The Japan Times - Olympic giants China face tough medal fight at home Games

EUR -
AED 4.299291
AFN 74.338984
ALL 95.44428
AMD 439.131904
ANG 2.095367
AOA 1074.676933
ARS 1613.805717
AUD 1.636342
AWG 2.107209
AZN 2.010472
BAM 1.955043
BBD 2.366015
BDT 144.134211
BGN 1.9528
BHD 0.441591
BIF 3493.118107
BMD 1.170672
BND 1.495208
BOB 8.116962
BRL 5.816484
BSD 1.17466
BTN 110.122376
BWP 15.794089
BYN 3.305163
BYR 22945.168791
BZD 2.362616
CAD 1.600086
CDF 2705.422275
CHF 0.919007
CLF 0.02648
CLP 1042.166921
CNY 7.989605
CNH 7.999183
COP 4181.019489
CRC 535.197417
CUC 1.170672
CUP 31.022805
CVE 110.222808
CZK 24.354833
DJF 209.181714
DKK 7.472832
DOP 70.693241
DZD 155.129271
EGP 60.886828
ERN 17.560078
ETB 184.908508
FJD 2.59643
FKP 0.86692
GBP 0.867526
GEL 3.149058
GGP 0.86692
GHS 13.004022
GIP 0.86692
GMD 85.458806
GNF 10310.09742
GTQ 8.978563
GYD 245.785915
HKD 9.169135
HNL 31.209187
HRK 7.535961
HTG 153.769168
HUF 365.014304
IDR 20237.170605
ILS 3.51709
IMP 0.86692
INR 110.119838
IQD 1538.810957
IRR 1544701.541974
ISK 143.79383
JEP 0.86692
JMD 186.089561
JOD 0.829987
JPY 186.777182
KES 151.192824
KGS 102.348797
KHR 4702.139813
KMF 492.852909
KPW 1053.546179
KRW 1733.40213
KWD 0.36066
KYD 0.978925
KZT 544.321638
LAK 25917.07917
LBP 105195.330741
LKR 373.277113
LRD 216.146338
LSL 19.310008
LTL 3.45669
LVL 0.708127
LYD 7.42822
MAD 10.846741
MDL 20.122469
MGA 4872.155791
MKD 61.669331
MMK 2458.131184
MNT 4189.948152
MOP 9.476173
MRU 46.89425
MUR 54.717092
MVR 18.086501
MWK 2036.529133
MXN 20.311742
MYR 4.642303
MZN 74.817505
NAD 19.310008
NGN 1582.268656
NIO 43.233266
NOK 10.887603
NPR 176.197306
NZD 1.987997
OMR 0.450123
PAB 1.174755
PEN 4.036903
PGK 5.167331
PHP 70.740208
PKR 327.479841
PLN 4.244716
PYG 7389.234586
QAR 4.282861
RON 5.092536
RSD 117.350542
RUB 87.91709
RWF 1716.550251
SAR 4.390732
SBD 9.42203
SCR 16.552177
SDG 703.023709
SEK 10.801614
SGD 1.494099
SHP 0.874025
SLE 28.856723
SLL 24548.399438
SOS 671.345882
SRD 43.851016
STD 24230.544279
STN 24.492089
SVC 10.279065
SYP 129.514287
SZL 19.302776
THB 37.911623
TJS 11.059719
TMT 4.103205
TND 3.415693
TOP 2.818697
TRY 52.591845
TTD 7.963951
TWD 36.919514
TZS 3037.893389
UAH 51.540591
UGX 4352.333965
USD 1.170672
UYU 46.701923
UZS 14247.485336
VES 564.445474
VND 30821.44918
VUV 138.1773
WST 3.190548
XAF 655.708801
XAG 0.01539
XAU 0.000248
XCD 3.163799
XCG 2.11709
XDR 0.815491
XOF 655.711601
XPF 119.331742
YER 279.380664
ZAR 19.322285
ZMK 10537.450421
ZMW 22.348636
ZWL 376.955867
  • RBGPF

