Australia's world and Olympic
swimming champion swimmer Ian Thorpe listens to a question during a media
conference announcing his retirement in Sydney November 21, 2006.
[Reuters]
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Olympic swimming champion Ian
Thorpe's retirement at 24, still sending shockwaves around his home country
Australia, was felt strongly in China which stands to lose one of the great box
office draws for the 2008 Games.
The news was enough to knock NBA sensation Yao Ming and the Chinese men's
volleyball team from the sporting headlines on Wednesday, with national
newspapers devoting near page-long tributes to the hugely popular swimmer.
"Thorpedo Stops Launching!" the Beijing Youth Daily proclaimed in a banner
headline jammed against a near full-scale image of Thorpe's unshaven face
grinning wryly at a camera.
"Goodbye to the Flying Thorpedo -- Thorpe Retires and Embarks Upon a
Beautiful and Unknown Path," a headline on China news Web site Sina.com read.
In an emotional tribute titled "The Fish That Would No Longer Swim," the
Beijing News lamented that Thorpe was too young to bid farewell.
"His departure is cruel, and leaves people in anguish. This young man dubbed
'Thorpedo,' known to people as the 'big-footed wonder,' won five Olympic golds
and broke 13 world records."
China central television showed pictures of Thorpe walking down catwalks at
fashion shows and flirting with three-times Australian Open tennis champion
Martina Hingis.
Thorpe, who drew screaming fans on a promotional visit to China in 2004, will
miss Beijing in 2008 and a genuine tilt at being the first male swimmer to win
gold at three consecutive Olympic Games after announcing his retirement on
Tuesday.