Special report: 2008 Olympic Games
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Chen Nan (R), center of the China women's basketball team, blocks her rival during the FIBA Diamond Ball for Women against Mali in Haining, a city of east China's Zhejiang Province, Aug. 2, 2008. (Xinhua/Huang Shengang) Photo Gallery>>> |
HAINING, East China, Aug. 2 (Xinhua) -- China
overcame a slow start on Saturday to dominate its opening game at the 2008 FIBA
Diamond Ball for Women, trouncing Mali 91-67 in the Olympics warm-up.
China's center Chen Nan, who tied with Mali's
Djenebou Sissoko to pour in the game-high 24 points, said that the first ever
match with Mali "helps the Chinese to spot its own problems before the
Olympics."
Thomas Maher, head coach of the Chinese national
team, also regarded the game as a way to find solutions to their weaknesses.
"The high-quality match helps us find and solve
problems in such important areas as possession of the ball," he told reporters.
Mali stunned the hosts with a flying start, taking a
16-13 lead before China's Sui Feifei hit a three-pointer to tie the score 16-16
and China's 7-0 run put it up 20-18 at the end of first quarter.
The veteran Chinese then prevailed, holding on the
lead 35-32 at the end of the second quarter.
Sui Feifei, center of the Chinese team, said they were not quite used to Mali's style at first, but the readjustment worked later.
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Miao Lijie (L), guard of the China women's basketball team, tries a lay-up during the FIBA Diamond Ball for Women against Mali in Haining, a city of east China's Zhejiang Province, Aug. 2, 2008.(Xinhua/Huang Shengang) Photo Gallery>>> |
"We came to terms with the style of the physical
Malian team," she said. "It's a great first game."
China went on a charge in the third quarter. With Sui
Feifei hitting a three-pointer in the remaining 20 seconds and Zhang Wei's two
points in the dying seconds, China extended the lead to double digits, 61-50.
China stayed comfortably with the lead in the fourth
quarter and Zhang Wei hit a three-pointer with 38 seconds left to notch the
91-67 win.
"We have a lot of speed on the bench, such the twin
sisters Zhang Wei and Zhang Yu," said Maher, explaining the reason for the
victory over the African team. "And they are learning their roles better."
The Chinese women's team, which grabbed a bronze at
the Los Angeles Olympics and a silver at Barcelona 1992, placed only ninth in
the Athens 2004.
The hosts consider the Beijing Olympics as a chance
to deliver along-awaited comeback. Maher has expected the Chinese to have a
chance to advance into the semis.
Mali's head coach Jose Ruiz attributed the loss to
the lack of physical talent, saying, "the gap in physical situation between the
two teams is big."
"We tried as much as possible," the reigning African
champion head coach said.
China will vie against the United States, Spain, the
Czech Republic, New Zealand and Mali in a round-robin women's preliminary round
for a berth in the quarterfinals at the Beijing Games.
Looking for an easy game in the quarterfinals, China
must try to finish second after the Americans in the preliminary round Group B.
Maher began to coach the Chinese team in 2005 and was
asked to make the team competitive as he had done with Australia and New Zealand
before.
Mali qualified for its first ever Olympic Games at
the 2007 FIBA Africa Championships in Senegal. They beat the Ivory Coast and the
traditional powerhouse Angola in the knockout stages.
The 2008 FIBA Diamond Ball for Women, the last major
international basketball event before the basketball tournaments at the Beijing
Games, tipped off on Saturday, with Latvia romped past Russia 75-69 in the
opening game. .
The Diamond tournament attracts China, Australia, Russia, the United States, Mali and Latvia.