Yang Wei spent the better part of a decade within touching distance of being the best gymnast in the world—a narrow but unforgiving gap. He won team gold at Sydney in 2000 and was part of every Chinese team that captured the World Championships title from 1999 through 2007. (China did not finish on the podium in 2001, when it sent a B team.) He claimed the all-around at back-to-back Asian Games (2002 and 2006). And yet, at the sport’s biggest moments, the individual all-around title kept slipping away.
Though the gymnastics press gave him a nickname: 千年老二 — the perennial runner-up, he finished second only twice: in Sydney (2000) and in Anaheim (2003), and was seventh in Athens (2004).
Then everything shifted. He captured the World Championships all-around titles in 2006 and 2007, becoming the first champion of the open-ended Code of Points. By 2008, he arrived in Beijing as the clear favorite. On August 14, he finally claimed the Olympic title, defeating Kohei Uchimura by more than 2.5 points.
The three articles collected here trace different moments in Yang Wei’s life: the promising teenager from Xiantao who fell in love with gymnastics and wanted nothing to do with the attention that came with winning; the twenty-three-year-old who held himself together through injury and exhaustion in Anaheim and then broke down in front of a CCTV camera; and the retired champion who returned to Hubei to run the provincial gymnastics program, bringing his toddler son with him to the training hall. Together, they fill in what the medal record cannot.









