Chinese Daily Photos, 2011 to 2019!

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kwaigonegin

Colonel
Re: Li Na of China wins the French Open!!!

I agree Mr T ...Schiavone's game was way off the mark today. But no excuses. You have to bring your best game to a championship match in any sport. . I'm happy Li Na won the match.

At any rate congrats to LiNa! I think she did the country proud. Since Michael Chang in the 90's I don't think there's been any memorable Asians in the world of tennis.
 
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bd popeye

The Last Jedi
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Re: Li Na of China wins the French Open!!!

I feel her win is nearly equivalent to Tiger Woods wining the Masters golf tournament in 1997.

Awesome job by Li Na. She dominated.
 

plawolf

Lieutenant General
Re: Li Na of China wins the French Open!!!

Oh, 'China clearly bribed the judge' they would say, 'Li even thanked her in her speach!' :rolleyes:

Quite an amazing achievement for Li! She simply didn't allow Schiavone to play how the Italian wanted by dictating the game with some very good shots in the first game. I think you could tell the enormity of the moment was starting to get at Li a little in the second game when she was a point from gking 4-1 up with a miss on a straight forward forehand shot she would have made every time in the first game.

Schiavone then have a mini revival to break back and go level at 4-4, and then held her serve to go 4-5 up.

That was when you started to wonder if Li had the mental strength to be a champion, but she proved she did and held her serve in two very tough games to force the tie break. Those holds obviously boosted Li and put any doubts to rest in her mind, as she was back to her first game form in the tie break and didn't give Schiavone a chance.

I think it was obvious that Li was by far the better player, and that the only way she was going to loose is if she lost it mentally.

The thing is, clay used to be Li's least favourite surface. So with both Williams sisters still out through injury, Li must really fancy her chances at Wimbledon next as she prefers grass to clay any day of the week! Hope the expectation doesn't get to her tho.
 

Mr T

Senior Member
Re: Li Na of China wins the French Open!!!

i bet in a few mins, someone will say that china cheated;)

It would account for Schiavone's crappy game, but at that level and stage in a grand slam people don't take bribes. And unlike football, Chinese tennis doesn't have a reputation for being controlled by gamblers.
 

Schumacher

Senior Member
Re: Li Na of China wins the French Open!!!

Congratulations to LI NA !
This should put more pressure on the Chinese men. Having just two world class sportsmen in Liu Xiang and Yao Ming is just not enough.
 

bladerunner

Banned Idiot
Congratulations to LI NA !
This should put more pressure on the Chinese men. Having just two world class sportsmen in Liu Xiang and Yao Ming is just not enough.

huh?

How about mens table tennis , badminton, gymnastics etc, or the double gold medalists in canoeing Meng Guanliang and Yang Wenjun.

There was also the Chinese high jumper Zhu Jian Hua who held the world record in the 80's

i bet in a few mins, someone will say that china cheated;)

hmmm........ nooooooooo... I dont think so, but they have suggested that it wasnt a top level competition, with the highly ranked seeds in Azarenka, Clijsters, and Wozniacki losing in the earlier rounds.
However Im pretty sure Li Na has beaten all those aforementioned players in other competitions.

On another note lets hope we see more Chinese women on the pro tennis circuit like the many from eastern Europe. Ive notice that lower ranked players (around the "200-250 ranking mark" )can earn better money($10000-$30,000) than the average worker by Chinese standards would make it an attraction, wouldnt it?
 
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bd popeye

The Last Jedi
VIP Professional
Re: Chinese Daily Photos, Videos & News!!

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China's Vice-President Xi Jinping receives a bunch of flowers upon his arrival at Jose Marti international airport in Havana, on June 4, 2011. Xi is in Cuba in a four-day official visit as part of an international tour that will include stops in Italy and Uruguay. China, Cuba's second largest trading partner after Venezuela and a key source of credit, has investments in transportation, oil, appliances, communications and tourism in the communist-ruled island.

