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Women's volleyball face USA tonight

Friday, 15th August 2008 ~ Maggie ~ Link ~ Comments (0)

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China women's volleyball team is 2-1 heading into tonight's 8:00 p.m. game against the United States. Earlier in the tournament, China beat Venezuela (3-0) and Poland (3-1) as expected, before losing a close one to Cuba (3-2). The last three sets, all won by Cuba, were each decided by only two points.

In its match against the USA tonight, China faces coach Lang Ping, a key player on China's 1984 gold medal-winning team. She is known in the United States as "Jenny," and despite leaving China to coach one of its volleyball rivals, remains beloved on the mainland.

A win tonight against the Americans or Sunday against Japan would clinch China's spot in the next round. China hopes a little home advantage in these Olympics will help it repeat its Athens gold medal performance, but competition is fierce this time around, with Brazil as the favorite and five other teams seriously challenging for medals. Olympic volleyball, like basketball, begins with two six-team pools, whittled down to an eight-team playoff after each team plays five games.

Here are China's leaders in four statistical categories over three games (more stats available here):

Spikes
1. Wang Yimei – 39
2. Zhou Suhong – 24
3. Ma Yunwen – 24

Kill blocks
1. Ma Yunwen – 11
2. Zhao Ruirui – 7
3. Feng Kun – 4

Aces
1. Zhou Suhong – 7
2. Ma Yunwen – 5
3. Zhao Ruirui - 3

Digs
1. Zhang Na - 41
2. Zhou Suhong – 36
3. Feng Kun - 18

Image: BOCOG

Tags: Beijing Olympics, Olympics, volleyball, Zhao Ruirui

The tickets are all sold, but the venues are not full

Friday, 15th August 2008 ~ Maggie ~ Link ~ Comments (0)

Plenty of open seats in Wukesong Arena at the China-Angola men's basketball game
Plenty of open seats in Wukesong Arena at the China-Angola men's basketball game
I started seeing them during Good Luck Beijing test events in Wukesong Basketball Arena, the Water Cube and Ying Tung Natatorium. I noticed them again when the University of Memphis came to play a three-game series against the Chinese men's national basketball team. I saw them during the Stankovic Cup, the FIBA Diamond Ball men's and women's basketball tournament and —maybe most surprisingly—in the games that Kobe Bryant and Lebron James played with USA basketball in Shanghai.

I am talking about empty seats—big swaths of blue, red or grey in arenas and gymnasiums. I saw more again as I watched the opening games of the beach volleyball tournament, and when I attended Olympic tennis, beach volleyball and basketball.

Before Memphis played its second game against the Chinese national team in Yangjiang this spring, assistant coach Rod Strickland looked up at the stands an hour before game time and wondered, "Will they fill it up?"

"This is China," I assured him. "They can fill up any venue they want to." But when the game tipped off, the crowd in that gym was below capacity. Yao Ming, Yi Jianlian and Wang Zhizhi were all out of action, but in a city of 2.6 million people, precious few of whom will have the chance to see Team China in action in Beijing, each one of the 4,000 seats should have been taken. And how can you explain empty chairs at the recent basketball games, featuring China at full strength and starring NBA players who have millions of fans here?

Much has been made of the tickets to these Olympics being sold out, thanks in large part to the large number of affordable tickets being made available domestically. But I wonder if that actually means that the venues will host capacity crowds. When I waited in lines in ticketing phases 3 and 4, I met more than a few people who were waiting in line for their bosses, who wanted tickets to give away to clients. I always found more of these ticket buyers near the front of the line—on the clock and under the gun, they seemed more likely to arrive extremely early.

So what happens when the boss gives a pair of tickets to a fencing preliminary to a client who decides that seeing the event is not worth the time she would need to spend out of the office? What happens when he gives tickets to a client in Sichuan, who decides he can't afford the flight to Beijing and the hotel stay?

This is just one of the many ways that sold out tickets can be prevented from turning into packed gymnasiums. I don't doubt that there are enough sports fans in Beijing to fill all of the Olympic venues—I have gotten calls and messages from Chinese friends desperately seeking a way to buy tickets to taekwondo, basketball and swimming. I had to explain to them that many of my tickets were bought in the United States from people who discovered at the last minute that they couldn't come... visa restrictions, maybe?

I have a feeling that we will see more empty seats than many people expect. If my experience is any indication, something is getting in the way of getting tickets in the hands of people who can actually attend the games.

Related: Washington Post on attendance problems

Tags: basketball, beach volleyball, Beijing Olympics, Olympic ticketing, swimming, tennis

Li Na beats Venus to reach singles tennis semis

Friday, 15th August 2008 ~ Maggie ~ Link ~ Comments (0)

Another world-class tennis tournament, another semifinal appearance for a Chinese player. Li Na (李娜) pulled off a huge upset and kept China's tennis singles medal hopes alive when she beat Venus Williams (USA)—7-5, 7-5—Thursday night in Beijing. Li, ranked 42nd in the world, dropped the Wimbledon champion and 8th ranked player in two sets.

Olympic quarterfinalist Li Na
Olympic quarterfinalist Li Na

Li came back from a 4-1 deficit to force and win a tie break in the first set. She carried that momentum into the next set, going up 3-1. Venus fought back to take three sets in a row and a 4-3 lead, but couldn't hold on to her lead. The win puts Li into the semifinals, where she will face the winner of a match between Jelena Jankovic (Serbia) and Dinara Safina (Russia).

With her win at the 2006 Australian Open, Li became the first woman from China to win a WTA singles event. Since then, she has three third-place finishes in Grand Slam events.

Li is the last woman standing among China's four entries in the tournament. Zheng Jie (郑洁), hot off a run to the Wimbledon semifinals, lost in the third round of the singles tournament to Russia's Safina (6-4, 6-3), the sixth ranked player in the world.

Alize Cornet of France dispatched Peng Shuai (彭帅) in the second round, and Yan Zi (晏紫) was the first of the Chinese women to be knocked out, losing in the first round to Vera Zvonareva (Russia).

Zheng gets a chance to avenge her loss when she and Yan, face Safina and Svetlana Kuznetsova in the doubles quarterfinal on Friday, August 15. The Chinese pair got there by beating a Swiss duo, 6-3; 7-6(2).

On the men's side, China has been much less competitive. Xu Xinyuan, Sun Peng and Zeng Shaoxuan all lost in short matches—55 minutes for Xu, 1 hour 6 minutes for Zeng and 1 hour and 7 minutes for Sun. Zeng and Xu also played doubles, losing in the first round.

Related: China's upset-minded tennis team gets its draws
Li Na image: 163.com

Tags: Beijing Olympics, Li Na, Olympics, Peng Shuai, tennis, Venus Williams, Yan Zi, Zheng Jie