2016 Rio de Janeiro Olympic GamesAug 21, 2016 by FloVolleyball Staff
Jenny Lang Ping Makes History with China's Gold
Jenny Lang Ping Makes History with China's Gold
China won women's volleyball Olympic gold and head coach Jenny Lang Ping became the first person to win gold as a player and a coach.
By Janie McCauley, Associated Press
Head held high as she took the court moments after her Chinese team entered the arena, Jenny Lang Ping waved and smiled in several directions then paced around the floor observing Serbia, China's championship opponent.
She proudly sang through the national anthem, then guided her team to a come-from-behind gold — and made her own history, too.
Lang Ping became the first person to win volleyball gold as a coach and player, her China team rallying from one-set down to defeat the upstart Serbians 19-25, 25-17, 25-22, 25-23 on Saturday night in the Rio championship match.
"It's not important to me to make history," Lang Ping said. "I'm so happy for the young girls, they trained very hard."
Early on in this tournament, Lang Ping — who captured an Olympic title with the 1984 Chinese national team in Los Angeles then later spent a four-year stint coaching the Americans — challenged her players to find ways to grow from their struggles with the world watching.
All along, Lang Ping believed her emotional China players had the talent and determination to compete with the top programs in the world.
And oh, did they show it. Once they found a groove.
China took a 23-22 lead in the fourth set when Ting Zhu's kill sent Maja Ognjenovic to the floor with a hard ball to the face, and the match was over shortly thereafter. Lang Ping raised both arms in the air and Fangxu Yang sprinted over to embrace her. Many more hugs followed.
The Chinese exhibited that same fire and fight a year ago while winning the World Cup in Japan, then got to Rio de Janeiro earlier this month and worked through some initial rough, inconsistent Olympic moments.
When the Chinese squad lost its Olympic opener in five sets to the Netherlands back on August 6, Lang Ping challenged her players: to learn, to support one another through the ups and downs, to grow from each defeat and triumph on the pressure-packed Olympic stage.
China responded, and seemed to play better when the moments got bigger.
"Before the tournament I never thought that we could win the gold," Lang Ping said. "I was thinking if we were lucky we could win a medal. You never know, our young players, at the beginning of the tournament we didn't play well. But at important times, we were really lucky we played well."
Lang Ping's group of women found its top level of volleyball over the recent days in Rio de Janeiro and spoiled things for a volleyball-crazed country in the process. China took down the two-time defending Olympic champion Brazil women on their home turf in Tuesday's quarterfinals to show this team had arrived — and, until Saturday night, that had been China's shining moment.
The Chinese had much more fight still in them.
"With our young team you never know. One day great, one day not," Lang Ping said. "We just had to be patient."
Serbia had pulled off an improbable upset of its own by taking down the top-ranked U.S. women in a thrilling five-set semifinal Thursday.
The Serbian women wore their socks pulled up Saturday, the words "Play to Win" written on the back. Their hands entwined, they sang in unison during the national anthem in an undeniably proud moment for the players, their supporters in the Rio stands and all of those others back home.
For Serbia, there will still be so much to celebrate from this remarkable run to the championship in Rio. This is the program's first Olympic medal, ever.
"In this moment I must inform you about small history. In Europe, in the youth category Serbia is No. 1, in junior category Serbia is No. 1," said Aleksandar Boricic, President of the European Volleyball Confederation. "We wait for the result in the Olympic Games if the senior team can be No. 1. It's a great future, they have many young players. In this kind of competition, Olympic Games, world championships, sometimes you need more lucky balls."
Head held high as she took the court moments after her Chinese team entered the arena, Jenny Lang Ping waved and smiled in several directions then paced around the floor observing Serbia, China's championship opponent.
She proudly sang through the national anthem, then guided her team to a come-from-behind gold — and made her own history, too.
Lang Ping became the first person to win volleyball gold as a coach and player, her China team rallying from one-set down to defeat the upstart Serbians 19-25, 25-17, 25-22, 25-23 on Saturday night in the Rio championship match.
"It's not important to me to make history," Lang Ping said. "I'm so happy for the young girls, they trained very hard."
Early on in this tournament, Lang Ping — who captured an Olympic title with the 1984 Chinese national team in Los Angeles then later spent a four-year stint coaching the Americans — challenged her players to find ways to grow from their struggles with the world watching.
All along, Lang Ping believed her emotional China players had the talent and determination to compete with the top programs in the world.
And oh, did they show it. Once they found a groove.
China took a 23-22 lead in the fourth set when Ting Zhu's kill sent Maja Ognjenovic to the floor with a hard ball to the face, and the match was over shortly thereafter. Lang Ping raised both arms in the air and Fangxu Yang sprinted over to embrace her. Many more hugs followed.
The Chinese exhibited that same fire and fight a year ago while winning the World Cup in Japan, then got to Rio de Janeiro earlier this month and worked through some initial rough, inconsistent Olympic moments.
When the Chinese squad lost its Olympic opener in five sets to the Netherlands back on August 6, Lang Ping challenged her players: to learn, to support one another through the ups and downs, to grow from each defeat and triumph on the pressure-packed Olympic stage.
China responded, and seemed to play better when the moments got bigger.
"Before the tournament I never thought that we could win the gold," Lang Ping said. "I was thinking if we were lucky we could win a medal. You never know, our young players, at the beginning of the tournament we didn't play well. But at important times, we were really lucky we played well."
Lang Ping's group of women found its top level of volleyball over the recent days in Rio de Janeiro and spoiled things for a volleyball-crazed country in the process. China took down the two-time defending Olympic champion Brazil women on their home turf in Tuesday's quarterfinals to show this team had arrived — and, until Saturday night, that had been China's shining moment.
The Chinese had much more fight still in them.
"With our young team you never know. One day great, one day not," Lang Ping said. "We just had to be patient."
Serbia had pulled off an improbable upset of its own by taking down the top-ranked U.S. women in a thrilling five-set semifinal Thursday.
The Serbian women wore their socks pulled up Saturday, the words "Play to Win" written on the back. Their hands entwined, they sang in unison during the national anthem in an undeniably proud moment for the players, their supporters in the Rio stands and all of those others back home.
For Serbia, there will still be so much to celebrate from this remarkable run to the championship in Rio. This is the program's first Olympic medal, ever.
"In this moment I must inform you about small history. In Europe, in the youth category Serbia is No. 1, in junior category Serbia is No. 1," said Aleksandar Boricic, President of the European Volleyball Confederation. "We wait for the result in the Olympic Games if the senior team can be No. 1. It's a great future, they have many young players. In this kind of competition, Olympic Games, world championships, sometimes you need more lucky balls."