    -13.5000

    69

    -19.57%

  • CMSC

    0.1700

    22.83

    +0.74%

  • NGG

    1.3300

    85.6

    +1.55%

  • BTI

    1.3400

    56.17

    +2.39%

  • RELX

    -0.8000

    36.27

    -2.21%

  • VOD

    0.1200

    15.31

    +0.78%

  • RYCEF

    -1.9600

    15.2

    -12.89%

  • AZN

    -0.9700

    194.81

    -0.5%

  • GSK

    -0.4200

    55.7

    -0.75%

  • RIO

    2.5600

    100.28

    +2.55%

  • BP

    0.4600

    46.37

    +0.99%

  • JRI

    -0.0500

    13

    -0.38%

  • BCC

    -0.2100

    82.24

    -0.26%

  • CMSD

    0.0900

    23.13

    +0.39%

  • BCE

    -0.1700

    23.73

    -0.72%

Olympic giants China face tough medal fight at home Games
Olympic giants China face tough medal fight at home Games

Olympic giants China face tough medal fight at home Games

China topped the medals table at its 2008 Summer Olympics but expectations are much lower for next month's Beijing Games as the country attempts to build a winter sports industry nearly from scratch.

Text size:

China did not appear at a Winter Olympics until 1980 at Lake Placid and has hardly sparkled since, winning one gold medal -- in short track speed skating -- at the last Games, in South Korea's Pyeongchang, in 2018.

Cold weather sports have not historically been popular in the country, where the prohibitive cost and relative lack of infrastructure had kept the pool of athletes small.

But a huge government-led push to promote snow and ice activities and a soaring middle class looks set to yield some results when the Games begin on February 4, and home athletes always tend to overperform at their own Olympics.

With foreign coaches drafted in to boost expertise, forecasters Gracenote expect China to win six golds at Beijing 2022 and enjoy its "best-ever Winter Olympics".

Norway, who topped the medals table in 2018, are predicted to do so again, ahead of the Russians and Germany.

- 'Big crisis' -

China set itself the goal of competing in all 109 events at Beijing 2022 -- nearly double the number the country qualified for at Pyeongchang.

The country has "no experience" in one-third of them, state media said.

Underlining the challenge, winter sports official Ni Huizhong admitted to Xinhua news agency last year in unusually stark terms that the country had "clear weaknesses and disadvantages" and was facing "a big crisis" in some sports.

China will compete in at least 96 events in the Chinese capital. In some, such as men's ice hockey, avoiding embarrassment on home soil will count as a small win.

China has had to be creative in its search to grow its small pool of winter sports athletes, including scouring martial arts schools of Buddhist monasteries.

Authorities also sent a group of teenagers with zero experience -- including a former gymnast and a sprinter -- to Norway in 2018 for a crash course in ski jumping in the hope of producing 2022 competitors.

China has also turned to naturalised athletes, including California natives Eileen Gu -- who looks set to be the face of the Games -- and ice skater Beverly Zhu.

With an eye on the future, the country is on course to open 5,000 winter sports schools by 2025 and has set up massive training bases for athletes offering wind tunnels and virtual reality simulators.

- Prestige -

Of China's 13 Winter Olympic golds, 10 have come in short track speed skating.

Wu Dajing won 500m gold in 2018 and will defend his title in Beijing, while there are also hopes in the relay events.

Pairs figure skaters Sui Wenjing and Han Cong will hope to go one better than their Pyeongchang silver, while US-born freestyle skier Gu, just 18, is hotly tipped for gold.

They are under pressure from the very top, with President Xi Jinping urging athletes to "struggle bravely and strive for success".

But medals will only be one part of what China hopes to reap from the Games.

It sees an opportunity to demonstrate its sophistication and prowess, even as the Covid-19 pandemic and diplomatic boycotts from a handful of countries over human rights concerns cast a shadow.

"By hosting the 2008 Summer Olympics (also in Beijing), China impressively demonstrated its economic development to the world," Jung Woo Lee, sport policy researcher at the University of Edinburgh, told AFP.

"(Now) China wants to display its cultural and technological merits to international audiences," Lee said, noting that Winter Olympics are "more exclusive competitions where the power of more advanced and affluent Western nations prevails".

"The staging of the Winter Olympics in their capital city can symbolically mean that China is no longer lagging behind Western democracies in terms of its international privilege," Lee said.

Y.Watanabe--JT