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Analysis | Tokyo Olympics: Sarah Lee’s bronze tinged with mild disappointment, which says everything about how good Hong Kong have been at Games

  • Six medals won in Japan make it the greatest Games ever for city’s athletes
  • Unprecedented success raised expectations for cyclist in her sprint semi-final

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Sarah Lee celebrates after winning bronze in the women’s track cycling sprint finals at the Tokyo Olympics. Photo: Reuters
It is perhaps a measure of Hong Kong’s spectacular performance at the Tokyo Games, that Sarah Lee Wai-sze’s bronze medal win in the sprint on the last day could even remotely be considered a minor disappointment.
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After all, it is a tremendous feat that was celebrated ecstatically when she first achieved it at the London 2012 Games, where she won Hong Kong’s only medal and just the city’s third ever.

In Japan, Hong Kong has now trebled its all-time medal haul, which perhaps explains why expectations might have been ever so slightly raised.

Lee has ensured she goes into the history books as Hong Kong’s only multi-Olympic medal winner, with her second bronze medal coming nine years after her first.

Hopefully, she will be the first of many multi-Olympic medallists in this young Hong Kong squad.

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Sarah Lee hugs one of her coaches Tung Qi after winning the bronze medal. Photo: AFP
Sarah Lee hugs one of her coaches Tung Qi after winning the bronze medal. Photo: AFP
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