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China's Vice-President Xi Jinping (L) is welcomed by his Cuban counterpart Esteban Lazo upon his arrival at Jose Marti international airport in Havana, on June 4, 2011

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Japan's Defense Minister Toshimi Kitazawa (L) and China's Defence Minister Liang Guanglie shake hands ahead of their meeting on the sidelines of the 10th International Institute of Strategic Studies (IISS) Asia Security Summit in Singapore June 4, 2011. Picture taken June 4, 2011.

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China's Li Na poses next to the Eiffel Tower during a photocall after defeating Italy's Francesca Schiavone in their women's final match for the French Open tennis tournament at the Roland Garros stadium, Saturday June 4, 2011, in Paris. Li Na won 6-4, 7-6.

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Chinese miners prepare to rescue survivors after a flood occured at the Shuanfeng coal mine in Shuangfeng county, central China's Hunan province on June 3, 2011, as the accident left two killed and another five workers trapped in the flooded coal mine. In 2010, 2,433 people died in coal mine accidents in China, according to official statistics, or a rate of more than six workers per day.

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China's Yu Hanchao (R) tussles for the ball against Uzbekistan's Server Djeparov during an international friendly football match in Kunming, southwest China's Yunnan province, on June 5, 2011. China beat Uzbekistan 1-0.

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Taiwan-China-IT-technology,FOCUS by Benjamin Yeh Chinese companies exhibit their products at Computex in Taipei on June 3, 2011. More Chinese companies than ever before took part in Asia's largest IT fair, which ended this weekend in Taipei, but their growing numbers could not disguise their lingering weaknesses, observers say.

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Visitors look at a bullet-riddled steam locomotive named "Cheol Ma", meaning "Iron Horse", on display at Imjingak pavilion near the Demilitarized Zone (DMZ) separating the two Koreas in Paju, about 52 km (32 miles) north of Seoul, June 5, 2011, on the eve of South Korea's Memorial Day to commemorate fallen patriots. According to local media, its last ride was on December 31, 1950 in the midst of the Korean War. Carrying military supplies for the allied forces of South Korea, it departed to Shinuiju in North Korea but would confront the Chinese army. South Korea and its allies blew it up to avoid it from being used by the North. The steam locomotive was left off the tracks without cars at Jangdan station in the demilitarized zone for almost 60 years and was placed at an exhibition site after restoration works.

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Chinese tennis lovers hold Chinese flags as China's Li Na plays Italy's Francesca Schiavone during their women's final match for the French Open tennis tournament at the Roland Garros stadium, Saturday June 4, 2011 in Paris.

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Hong Kong on June 4, 2011, Thousands of people take part in a candlelight vigil at a park in Hong Kong to commemorate the June 1989 pro-democracy demonstrations at Tiananmen Square, Beijing

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Hundreds of red plastic chairs are arranged to form one of Chinese characters of Chinese artist and activist Ai Weiwei's name to support him on the Liberty Square in front of the Chiang Kai-shek Memorial Hall in Taipei, Taiwan, Saturday, June 4, 2011. Chinese police detained Ai on April 3, 2011 without laying any official charges and the authorities alleged a company controlled by Ai evaded "huge amount" of tax.
 

bd popeye

The Last Jedi
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Re: Chinese Daily Photos, Videos & News!!

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A man walks his motorcycle on a flooding road in Ruichang of Jiujiang City, east China's Jiangxi Province, June 4, 2011. A rainstorm hit most parts of Jiujiang on Saturday. The rainfalls, to last until Monday, will greatly ease the drought the area has suffered for months. [Wei Dongsheng/Xinhua]

