Chinese teenage skater, Nepali cricketers break records in Hangzhou

HANGZHOU, China Sept 27 (Reuters) - China's teenage skateboarders, Japan's cyclists and a Thai Esports player bagged golds on day four of the COVID-19 delayed Asian Games in Hangzhou on Wednesday.
At the skate park, 13-year-old Cui Chenxi became China's youngest Asian Games gold medallist when she won the women's street event.
With an eye-catching performance featuring several 'Ollies' and a huge move off a high rail, Cui took gold ahead of compatriot Zeng Wenhui, 18, with Japanese 16-year-old Miyu Ito taking bronze.
"I did quite well today," Cui said modestly.
Cui, who hails from China's eastern Shandong province, only took up skateboarding in 2020 when China's COVID restrictions meant she could not practice rollerblading, which she began as a three-year-old.
The street competition involves skaters performing daring tricks on a course that has features that resemble an urban environment including rails and gaps.
In bright, warm and humid conditions, which felt even hotter because of the skate park's innate lack of greenery, scores of dragonflies shared air time with the competitors as they performed their tricks.
The skaters did two 'runs' followed by five individual 'tricks'. Each athlete's highest scoring run and two highest scoring tricks were then added together to reach a final score.
Margielyn Didal, who won gold for the Philippines at the 2018 Asian Games, is still only 24 yet she seemed like a veteran with all her competitors in the final 18 or under.
"I don't feel old because I'm also a bit childish, I just want to mess around," she said, after an injury in the final meant she finished last of the eight skaters.
In the men's final, another 13-year-old and hot favourite for the title, Ginu Onodera, was in the lead after the "run" section. But the Japanese failed to land a single of his "tricks" and so dropped down to seventh.
China's Zhang Jie, 16, won the gold, making that three golds out of a possible four for the host nation at the skate park.
"I felt very excited and happy to win the gold medal," Zhang said. "I never saw it coming."

SMASHING RECORDS

On the opening day of men's cricket, Nepal broke a host of records on their way to beating Mongolia by 273 runs. That included their 314-3 total which was the first time any international team has gone past 300 in this format.
In the velodrome, Japan were dominant winning all three golds on offer on day four, in the women's keirin and the men's and women's team pursuit.
"We were actually already celebrating during the last three or four laps," said Naoki Kojima, from the men's pursuit team.
But China's medal tally continued to far exceed all of the others. On Wednesday the hosts won golds across the board including in gymnastics, sailing, chess, beach volleyball, chess, taekwondo, shooting and Wushu.
In the pool, China's 'butterfly queen' Zhang Yufei, 25, picked up two more golds to add to her mounting collection.
One of those came in the mixed 4x100m medley relay where her team set an Asian record of 3.37.73 and came within two tenths of a second of breaking Great Britain's world record.

'TOUGH BATTLE'

Earlier, Yu Yuting, 18, just held on for victory over Japan's Ageha Tanigawa, 20, in the women's 400m medley.
"It was really a tough battle out there, and it was very close towards the end," Chinese swimmer Yu said. "I gave it everything I had, and had nothing left in the tank when I touched the wall."
While China's men's football team progressed to the quarter-finals, Thailand won the Asian Games' first gold medal for the online version of the beautiful game.
In an all-Thai final Teedech Songsaisakul beat his compatriot and close friend Phatanasak Varanan 2-0 to take the gold in the online soccer game EA Sports FC Online, with South Korea's Kwak Junhyouk picking up bronze.
China won the Games' first Esports gold on Tuesday in the 'Arena of Valor' multiplayer battle game.
Kuwait's 60-year-old Abdullah Alrashidi impressed on the shooting range with a world record-equalling performance in the men's skeet to get his country's first gold of the Games.
In the event where the shotgun wielding athletes attempt to shoot and break clay targets fired into the air at high speeds and varying angles, Alrashidi held off a strong challenge from India's Anant Jeet Singh Naruka, 25, to take the win, with Qatar's Nasser Al-Attiya, 52, finishing third.
"Today I only missed one target from 110 targets," the veteran of seven Olympics, which have included two bronze medals, said. "This happens when you play every day, you exercise, go swimming, and eat well.
"You keep your body strong. I don't look at the telephone or Twitter, because this is not good for your eyes. I look after my body and my health, and I go to sleep early and wake up early.
"Inshallah, we have time to shoot (at) the next two Olympics."

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Writing and reporting by Martin Quin Pollard; additional reporting by Ian Ransom and Dylan Martinez; Editing by Peter Rutherford and Christian Radnedge

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Martin is a (China) political and general news correspondent based in Beijing. He has previously worked as a TV reporter and video journalist and is fluent in Mandarin and French.