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2008 Age China WAG

The Many Birth Years of Jiang Yuyuan

In 2011, in the wake of Dong Fangxiao’s verdict and amid a skating age scandal, Chinese journalists wrote openly about the problem of age falsification in sport. Even the China Youth Daily addressed the issue, underscoring just how messy age adjustments could be:

In Chinese sport, athletes falsifying their ages has long been an open secret. This reporter has frequently encountered a revealing phenomenon when interviewing athletes: ask them how old they are, and they often have to think for a long time, sometimes even consulting teammates before answering — because some athletes have changed their ages not once but multiple times, and have lost track of their own versions.

Ci Xin, China Youth Daily, February 18, 2011, p. 8

在中国体坛,运动员改年龄早已是公开的秘密,记者在采访不少运动员时就常常遇到一个奇怪的现象,当问及这些运动员的年龄时,他们往往要思考半天,甚至要与自己的队友讨论一番,因为有的运动员不仅改了年龄,还改了不止一次,年龄改来改去,连自己都糊涂了。

The China Youth Daily is the official newspaper of the Central Committee of the Communist Youth League of China.

Though the article did not mention Jiang Yuyuan, her case illustrates the phenomenon clearly. Depending on the document consulted, she appears to have been born in 1993, 1992, or 1991.

Jiang Yuyuan, August 13, 2008
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2008 China WAG

2008: China’s Makeup Controversy

In 2008, criticism was not limited to age. It extended to the Chinese gymnasts’ makeup, as well, with the two themes often treated as inseparable. Writing for NBC News, Thomas Boswell wrote:

But if it’s tears you want, the kind you feel inside when you see a small girl in glittery makeup trying to pretend she’s 16 — and eligible for the Olympics — when she may only be 14, then National Indoor Stadium was the place to come for that emotion, too.

Thomas Boswell, NBCNews.com

He returned to the subject later in the piece:

Next to He, accepting praise, was Jiang Yuyuan, an amazing uneven-bar performer. Both looked extremely young despite thick makeup, sparkles, and fairly sophisticated hairstyles.

Thomas Boswell, NBCNews.com

Across the Atlantic, Sonia Oxley echoed that sentiment in a Reuters piece pointedly titled “Makeup Cannot Cover up Age Issue.” She argued that makeup was being used to make the gymnasts appear older. The article opened:

Even with their eyeshadow and mascara, gymnasts look young. The question is, exactly how young? China’s tiny leotard-clad athletes have repeatedly had to fend off questions about not being old enough to compete at the Olympics. On Friday, the International Olympic Committee called for an investigation into exactly how old one gold medallist is.

Sonia Oxley, Makeup cannot cover up age issue, Reuters

The piece continued:

The nature of the sport means gymnasts often look younger than they really are because they are shorter than average and also very light. The glitter and the makeup helps them look a bit older.

Sonia Oxley, Makeup cannot cover up age issue, Reuters

So what did China have to say about all of this?

Categories
2008 China Interviews & Profiles WAG

Like a Swallow in Flight: Profiles of He Kexin in 2008

While much of the U.S. coverage of He Kexin focused on her age, there were many profiles of He Kexin in the Chinese press. They painted a portrait almost entirely different in emphasis: not a suspicious document trail, but a girl from Beijing with trembling hands and an idol named Khorkina.

The American story was essentially demographic — a birth year, an age, a discrepancy. The Chinese story was biographical, and its details had the texture of something lived rather than constructed. A coach named Shang Chunyan remembered going to a kindergarten near Yonghegong in 1997, looking for recruits among five-year-olds. She noticed a small girl — not tall, not overweight, nothing exceptional yet. She took her anyway. That girl, years later, would win China’s seventh gold medal of the Beijing Games.

The road was not straight. When the national team selectors visited the Beijing squad to scout for Olympic prospects, their first impression of He Kexin was unflattering. She was “bent everywhere,” one coach recalled — her movements awkward, her form uninspiring. The only time she looked graceful was when she was upside down. They took her on that basis, as something of a gamble, and she rewarded the gamble almost immediately. A foot injury that ruled out balance beam and floor exercise forced her coaches to try an experiment: put her entirely on the uneven bars. In two months, she had mastered the Li Ya salto, one of the most demanding release skills in the sport. Her coaches were astonished. The nickname “Princess of the Uneven Bars” was not far behind.

But the profiles also preserved the setbacks. At the 2007 City Games, she fell off uneven bars. Afterward, she sat alone in the stands and watched the rest of the competition in silence, refusing to eat, refusing to rest — as if she were punishing herself. It was, reporters noted, the most heartbroken she had ever been. That moment of private devastation appears in multiple accounts, always in the same register: not as a scandal but as evidence of seriousness, of how much it mattered to her. The same attentiveness extended to smaller details. During a team training check, coaches discovered she had skipped lunch and eaten only a piece of chocolate before the afternoon competition. She told them she was afraid of feeling heavy on the apparatus. She never threw a temper tantrum when disciplined. When a surprise dormitory inspection ended with everyone else quietly slipping away, she stayed and cleaned the room herself.

By the time the Beijing Olympics arrived, these stories had accumulated into a coherent character: diligent, self-possessed, quietly stubborn. On the night of the uneven bars final, competing first against a field that included three recent world champions, she admitted afterward that her hands had been shaking. She said she hadn’t let herself think about the gold medal, because the more you think about gold, the more pressure you feel. She performed a flawless routine. When American star Nastia Liukin matched her score of 16.725, He Kexin didn’t yet know the tie-breaking rules that would ultimately decide in her favor; she thought they might simply share the gold. When the rankings appeared on the screen, and she realized she had won outright, she ran over to Yang Yilin, who had just finished her own routine, and lifted her up.

