Japan’s Mizutani and Ito clench first Olympic gold

Mima Ito of Japan and Jun Mizutani of Japan celebrate winning their match against Xu Xin of China and Liu Shiwen of China REUTERS/Thomas Peter.
Mima Ito of Japan and Jun Mizutani of Japan celebrate winning their match against Xu Xin of China and Liu Shiwen of China REUTERS/Thomas Peter.

TOKYO, (Reuters) – Japan’s dynamic duo of Jun Mizutani and Mima Ito narrowly defeated long-invincible Chinese pair Xu Xin and Liu Shiwen to give the host country their first Olympic table tennis gold in the mixed doubles event yesterday.

Mizutani earned his third medal and Ito her second since the Rio Olympics, but a first gold for both paddlers — and a first gold for any non-Chinese players since 2004.

The 32-year-old Japanese paddler hugged his compatriot the moment they wrapped up the title, but he said the embrace was so strong that Ito pushed back and told him, “It hurts”.

Men’s world No.2 Xu and world champion Liu led after the first two games but Mizutani and Ito fought back to win the third game.

While the powerful Chinese made a brief comeback in the sixth game, the Japanese pair did not lose the momentum and trumped their opponents 5-11 7-11 11-8 11-9 11-9 6-11 11-6.

For Mizutani and women’s world No.2 Ito, who are from the same hometown and have known each other since childhood, the 4-3 win over Xu and Liu was sweet revenge.

They lost to the Chinese pair in the mixed doubles finals of the ITTF’s World Tour Grand Finals and World Tour Swedish Open in 2019 plus the World Tour German Open a year later.

“We’ve lost to China at the Olympic Games and at world championships numerous times, but we were able to take a revenge on all that at the Tokyo Olympics,” Mizutani told reporters.

“I feel like I’m in a dream, that’s how happy I am.”

UNACCEPTABLE DEFEAT

China have long enjoyed a reputation as the powerhouse in the sport, winning 28 of the 32 golds awarded since it was added at the 1988 Games, including all eight women’s singles titles.

Xu and Liu, who silently tucked their silver medals inside their pockets once they stepped off the podium, both said their defeat was “unacceptable”.

“I had a hard time accepting it,” Liu said at the press conference after the defeat. “I feel sorry for my team.”

“I know all the fans had high expectations for this final,” added Xu.

“It doesn’t matter what happened before the final, people will only remember who’s the champion and who stands at the top of the podium. I think this result to the team is unacceptable.”

In the bronze-medal match, world No.1 mixed doubles pair Lin Yun Ju and Cheng I Ching of Taiwan had a 4-0 clean-sweep win against French duo Emmanuel Lebesson and Yuan Jia Nan.