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Gold medalist Lena Schoneborn of Germany
poses on podium during victory ceremony of the women's modern pentathlon
at the Beijing 2008 Olympic Games in Beijing, China, Aug. 22, 2008.
(Xinhua/Luo Xiaoguang) Photo
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Lena Schoneborn of Germany competes
during the women's running 3000m competition at the Beijing 2008 Olympic
Games morden pentathlon event in Beijing, China, Aug. 22, 2008. Lena
Schoneborn of Germany won the gold medal of Olympic women's modern
pentathlon Friday. (Xinhua/Luo Xiaoguang) Photo
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By Sportswriter Zhang Rongfeng
BEIJING, Aug. 22 (Xinhua) -- Lena Schoneborn of
Germany clinched the women's modern pentathlon title in 5,792 points at the
Olympic Sports Center here on Friday.
Schoneborn, ranked third in the world, came 20th in
the shooting before winning the fencing to top the overall ranking and never
gave the lead away.
Heather Fell of Great Britain, 24, placed highly at this
year's European and world championships, came in second 10 seconds trailing the
titlist with 5752 points.
Fell finished fifth and fourth respectively in the
two championships.
Victoria Tereshuk of Ukraine won the bronze in 5,672
points, taking the advantage of a strong rally in running. She was in sixth
place before the last discipline.
"We all focused on Victoria Tereshuk because we know
she is the best at running. I also tried to keep on Heather and I could see her
coming. I knew we are about the same speed so I knew I could increase my speed
on the final lap," said Schoneborn.
"I knew that for the running and the swimming I would
be fine. The big risk is always the horses, so that's what you think about the
most.
"As for the fencing and shooting, it all depends on
your form on the day. My shooting today was not good but my fencing was much
better and I started to enjoy myself then," added she.
For Fell, it's a hard and successful comeback after
injuries two years ago.
"Two years ago I had been battling with injuries for
some time and I was getting bad results, so I had to view where I was going with
my career," recalled Fell.
"I went back home and thought about it, and decided
to give pentathlon one more shot. Obviously I am glad I changed my mind."
"I did not realise I had made 10 seconds today on
Lena because my biggest worry was Victoria catching me. I realized by the third
lap that I had made some ground up but I thought the gap would still be too
much. I knew I was fit but I thought Lena would be pretty fit for this event
too," said Fell.
World No. 2 Aya Medany, 19, form Egypt was second
overall on 2,072 points after coming joint eighth in the shooting and joint
fifth in the fencing, but a poor swimming result downgraded her to eighth
overall.
"It is not because of my recent injury, and I don't
think my performance was that bad. I tried hard in everything but it didn't help
my performance," said Medany.
"I am still young, I can achieve my goals step by
step. To be eighth in Olympic Games is OK and I am hoping for a better
performance in the next Olympic Games."
Belinda Schreiber of Switzerland, ranked No. 38 in
the world, won the shooting with a score of 188, but dropped to eleventh
overall.
Pre-game favorite Amelie Caze, 23, finished a lowly
ninth for weak shooting and running. The tall French school teacher, 23, has
earned her favourite's tag the last two seasons, in 2007 and 2008, when she
twice won the world championship title, in Berlin and Budapest.
"It was very hard, I went hard, I tried hard. You
have to accept your place," said Caze.
"I was disappointed with the equestrian (horse
jumping), that was when I knew I had no chance for a medal. I did what I could.
I wasn't at my level."
Caze is now ranked No.1 by the International Modern
Pentathlon Union (UIPM).
Anastasia Samusevich of Belarus narrowly missed the
podium with eight seconds adrift. Samusevich slipped from joint third to joint
17th overall after coming 33rd in the pool, but a leading run result earned her
place back by big margin.
China's Chen Qian took the fifth place as she managed
full mark in horse jumping and a remarkable run.