 |
|
Fukuhara Ai of Japan eyes the ball during the women's team bronze medal contest between Japan and the Republic of Korea of Beijing Olympic Games table tennis event in Beijing, China, Aug. 17, 2008. The Republic of Korea beat Japan 3-0 and won the bronze medal in this event. (Xinhua Photo) Photo Gallery>>> |
BEIJING, Aug. 17 (Xinhua) -- South Korea won the women's team bronze medal in the Olympic table tennis competition here Sunday, after steamrolling over a tenacious Japan 3-0.
The bronze medal contest, which was an exact repeat
of a group stage clash between the Asian powers, dealt a heavy blow to Japan's
hope for an end to its Olympic table tennis medal drought.
South Korean chopper Kim Kyung-ah, who won a singles
bronze medal at the Athens Games, beat Sayaka Hirano 11-5, 11-4, 7-11, 12-10
though the Japanese caused some trouble, using fast attacks.
 |
|
Kim Kyung Ah of the Republic of Korea celebrates scoring during the women's team bronze medal contest between Japan and the Republic of Korea of Beijing Olympic Games table tennis event in Beijing, China, Aug. 17, 2008. The Republic of Korea beat Japan 3-0 and won the bronze medal in this event. (Xinhua Photo) Photo Gallery>>> |
The crowd cheered as Fukuhara Ai took to the table
against former Chinese Dang Ye-seo. Whenever the Japanese star fell behind, the
enthusiastic fans chanted "Fuyuan Ai Jia You", or "Go Fukuhara Ai".
A boy shouted "Take it easy", drawing laughter from
the crowd. But noisy fans failed to pull their idol through, who lost to the
lower-ranked opponent 11-4, 13-12, 7-11, 11-3.
Kim then paired with Park Mi-young in the doubles,
quickly finishing off Hirano and Haruna Fukuoka 11-6, 11-8, 13-11.
Both the winners and losers burst into tears.
"We really wanted to win the bronze medal because we
have never won an Olympic medal for Japan and it is the last Games for our
coach," Fukuhara told reporters, with tears coming to her eyes.
She confirmed Saturday that Japanese women's head
coach Kinji Kondo, who was 65 and had 12-year teaching experience in the
national team, would retire after the Beijing Olympics.
"We came here hoping for a medal but the South
Koreans played better than expected," Kondo said.
Japan, which has never won an Olympic table tennis
medal since the sport was introduced at the 1988 Seoul Games, finished third
three times at the biennial world team championships between 2004-2008, while
the last medal South Korean women got at the worlds was in Osaka, 2001.
"We were very sad about our loss to Singapore in the
semifinal, but we regained confidence and were well prepared for the match
against Japan," Kim said.
China's formidable women, undefeated since the start
of the Olympic tournament, take on Singapore in their final later
Sunday.