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Sports / Athletics

China’s young stars top Asian medals tally

Published: 08 Jul 2013 - 01:03 am | Last Updated: 31 Jan 2022 - 02:16 pm


Men’s 200 metres gold medal winner from China Xie Zhenye (left), silver medal winner from Saudi Arabia Fahad Mohammed Alsubaie (right) and bronze medal winner from Japan Kei Takase cross the finish line on the fifth and final day of Asian Athletics Championship 2013 at the Chatrapati Shivaji Stadium in Pune, yesterday. 

PUNE, India: China’s young athletics brigade showed they were ready for higher honours after dominating the medals tally in the Asian track and field championships which ended in Pune yesterday.

China’s team of the future finished the continental meet with 16 gold medals from the 42 events contested, way ahead of the five golds won by second-placed Bahrain and four each by Japan and Saudi Arabia.

Su Bingtian, who retained his 100m title beating Asian record-holder and favourite Samuel Francis of Qatar, turns 24 next month. The fastest woman sprinter, Wei Yongli, is 21.

Wang Jianan, who won the men’s long jump, is not even 17 years of age. Compatriots Li Ling and Li Lingwei, winners of the women’s pole vault and javelin events with new meet records, are both aged 24.

Gold medallists at the Asian meet earn a direct entry to next month’s world championships in Moscow, but Chinese head coach Feng Shuyong insisted the idea to bring juniors to Pune was to help them gain experience.

“Most of our top athletes have already qualified for the world championships and are busy preparing for them,” Feng said. “This was a good chance to have our youngsters compete against the best in Asia.”

Belayneh Betlhem Desalegn of the United Arab Emirates clinched a double when she added the 5,000 metres gold medal to the 1,500m title she won on Friday.

Japanese athletes were unstoppable in the 400m hurdles as Yashuhiro Fueki won the men’s event and Satomi Kubokura coasted home in the women’s final.

Xie Zhenye of China took the men’s 200m in 20.87 seconds, while Viktoriya Zyabkina became the first sprinter from Kazakhstan to win the women’s race when she dashed home in 23.62secs.

Musaab Abdelrahman Balla of Qatar emerged an easy winner in the men’s 800m and Wang Chunyu of China won the gold in the women’s event.

Saudi Arabia ended on a high note when Mohammed Alsubiani, Mohammed Ali Albishi, Mohammad Obaid Alsalhi and Yousef Ahmed Masrahi won the men’s 4x400 relay in a new meet record time. AFP