Games continue without biggest stars

By Jaime Aron, AP Sports Writer
Tuesday, August 19, 2008 | No comments posted.

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BEIJING — Welcome to the rest of the Beijing Olympics — the Summer Games of 2008, A.P.

After Phelps.

The games continued Monday in search of a new headliner now that Michael Phelps has toweled off for the last time. The Bird’s Nest seemed the likeliest place for someone to emerge and, indeed, the big news of the day came from the track.

However, it wasn’t good news. It was the sad sight of Chinese hurdler Liu Xiang limping to the starting blocks, trying to race through injuries and quickly finding out he couldn’t.

To understand how big a deal this is, you have to understand how big a deal he is.

Liu is China’s first-ever male gold medalist in track, having won the 110 meters in Athens. Folks have spent the last four years expecting him to do it again on home turf, and in this land of 1.3 billion people, he’s as much of a celebrity — not just sports star, full-fledged celebrity — as their main man, Yao Ming.

That’s why people inside the stadium cried. Why folks watching at subway stations gasped. Why his personal coach was too overcome with grief to speak at a news conference.

The Olympics, however, still went on Monday, without Liu or Phelps. At least there’s still Usain Bolt and his bid to become the first winner of the 100- and 200-meter races since Carl Lewis in 1984.

Bolt was second in his opening-round heat of the 200 in the morning, then easily won his quarterfinal heat at night, jogging down the stretch and still topping the reigning champ Shawn Crawford of the United States by several strides.

Other notable events included another rout by the U.S. men’s basketball and softball teams and a bad break, in more ways than one, for U.S. cyclists.

Today, Kerri Walsh and Misty May-Treanor advanced to the finals in women’s beach volleyball, giving them a chance to defend the title they won four years ago. The win was their 107th straight and it came in straight sets over a Brazilian duo.

Track and field



The U.S. flag finally rose at the Bird’s Nest, and it came from an unexpected source when Stephanie Brown Trafton won the women’s discus. It went up again later when Angelo Taylor won the 400-meter hurdles, with Americans Kerron Clement and Bershawn Jackson taking silver and bronze.

After capturing only one of six possible medals in the men’s and women’s 100, watching the 1,500-meter team of Bernard Lagat, Lopez Lomong and Leo Manzano all fail to advance past the semifinals, and seeing Terrence Trammell get hurt in the opening heat of the 110 hurdles, Brown Trafton’s victory was a much-needed lift. The 400 sweep was awfully nice, too, something no country had done since the U.S. in 1960.

Also, Russia’s Yelena Isinbayeva won her second consecutive gold in women’s pole vault, topping American rival Jenn Stuczynski and then upping her own world record to 16 feet, 63⁄4 inches; Brimin Kipruto made it seven straight Olympics that Kenyans have won the men’s 3,000-meter steeplechase; and 18-year-old Pamela Jelimo led a 1-2 Kenya finish in the women’s 800.

Irving Saladino picked up Panama’s first-ever gold in any sport by winning the men’s long jump.

Despite the pain of a lingering hamstring problem and the added bother of a tendon flare-up in his right foot, national pride carried Liu to the start line.

He took off at the gun, took three strides and then began hopping on his left leg, the good one. Someone else false-started, so he could have tried again, but there was no way. He peeled the lane-assignment number off each leg and headed for a tunnel.

“He couldn’t imagine the pain he was suffering,” said China’s track and field coach, Feng Shuyong. “Let me repeat: Liu Xiang will not withdraw unless the pain is unbearable.”

So the guy who croons in a music video, appears in TV commercials and looms on billboards will no longer have his gold-medal defense play out daily Monday through Thursday.

“After Liu Xiang’s injury, I won’t bother coming back to the Bird’s Nest for more,” a 67-year-old Chinese fan said as he left the stadium.

Diving



He Chong has easily won the gold medal on men’s 3-meter springboard, making China 6-for-6 in Olympic diving — two events away from matching swimmer Michael Phelps’ golden haul.

He earned 11 perfect marks of 10.0 in the six-round final today, totaling 572.90 points and giving China its fourth consecutive Olympic title in the event.

Alexandre Despatie of Canada took the silver for the second consecutive Olympics with 536.65.

He’s teammate Qin Kai earned the bronze with 530.10.

American Troy Dumais was sixth for the third straight Olympics.

Men’s basketball



The “Redeem Team” keeps powering through the Olympics, crushing Dirk Nowitzki and Germany 106-57. Next up: A quarterfinals game against Australia, which gave the U.S. team its only close competition thus far in an exhibition game two weeks ago. The winner goes to the semifinals against the Argentina-Greece winner.

“We feel like we’re playing very well right now, but you have to keep in mind it’s single elimination,” Kobe Bryant said. “You can’t afford any slip-ups.”

China secured a spot in the medal round despite losing 91-77 to Greece. Yao Ming and his pals will next play Lithuania, while Spain will face Croatia, the winners of those games meeting in the other semifinal.

