At the 1998 Asian Games, the ages of the North Korean gymnasts were questioned, largely because they appeared unusually young. Organizers reviewed their passports, and in the end, the North Korean gymnasts were deemed age-eligible, though Chinese coverage still raised the possibility that the passports themselves had been altered.
In the history of age falsification, this episode is revealing for a different reason, as well. In controversies surrounding Chinese gymnasts, one common defense has been to invoke racial generalizations—that athletes of Asian descent tend to look younger than their actual age. But this case complicates that argument. The skepticism did not come from Western observers projecting assumptions onto Asian bodies, but from within Asia itself, with one group questioning whether another Asian team’s gymnasts appeared overly young.
Below are Chinese, Korean, and English accounts of the incident.









