Chinese paddlers continue winning streak at WTT Champions Incheon
Time:2024-05-20 04:45:16 Source:healthViews(143)
Chinese paddlers dominated the WTT Champions Incheon as all seven players secured their places in the quarterfinals in Incheon on Friday.
In the men's singles, world No. 3 and second-seeded Liang Jingkun came from behind to see off Slovenian Darko Jorgic 3-1 (7-11, 12-10, 11-7, 11-7).
"I had played with Darko Jorgic several times before, so I prepared well for this match. I was not fully mobilized at the start, which led to the loss of the first game. After that I adjusted my mentality, tried to fight point by point and finally sealed the win," Liang said.
Third seed Ma Long got past South Korean paddler Lim Jong-hoon 3-1, while top-seeded Fan Zhendong also advanced.
In the women's singles, world No. 1 and top seed Sun Yingsha got the better of Swedish paddler Linda Bergstrom 11-3, 11-3, 9-11, 13-11 to cruise into the quarterfinals. She will face No. 5 seed Hina Hayata from Japan on Saturday.
Sun admitted her movement at the beginning was quite good, but with the opponent's changing of tactics from the third game, she was too hasty in dealing with some crucial points. In the last game, she calmed herself down to seal the victory.
In another match, third-seeded Wang Yidi beat Romanian Elizabeta Samara 11-4, 10-12, 13-11, 11-2, and will take on Austrian paddler Sofia Polcanova in the quarterfinals.
In the clash with Japan's Miwa Harimoto, world No. 4 Chen Meng sealed a comfortable 11-5, 11-7, 11-8 victory, while second-seeded Wang Manyu bested Chinese Taipei player Cheng I-Ching 11-7, 12-10, 11-6.
As the first WTT Champions Series event on the 2024 calendar, world's top players gathered in Incheon to battle for a prize pool of 300,000 U.S. dollars, while the champions will also earn 1,000 ITTF world ranking points each.
Previous:Democrats seek to seize control of deadlocked Michigan House in special elections
Next:Why the royals are no fans of Buckingham Palace... and what it's really like to live there
You may also like
- GENERAL JACOB NAGEL: Why Israel's failure to strike back at Iran could lead to NUCLEAR WAR
- Japanese PM to US lawmakers: US does not have to confront global challenges alone
- AT&T data breach: Millions of customers caught up in major dark web leak
- US restricts trade with companies tied to drones used by Russia, Houthis
- Wanderlust will spark recovery
- Indigenous deaths in custody haunt Australia
- 3 Body Problem: Lawyer sentenced to death for Lin Qi murder
- HK's West Kowloon arts hub to run out of funds in 2025: CEO
- Emperor Qinshihuang's museum launches online ticket platform for overseas tourists