Baseball



The U.S. team beat China 9-1 in a game that featured rough play such as a home-plate collision that knocked out China’s top player, a retaliatory hit batsman and three ejections.

Softball



Feel free to move on to the next section if the details of the latest U.S. rout bore you.

It was a nine-run first inning against the hostesses on the way to a 9-0 win over China, leaving the Americans two wins from another gold medal. Their win streak is up to 23; two more and they get another gold before their sport goes off the docket until at least 2016.

Up next is Japan, already a 7-0 loser to the U.S., although their ace was saved for the rematch.

Canada lost to Japan 6-0, but advanced to a semifinal game against Australia.

Beach volleyball



There won’t be an all-American men’s final.

Although top-ranked duo Todd Rogers and Phil Dalhausser rolled into the semifinals with a win over a German team, Jake Gibb and Sean Rosenthal lost to the defending Olympic champions from Brazil.

Next up for Rogers and Dalhausser is surprising Georgia on Wednesday.

Women’s soccer



Get ready for a rematch. Just like 2004, the final will pit the United States and Brazil.

The Americans advanced by beating Japan 4-2. Brazil got there with a 4-1 victory over Germany.

Cycling



The U.S. appears headed toward a second straight Olympics without any medals from the velodrome. American Sarah Hammer appears headed toward a layoff after breaking her left collarbone in a fall during the women’s points race. Jennie Reed also lost in the sprint quarterfinals.

Britain continued to dominate, knocking nearly 2 seconds off the world record it set a day earlier to win the men’s team pursuit. The medal gave Britain 12 golds for the Olympics so far, already its best showing since 1920. It also was its fifth gold medal in track cycling in Beijing.

World champion Marianne Vos of the Netherlands won the women’s points race.

Boxing



Mauritius is a tiny island nation 560 miles off the eastern coast of Madagascar. That’s worth knowing because it has produced a bantamweight medalist, although Bruno Julie isn’t done fighting.

Julie beat Venezuela’s Hector Manzanilla in the quarterfinals, securing no worse than bronze.

Super heavyweight Zhang Zhilei knocked down Kazakhstan’s Ruslan Myrsatayev twice in a 12-2 victory that assured China of at least two boxing medals in Beijing after winning just one in its previous history.

Moldova bantamweight Veaceslav Gojan clinched his nation’s second boxing medal with an upset victory over India’s Akhil Kumar.

Cuba secured its fourth medal with bantamweight Yankiel Leon’s victory over Worapoj Petchkoom of Thailand, but Azerbaijan’s Shahin Imranov upset young Cuban featherweight Idel Torriente, just the second of Cuba’s 10 fighters to lose in Beijing.

Weightlifting



Word to the wise: Don’t mess with Andrei Aramnau of Belarus.

The heavyweight broke three world records to win his country’s first Olympic gold in weightlifting. He set world records in the snatch, becoming the first man in the weight class to lift 200 kilograms (440.9 pounds); the clean and jerk (236 kg, or 520.3 pounds) and with his total (436 kg, or 961.2 pounds).

Men’s volleyball



The U.S. squad wrapped up pool play a perfect 5-0, beating winless Japan in three sets. This was their second game with coach Hugh McCutcheon back on the sideline. He missed the first three matches after his in-laws were attacked at a tourist spot in Beijing.

The Americans are off to the quarterfinals Wednesday against Serbia.

Women’s triathlon



Australia took first and third, with Emma Snowsill pulling away early in the 10-kilometer run to finish more than a minute ahead of the field. American Laura Bennett finished fourth, less than 30 seconds shy of a medal.

“I’m very pleased,” Bennett said. “I had bike issues somewhere in the middle of the bike leg. I gave everything I had.”

Sailing



After a morning decision to give Denmark the gold medal in the 49er skiff class — even though they used a boat borrowed from Croatia — the regatta continued with Australia taking the men’s and women’s double-handed 470 dinghies.

Medal races in the men’s Laser and the Laser Radial for women were slated for Tuesday. American favorite Anna Tunnicliffe led overall after nine Laser Radial races, seven points ahead of Lithuanian Gintare Volungeviciute and 11 points ahead of China’s Xu Lijia.

Men’s water polo



The U.S. beat Germany and won its preliminary group, earning an automatic berth in the semifinals. The Americans are guaranteed of finishing at least fourth, which would match their best since 1988.

“It’s a great feeling,” captain Tony Azevedo said. “We’re definitely the underdog story.”

Women’s field hockey



No goals. No more Olympics for the U.S. women, who were eliminated after a scoreless draw with Britain. The Americans went 1-1-3, remaining without a medal since 1984. This was their first Olympics since 1996, when they got in automatically as the host nation.

Table tennis



China beat Germany 3-0 to win the men’s team event. South Korea got bronze.

Equestrian



The U.S. won team jumping, making it two Olympic titles in a row.
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