Fastest and strongest women crowned (China Daily) Updated: 2004-08-23 08:04
The world's fastest and strongest women were crowned at the Olympics on
Saturday as United States swimming sensation Michael Phelps etched his name into
history with a sixth gold medal.
Doping controversies and wrangles over judging bubbled away on the sidelines
but for once it was sporting stories that dominated on a day which saw 32 gold
medals won and the United States' basketball 'Dream Team' beaten again.
Yulia Nesterenko of Belarus won the last of the day's golds when she blasted
to victory in the women's 100 metres in front of a capacity 70,000-crowd at the
Olympic Stadium.
The win was the first by a non-American winner for 24 years, Nesterenko
taking full advantage of a field missing banned US stars Kelli White and Torri
Edwards, both serving drug bans.
Nesterenko's victory followed a gold medal for Sweden's Carolina Kluft, who
confirmed her status as the world's best all-round female athlete with a
comfortable victory in the heptathlon.
The down-to-earth 21-year-old celebrated by hugging her mother before leading
her fellow competitors around the stadium on a joint lap of honour.
"It was two long days but I am very satisfied. The crowd and the competition
were remarkable," said Kluft, the reigning world champion and best heptathlete
since 1992 and 1996 Olympic champion Jackie Joyner-Kersee.
While track and field events were getting into full swing, the curtain came
down on the swimming with American teenager Phelps making history - without even
getting into the pool.
Phelps earned his record-equalling eighth medal of the games as his
team-mates in the US 4x100 medley relay squad recorded victory with a new world
record of 3min 30.68sec
The 19-year-old, who was awarded a relay medal by virtue of taking part in
the early rounds, now stands alone with Soviet gymnast Alexander Dityatin, who
also won eight at the 1980 Moscow games.
At the end of day eight, the United States led the medal tables with 19
golds, one ahead of China, who added to their tally with wins in weightlifting,
badminton and table-tennis.
While Nesterenko finished the day as world's fastest woman, there was no
doubting who was the strongest. That honour went to super heavyweight Chinese
lifter Tang Gonghong, who won gold with a world-record breaking display.
The 25-year-old Tang, the reigning Asian champion who tips the scales at just
under 120kg, won with a jaw-dropping total of 305kg, which beat her own world
record set earlier this year by 2.5kg.
Later Saturday the United States basketball players suffered their second
defeat of the Olympics and only the fourth in 115 matches in their history when
they lost 94-90 to Lithuania.
The win handed Lithuania a place in the quarter-finals but the Americans
should still qualify with victory over Angola next week.
In other action, British rower Matthew Pinsent made sure of his place in the
pantheon of Olympic greats by winning a gold medal for the fourth consecutive
games in the men's coxless fours.
The British rowers pipped Canada by just eight-hundredths of a second to take
gold. Pinsent, 33, who helped Steve Redgrave to his fifth gold in Sydney four
years ago, has also won golds at the 1992, 1996 and 2000 games.
Britain earned another gold - in the court-room - when they won their legal
battle to have the topsy-turvy result of the three-day eventing equestrian
competition overturned.
Leslie Law was promoted to individual gold medallist while France were
awarded the team gold after the two nations, as well as the United States, went
to arbitration to have Germany removed as winners.
In the men's football tournament, both Iraq and Italy earned 1-0 wins over
Australia and Mali respectively to reach the semi-finals. Iraq play Paraguay in
the semi-finals while Italy face favourites Argentina.
Belgium meanwhile earned their first gold medal of the games thanks to tennis
star and world No 1 Justine Henin-Hardenne who defeated Frenchwoman Amelie
Mauresmo 6-3, 6-3.
But away from the sports arenas the weightlifting drugs crisis showed no sign
of ending as two more failed dope tests were confirmed.
The International Weightlifting Federation (IWF) said super heavyweight
Russian woman weightlifter Albina Khomich had tested positive as Greek officials
confirmed results of bronze medallist Leonidas Sampanis.
A total of 13 athletes - including nine weightlifters - have now failed drug
tests since July 30.
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