic record in beach
volleyball on Sunday, overcoming their rivals in a quarterfinal.
China's best finish at the Olympics was ninth place,
achieved by Tian and her then partner Wang Fei at the Athens Games.
In Sunday's match, the Chinese players easily beat an
Austrian pair in straight sets. Both sets ended 21-12.
The Chinese tandem dominated the match with strong
serves and attacks, leaving the Austrian pair Doris Schwaiger/Stephanie
Schwaiger no resistance most of the time.
"We played to our normal standard, and we didn't
carry a burden today. We didn't think about anything, winning or losing,"
1.87-meter-tall Wang said after the match.
The Austrian sisters said they didn't play well in
the match as they had expected.
"Two days ago we served much better to the German
team, and I suppose it is disappointing that we could not do the same here
today," said Doris.
"I want to congratulate the Chinese team. They're
very good and I hope they win a medal," she said.
The Austrian pair, who finished second in the
preliminary round, eliminated Germany's Laura Ludwig and Sara Goller, a much
higher-seeded pair, in their round of 16 encounter on Friday.
"We didn't expect them to go so far. They were
certainly the biggest dark horse in this tournament. But they didn't play their
best today," China's Tian said on the performance of the Austrians.
To their semifinal, the two Chinese said they didn't
care about the result and would just focus on the match.
"We've already achieved beyond our goal since we
entered the quarterfinals. For the next matches, we'll try to take hold of every
match and try our best," Wang told a press conference.
In the semifinal on Aug. 19, they are to take on the
winner of the quarterfinal between Nicole Branagh/Elaine Youngs of the United
States and China's Zhang Xi/Xue Chen.
Tian and Wang said they had learned a lot from their
experiences in the preliminary round, where they remained unbeaten but sometimes
had to come from behind to win the match finally.
"We didn't play well in the preliminary round, which
was big help for us," Wang said.
"The difficulties we experienced gave us a lesson
that we should put us in a low position and treat every rival as the best team,"
she explained.
"With this mental state, we don't get muddleheaded
when we are in disadvantage. We just act quickly to adjust our psychology and
strategy," she said.
While Tian is for the third time at the Olympics,
Wang is taking part for the first time.
They remained unbeaten in the preliminary round. In
their round of 16 match, Tian/Wang beat Norwegian opponents Nila Ann
Hakedal/Ingrid Torlen in two straight sets 21-13, 21-15.
The Chinese duo had won three FIVB World Tour gold
medals and placed second on the Beijing Olympics qualification rankings.
In another women's quarterfinal, Misty May-Treanor
and Kerri Walsh of the United States, also defending champions, won easily over
Ana Paula Connelly and Larissa Franca of Brazil in straight sets of 21-18 and
21-15.
So far the American duo have lost no set at the
Beijing Olympics. They have been continuing their winning streak in world-class
tournaments in the past years.