The profiles collected here were published across several days in August 2008, in outlets ranging from the People’s Daily and Oriental Sports Daily to the PLA Daily, which capped its coverage with an earnest poem comparing He Kexin to a swallow in flight. These profiles are historical documents not only of what she accomplished, but of how China chose to present her.

Jiang Yuyuan, He Kexin, and Tsurumi Koko, December 2008, World Cup Final, Madrid, Spain
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Age China WAG

The Accusers: How the Károlyis Became the Faces of China’s Age Controversy

The question was simple enough: how old was He Kexin?

It was the question that defined women’s gymnastics at the 2008 Beijing Olympics, shadowed China’s historic team gold, and resurfaced repeatedly in the years that followed. But embedded within it was a second, harder question: why had this become an issue in the first place?

In the West, the conventional answer pointed first to the Chinese state — a system that had been suspected of age falsification, and that controlled the bureaucratic infrastructure of sport: passports, identity cards, and national registration systems. A second answer pointed to the American press, which had built an international controversy out of cached web pages, newspaper articles, and the appearances of a teenage athlete.

But in Chinese-language media coverage of the controversy, a third explanation appeared. It pointed not to Beijing and not to U.S. journalists, but to one of the most famous coaching partnerships in gymnastics history: Béla and Márta Károlyi.

In that telling, the Károlyis were not neutral observers of the controversy. They were among its principal drivers.

Gymnastics coach Bela Karolyi speaks during a 2014 news conference in Arlington, Texas.
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2008 Age China WAG

China’s Official Story: How the Mainland Press Covered the He Kexin Age Controversy

The story of He Kexin’s age has been told many times, but nearly always from the same vantage point. Western readers know the New York Times investigation, the deleted spreadsheets, and Béla Károlyi’s comments about baby teeth. What they do not know — because almost none of it has been translated or discussed in English — is how Chinese mainland media told the same story.

This essay traces that mainland narrative across a single year, from the first stray press mentions of He Kexin’s age in late 2007 through the International Gymnastics Federation’s formal resolution of the controversy in October 2008. It is not, primarily, a story about whether she was 14 or 16. It is a story about how the same events, covered by journalists working under different constraints and writing for different audiences, can produce such divergent accounts.

Nastia Liukin, He Kexin, and Yang Yilin, 2008 Olympics, Copyright: imago/Xinhua
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China Interviews & Profiles MAG

Yang Wei: The Long Road to All-Around Gold

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.

Yang Wei, 2008 Olympics, Men’s All-Around
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2000 Age China Olympics WAG

Yang Yun’s Warning

Yang Yun was fifteen years old—officially—when she competed at the 2000 Sydney Olympics. Her registered birthdate, December 2, 1984, meant she turned sixteen in the Olympic year, clearing the minimum age requirement set by the International Gymnastics Federation in 1997. She won bronze medals in both the team event and on uneven bars.

In 2001, she competed in the Goodwill Games, but ultimately, the Sydney Olympics were her first and last major competition. After retiring, she enrolled at the Communication University of China to train as a broadcaster. By 2008, she had established herself as a sports commentator and was engaged to Yang Wei, who would go on to win the men’s all-around champion in Beijing.

In the months leading up to the Beijing Olympics, Yang Yun was cast as a supporting figure in a love story, not the subject of scrutiny.

Then the documents began to surface.

Yang Yun, Sydney Olympics
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Age China WAG

Kang Xin: 13 in 2001, 16 in 2002

In November 2001, at China’s Ninth National Games, a small gymnast from Beijing captured the country’s attention. Newspapers called her “Kang Douzi”—“Little Bean Kang”—and, almost without exception, they described her the same way: just thirteen years old. She cried after a costly fall on uneven bars that may have cost her team the gold. Days later, she rebounded to win the all-around title, throwing herself into her coach’s arms, still unmistakably a child on one of the biggest stages in Chinese sport.

And yet, within a year, that same gymnast had changed. By 2002, Kang Xin was no longer thirteen. According to her official profile, she was sixteen—old enough to compete internationally, old enough to stand alongside China’s senior team at the Asian Games.

How does a gymnast age three years in the span of one?

Kang Xin, Date: 22.11.2002, Copyright: imago/Schreyer
Categories
Age China WAG

Bi Wenjing: The 13-Year-Old Silver Medalist in Atlanta

There’s a fact that the Chinese media likes to print:

July 28, 1996, was the day of the women’s uneven bars final at the Atlanta Olympics, and it was also Bi Wenjing’s 15th birthday.

她们的的故事要从亚特兰大说起,1996年7月28日这一天是亚特兰大奥运会女子高低杠决赛的日子,这一天也是毕文静15岁的生日。

“Nothing Is Impossible—The Girl Who Defeated the Queen” (做不到没有想不到 战胜皇后的女孩), Sohu Sports, April 16, 2007

There’s one problem with that story: Bi Wenjing didn’t turn 15 in 1996. She turned 13.

Bi Wenjing, Svetlana Khorkina, Amy Chow, 1996 Olympics, Robert Maximov/TASS
Categories
Age China WAG

Sun Xiaojiao: A Gymnast Born in 1984, a Professor Born in 1986

When Sun Xiaojiao won bronze on balance beam at the 2001 World Championships, she turned 17 that year, according to the FIG’s records. A year later, when she took gold at the 2002 World Cup Final, she turned 18.

But here’s the thing: Sun Xiaojiao was not born in 1984.

Sun Xiaojiao, Date: 25.11.2001 Copyright: imago/Schreyer