? ?
Sports / Other Sports
Lady Luck can be the key, Chinese windsurfer says
By Si Tingting (China Daily)
Updated: 2007-08-25 13:21
QINGDAO: To win gold at a sailing event, competence and confidence aren't
enough. Sometimes, luck has the final say.
For China's top-notch windsurfer Zhou Yuanguo, the good fortune of a
light wind is all he needs to win.
In the just concluded Good Luck Beijing Olympic sailing test event, Zhou
was blown off from his throne in the RS:X Men class by an unusually
strong wind (8m/s, while on average days, just 3m/s) in the final medal
race, finishing a distant ninth place, his worst in the regatta. He lost
his gold to New Zealander Tom Ashley, who loves stronger winds.
However, Zhou's excellent performance in the six preliminary races got
him four bullets to secure second place on the podium.
"When the wind is weak, Zhou is the strongest of us. The wind changed
today. We couldn't have the chance to catch up with him until the wind
gets stronger," Ashley said after he won gold. "I think Zhou and me are
the fastest among all the athletes," he added.
Deshopol Phuanukoolnont, the Thai windsurfing coach, bet on Zhou's
victory two weeks before the medal race.
"I had been observing Zhou for the past 10 years, and I think Zhou is No
1 in light wind," the Thai coach said.
Phuanukoolnont's prescription for Zhou is to get physically stronger so
that he can control the boat in strong winds.
Zhou, a native in Northeast China's Liaoning Province, is 174cm in
height, the smallest of the windsurfers at the Qingdao regatta.
"I think I still have a big gap with the world's leading windsurfers.
After the event, I need to analyze my sailing, and try to fill this gap
for future races," Zhou said.
As the only Chinese who managed to get a medal at the Olympic sailing
test event a year before the Games, Zhou carried on his shoulder the
Chinese sailing team's ambition to win gold at the Beijing Games.
Head of the Chinese sailing team Yao Xinpei once hinted in an interview
with China Daily that China was targeting gold in either the RS:X Men or
RS:X Women or Laser Radial at the Beijing Games. But in this year's test,
RS:X Women sailor Yin Jian managed fifth place in the overall standing
while the 20-year-old Laser Radial sailor Xu Lijia failed to reach the
final medal race.
Zhou seems to have the best chance to win gold next year.
But before that, 30-year-old Zhou still has to fight to win the Olympic
qualification test next April with his strong and much younger teammates,
like the 18-year-old Fang Zhennan and 23-year-old He Feng, who won the
gold and silver respectively in RS:X Men in last year's test event.
"My biggest challenge is my teammates right now," Zhou said. "They are
younger than me, but I think I'm stronger in terms of experience."
Zhou's best Olympic performance was a fifth place at the 2000 Sydney
Games, where he unwittingly violated race rules banning contact between
competitors and coaches within five minutes of races when he handed his
coach a jacket.
"He had good chances to win a bronze or even a silver without that
incident," Yao told China Daily last week.
Zhou's presence at this regatta revealed his attempt to conclude his
sailing career with an Olympic medal.
"I wanted to retire from sailing in 2005 as I really felt tired then. But
I found I was still able to play my game. Right now I spend six days of a
week on the water," Zhou said.
Aiming to take advantage of the home turf and favorable wind conditions
in Qingdao, Zhou believes an Olympic gold is not far way.
Top Sports News ?
* Brazil break duck with Robinho hat-trick
* China coach tries to save job in Asian Cup
* NFL hopes its game doesn't get lost in translation in China
* Late starters face uphill task in China
* LA Galaxy to present Beckham on July 13
Today's Top News ?
* China set to pass anti-monopoly law next week
* 1.33b yuan earmarked to cut pollution
* US bomb kills 3 British soldiers
* Minister confident of quality victory
* 'Special war' launched to raise quality
Most Commented/Read Stories in 48 Hours
Learn Chinese, Learn Mandarin online, Learning Materials, Mandarin audio lessons, Chinese writing lessons, Chinese vocabulary lists, About chinese characters, News in Chinese, Go to China, Travel to China, Study in China, Teach in China, Dictionaries, Learn Chinese Painting, Your name in Chinese, Chinese calligraphy, Chinese songs, Chinese proverbs, Chinese poetry, Chinese tattoo, Beijing 2008 Olympics, Mandarin Phrasebook, Chinese editor, Pinyin editor, China Travel, Travel to Beijing, Travel to Tibet

No comments:
Post a Comment