WOMEN
7/8 finals
Chinese Taipei vs Tunisia 2:1 (23:15, 17:19,
6:5)
The optimism and good spirit of Chinese Taipei finally
paid off in the 7th place final against Tunisia.
After a clear first period, in which Chinese Taipei
won by 8 points, Tunisia came back in the second period and beat their
opponents 19:17 so that the match went into shoot-outs. The luck was on the
side of the Asian team who celebrated a 6:5 win.
Sz-Yu Lin could not hide her happiness, but still got
critical about their performance: “We were really nervous before the game, but
since we got to the court, we got excited and very concentrated instead. After
we won the first period, I think we got too ambitious and nervous, so we
weren’t able to win the second one. We overthought a lot of situations. We
managed to get rid of our bad feelings at the second half of the set, but it
was too late.”
5/6 finals
Australia vs Poland 0:2 (8:14, 8:12)
In a rather low-scoring 5th-place final of the women’s
competition, hosts Poland celebrated a 2:0 win in front of a cheering home
crowd.
Yesterday, Australia’s Madeleine McAfee could not
finish the match due to a clash leading to a muscle injury. A similar scenario
occurred today when Ana Medjed was injured during an unfortunate encounter with
one of the polish opponents.
“We played great, but we felt a lot of pressure
because of the audience. We played for our people and we didn’t want to let
them down. We are really satisfied with the result as these are our first World
Games,” said Sylwia Bartowiak from Poland.
MEN
7/8 finals
Poland vs Egypt 2:0 (16:11, 14:8)
During the 2005 World Games in Duisburg, Germany Egypt
ranked 6th and attended this year’s edition with a new, inexperienced young
team.
Poland used their advantage in experience and the
support of the home audience and won both periods of the match.
“I believe we played a good game, but it was a bad
luck,” said the Egyptian youngster Mohamed Abousalem Abdelmnem Tarek.
Poland were not satisfied with how the tournament
turned for them: “This is not a good result for us, we wanted to do better. But
the atmosphere was great and enjoyable,” commented Adrian Fiodor.
5/6 finals
Uruguay vs Australia 2:0 (18:14, 18:17)
Both teams started their battle motivated and with a
lot of determination but in the end only one team could win. In a close encounter
Uruguay, however, proved to be the better team and won 2:0.
“To win was the only option for us. Australia won our
first match on this tournament, so we knew we have to bounce of the bottom and
get the best of us. We’re already thinking about the Pan American Championships
in February and we’re excited about that. This tournament definitely helped us
to get more confident,” explained Felipe Adler Bonifacino from Uruguay.