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Women to rule at Doha tennis arena

(Xinhua)
Updated: 2006-11-17 09:57

Four years ago, Chinese tennis players suffered a heavy trauma at the Busan Asian Games, hoping to chalking up at least one gold but coming back even without a single semifinalist.

A bitter ending as it was, the Busan Games dramatically became a crucial turning point, since which the tennis governing body had taken a lot of initiatives to give a leg up to the sport in China, with boosting the female players in the core and the doubles event as its priority.


China's Li Na returns a shot to Russia's Svetlana Kuznetsova during their quarter-final match at China Open in Beijing September 22, 2006.[File Photo/Reuters]

As a result, the professionalized tennis with Chinese characteristics has finally took its root and sprouted in Chinese soil during the following three years' time. And China has gradually set up its image as a tennis upstart in Asia and even in the world after a string of breakthroughs in women's events of international level including the Grand Slams titles.

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So the upcoming 15th Doha Asian Games tennis tournament, where Chinese have harvested at least one gold in each edition since 1986 with the Busan Games as the sole vacuum, will be a best forum for Chinese tennis players to establish hegemony in Asia.

Chinese women's number one Li Na, ranked 22nd in the world now, has toppled Japanese veteran Ai Sugiyama to be the Asian number one. She has notched up many impressive wins over the world top 10 players en route to the best 20th ranking in August this season.

The top favorite in women's singels will be strengthened by fellow Chinese Zheng Jie, a specialist in doubles event but also among the best singles players in Asia. Ranked 34th in the world, the 23-year-old will join Li to keep alive the hopes of claiming the gold in singles when 26th-ranked Ai Sugiyama decared her pulling out from Doha in this year's China Open.

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