The Oakland Press

China’s Yang takes first gold at uneasy Tokyo Games

- By Jake Seiner

TOKYO » Hardly half a day passed before politics, the pandemic and blistering heat impacted events across the Tokyo Olympics.

China’s Yang Qian, at least, stayed right on target.

Yang overtook Anastasiia Galashina of Russia to win the first gold medal of the Tokyo Games in the women’s 10-meter air rifle Saturday. Her last shot was her worst of the finals but still rallied her past Galashina with an Olympicrec­ord score of 251.8. Switzerlan­d’s Nina Christen took bronze.

“It’s unbelievab­le that I can be here,” Yang said through an interprete­r. “I was really nervous. The competitio­n was really tight, but I’m so happy that I could win.”

Galashina led Yang by 0.2 points when they fired almost simultaneo­usly on their last shots. The limited crowd at Asaka Shooting Range let out gasps as the scores posted a split second later.

Yang, a 21-year-old who qualified sixth of the eight medal competitor­s, missed the innermost circle on her final shot, a 9.8 that she figured would cost her gold.

She looked up to see Galashina missed the two center rings. The Russian’s 8.9 meant IOC President Thomas Bach would present Yang the gold medal on a tray — per pandemic protocols — instead of Galashina.

COVID-19 cancellati­on

The first event of the Olympic beach volleyball tournament was canceled because a Czech player tested positive for COVID-19.

Markéta Sluková, who tested positive earlier this week, and partner Barbora Hermannova were eliminated from the tournament.

Already empty because of a ban on fans, the venue at Shiokaze Park was eerily still when the match was supposed to start at 9 a.m. on Saturday, the only sound coming from the incredibly loud cicadas in the nearby trees.

The Japanese team of Megumi Murakami and Miki Ishii earned the win by default after qualifying for the tournament via the entry reserved for the host country. Officially, the Czechs were marked as “Did Not Start,” and their three round-robin opponents will be awarded victories.

Sluková is one of at least three members of the Czech team who have tested positive since their arrival in Japan, including men’s

OndĜej beachþ volleyball player

Peruši . The team has said it’s investigat­ing if the outbreak of COVID-19 is linked to its charter flight to Tokyo.

Palestinia­n pass

An Algerian judo athlete will be sent home after he withdrew from the competitio­n to avoid potentiall­y facing an Israeli opponent.

Fethi Nourine and his coach, Amar Benikhlef, told Algerian media they were withdrawin­g to avoid a possible second-round matchup with Israel’s Tohar Butbul in the men’s 73 kg division on Monday. Nourine was to face Sudan’s Mohamed Abdalrasoo­l in the opening round, with the winner facing Butbul, the fifth seed.

The Internatio­nal Judo Federation’s executive committee has temporaril­y suspended Nourine and Benikhlef, who are likely to face sanctions beyond the Olympics. The Algerian Olympic committee then withdrew both men’s accreditat­ion and made plans to send them home.

Nourine and Benikhlef attribute their stance to their political support for Palestinia­ns.

Sweltering start

Tennis player Daniil Medvedev wants organizers to move matches to the evening after players slogged through their opening matches in heat that reached 91 degrees F (33 degrees C) and a heat index that made it feel like 100 F (38 C).

Medvedev called it “some of the worst” heat he’s played in after

eliminatin­g Alexander Bublik of Kazakhstan 6-4, 7-6 (8).

“I’m not going to lie. But you have to play,” the Russian said. “That’s the Olympics, you go for the medal. You are not here to cry about the heat.”

French Open finalist Anastasia Pavlyuchen­kova grasped for an air tube during a medical timeout and shoved bags of ice up her skirt during a changeover as she routed Sara Errani of Italy 6-0, 6-1.

“You’re just not feeling great,” Pavlyuchen­kova said. “So I wasn’t enjoying it at all.”

On the board

Naohisa Takato won Japan’s first gold medal, beating Taiwan’s Yang Yung-wei in the men’s 60-kilogram judo final.

The charismati­c Takato’s success could provide a much-needed jolt of excitement for a nation still feeling profoundly ambivalent about these Olympics and discourage­d by the scandals and coronaviru­s setbacks surroundin­g them.

The 28-year-old Takato atoned for his disappoint­ing bronze-medal performanc­e in Rio de Janeiro five years ago with a hair-raising run to the Tokyo final at the venerable Nippon Budokan arena, the site of judo’s introducti­on to the Olympics in 1964.

Already done

The youngest competitor at the Tokyo Games has been eliminated, and so has an Olympic great.

Hend Zaza of Syria lost in straight sets to Liu Jia, ending the 12-year-old’s hopes of making noise as the youngest table tennis player in Olympics history.

Zaza told Olympics.com that she was pleased with her performanc­e and learned from the loss — and she’s hoping for another shot at the next Olympics, in Paris.

Two-time Olympic champion Kohei Uchimura’s Olympic career ended when the 32-year-old Japanese gymnast fell during qualifying on high bar.

Considered by many the greatest of all time, the 2012 and ‘16 allaround gold medalist was midway through his set when he peeled off while doing a complicate­d connection. He picked himself up and finished his routine, drilling his dismount.

His score of 13.866 placed him outside of the top eight, meaning he will not make the finals.

 ?? ALEX BRANDON — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Yang Qian, of China, reacts after winning the gold medal in the women’s 10-meter air rifle at the Asaka Shooting Range in the 2020 Summer Olympics on Saturday in Tokyo, Japan.
ALEX BRANDON — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Yang Qian, of China, reacts after winning the gold medal in the women’s 10-meter air rifle at the Asaka Shooting Range in the 2020 Summer Olympics on Saturday in Tokyo, Japan.

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