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Hurdler
Liu Xiang done without a run
in Olympics
BEIJING (AP)—Liu Xiang
and the entire nation of China
looked forward to this moment
for years: The defending Olympic
champion lining up to run the
110-meter hurdles at the Beijing
Games.
He didn’t even get to
race.
Grimacing and rubbing his troublesome
right hamstring before getting
into his crouch, Liu pulled
up lame just steps into the
first round of qualifying Monday,
leaving the Summer Games’
host country without one of
its biggest stars — and
far and away its biggest star
in track and field.
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He limped out of the
block at the starting gun, took a
few awkward steps, then stopped and
limped again when the second gun sounded
to signal a false start. No one is
disqualified by an initial false start,
yet Liu tore the pieces of paper with
his number off each leg and immediately
headed for a tunnel, stepping gingerly
all the way with what the coach of
China’s track team said was
a right foot injury.
“He couldn’t imagine the
pain he was suffering,” coach
Feng Shuyong said at a news conference
Liu didn’t attend. “Let
me repeat: Liu Xiang will not withdraw
unless the pain is unbearable.”
While the other entrants in his heat
prepared for the restart, Liu took
a slow, painful walk along a concrete
path leading away from the rust-colored
track where he was supposed to thrill
a nation of 1.3 billion people.
Instead, he sat against a wall alone,
that smiling face that adorns so many
advertising billboards now sullen.
At that moment, some members of the
Chinese media watching the scene unfold
on a TV under the stands began to
cry while thousands of his disappointed
countrymen were heading for the exits.
“I feel very sad for Liu Xiang,”
said 67-year-old retiree Liu Guixiang.
“After Liu Xiang’s injury,
I won’t bother coming back to
the Bird’s Nest for more.”
Had this been any other competition,
in any other setting, it seems safe
to say Liu wouldn’t even have
shown up at the stadium himself on
this day.
“When you see the crowd, you
realize why he had to come out,”
said Britain’s Allan Scott,
who was surprised when he glanced
across the lanes and didn’t
see Liu ahead of him in the final
heat.
Liu’s personal coach, Sun Haiping,
said Liu was bothered by a right foot
injury that has lingered for six or
seven years—and that the pain
intensified Saturday. Sun’s
shoulders shook and he wiped away
tears as he spoke about Liu’s
withdrawal.
Feng said the injury is where the
Achilles tendon attaches to Liu’s
right foot, “his takeoff foot,
so there is a lot of stress on that
area.”
There were signs of trouble as soon
as Liu made his first appearance on
the Bird’s Nest’s big
video screens. Once on the track,
he stopped after clearing two hurdles
during the warmup period, then crouched
down and favored his right leg as
he walked back to the starting area.
He peeled off his red shirt when others
were lining up behind the blocks and
seemed to wait forever before pulling
a new jersey over his head.
“In watching warmups, we could
see he wasn’t quite as strong
as you expect him to be,” said
former world record-holder Colin Jackson.
“But we didn’t know it
was as bad as it turned out to be.”
Liu’s hamstring problem forced
him to pull out of a meet in New York
on May 31—the same night Usain
Bolt first broke the world record
in the 100 meters.
Liu Xiang of China leaves the track
without starting his 110m hurdles
heat of the athletics competition
in the National Stadium at the Beijing
2008 Olympic Games August 18, 2008.
After one false start Liu stopped
before the first hurdle clutching
his leg and then walked out of the
stadium. REUTERS/David Gray (CHINA)
A week later, Liu lined up for the
Prefontaine Classic in Eugene, Ore.,
but was disqualified for a false start.
He hasn’t raced since and only
rarely has made public appearances,
training in seclusion.
The 25-year-old hurdler is as much
a celebrity here as Houston Rockets
center Yao Ming. At the Athens Games
four years ago, Liu became as the
first Chinese man to win an Olympic
track and field gold medal. A Chinese
insurance company volunteered more
than $10 million of coverage for his
legs. His image appears everywhere
in his hometown of Shanghai, and he
has sponsorship deals with Visa and
Coca-Cola, among others.
“I think the Chinese people
will understand the situation,”
Feng said of Liu’s withdrawal,
“and will encourage him to come
back to the track.”
Thursday night’s 110-meter hurdles
final was expected to be one of the
highlights of these Olympics: China’s
Liu vs. Cuba’s Dayron Robles,
the man who broke Liu’s world
record in June—with 91,000 fans
crowding into the Bird’s Nest
to cheer on their man.
“I think they will be disappointed,”
said Wang Wei, executive vice president
of the games’ organizing committee.
“But they will understand. When
somebody has an accident, you can’t
help it.”
Now Robles, who won his heat but at
13.39 seconds was well off his world
record time of 12.87, becomes the
clear favorite.
Yet another of the top contenders
departed Monday when two-time Olympic
silver medalist Terrence Trammell
of the United States grabbed the second
hurdle and limped off the track with
an injured left leg.
The exits of Liu and Trammell leave
David Oliver, thought to be running
as consistently as any of the U.S.
hurdlers of late, as a serious medal
candidate. His personal best of 12.95
seconds is only 0.08 second off Robles’
world record.
Asked before Liu lined up for his
heat whether he knew that his Chinese
rival appeared to be hurting badly,
Robles said he didn’t care.
“I’m going to do what
Usain Bolt did,” the Cuban said
when asked about breaking his hurdles
world record. “The track is
perfect. Anything is possible in the
final.”
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