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Putting people first: China's sport development as an engine for reform (2)

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2016-08-08 11:06Xinhua Editor: Gu Liping

CHINA OLYMPIC DREAM: BEIJING 2022 AND THE GROWTH OF WINTER SPORTS

China's forward-looking approach to sport reform is also exemplified in its embrace of winter sports. The country's winning bid for the 2022 Winter Olympic and Paralympic Games means that Beijing will be the only city on Earth to have hosted both the winter and summer Olympic Games.

The 2022 Games will not solely be held in China's capital city though. Chongli County in Zhangjiakou will host the snow events, a nod that has provided a shot in the arm for a fledgling winter sports industry.

But China's increasing emphasis on winter sports is not only about profits, or glory on the world stage. It is, above all, about serving the Chinese people. That is the view of Liu Peng, director of China's General Administration of Sport. He has stressed that "the development of winter sports in China [can] improve public fitness and lifestyle."

One member of the public who has been inspired to get on the slopes is Cui Jing, who works in import-export. She has been skiing for nearly a decade. At first, she would only tackle medium-difficulty pistes. But since November, she has been braving and mastering black runs in resorts across north China, including Olympic venues in Zhangjiakou.

Cui expects winter sport to grow in China as the middle classes swell. "As the Chinese people become richer, more and more will take up skiing."

AWAY FROM "MEDAL FIRST"

During the 2008 Beijing Olympics, Wu Meiru would get up early and check the medals table every day.

With the Rio Olympic Games open, she said she is as ready as ever to cheer on her heroes. But this time around, she will be focusing on more than just the medal count.

"When I was little, I could recite the names of every Chinese champion from the 2004 Athens Olympics, but now who's winning is no longer that important, just as long as they try their best," she said.

There exists perhaps no better example of China's shift away from a "medals first" mentality than tennis star Peng Shuai. The former world doubles No.1 has fallen below the top 200 due to injuries.

Peng, a 2014 U.S. Open semifinalist, is still recovering from waist surgery. But she was included among five Chinese players in a slate of singles and doubles entries for Rio 2016 announced by the International Tennis Federation.

While Peng is still struggling to get back in shape, she takes her task in Rio with grace and sportsmanship. "I am really honored to represent the country in the Olympics. I don't know for sure if my form will have returned but I will try my best, even if the recovery is slow," she said.

SPORTS AS AN ENGINE FOR CULTURAL AND ECONOMIC REFORM

China's state-run sport system has been a huge success since the country returned to the Olympic Games in 1984, giving rise to many Olympic champions.

China's pride in its Olympic victories culminated in 2008 at the Beijing Games, when the host nation topped the medal tally with 51 golds.

While the system still functions to churn out champions in the Olympics and world championships, the balance of Chinese sport has started to tilt toward the masses.

"2008 was a landmark year as the Beijing Olympic Games gave people some new insight into sport," said Song Hongfei, of Wisdom Sports Group, a sport marketing company.

He said gold medals for big stars are great but that sport is also about the general public keeping healthy and having fun.

Song's company manages several marathons in China, where running has come into vogue. More than 1.5 million people took part in more than 130 distance running events in 2015.

Bodybuilding and other sports are also on the rise. If all goes as expected, the country will have 435 million people regularly taking part in sport by 2020.

A plan published by China's cabinet in late 2014 set a goal for the industry's annual economic output to top 5 trillion yuan by 2025.

The plan is off to a promising start. China's service sector, including sport, accounted for 56.9 percent of China's overall GDP growth of 6.7 percent in the first quarter of 2016.

China is striding towards its goal to become a "Xiao Kang" society. While this Chinese phrase translates to "well off" in English, "Kang" has the literal meaning of "good health."

This is a lesson Beijing school headmaster Zhao Caixia has been trying to impart to her students. Zhao was alarmed at the poor physical shape of her pupils when she took over Cui Village Primary School two years ago.

"Some students could not support themselves through a 20-minute flag raising ceremony," she said.

Luckily for Zhao, the government has begun encouraging more campus sport.

Mao Zhenming, a professor from Beijing Normal University who is also a member of the central leading group on football, became a coach to Zhao's students and entered them into small competitions.

Zhao also urged her 700 students to add outdoor time besides the mandatory one hour of physical exercise mandated by the government.

"Now their skin is tanned and they are getting stronger. None of them feel sick after outdoor activities in the sun," she said.

As more and more parents realize that sport will benefit their children for a lifetime, it is rising to a position of prominence alongside academic study.

Raising a sporty younger generation has pride of place in China's overall sport reform that seeks to, above all, put the people and their well-being first.

  

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