Sun finally shines at Asian Games before flags fall

Published August 20, 2018
JAKARTA: China’s Sun Yang competes on way to winning the men’s 200m freestyle swimming final during the 18th Asian Games on Sunday.—AFP
JAKARTA: China’s Sun Yang competes on way to winning the men’s 200m freestyle swimming final during the 18th Asian Games on Sunday.—AFP

JAKARTA: After waiting so long to win this title, Sun Yang really wanted to see his flag flying at the Asian Games. The China’s greatest swimmer finally won the 200-metre freestyle gold after placing second at the 2010 and ‘14 editions of the continental games.

Sun, a three-time Olympic gold medalist and nine-time world champion, had straddled the lane rope and held both arms up in triumph after touching the wall in 1 minute 45.43 seconds on Sunday on the first night of finals.

He later climbed a tiered platform full of photographers to shake hands with his supporters in the stands, and choked back tears as he returned to the pool deck.

Everything was going to plan until he was standing atop the podium and a technical malfunction resulted in the flags of the three medallists crashing to the ground. The 6-foot-7 (2-metre) Sun got off the podium, walked to some officials and demanded they do it again.

The flags were re-attached to the broken hoist but couldn’t be raised as the anthems were replayed. Sun later played down the incident, saying he was just relieved to win the event.

“I’ve waited eight years for this title,” Sun said. “People worried more for me over the 200 [they] don’t worry as much for the longer distances.

“I think my experience and aggressiveness were the keys. It is a good start for the Chinese men’s swimming team.”

Sun is targeting victories in every freestyle event from the 200- to the 1,500-metres and kicked it off with a comfortable win, finishing more than a second clear of Kats­uhiro Matsumoto of Japan.

China won four of the first seven swimming golds, edging arch-rivals Japan by one with five days remaining in the pool.

Rikako Ikee led the Japanese women’s 4x100-metre relay team off to a games record after Daiya Seto’s win in the men’s 200-metre butterfly and Satomi Suzuki’s win in the women’s 100 breaststroke.

China claimed the first gold medal of the games in the morning session with Sun Peiyuan’s acrobatic victory in wushu’s changquan discipline. Sun scored 9.75 to claim a gold medal in the same city where he won the world title in 2015, holding off local hope Edgar Marvelo and Tsai Tse-min of Taiwan.

There were 21 finals on the program for the day across the host cities of Jakarta and Palembang.

Taiwan won the first of the gold medals in Palembang on the island of Sumatra and more than 400 kilometres (250 miles) northwest of the capital with Lin Ying-shin and Lu Shao-chuan combining for a games record 494.1 points in the 10-metre air rifle mixed team final.

Also in Palembang, a joint Koreas rowing team finished last in the first heat of the lightweight men’s four competition behind Indonesia, Uzbekistan and Hong Kong.

South Koreans Kim Su-min and Park Tae-hyun and North Koreans Yun Chol Jin and Kim Chol Jin only started training together last month after their countries agreed to enter joint teams for three rowing events, a dragon boat crew and women’s basketball.

The South Koreans were more successful in their traditional form of martial arts, securing two of the first taekwondo poomsae gold medals ever awarded at the Asian Games.

Defia Ronsmaniar won Indonesia’s first gold after beating Marjan Salahshouri of Iran in the women’s individual poomsae final. Thailand upset South Korea for the women’s team title.

Mongolia opened their gold medal account when Bekhbayer Erdenebat beat North Korea’s Kang Kum Song in the men’s 57-kilogram freestyle wrestling final.

India made up for two-time Olympic wrestling medalist Kumar Sushil’s shocking first-round loss when Barjang Bajrang won the 65-kilogram class.

Published in Dawn, August 20th, 2018

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