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No heir in sight as Olympic legend Liu retires

(China Daily)    10:53, April 08, 2015
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Liu clears the final hurdle on his way to gold in the 110m hurdles as France's Ladji Doucoure hits the last obstacle in the 2004 Olympic Games in Athens, Greece, Aug 27, 2004. Liu won in a world record-equaling time of 12.91 sec, matching the feat of Colin Jackson, who ran 12.91 sec in Stuttgart, Germany, in August 1993. He was China's first men's Olympic gold medal winner in track and field. (Photo by Xu Jingxing/China Daily)

Star hurdler Liu Xiang's retirement, announced officially on his micro blog on Tuesday, brings to an end an era of outstanding Chinese athletes who demonstrated the country's ability to excel on the world stage.

He leaves a massive void, as no new crop of exceptional sports stars has emerged to continue the momentum that he and other greats unleashed.

Liu shared the international sporting spotlight with iconic figures such as basketball hero Yao Ming and tennis star Li Na. Their groundbreaking feats saw China standing high as a top sporting nation, but experts say such scenes may be over for the time being.

"In the next few years, there might not be any athlete who can fill the big shoes left by Liu, Yao and Li and excel as they represent China in mainstream global events," Tan Jianxiang, a sports sociology professor at South China Normal University, told China Daily on Tuesday.

"Boasting a combination of athletic prowess, international influence and marketing value, the three stars earned a level of recognition for Chinese sports at the highest level that their predecessors never achieved.

"Now that they have all retired, China's sporting leaders have to reflect on their careers and consider an adjustment to the system for developing talent to produce future stars."

Liu has been struggling to return to fitness since he pulled his Achilles tendon at the 2012 London Olympics.

He said in a statement posted on his micro blog: "I am officially retiring today to say goodbye to my beloved tracks and hurdles. It's a well-considered decision but a hard one to make. I've tried all my best to recover from the injury over the past two years since the 2012 London Olympics, dreaming that I could start over again.


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(For the latest China news, Please follow People's Daily on Twitter and Facebook)(Editor:Zhang Yuan,Huang Jin)

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