HANGZHOU, China — Asian Games hosts China claimed the first gold of the continental sporting showpiece on Sunday when Zou Jiaqi and Qiu Xiuping won the lightweight women’s doubles sculls title in the rowing.
On an overcast morning at the Fuyang Water Sports Centre, the Chinese duo dominated, clocking a time of seven minutes and 6.78 seconds to finish nearly 10 seconds clear of Uzbek runners-up Luizakhon Islomova and Malika Tagmatova.
Indonesia took the bronze.
About 12,400 athletes from 45 nations are competing for 481 gold medals across a huge program of 40 sports at the Hangzhou Games in eastern China, which were delayed by a year due to COVID-19.
China topped the medals table in the last 10 Asian Games and are almost certain to do so again on home soil.
XI OPENS HANGZHOU ASIAN GAMES, CEREMONY DAZZLESChina’s President Xi Jinping opened the COVID-delayed 19th Asian Games in the Eastern city of Hangzhou during a spectacular and at times raucous ceremony on Saturday, which organizers hope will lift the mood in a nation struggling with an economic slump.
Spectators in the city’s 80,000 capacity stadium let out a huge roar as Mr. Xi was introduced and walked in to sit with visiting dignitaries including International Olympic Committee President Thomas Bach and Syria President Bashar al-Assad.
The Games, delayed by a year due to China’s measures to combat the COVID-19 pandemic, will be the country’s biggest sporting event in over a decade in several metrics, with around 12,000 athletes from 45 nations competing in 40 sports.
After the Chinese flag was brought out, the first team out was Afghanistan, whose female athletes, based abroad due to sport for women being banned by the Taliban, walked together with their male counterparts.
Their flagbearers carried the tri-color flag for Afghanistan which is used by international resistance movements and shunned by the Taliban.
Several teams including Chinese Taipei were vocally welcomed by the spectators, but none more than the home team, whose athletes are expected to dominate the medals table once again.
The Games also mark a stark contrast to the cheerless Beijing 2022 Winter Olympics that took place under China’s strict zero COVID conditions, which lasted for nearly three years from January 2020 until late 2022.
In an often spellbinding ceremony intended to burnish Hangzhou’s status as one of China’s centers of technology and creativity, dozens of balletic dancers hovered above a digitally-projected lake in the wake of a flotilla of sail-boards.
In a modern take on the traditional lighting of the cauldron, a huge, digitally animated torchbearer “ran” the length of the stadium before settling to loom above the actual torch-bearer, China’s Olympic champion swimmer Wang Shun.
In synch, the pair lit a huge, multi-pronged cauldron, prompting another bout of cheering and, soon after, a digital firework display.
TRAFFIC CONTROLA sizeable “traffic control area” around the city’s Olympic stadium was blocked off, at least one metro station was shut and deliveries were disrupted on Saturday.
Some felt the security measures, always tight wherever Mr. Xi goes for a visit, were overdone.
One local social media user was told that due to safety rules surrounding the Games a pencil sharpener they had ordered could not be delivered.”How dangerous is the sharpener?,” the user wrote. “Will I be able to use it to kill foreign country leaders?”
Organizers have not disclosed spending on the Games, though the Hangzhou government has said it spent more than 200 billion yuan ($30 billion) in the five years through 2020 on transport infrastructure, stadiums, accommodation and other facilities.
Organizers hoped a high-tech opening ceremony on Saturday would help drum up excitement for the Games. Interest at home has been muted as the economy sputters and some question the cost of hosting the mega-event.
GEOPOLITICAL TENSIONSThe official slogan of the event, “Heart to Heart, @Future,” represents the goal of uniting the people and countries of Asia through these games, officials have said, but geopolitical tensions and rivalries threatened to overshadow that effort this week.
On Friday, India protested over a visa issue that affected three of its athletes at the games, leading India’s sports minister Anurag Thakur to cancel his trip.
Japan’s top government spokesperson said on Tuesday that Tokyo would do its utmost to ensure the safety of Japanese nationals in China as the release of treated radioactive water from the Fukushima nuclear power plant into the sea has chilled ties.
“We should promote peace through sports, adhere to the principle of goodwill towards neighbors and mutual benefit and … resist the cold war mentality and confrontation between camps,” Mr. Xi told dignitaries including Bach and Assad at a banquet before the ceremony on Saturday, state news agency Xinhua reported.
Some analysts said Mr. Xi also wishes to send a message to Asian leaders that China is open for business.
“Xi Jinping wants to use these Games to showcase that China is still an economic leader, the economic locomotive of Asia … as a response to Western criticism,” said Marcus Chu of Hong Kong’s Liangnan University who researches Chinese sports-politics. — Reuters