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August 22, 2016

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Home » Sports » Olympics

Fewer golds but China’s athletes can still delight

CHINA blamed fierce competition for their Rio flop and promised to examine “shortcomings” after the nation’s worst Olympic performance in 20 years.

China sent 410 athletes, their biggest team at a foreign Olympics, but by Saturday they had won just 26 gold medals, their fewest since Atlanta in 1996.

Worse still, China trailed not only the United States but also Britain on the medals table. China topped the table in 2008 and were second in 2004 and 2012.

Chinese Olympic Committee chief Liu Peng said on Saturday that rising standards had taken them by surprise.

“There are a few problems we cannot overlook. In the Rio Games we didn’t win so many medals ... we didn’t assess objectively the challenges we might face at these Games,” said Liu.

“In recent years more countries have attached importance to the Olympic Games, so the level of play internationally has come up and the competition has become fierce.

“We need to employ a new mentality and new understanding how to improve our performances and ability. We need more experiences and learning.”

Liu said inexperience, in particular, had cost China, whose team was young with three-quarters of them competing at their first Olympics.

“We have trained these athletes but the training isn’t enough,” he said.

Too many mental burdens

“Because when these athletes are facing fierce competition and challenges they have too much to think about and too many mental burdens and they didn’t play at their highest level.”

But he had warm words for swimmer Fu Yuanhui, whose bubbly personality and frank comments — rare for a Chinese athlete — won hearts at home and abroad.

“Her happiness, starting from the bottom of her heart, fully demonstrated her spirit to continue to challenge herself and achieve excellence,” said Liu.

“This is something that touched audiences on the very deepest level.

“Her ‘prehistoric strength,’ as she put it, fully demonstrated the modern Chinese athletes — they’re confident, they’re active and they’re fully pushing forward.”

Liu also praised China’s athletes for competing in the right spirit and not appearing desperate to win at all costs. “We have fully demonstrated our Chinese spirit. We’re not arrogant when we win, we don’t give up easily and we continue to strive forward,” he said.

A once-feverish obsession with gold medals has slowly subsided among the Chinese public, which has shown more interest this year in lavishing adoration on athletes with personalities, such as bronze medalist Fu.

“Finally, the public desire for golds has returned to normal,” said Lu Yuanzhen, a professor of sports at South China Normal University who has long argued that a mature nation should have a more relaxed attitude toward wins and losses in athletic competitions.

Boost to national pride

The entire country was moved to tears when Xu Haifeng, a pistol shooter, won the first gold Olympic medal for the People’s Republic of China in Los Angeles in 1984. It was a huge boost to national pride.

The fever only grew as China sought better Olympic performances and the ultimate goal of hosting the Games. The Olympics was a national obsession, and gold medalists were household names and rewarded handsomely.

China’s gold medal tally climbed to 28 in Sydney, 32 in Athens and 51 in Beijing. In London, Chinese athletes still took away 38 gold medals and were second only to US Olympians.

Ning Zetao, another swimmer, came home empty-handed from Rio but still grabbed headlines because of his undiminished popularity in China.

And Chinese social media was full of encouraging words when swimmer Sun Yang failed to qualify for the 1,500-meter freestyle final, a sharp contrast to the days when the Chinese public hurled hurtful words at athletes failing to clinch gold.

At recently as 2008, hurdler Liu Xiang was booed when he could not get off the starting line in Beijing because of injuries.

“The public has gone to another extreme — tolerance of non-champions and even adoration of them,” wrote Li Ruyi, a veteran Chinese sports writer.

China’s gymnasts came home with two bronzes this year, the worst performance in 32 years.

It was also the first time that Team China, a longtime powerhouse in gymnastics, had not win a single gold since the nation returned to the Olympics in 1984.




 

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