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China takes lead in Olympic medal table

August 10, 2008 00:00:00


BEIJING (AFP): China took an early lead in the Olympic march to sports supremacy, winning two of the first seven golds when the Beijing Games began in earnest Saturday.

The remaining golds were shared among the United States, Spain, the Czech Republic, Romania and South Korea.

However, it wasn't quite the dream start the Olympic hosts wanted to follow the breathtaking opening ceremony the previous night.

Their hopes were on a golden start with the attention-commanding first medal, but their defending champion Du Li wilted under pressure as Czech shooter Katerina Emmons came through to win with a record-breaking performance.

Pang Wei made amends for China in the shooting, taking the men's 10m Pistol event and Chen Xiexia won the women's 48kg weightlifting title, while Spanish cyclist Samuel Sanchez won the gruelling road race.

Choi Min-Ho won for South Korea in the men's -60kg judo division to add to the silver won by Jin Jong-Oh who was runner-up to Pang in the pistol shoot, and Romania's Alina Dumitru claimed the women's -48kg judo gold.

Mariel Zagunis beat compatriot Sada Jackson in the women's fencing sabre final for the United States sole gold of the day, although they can expect to move up the ranks when the swimming finals begin Sunday.

In the opening session at the pool American ace Michael Phelps opened his quest for eight gold medals and Olympic immortality posting a Games record to a win in his heat of the 400m individual medley.

Phelps was under world record pace for the first half of the race, before easing off to record the fourth fastest time ever.

"I didn't think I'd swim that fast in the preliminaries. I saw the first few heats go out, and I kind of wanted to be the top seed for tomorrow, that is all I went out to do," he said.

The the honour of first on the podium in Beijing went to Emmons who overcame a splitting headache to produce a record-breaking performance in winning the women's 10m air rifle title.

"I couldn't believe it. I had a headache this morning. I felt so terrible that I didn't know how I'd shoot. So to win the first gold medal of this Olympics is pretty amazing," said Emmons who broke Du's Olympic record in the process.

Du, under pressure to produce 'aoyun shoujin' - first Olympic gold - fled the hall in tears, and later said she "wasn't fully prepared for the pressure of competing at home".

But there was no sign of nerves when Chen won her weightlifting gold and set two Olympic records, nor with Pang at the shooting range although team officials did not tell him Du had failed.

"We have to focus on our own performance and this helps me to relax and not come under pressure."


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