Volleyball pair undefeated as track and field kicks off

Latvia’s beach volleyball pair of Martins Plavins and Janis Smedins beat Norway 2:0 (21:18 and 21:16) and remain undefeated to advance to the quarter finals. On Monday they will face the winner of Saturday’s match between Russia and the USA. Win or lose they are guaranteed at least an 8th place finish.

The second pair of Aleksandrs Samoilovs and Ruslans Sorokins face off in the round of 16 against 3rd ranked Germany on Saturday to see if they too can make it to the quarter finals. It will be a tall order but the two Latvian pairs have surprised at London.

Things got interesting in beach volleyball on Friday when the top-ranked USA pair who were gold medalists in Beijing and were ranked 2nd in London were upset and eliminated by the Italians.

So far Latvia’s beach volleyballers have gone the furthest as other Latvian athletes have failed to deliver although the games are only half-way through.

Sixty-five year old pistol-shooter Afanasijs Kuzmins, in his 9th Olympics this year, finished 17th in a field of 18. He won gold under the Soviets at Seoul in 1988 and a silver at Barcelona in 1992 as part of Latvia’s team. This time he did not qualify for the Games but was given the one wild card berth awarded to Latvia’s Olympic Committee.

Meanwhile athletics, or track and field as it is more commonly known, kicked off on Friday.

The heptathlon is a women’s track and field event and consists of seven disciplines: the 100m hurdles, the high jump, the shot put, the 200m, the long jump, the javelin and the 800m. It is a test of strength, endurance and speed. It was added to the Olympics for women in 1984 and replaced the five event pentathlon. Laura Ikauniece finished 15th after day one, while Aiga Gribuste was 23rd in a field of 38. Competition continues on Saturday.

Ikauniece was a surprise bronze winner at this year’s European championships after moving up from junior ranks. Latvian fans should take note of that as they continue to wait for one of their athletes to get to the podium. Most of the medal winners for Latvia in the Summer Games since independence was restored have been a surprise.

The Games are over, however, for Latvian athletes in gymnastics, judo, swimming, table tennis, the shot put and road cycling.

Latvia’s beach volleyballers poised to advance

Latvia’s beach volleyballers are off to a great start at London in the preliminary round of 24 teams playing in 6 groups. Both pairs won their first two games and are in a good position to advance to the next round.

Ruslans Sorokins (b. 1982) and Aleksandrs Samoilovs (b. 1985) are ranked 13th and defeated 7th-seeded Poland in three sets after losing the first. They had a much easier time with South Africa winning in two. They now face the 4th ranked duo from the USA on August 1. That should be a treat for Latvian fans in Canada and the United States because the game will be televised. It starts at 4:30pm local time or 11:30am Eastern.

Meanwhile 14th ranked Martins Plavins (b. 1985) and Janis Smedins (b. 1987) also came through big disposing of an 8th-ranked German pair in three sets and Venezuela in two. They face the 5th-seeded Dutch a day later on August 2.

The preliminary round will finish on August 2. The top two teams in each of the six groups advance.  They are joined by the top two third place teams. The remaining four third place teams then compete for the final two places. From that point on it’s winner takes all as the sixteen qualifiers drop to eight, then to four and then to the two finalists.

Samoilovs and Plavins played together going into the 2008 Beijing Olympics where they beat the heavily favoured Americans in the preliminary round and then made it to the round of 16 before losing. Plavins and Smedins won bronze in the 2010 European championships.

As for other action, Latvian fans have to bide their time as the bulk of their athletes have yet to compete. Not so in neighbouring Lithuania which is basking in glory at the surprise 100m breaststroke gold win by 15 year old teenager Ruta Meilulyte. Now based in Britain, she stunned the sporting world and catapulted to instant fame. Basketball-crazy Lithuanians momentarily forgot about their team which stumbled in a opening loss to Argentina but then defeated Nigeria and could still go far. Like Latvia, Estonia also hopes to pull in a few medals but there’s nothing to report yet.

Latvia does not have a tradition of excellence in any summer discipline so predicting medals is difficult. One group to watch is the team of four Latvian BMXers. Led by Beijing gold medalist Maris Strombergs who is still considered an elite cyclist, they will compete from August 8-10.

The Games are over for a number of Latvia’s athletes. Road cyclist Aleksejs Saramotins finished 56th, Dimitrijs Trefilovs finished 38th in men’s gymnastics, Konstantins Ovchinnikovs lost to a Brazilian in judo, Matiss Burgis made it to the second round of table tennis before bowing out and Uldis Kalnins, who, despite coming in 2nd in his 100m freestyle swimming heat, placed 30th overall and did not advance.

Who will bring home Olympic medals for Latvia?

Since regaining independence, Latvian athletes have brought home medals from every Summer Olympics. In 1992 at Barcelona it was a silver in canoeing by Ivans Klementjevs, a silver in pistol shooting by Afanisijs Kuzmins and a bronze by Dainis Ozols in the individual men’s cycling road race.

Four years later Klementjevs repeated with a silver at Atlanta. Igors Vihrovs won Latvia’s first ever gold at Sydney in 2000 in gymnastics while teammates Aigars Fadejevs added a silver in the men’s 50km walk and Vesvolods Zelonijs picked up a bronze in judo.

Latvia’s biggest haul came at Athens in 2004 with four silvers. Jevgenijs Sapronenko came second in the pole vault, Vadims Vasilevskis followed in the javelin, Jelena Rublevska in the women’s pentathlon, a single day event consisting of sharp-shooting, fencing, swimming, equestrianism and cross-country running, and Viktors Scerbatihs in weigthlifting. Maris Strombergs picked up a BMX gold in 2008 at Beijing, Ainars Kovals scored a silver in the javelin while Scerbatihs added a bronze in the men’s super heavyweight weightlifting class.

Coming into London, Latvia has a record of 3 gold, 11 silver and 4 bronze medals. The total includes a silver in Los Angeles in 1932 as well as a silver and a bronze in Berlin in 1936. Latvian athletes first participated in the 1912 Games under the Tsarist flag and were members of Soviet teams during occupation. Janis Konrads won a swimming gold for Australia in 1960, his sister Ilze won a silver in the same Games while Aldis Berzins was on the 1984 USA gold medal volleyball team.

Latvia has 48 athletes in London and they will be competing in wrestling, judo, table tennis, the pentathlon, swimming, beach volleyball, canoeing, weightlifting, athletics, gymnastics, BMX cycling and road cycling.

While Latvia has few contenders, previous games show that medals can come from unexpected quarters. However Maris Strombergs, the BMX winner at Beijing is considered a medal contender. Two pairs are entered in the men’s beach volleyball. They are ranked 13th and 14th coming into the Games and could surprise.

Of note is sharpshooter Kuzmins who is at the age of 65 is in his 9th Summer Olympics. Kuzmins made his debut under the Soviet flag at the 1976 Games in Montreal. He only missed the 1984 games in Los Angeles due to a tit-for-tat Soviet bloc boycott following the West’s boycott of the 1980 Games in Moscow in retaliation for the 1979 Soviet invasion of Afghanistan. He is not the oldest participant in London. The oldest is a Japanese equestrianist at 71.

As a footnote, Sanita Puspurs, a recent immigrant from Latvia, will be competing for Ireland in single women’s rowing.

While bigger countries fret over their medal totals, for Latvia it will be pulling in a few medals and not being skunked. But then again, 80 of the 205 nations participating at London have never won any Olympic medal at either the Winter or Summer Games.