Chinese teenage sensation Guo Yue pulled herself together at 1-3
down, beating compatriot Li Xiaoxia 4-3 in the women's singles
final of the world table tennis championships on Saturday.
Zhang Yining and Guo Yan, both of China, picked bronze
medals.
The 18-year-old Guo was jolted awake in the fifth set, sweeping
three sets in a row to triumph 8-11, 11-7, 4-11, 2-11, 11-5,
11-2,11-8.
Fourth-seeded Guo, who stunned defending Olympic and world
champion Zhang Yining in the semifinals, didn't find her touch
until the end of the fourth set, in which she had once trailed
0-9.
Guo used her forehand topspin and lightning backhand flicks to
win the fifth set 11-5 and then the sixth 11-2.
Both players were technically correct in the final set but the
championship game was usually a battle of minds. At the end of the
fourth set the momentum was with Li, now it was with Guo.
Li looked disconsolate as she made errors with Guo moving into a
4-0 lead. When the players changed ends Guo was 5-0 ahead,
prompting Li to call "Time Out". She returned to serve a clean
ace.
Guo called "Time Out" with a 7-3 lead and then went ahead
10-4.
Saving four match points, Li closed it to 8-10. Then Guo served
a topspin which looked like an underspin, Li misjudged the spin and
returned well off the table.
"It was a difficult game," said Guo. "But a more difficult game
will be the doubles semifinal against South Korea."
Guo, who won the mixed doubles with Wang Liqin on Friday, will
take on Kim Kyung Ah and Park Mi Young on Sunday.
The other semifinal is between China's Olympic champs Wang
Nan/Zhang Yining and Singapore's Li Jia Wei/Wang Yue Gu.
"I was a bit hesitant and made quite a few mistakes early in the
final," Guo said. "When I was cornered, I told myself to fight to
the end."
When asked if a world title would ensure an Olympic berth in
2008, Guo said she was not sure.
Li Xiaoxia, however, is hopeful of an Olympic ticket.
"I lost the final but had won the semifinal against Guo Yan,"
said Li. "With the Olympics one year to go, a lot of things will
happen."
Chinese coaches are mulling over the selection of three singles
players for the Beijing Games. Zhang Yining, a Beijing native
and a grand slam winner of Olympic, world championships, World Cup
singles titles, will be a logical choice, while Wang Nan, also a
grand slam winner, is being considered for one more Olympic
chance.
Guo Yue, Guo Yan and Li Xiaoxia will have to fight for the last
Olympic ticket.
The problem is Guo Yue hailing from the same province with Wang
Nan. Playing in an Olympic Games is a huge honor for Chinese local
teams. If either of Guo and Wang, both from northeastern China's Liaoning team, makes it to the Beijing Games,
the other has to go, said a Chinese team official.
In the last event of the day, Chen Qi/Ma Lin beat Wang Liqin/
Wang Hao in the all-Chinese men's doubles final, 6-11, 11-7,
6-11,11-3, 11-9, 11-9.
While the Wangs trailed 8-10 in the sixth set, a return by Wang
Hao clipped the net to fall on Chen's table.
Following the lucky point, Wang missed an easy kill to hand the
title to Chen/Ma.
Hong Kong duo Ko Lai Chak/Li Ching and Chinese Taipei's Chang
Yen-Shu/Chiang Peng-Lung took bronze medals.
Earlier, Olympic champion Ryu Seung Min from South Korea made
the world championships an Asian meet after beating Germany's Timo
Boll in the men's singles quarter-finals.
Before the Ryu-Boll match, Belarus' Vladimir Samsonov had lost
to world No. 1 Ma Lin of China, 11-9, 11-7, 12-10, 9-11, 11-6.
Boll, the third seed and last hope of Europe, wilted under
barrages of Ryu's forehand topspin strikes.
The turning point came in the second set, when Ryu erased Boll's
6-0 lead with a 11-1 run.
Boll saved two match points in the fourth set but a return to
the net and a wayward backhand shot ended his Zagreb campaign.
"Boll looked very nervous," commented Ryu after the game.
"I had made a lot of mistakes," said Boll. "But I have tried my
best."
Ryu will take on defending champion Wang Liqin from China.
Wang Liqin, twice world champion, beat fellow Chinese Hao Shuai
11-7, 11-5, 11-8, 11-8.
Earlier, Ma Lin trounced sixth seed Samsonov 11-9, 11-7, 12-10,
9-11, 11-6 in a clash of two hungry tigers.
Ma has won four World Cups, but has never owned a world
championship or Olympic singles title.
Samsonov has never claimed a world championship either, although
he has won three European top honors and two World Cups.
Ma Lin, twice world runner-up, tried to avoid long rallies with
the 1.90m-tall Samsonov as the penholder attacked early with
powerful forehand.
The tactics worked well.
"We know each other's play and today's game was just a normal
one to me," said Ma.
"Ma Lin is very difficult. I need something special in my game
to beat him," said Samsonov.
In the other quarter-final, Chinese Wang Hao, a surprise loser
to Ryu Seung Min in the 2004 Olympic final, beat South Korean Joo
Se Hyuk 11-4, 11-9, 11-3, 11-3.
(Xinhua News Agency May 27, 2007)