Good Emmons: Katerina claims
shooting gold. (Photo credit: Getty)
(BEIJING, August 9) -- A dazzling
first day at Beijing 2008 got off to a storming start
with seven gold medals seized by competitors in five
separate sports and challengers in a further 13 sports
beginning their Olympic quest.
The pace was set by the first gold
medalist of the Games,24-year-old Katerina Emmons of the
Czech Republic, who claimed a new Olympic record in the
Women's 10m Air Rifle of 103.5 points in the final, which
gave her an overall total of 503.5. Emmons also broke the
Olympic qualification record with a perfect score of
400.
The silver medal went to Russia's
Lioubov Galkina and the bronze to Snjezana Pejcic of
Croatia.
Home-favorite and defending champion
Du Li of China finished a disappointing fifth, while World
No. 1 Sonja Pfeilschifter of Germany failed to reach the
final -- however China didn't have long to wait to claim
its first shooting gold of the Games.
Twenty-two-year-old Pang Wei took
the Men's 10m Air Pistol gold, with the Republic of Korea's
Jin Jong-oh claiming silver and Kim Jong-su collecting
bronze for the Democratic People's Republic of
Korea.
Emmons' Czech teammate David
Kostelecky stands in first place after the first three
qualification rounds in the Men's Trap. Italian shooters,
Athens 2004 silver medalist Giovanni Pellielo and Erminio
Frasca are one target behind, with the two remaining
qualification rounds continuing tomorrow morning, August
10. The final round begins at 3:00 p.m. local time (UCT/GMT
+8).
Heave: China's Chen XieXia hoists gold. (Photo
credit: Getty)
Pang Wei wasn't China's first
medalist of the day -- that honor went to 25-year-old
world record holder Chen Xiexia, who won the 48 kilogram
Weightlifting competition with a new Olympic Record total
score of 212kg. Turkey's Sibel Ozkan won the silver medal
with 199kg, and Chen Wei-Ling of Chinese Taipei seized
bronze with 196kg.
Defending gold medalist and previous
Olympic Record-holder Nurcan Taylan of Turkey bombed in the
Snatch, which knocked her out of the
competition.
Spaniard Samuel Sanchez captured
Cycling gold in the Men's Road Race. Sanchez out sprinted
Italy's Davide Rebellin in a tight finish. Rebellin took
silver with the bronze medal going to Fabian Cancellara of
Switzerland.
America seized gold, silver and
bronze in the Fencing Women's Individual Sabre with
reigning Olympic Champion Mariel Zagunis defeating teammate
Sada Jacobson 15-8 in the final to retain her crown, and
Rebecca Ward beating Russian fencer Sofiya Velikaya 15-14
to claim the bronze medal. Reigning world champion Elena
Nechaeva of Russia crashed out early on, while Athens 2004
silver medalist Tan Xue of China lost in the
quarterfinals.
Magnificent Mariel: Zagunis grabs fencing gold
for USA. (Photo credit: Getty)
Alina Alexandra Dumitru of Romania
defeated Cuba's Yanet Bermoy with an ippon in 1:20 to win
gold in the Judo Women's -48kg final. Japanese defending
champion Tani Ryoko defeated Lyudmila Bogdanova of Russia,
also with an ippon, to claim a bronze medal.
The legendary 33-year-old joins an
elite list of Olympians to win medals at five consecutive
Games, having struck gold in Athens and Sydney, and silver
in Atlanta and Barcelona. Paula Belen Pareto of Argentina
defeated Pak Ok-song of the Democratic People's Republic of
Korea to win the other bronze medal.
In the Men's -60kg contest, Choi
Min-ho from the Republic of Korea won gold by defeating
World No.1 Ludwig Paischer of Austria with an ippon in
2:14. Choi took just four seconds to beat World No. 2 Dutch
judoka Ruben Houkes in the semifinal. Houkes took a bronze,
with Rishod Sobirov of Uzbekistan claiming the other bronze
medal.
Away from the medals, 13 other
sports began on Day 1.
Records tumbled at the Water Cube as
the Beijing 2008 Swimming competition splashed into style
with Michael Phelps of the USA setting a new Olympic record
of 4:07.82 in the heats for the Men's 400m Individual
Medley. Also through to Sunday (August 10) morning's final
are Ryan Lochte (USA), Gergo Kis (Hungary), Alessio
Boggiatto (Italy), Brian Johns (Canada) and Thiago Pereira
(Brazil).
Five swimmers broke the old Olympic
Record of 1:00.01 in the Men's 100m Breaststroke. Alexander
Dale Oen of Norway was the top finisher with a time of
59.41. Japan's Kitajima Kosuke, Hugues Duboscq of France,
Australian Brenton Rickard and Cameron van der Burgh of
South African also fractured the previous best.
Jensen Larsen from the United States
leads the eight qualifiers in the Men's 400m Freestyle
preliminaries clocking 3:43.10. Favorite for the event,
Grant Hackett of Australia, came in at an unexpected fifth
fastest qualifier for the final, which will be held at
10:24 a.m. local time (UCT/GMT + 8) on Sunday, August
10.
Another US swimmer, 15-year-old
Elizabeth Beisel finished first in the heats of Women's
Individual Medley with a time of 4:34.55, ahead of
compatriot World record holder Katie Hoff. Stephanie Rice
(Australia), Alessia Filippi (Italy), defending Olympic
champion Yana Martynova (Russia), Li Xuanxu (China), Kirsty
Coventry (Zimbabwe) and Hannah Miley (Great Britain) will
contest Sunday's final.
The Beijing 2008 Basketball
tournament tipped off with six women's round-robin
preliminary matches.
In group A, Australia comfortably
beat Belarus by a 19-point margin, 83-64 with Boomers
captain Lauren Jackson netting 18 points. Asian Champion
Republic of Korea edged out World No. 4 Brazil 68-62 in
overtime, and Russia beat Latvia 62-57.
Mali gave New Zealand a surprise run
for their money in group B -- leveling the scores briefly
in the final quarter at 64-64, before the Kiwis ran out
winners, 76-72. China edged out Spain 67-64 in another
close encounter, and tournament favorites the USA thrashed
the Czech Republic 97-57 in the final group game of the
day.
The Beijing 2008 Women's Football
tournament continued with 1-0 group game wins for Sweden,
Germany, the United States and Norway. Brazil defeated the
Democratic People's Republic of Korea 2-1, while Canada and
China drew 1-1.
In the Women's Volleyball
tournament, there were 3-1 pool A wins for Italy, who edged
out Russia and Serbia, with World No. 1 Brazil recording a
straight sets win over Algeria. In pool B, defending
Olympic champion China defeated Venezuela, Cuba beat Poland
in straight sets and the USA beat Japan 3-1 in the final
game of the day.
In Women's Handball, there were
opening game wins for France, Hungary, Romania, Norway and
Germany.
Elsewhere, the opening day saw the
start of competition in Artistic Gymnastics, Equestrian
Eventing, Rowing and Sailing, and opening rounds of the
Olympic Boxing and Badminton tournaments.
Those are the highlights from Day 1.
There are 15 more days like this to come -- so hold on
to your hats, folks -- it's going to be a thrilling 16-day
ride.