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Olympic Games
BEIJING: Anastasia Davydova and Anastasia Ermakova share the same first name, age, height, weight and hometown. The Russian synchronised swimmers also now share duet gold medals in two straight Olympics. Performing a perfect free routine to the “Peer Gynt” before a near capacity crowd at the Water Cube on Wednesday, Davydova and Ermakova won with a combined 99.251 points. The pair received all perfect 10s for technical merit. “Competition makes you achieve things you never thought possible,” Ermakova said though a translator. “We waited four years for this gold and a whole row of 10s was our crowning achievement.” Gemma Mengual and Andrea Fuentes of Spain took the silver medal with 98.334 points and Saho Harada and Emiko Suzuki of Japan took the bronze with 97.167. “Athens was our first Olympics and your first gold is probably the high point of your entire life,” Davydova said. “These last four years, it was harder to train, because when you have that status it seems like there is nothing left to strive for. But we were aware that we needed to prove ourselves again.” Jian twins finish fourthTwin sisters Jiang Tingting and Jiang Wenwen of China settled for fourth with 96.334. The final results were determined by the sum of the free routine final score and the technical routine score from Monday’s preliminary. The American pair of Christina Jones and Andrea Nott finished fifth. Wearing gold-backed suits to fit their golden expectations, the Anastasias matched the high flute notes of Edvard Grieg’s music with perfectly timed twirls and synchronised spins of sheer beauty. On one move, the pair looked like a single body with four limbs sticking out of the water, each one moving in unison. “It was a very serious competition. The Spanish girls, especially, were very, very strong competitors,” Davydova said. “We knew no one was going to give us the gold medal on a silver plate.” Support from fansFans displaying Russian banners clapped along and chanted encouragement and Davydova and Ermakova formed a celebratory embrace while still in the water. Davydova and Ermakova are both 5’7” tall, weigh 55 kilograms and hail from Moscow. The duo has been competing together for 10 years, beginning as juniors. The pair had to wait until Sydney 2000 winners Olga Brusnikina and Maria Kiseleva retired before becoming Russia’s top combination. Mengual swept the solo and duet (with Fuentes) titles at the European championships in March, but the Spanish synchro standout had never won an Olympic medal before. Fuentes stepped in alongside Mengual following the retirement of long-time partner Paola Tirados after the 2007 worlds. The new duo already showed promise by winning the Olympic qualifying tournament in April, although the Russians were absent. “It was a long road to reach this Olympic medal. It’s been hard work,” Mengual said. “Our goal was to do our maximum, and we were near the Russians, so we reached our goal. “The difficulty nowadays in this sport has to do with speed. You have to be quicker and higher. You see that with the Anastasias.” Japan has won a medal in synchro in every Olympics since the discipline was introduced at Los Angeles in 1984, and this was the country’s 12th medal overall. — AP
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