Nino Salukvadze would become just the second athlete to compete at 10 Olympic Games when she steps up to the mark in Paris, a milestone that the Georgian shooting great says would fulfill her father’s last request.
Salukvadze’s dream Olympic debut came as a 19-year-old at the 1988 Games in Seoul, where she won gold in the 25m pistol and silver in the 10m event for the former Soviet Union.
Barcelona, Atlanta, Sydney, Athens, Beijing, London, Rio and Tokyo — she has not missed an Olympics since.
Photo: Reuters
Salukvadze completed her medal set by winning 10m bronze in Beijing, this time for Georgia, and the 55-year-old would match Canadian equestrian Ian Millar’s record of 10 Olympic appearances when she competes in Paris.
“Ten Olympiads — it’s my whole life,” Salukvadze said from Baku where she is in the final stages of her Olympic preparations. “After the first Olympics, I couldn’t even imagine I’d compete in 10 Olympics. I will have to write a whole book [to explain my longevity], but the euphoria I experienced after winning forced me to train hard every day.”
That book would surely have a chapter devoted to her father Vakhtang Salukvadze, who coached her from the beginning.
Her Rio experience, where she and Tsotne Machavariani became the first mother-son duo to compete at the same Olympics, would also feature prominently in it.
Yet, there were times when it seemed the Tokyo Olympics would be the end of her story.
“After Tokyo, I’d decided to give up,” she said. “But my father, who was 93, told me: ‘There are only three years before Paris, and maybe you try to win the quota.’”
“I thought my father had never asked for anything and this might be his last request. So I gathered all my strength and agreed,” she said. “Today, despite the fact that my father passed away, I am happy that I fulfilled this request.”
Her son put the pressure on, too.
“Also, my son threatened me: ‘If you surrender, I will also surrender,’” she said.
Nino Salukvadze has vivid memories from competing at the Games.
She remembers being showered with gifts by fans in Seoul, competing alongside her son in Rio, and witnessing how Tokyo defied a pandemic to salvage an Olympics.
However, the 2008 Olympics stood out for a different reason.
On the opening day of the Games war broke out between Georgia and Russia. Despite the conflict between their two countries, Nino Salukvadze embraced Russian rival Natalia Paderina on the podium.
“Every Olympic is memorable in its own way, but I’d single out Beijing,” she said. “The Olympic Games were created to establish peace between warring city states, where slaves and masters lived together for a month and enjoyed the same rights. That’s why you were shocked when, on the opening day of the Games, a war broke out in my country. I could not imagine this.”
For the Paris Games, the shooting events are to be held 270km away in Chateauroux.
Moving them away from the main venue cluster goes against that spirit of togetherness, Nino Salukvadze said.
“I feel a little sad that we will not be in the Olympic Village in Paris. These Olympic Games are held more like a championship,” she said. “The essence of the Olympics is that everyone should live together during that one month.”
Hong Kong-based cricket team Hung See this weekend found success in their matches in Taiwan, even if none of the results went their way. Hung See played the Chairman’s XI on Saturday morning, the Daredevils that afternoon and PCCT yesterday, with all three home teams winning. The team for Chinese players at the Happy Valley-based Craigengower Cricket Club sends teams on tour to “spread the game of cricket.” This weekend was Hung See’s second trip to Taiwan after visiting Tainan in 2016. “The club has been traveling to all parts of the world since 1982 and the annual tradition continues [with the Taiwan
Taiwan’s Hsieh Su-wei yesterday advanced to the semi-finals of the women’s doubles at the Australian Open, while Coco Gauff’s dreams of a first women’s singles title in Melbourne were crushed in the quarter-finals by Paula Badosa. World No. 2 Alexander Zverev was ruffled by a stray feather in his men’s singles quarter-final, but he refocused to beat 12th seed Tommy Paul and reach the semi-finals. Third seeds Hsieh and Jelena Ostapenko of Latvia defeated Elena-Gabriela Ruse of Romania and Marta Kostyuk of Ukraine 6-2, 5-7, 7-5 in 2 hours, 20 minutes to advance the semi-finals. Hsieh and Ostapenko converted eight of 14 break
The San Francisco Giants signed 18-year-old Taiwanese pitcher Yang Nien-hsi (陽念希) to a contract worth a total of US$500,000 (NT $16.39 million). At a press event in Taipei on Wednesday, Jan. 22, the Giants’ Pacific Rim Area scout Evan Hsueh (薛奕煌) presented Yang with a Giants jersey to celebrate the signing. The deal consisted of a contract worth US$450,000 plus a US$50,000 scholarship bonus. Yang, who stands at 188 centimeters tall and weighs 85 kilograms, is of Indigenous Amis descent. With his fastest pitch clocking in at 150 kilometers per hour, Yang had been on Hsueh’s radar since playing in the HuaNan Cup
HARD TO SAY GOODBYE: After Coco Gauff dispatched Belinda Bencic in the fourth round, she wrote ‘RIP TikTok USA’ and drew a broken heart on a television camera lens Defending champion Hsieh Su-wei of Taiwan yesterday advanced to the quarter-finals of the women’s doubles at the Australian Open, while compatriot Chan Hao-ching on Saturday dominated her opponents in the second round, as world No. 1 Aryna Sabalenka swept into the quarter-finals. Third seeds Hsieh and Jelena Ostapenko of Latvia toppled Hungary’s Timea Babos and Nicole Melichar-Martinez of the US 6-4, 6-3, hitting 24 winners and converting three of seven break points in 1 hour, 18 minutes at 1573 Arena. Although rivals at last year’s Australian Open — where Hsieh and Belgium’s Elise Mertens beat Ostapenko and Ukraine’s Lyudmyla Kichenok 6-1, 7-5