Norman Vergara -
AHN Sports
Writer
Washington, DC (AHN)
- Gao Jun is among
the few Chinese
players on the U.S.
national team who
are banking on a
share of medals in
the table tennis
event in next week's
Beijing Olympics.
Not
coincidentally, Gao
and the rest of the
field are in China
to prep for the big
competition, fitting
enough for a country
where the sport is
iconic.
The 39-year-old
Gao sure knows the
ins and outs of
training in Beijing,
especially with
seemingly
insurmountable odds
before her and her
teammates.
The U.S. national
team has four
members, all from
China.
Like Gao, Crystal
Huang, Wang Chen and
the only men's
player David Zhuang
are nowhere in North
America, where the
sport more locally
known here as
ping-pong is taking
a slow, grinding
climb to popularity.
It all pales to
comparison in
Beijing, that is why
Gao is taking his
pair of paddles to
her native homeland.
"If I want to
play good, I have to
go to China to
train," Gao told the
Washington Post. "In
U.S., nobody was
training with me.
Nobody practiced
with me. In the
U.S., there's not
many good players.
We have some, but we
don't live together,
so it's very hard
for us to train in
the U.S."
Gao, ranked 25th
in the world, had
been there
before-winning the
silver in the
doubles event in
1992-although she
admitted her Chinese
foes have become
much stronger over
the years.
She backed off
from the sport's
limelight after
Barcelona for
several years but
renewed her craze
for the sport when
she became a U.S.
citizen. In 1997,
Gao was back in
front of the table
once again.
Gao, who helped
the U.S. reach its
best showing since
1989 with a
12th-place finish at
the World
Championships,
trains at Shanghai
University and is
focused on giving
her career another
shot in the arm.
"I want to get a
medal. But it's
hard. If you think
you have no chance
to get a medal, your
performance will
suffer," she told
AFP.