 |
China's Guo Jingjing (C) wins gold in the 3 metre women's springboard
at the Athens 2004 Olympic Games August 26, 2004.
Guo's compatriot Wu Minxia (R) took the silver and Russia's Yulia
Pakhalina the bronze. (Reuters) |
The names may change. Not the results. China still
rules the Olympic diving pool. The Chinese earned another gold medal -
their fifth of the Athens Games - when Guo Jingjing easily won the women's
3-meter springboard
Thursday night.
Teammate Wu Minxia made it a 1-2 finish for the world's diving
superpower, taking the silver.
"I do not feel any pressure," Guo said matter-of-factly. "I finished my
competition, and I got my gold medal."
The bronze went to Russia's Yulia Pakhalina, who attends the University
of Houston.
It was the fifth straight win on springboard for the Chinese women, and
the five gold medals match the country's total from the Sydney Games in
2000. China can surpass that standard in the final diving event of these
games: men's 10-meter platform, which begins Friday.
"We just need to come up with something so we can beat the Chinese and
stop this process," Pakhalina said. "We feel a little bit unsatisfied
right now."
Imagine how the once-dominant US team must be feeling as it faces its
most dismal Olympics since 1912, the only time the Americans failed to win
at least one diving medal. They have yet to climb the podium in Athens.
Rachelle Kunkel of West Valley City, Utah, finished ninth on the
springboard, and the platform men aren't considered strong medal
contenders.
Kunkel admitted she was in awe of the Chinese and Russians. "They're
unbelievable," she said.
China won its first springboard gold in 1988, when Gao Min
captured the first of two straight titles. Fu Mingxia pulled off the
double in Atlanta and Sydney before giving way to Guo, who was the silver
medalist four years ago.
Australia's Irina Lashko led heading into the final, but faded badly
after a strong first dive. The three-time Olympian, who competed for
Russia at the 1992 and '96 games, dropped to seventh.
Guo never faltered, receiving a perfect mark of 10 on her second dive
and another on her fourth attempt to build a commanding lead. No one else
got so much height off the board, kept her spins so tight or created such
a small splash when entering the water.
Guo had a bit of trouble on the entry of her final dive, receiving her
lowest scores of the night. The large Chinese contingent at the indoor
pool booed lustily, forcing Pakhalina to back away from the board for a
few seconds.
It didn't matter. Guo still finished with 633.15 points, beating out
her teammate's total of 612.00. Pakhalina barely missed the silver,
finishing third with 610.62.
"This is due to the hard work we have put in," Wu said. "The more you
put in, the more you will get back."
(Agencies) |