China unveiled a 928-strong delegation for the Doha Asian Games, led by 
Olympic champion 110m hurdler Liu Xiang but made up mostly of newcomers to 
international competition. 
 
 
 |  Chinese sports chieves attend a press 
 conference on China's delegation for the Doha Asian Games on Friday, Nov 
 17, 2006.[Xinhua]
   | 
The squad includes 647 athletes whose goal is 
to ensure that the 2008 Beijing Olympic Games host nation wins the most medals 
at the December 1-15 Asiad. 
"Our goals is to top the medals table in terms of gold medals and also in 
terms of total medals and to ensure that China dominates the Asian Games for the 
seventh edition in a row," Cai Zhenhua, a deputy head of the delegation, told a 
press conference. 
China will field more then 400 rookies in Doha who have no experience of 
major international events, Chinese officials said. 
By contrast, several established stars with world and Olympic titles will be 
staying at home. 
China has topped the Asian Games medals table since 1982 and its goal in Doha 
is to retain that position while grooming a new generation of medal hopes for 
the 2008 Olympics. 
"Our first goal is to give younger competitors experience, to speed up the 
training of the younger competitors and secondly to rest top athletes who have 
had too much competition and need a break," said deputy delegation head and 
deputy sports minister Duan Shijie. 
Liu Xiang, the Athens Olympic champion who set a new world record in July 
this year, will lead the 41-strong athletics team that will be without 10,000m 
women's Olympic champion Xing Huina, recovering from a knee injury 
In swimming, Athens 100m breaststroke champion Luo Xuejuan was left out of 
the women's team while several teenage newcomers were drafted.