Post by Admin on Oct 13, 2021 5:14:45 GMT
The 2021 Asian Open, which runs from 13 to 16 October in Beijing, will spotlight a raft of medal hopefuls from the People’s Republic of China and Japan ahead of the much-anticipated 2022 Winter Olympic figure skating competition this February.
This week's Asian Open - an official test event for the Beijing 2022 Olympic figure skating competition and the fifth of nine stops in the 2021-22 Challenger Series - boasts the likes of Japan's SAKAMOTO Kaori and KAGIYAMA Yuma, and People's Republic of China's HAN Cong and SUI Wenjing, the pairs silver medallists at PyeongChang 2018.
The 2021 Asian Open, which runs from 13 to 16 October in Beijing, will spotlight a raft of medal hopefuls from the People’s Republic of China and Japan ahead of the much-anticipated 2022 Winter Olympic figure skating competition this February.
Women’s stars set to shine
Among the top women's skaters in action at the Asian Open are SAKAMOTO Kaori and MIHARA Mai, both from Japan, and both making their first appearances of the season.
The 21-year-old Sakamoto, winner of the 2018 Four Continents Championship and the 2020 NHK Trophy, is among Japan’s brightest hopes to bring home a first women’s figure-skating gold since ARAKAWA Shizuka made history in Torino in 2006.
Sakamoto, currently ranked sixth in the world, will face a stiff challenge from 22-year-old Mihara, who finished a close second in the 2018 Four Continents competition, and two-time Four Continents champion KIHIRA Rika.
Originally scheduled participants Marilena Kitromilis of Cyprus, winner of the 2021 Autumn Classic International, and Mariah Bell and Gabriella Izzo of the United States, pulled out of the Open last week.
Men’s standouts on hand
On the men’s side, Japan’s KAGIYAMA Yuma and his compatriot SATO Shun are among the ones to watch as the figure skating field begins to take shape in the run-up to the big Olympic showdown, which runs from 4 to 20 February.
Kagiyama – son of former Japanese Olympian KAGIYAMA Masakazu, also a figure skater – finished with a bronze at the 2021 World Figure Skating Championships in Stockholm, and Sato, the 17-year-old phenom and junior world record holder for men’s free skating and combined total score, most recently won the 2020 Bavarian Open.
JIN Boyang, of the People’s Republic of China, is among the front-runners in the men’s singles. The PyeongChang 2018 fourth-place finisher will be under heavy pressure to reach the podium on home ice at the 2022 Games.
The only skaters in the men’s competition not from Asia are Latvia’s Deniss Vasiljevs, who finished second in the 2016 Youth Olympics, and Switzerland’s two-time national champion Lukas Britschgi.
In the pairs competition, the Chinese teams of HAN Cong/SUI Wenjing – who finished with silver at the 2021 World Championships – and JIN Yang/PENG Cheng will be in direct competition in a slim four-team field (all from the host nation).
Test Dress Rehearsal at the Capital
As an official test event, the Asian Open allows for both sides – athletes and hosts – to tweak their final preparations ahead of the Olympic Games proper in February.
The competition venue of the Capital Indoor Stadium is no stranger to Olympic action. The legacy venue was held over and repurposed from the 2008 Beijing Summer Games where it hosted the men’s and women’s volleyball tournaments.
The arena, built back in 1968, has staged numerous important sporting events through the decades, including the table tennis matches between China and the United States that comprised part of the ping-pong diplomacy exchange program of the early 1970s.
The Capital also hosted one of the first NBA games in China in 2004.
At the upcoming Beijing Winter Games, the Capital Stadium will host all the figure skating events in addition to short-track speed skating.