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Chinese children read issues of well-known Belgian comic strip 'Tintin and the blue lotus' in Beijing, 22 May 2001, during the fourth day of the visit of Belgian Foreign Minister Louis Michel in China. Chinese Culture Minister Jiazheng Sun and Belgian Foreign Minister Louis Michel presented 24 Tintin comic strips in Chinese language. Some 85,000 copies of 'Tintin and the Blue Lotus' have already been printed. The first 'Tintin in the Land of the Soviets' is not allowed in China because of Herge's critical view on communism. The Chinese officials have translated 'Tintin in Tibet' into 'Tintin in China-Tibet

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College students have been holding an activity of "snatching cigarettes away from people" to advance "No Smoking" in Nanchong City, Sichuan Province since May. For days, a team of more than 30 female students have exhorted almost 500 people not to smoke. [Chinanews.com]

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Members of the Clean Air Network (CAN) stage a 'flash mob' calling for better air quality in Hong Kong on June 5, 2011. The Hong Kong government recently promised that new air quality objectives that it said would be ready this year. In 2010 air pollution levels in the city reached a record high, prompting government warnings calling for people to avoid going out.

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A woman holds a candle during a vigil marking the anniversary of the Tiananmen Square crackdown, in Hong Kong on June 4, 2011.

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People watch as an aircraft takes off from Hong Kong international airport on June 5, 2011. Citing an increase in air traffic demand on the back of strong economic growth in Asia, the city's Airport Authority said it had to find ways to increase the capacity of the airport because current facilities were expected to be saturated by 2020. A proposed third runway would enable the airport to handle a maximum of 620,000 flights a year, the authority said, though environmental groups have expressed concern over the plan which they say would threaten an area popular with endangered Chinese white dolphins.

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Airborne firefighters stand by for orders during a firefighting drill in Honghuaerji Township of Hulunbuir, north China's Inner Mongolia Autonomous Region, June 3, 2011. The Hulunbuir regiment of Inner Mongolia's firefighting brigade held a drill here Friday.

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Photos taken on June 3, 2011 show transformer robots in Guangzhou, south China' Guangdong Province.

Twelve transformer models, all made from scrapped auto parts, were unveiled here Friday to promote "Transformers: Dark of the Moon'', a second sequel to the 2007 Hollywood blockbuster "Transformers"
 

Quickie

Colonel
Re: Chinese Daily Photos, Videos & News!!

huh?

How about mens table tennis , badminton, gymnastics etc, or the double gold medalists in canoeing Meng Guanliang and Yang Wenjun.

There was also the Chinese high jumper Zhu Jian Hua who held the world record in the 80's



hmmm........ nooooooooo... I dont think so, but they have suggested that it wasnt a top level competition, with the highly ranked seeds in Azarenka, Clijsters, and Wozniacki losing in the earlier rounds.
However Im pretty sure Li Na has beaten all those aforementioned players in other competitions.

On another note lets hope we see more Chinese women on the pro tennis circuit like the many from eastern Europe. Ive notice that lower ranked players (around the "200-250 ranking mark" )can earn better money($10000-$30,000) than the average worker by Chinese standards would make it an attraction, wouldnt it?

Not to forget the Chinese weightlifters and Wu Peng, who has beaten Phelps twice recently.
 

bd popeye

The Last Jedi
VIP Professional
Re: Chinese Daily Photos, Videos & News!!

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06.03.2011....Apple lovers are known for their somewhat radical devotion to any new products the company introduces, but selling body parts to afford them is definitely something new — and scary. According to Global Times, a youngster in China's Anhui province wanted a new iPad 2 tablet so badly he was willing to part with a kidney to be able to afford it.

The student, a 17-year-old high school student named Zheng, told a local newspaper "I wanted to buy an iPad 2 but could not afford it. A broker contacted me on the Internet and said he could help me sell one kidney for 20,000 yuan." The "broker" was true to his word, and after the operation was completed on April 28, Zheng received his 20,000 yuan, which equates to a little over $3,000.

The young organ donor carried out these plans without the knowledge of his mother, who was surprised to see her son awash in new, expensive electronics. After discovering what Zheng had done, she promptly alerted authorities, who have been attempting to track down the buyers ever since.
 
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