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Sports / Tennis

Teenager Nishioka brings an end to Japan’s 40-year wait

Published: 01 Oct 2014 - 10:14 am | Last Updated: 20 Jan 2022 - 04:15 pm

Pakistans’ Atif Waheed (centre) tries to catch India’s players as umpires watch them during their men’s kabaddi match at the Songdo Global University Gymnasium during the 17th Asian Games in Incheon, yesterday.

INCHEON: Teenager Yoshihito Nishioka humbled Taiwanese veteran Yen-Hsun Lu in straight sets yesterday to become Japan’s first Asian Games men’s singles tennis champion in 40 years.
The 19-year-old left-hander, ranked 168th in the world, outclassed number 42 Lu 6-2, 6-2 in 101 minutes to emulate countryman Toshiro Sakai’s win at the 1974 Games in Tehran.
Nishioka raised his arms in the air after winning on second match-point and then danced on court wrapped around a Japanese flag thrown from the stands by his team.
“This is hard to believe, I have not had a better day in tennis,” said the teenager, who is in his first full year on the ATP cicuit.
“My aim is to get into the top 100 as soon as possible. I wanted it to happen this year itself. But I am very happy today.”
Lu, a 31-year-old veteran who has been part of the circuit since 2000, paid dearly for an error-prone game that produced five double-faults. “Of course those double-faults cost me, but I tried my best,” Lu said.
Nishioka ran up a 5-0 lead in the first set before losing his serve to hand Lu his first game. But another break gave the Japanese the first set in just 32 minutes.
Lu never recovered after being broken in the first game of the second set -- mainly due to two double-faults -- and Nishioka clinched victory on his second match point.
Luksika Kumkhum’s bid to become Thailand’s first woman singles champion ended in despair as Qiang Wang of China won the final 6-3, 7-6 (7/5) in an hour and five minutes.
Luksika, who won the women’s doubles gold on Monday with veteran Tamarine Tanasugarn, failed to add another title as Qiang responded cooly to the Thai’s attacking ground play.AFP