Friday, January 4, 2008

Learn Chinese online - Sailors dazzled by China's Olympic sailing venue

CHINA / News

Sailors dazzled by China's Olympic sailing venue

Updated: 2006-08-24 13:49

QINGDAO, China (AFP) - The world's best sailors have been left dazzled by
China's quest for perfection in staging the first test event for the 2008
Olympics, however one vital element is missing -- the wind.

"This place is like a dream," Roman Budzinski, coach of Poland's
windsurfing class, said this week during the international regatta at the
picturesque coastal city of Qingdao 500 kilometers (300 miles) southeast
of Beijing.

"I'm almost not sure if it is an illusion -- it is just an incredible
place, one of the best I have seen."

Denmark's Kristian Kjaergaard, a Laser class competitor who is aiming for
his second consecutive Olympic appearance, had similar plaudits for the
ultra-modern sailing venue.

"Everything is really perfect, both the organization and the facilities,"
said Kjaergaard, one of 460 world-class sailors from 41 countries racing
in the 11-day event that began Monday.

Unlike the 2004 Games in Athens, which struggled with poor planning and
last-minute completion of its facilities, the applause for Qingdao seems
to bode well for the country's preparations for the 29th Olympiad in
Beijing.

"They could hold the Olympics tomorrow," said Luissa Smith,
communications director for International Sailing Federation (ISAF),
yachting's governing body.

"We've never seen a facility built so fast and at such advanced stages of
preparation and planning."

The Qingdao Olympic sailing center was thrown up in just two years on the
site of an old shipyard wharf.

Its 45 hectares (111 acres) gleam with glass buildings in sail-shape
motifs and a harbor-side marina capable of docking 800 yachts.

The high-tech facilities have not come cheap, costing a total of 3.28
billion yuan (410 million dollars).

"I was fortunate to see the site in 1999 when Qingdao was a candidate
city, and I can tell you that the plans that the Qingdao government
presented were exceptional," said ISAF vice president David Kellet.

"They have delivered everything on time."

Organizers have promised that by next June the venue will be completely
finished including the Olympic village and a museum.

Concerns that China risked running aground when it came to the
on-the-water complexities of getting 300 boats racing on the Yellow Sea
also seem to have been assuaged.

"The race organization is good, there have been no mistakes and that is
usually an enormously good sign," said Matthias Schmid, Austria's number
one-ranked skipper in the 470, the men's double-handed dinghy class.

China held only its second major international dinghy regatta last year
when it hosted the Europe class world championships in Rizhao, about two
hours south of Qingdao by car.

The 2001 world title for the Optimist class, a popular children's racing
boat, was the first held in Qingdao.

But no amount of planning, hard cash or cutting-edge technology has been
able to dispel one consistent worry -- Qingdao's persistent lack of
breeze at this time of year.

"It is our first time here and we find the conditions very hard, very
technical. It's very choppy, with very little wind," said Benjamin
Bonnaud, 25, skipper of France's number one-ranked 470 team.

"But that is why we're here, to see the place and see the conditions,"
added Bonnaud, who will stay in China to prepare for the 470 world
championships next month in Rizhao.

Elizabeth Tan, a crew member on the women's 470 team from Singapore,
echoed the sentiments of Bonnaud and many other sailors.

"In these conditions every move requires a lot of planning. More wind
would really be good," she said.

Before the racing ends here on August 31, China will have embarked on its
second Olympic test event, a week-long softball tournament in the Chinese
capital that begins on Sunday.

Most Commented/Read Stories in 48 Hours

Today's Top News 

� RMB gains before US Treasury Secretary's visit

� More peacekeepers head to Lebanon

� 75th anniversary of invasion marked

� Man rejects first penis transplant

� Female space tourist blasts off

Top China News 

� PBOC: 'Significant progress' made in currency reforms

� China, US agree to further strengthen bilateral ties

� IMF agrees to increase China's voting power

� China blasts US accusation on religious freedom

� China to better help LDSs out of poverty

Alibaba is the largest B2B marketplace in the world. Source model ship,
wooden puzzle, one-piece toilet, RC hovercraft, photo album, prom dress,
pocket bike, Vaginal Speculum, Samurai Sword, String Panty and PVC Pipe.

Learn Chinese online

No comments: