|
|
|
|
|
Excited
Chinese delegates at the 2001 announcement of the Chinas
winning bid for the 2008 Olympic Games.
|
High
Priestess Maria Nafpliotou ready to light the Olympic flame
in Ancient Olympia.
|
Chinese
athlete Luo Xuejuan passes the Olympic torch to Deng Yaping
on March 24, 2008.
|
WHEN will China send athletes to the Olympics? When will China
win the gold? When will China host the Games? asked a magazine
in an article entitled Athletic Sports as far back
as 1908.
The answer to the first question finally came in 1932, when Liu
Changchun participated in the Los Angeles Olympics, and the second
question was answered when China came away with 15 gold medals
at the 1984 Games, also in Los Angeles. The final question will
be settled exactly a century after being asked, when Beijing plays
host to the Olympics for the first time in 2008.
Chinas involvement in the Olympic movement, however, can
be traced all the way back to the beginning of the Games, when
Pierre de Coubertin, father of the modern Olympics, wrote to Li
Hongzhang, chief minister of the Qing Dynasty, in 1895 urging
China to attend the first Games. The preparatory committee of
the Athens Olympics also sent China an invitation on August 16
through foreign embassies, but the country was at the time being
threatened both by domestic unrest and foreign invasion, and was
consequently unable to attend.
In 1904, many Chinese newspapers and periodicals covered the
third Olympic Games, and beginning in 1907, the Young Mens
Christian Association (YMCA) and missionary schools in China started
publicizing the Olympics. On October 24, Zhang Boling, an advocate
of sports and a well-known educator, delivered a speech to the
fifth school athletic meeting organized by the Tianjin YMCA urging
China to intensify its preparations and to participate in the
Games as soon as possible.
Four years later, the Chinese press reported that London would
host the fourth Olympics, and declared that the Olympic
Games are unparalleled in the world.
1932: China Attends the Olympics for the First Time
China first sent a team to the Los Angeles Summer Olympics in
the United States in 1932. The three-man delegation consisted
of the team head, Shen Siliang, the coach and interpreter Song
Junfu, and the sprinter Liu Changchun, who became the first Chinese
athlete to compete in the Games.
Liu was born into a poor family in northeast China in 1909, and
at the age of 19 was admitted to Northeast University on the strength
of his outstanding athletic ability. He first established his
reputation in mens 4×400 meter relay race in a Chinese-Russian
track and field competition, when despite a 50-meter lag behind
the Russian runner, he finished 50 meters ahead, achieving instant
fame. Later, at the 1930 National Games, Liu won three events
the 100-meter, 200-meter and 400-meter races in
a row.
Because northwest China had been occupied by Japan in 1931, Lius
participation in the Olympics the following year was a source
of intense patriotic enthusiasm. On the eve of the 1932 Games,
he flatly refused to represent the puppet regime of Manchukuo,
traveling instead to the United States with financial assistance
from Zhang Xueliang, president of Northeast University.
When Liu eventually arrived in Los Angeles on July 29 after a
20-day voyage, American reporters asked him to raise his hands
high for a photograph, but Liu refused at first, thinking the
gesture was an indication of surrender. Not until it was explained
to him that he would be symbolically holding up the Chinese
people did he consent.
The Games began the next day, and during the opening ceremony
he marched in carrying the Chinese flag as the only Chinese athlete.
China had finally joined the modern Olympic movement.
As a sprinter in the mens 100-meter dash, Lius fastest
time at home had been 10.06 seconds more than a match for
any foreign competitor. However, after 20 days of being tossed
about at sea and being unable to stay in top form, he was eliminated
in the first heat. Still, Liu did not leave the Games following
his defeat, staying on to watch various events and to attend the
championship dinner. In addition, he and his coach, Song Junfu,
took part in the World Youth Debate Convention in Los Angeles,
where the latter addressed the meeting in English to denounce
the Japanese occupation of northeast China.
Upon Lius return home in late August, he was joyously greeted
by the Chinese people, who clearly felt that given that political
situation, Liu was an inspiration to have represented China at
the Games.
China next took part in the Summer Olympics in Berlin in 1936,
this time with a full lineup of athletes and coaches, including
Liu Changchun and Song Junfu. In all, 69 athletes participated
in events ranging from track and field, to the swimming, weightlifting,
bicycling, boxing, basketball and football competitions.
However, the total cost to the Chinese team was 220,000 yuan,
and the Chiang Kai-shek government had only allocated 170,000
yuan, leaving a 50,000-yuan shortfall that became a real problem
for the national team. Despite a countrywide drive to solicit
donations, a 20,000-yuan shortfall remained, so the Chinese football
team, which had won nine straight victories in the Far East Games,
left early to participate in fundraising matches in Vietnam, Singapore,
Indonesia and India.
Led by the famous captain Li Huitang, the team played 27 games
within two months, winning 23 and drawing four. As a result, the
undefeated team demonstrated Chinas football prowess, winning
favor with fans everywhere and earning far in excess of the required
20,000 yuan in ticket sales.
1984: China Wins Gold at Last
China continued to send athletes to the Olympics after 1932,
but war and economic turmoil meant that the teams consisted of
fewer than 100 people. Later, as a consequence of the Taiwan issue,
the newly founded Peoples Republic of China (PRC) broke
off its relationship with the International Olympic Committee
(IOC) in 1958, and did not rejoin the Olympic family until 1979.
Finally, at the 1984 Games in Los Angeles, China participated
with a large delegation for the first time. The lineup included
not only 225 athletes in 16 events and 50 coaches, but also a
visiting group, a press delegation and a performing arts troupe
comprised of Chinese celebrities.
During the opening ceremony on July 28, when Chinese players
wearing the national emblem entered the stadium, the host specially
played the March of the Peoples Liberation Army to welcome
them. As the American sports commentator for CNN said, The
whole audience bursts into warm applause as the Oriental dragon,
the Chinese delegation, enters the arena.
In joining the Los Angeles Olympics, China had established itself
as a sports power, but no Chinese competitor had ever won Olympic
gold. The marksman Xu Haifeng became the first to achieve a zero
breakthrough by winning a gold medal for China in the very
first competition of the Games.
In fact, the 27-year-old Xu was not even a professional athlete,
but a clerk in a supply and marketing company. When he clinched
the victory in the shooting competition, a Chinese sports official
rushed onto the field with tears in his eyes, embracing him and
praising him for the monumental event in Chinese sports history.
Xus teammate won a bronze medal in the same match, which
presented a problem for the Games organizers, who had only
one Chinese national flag on hand. As a result, the award ceremony
had to be postponed for over an hour. Today is a great day
for Chinas history, said Juan Samaranch, president
of the IOC at the time, as he presented Xu with the medal.
In all, Chinese athletes won 15 gold, eight silver and nine bronze
medals during the 1984 Games, ranking China fourth on the overall
medals list. The championship events included shooting, gymnastics,
weightlifting, diving, fencing and volleyball, and the Chinese
National Womens Volleyball Team went on to win three times
in a row in world-class competitions. Since then, shooting, gymnastics,
weightlifting and diving and later table tennis, badminton
and judo, which subsequently became Olympic events have
all been dominated by China.
Chinas outstanding performance at the 1984 Los Angeles
Games was an incomparable boost to the morale of the Chinese people,
and the first fruits of Chinas reform policies were gathered
in the sports arenas. Following the 1984 Olympics, terms like
zero breakthrough and three-straight-win
become synonyms for advance valiantly in all walks
of Chinese life.
2008: The 1.3 Billion Peoples Olympics
Chinas wins at the 1984 Olympics were especially exciting
events for Chinese leader Deng Xiaoping, who had been in charge
of sports in the 1970s. According to the recollections of a Chinese
sports official, Deng had entertained the idea of bidding
for the Olympics from the moment China rejoined the IOC,
but the outside world would not learn of it until later.
In November 1985, Deng finally announced to the world that China
would bid for the Olympics, telling Kim Il Sung, chairman of the
Democratic Peoples Republic of Korea, We will spend
over a decade preparing to bid for the 2000 Olympics, which will
be linked to the development of our tourism industry.
In July 1990, while inspecting preparations for the Beijing Asian
Games, Deng conspicuously wore a hat emblazoned with the Chinese
national flag and the Olympic rings logo, and specifically asked
officials from his entourage: When will we bid for the Olympics?
That conversation was later reported to the highest levels of
the Communist Party of China (CPC), and during the closing ceremony
of the Asian Games, a banner reading Succeeding in the Asian
Games, Expecting the Olympic Games was displayed in the
grandstand.
In February 1991, China announced that it would bid for the 2000
Summer Olympics, but on September 23, 1993, Beijing lost out to
Sydney by two votes in the IOCs balloting in Monte Carlo.
He Zhenliang, the first vice president of the IOC, concluded
later that Sydneys infrastructure at the time had indeed
been better than Beijings, and that in any event Sydney
had already bid three consecutive times for the Games. In addition,
two IOC members that firmly supported Beijings candidacy
were unable to attend the voting.
In November 1998, Beijing bid for the 2008 summer Olympics, and
on July 13, 2001, the IOC voted in Moscow and Beijing won the
bid in the second round with an overwhelming majority, gathering
56 votes to second-place Torontos 34.
This time, He Zhenliang could say that conditions for Beijings
bid had been ripe. With the return of Hong Kong in 1997, Chinas
spectacular economic growth, as well as third place on the gold
medals list at the 2000 Sydney Olympics, Chinas Olympic
dream could finally become a reality.
The entire country was seized with excitement once the good news
from Moscow came out, and Beijing embarked on a night of revelry
during which an estimated million people swarmed onto Tiananmen
Square. No one noticed the horrendous traffic jam, everyone being
content to wave national flags and congratulate one another with
handshakes and hugs.
Chinese President Jiang Zemin stood on the Tiananmen Rostrum
and waved to the people on the square, even conducting them in
a song celebrating the country. From that night, the 2008 Games
became an Olympics for 1.3 billion Chinese people.
|