OLYMPIC NOTEBOOK

Indonesia's Polii, Rahayu upset China to win women's doubles badminton gold

Greysia Polii and Apriyani Rahayu of Indonesia have upset China's Chen Qing Chen and Jia Yi Fan, 2-0, for gold in women's doubles badminton.

China claims gold and silver in the men's gymnastics rings event

Greysia Polii, left, and Apriyani Rahayu of Indonesia celebrate after beating Chen Qing Chen and Jia Yi Fan of China in the women’s badminton doubles gold-medal match at the Tokyo Olympics on Monday in Japan. (Lintao Zhang/Getty Images)

Greysia Polii and Apriyani Rahayu of Indonesia have upset China's Chen Qing Chen and Jia Yi Fan, 2-0, for gold in women's doubles badminton.

The unseeded Indonesians won the first game 21-19 and the second 21-15 against an overwhelmingly favoured Chinese team.

Emotions ran high in the match, with both teams screaming after won points and several times disputing their opponent's requests to change shuttles. At one point, Polii ran off the court after breaking her racket, got a new one, and joined the point in progress. Indonesia won the point.

The match extends Chinese struggles in women's doubles, after years of domination. The Chinese team lost at the 2016 Rio Games to a Japanese pair. Before that, China had won a remarkable five straight gold medals.

Earlier Monday, Kim So-yeong and Kong Hee-yong won the bronze medal in women's doubles, beating countrywomen Lee So-hee and Shin Seung-chan, 2-0.

"Since we know each other very well, we tried to pretend this was practice not the real match so that we didn't feel nervous," Kong said.

The men's singles finals will be held later in the day between world number two Viktor Axelsen of Denmark and China's Chen Long, the champion from the 2016 Rio Games.

China claims gold, silver in the men's gymnastics rings event

Liu Yang led a China one-two in the men's gymnastics rings event final at the Tokyo Olympics on Monday, claiming a slim victory over compatriot You Hao.

Greece's Eleftherios Petrounias, winner of the ring gold at the 2016 Rio Games, took the bronze.

Yang's clinical performance and flawless dismount earned him a score of 15.500, a sliver over You's 15.300 and Petrounias's 15.200.

It marks the first time China has topped the rings podium since going one-two at the 2008 Beijing Summer Games.

Olympic volunteers strive to tell their earthquake stories

Atsushi Muramatsu's handmade flyers are the size of a business card, written in several languages. "Welcome to Miyagi Stadium," one reads. "The gymnasium next door was the largest morgue for tsunami victims."

Over a decade after the massive earthquake and tsunami devastated northeastern Japan, the Tokyo Games were supposed to offer a chance to showcase how much has been rebuilt. They were even billed as the "Recovery and Reconstruction Games," and the Olympic torch relay started from Fukushima prefecture, the heart of the nuclear disaster area.

But the coronavirus pandemic means few spectators are coming to any of the Olympic events, including soccer and baseball, being held here. That leaves some Olympic volunteers having to find their own ways to recount their experiences to those rare fans who pass through, as well as members of the media.

"I believe that residents in disaster-hit areas want to express gratitude for support from overseas, and I also want to keep delivering a message that we want to be remembered," said Muramatsu, who is serving as a volunteer at the Miyagi Stadium media operation centre.

The stadium has a capacity of 49,000, but because of the pandemic, it's one of the few venues that allow up to 10,000 spectators.

Another volunteer, Mieko Onuma, wants to return the favour to all those who supported the reconstruction by sharing her experience with Japanese visitors to Miyagi at a storytelling centre set up near a shuttle bus station.

"When the disaster happened, I was working as a teacher at an elementary school. I feel a sense of duty to tell what happened that day, so I tell my stories here," said Onuma.

Toshihiro Umeki, 14, came to see the soccer games with his father, but also joined Okuma's storytelling session.

"Back then I was 5 years old, so I barely remember the disaster. So it wasn't like recalling back my memories but rather learning new things," said Umeki. "There were so many shocking things I didn't know."

On March 11, 2011, the magnitude 9.0 quake sent a tsunami that triggered meltdowns at the Fukushima nuclear power plant. The disaster heavily damaged coastal neighbourhoods and took more than 18,000 lives in all, with around 10,000 people killed in Miyagi prefecture.

Muramatsu said he observed hundreds of dead bodies being cleaned after their recovery from the ocean, then carried to the gymnasium.

Being exposed to such scenes every day and hearing about the deaths of his friends, Muramatsu said he felt there was no line between life and death. What motivated him to stay alive was the daily conversations with foreign rescuer workers, who helped lift people's spirits with a joke or a kind word.

"I want to pass on the message to the next generation that we have received so much support from overseas, and we shall never forget that support," Muramatsu said.

with files from The Associated Press

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