chinas statebacked curlers hope for winter olympic sweep
Last Updated : GMT 09:07:40
Egypt Today, egypt today
Egypt Today, egypt today
Last Updated : GMT 09:07:40
Egypt Today, egypt today

China's state-backed curlers hope for Winter Olympic sweep

Egypt Today, egypt today

Egypt Today, egypt today China's state-backed curlers hope for Winter Olympic sweep

China's rapid rise up the curling ranks
Harbin - Arab Today

When Liu Jinli first heard the soft rumble of curling stones slipping over Chinese ice a decade ago, the sport was virtually unknown in the country.

But a few years later she won world championship gold with China's national curling team, securing Beijing's place as a major power in the sport first played in medieval Scotland.

China's rapid rise up the curling ranks is part of a wider growth in winter sports promoted by the country's authorities as Beijing pursued its successful bid to host the 2022 Olympics.

China only settled on an official name for curling -- "ice kettle" -- in 1995, and had no professional teams until 2001.

Taking up the game as a teenager in the northeastern city of Harbin, Liu said the players "used to make our own footwear".

"At the very beginning, we would buy plastic shopping bags and put them over our shoes before going out on the ice," she said. "We had about two brooms for every 10 people."

Now, with the financial backing of China's General Administration of Sports, the 26-year-old and her teammates train full time throughout the year.

In summer they retreat to the seaside resort of Qinhuangdao, some 270 kilometres (170 miles) from Beijing, to build their strength with a type of tough gymnastics called callisthenics.

"Curling is a gentle sport. It's changed my life," said Liu after grimacing her way through an afternoon weightlifting session under the watchful eye of coach Zhang Wei.

"I think the sport has really developed quickly... there has been a great leap," said Zhang, a former ice hockey player who 20 years ago became the first Chinese curling coach, as he looked on with an icy expression.

- 'Five gold flowers' -

Games similar to ice hockey were played in China as early as the 17th century, but other winter sports are relatively new to the country.

China won its first Winter Olympic medals in 1992 and has since racked up 12 golds.

Curling got an unlikely start in China in the mid-1990s thanks to Japanese investors seeking to profit from their neighbour's increasingly open economy.

An official from Japan's snowy northern island of Hokkaido suggested the two countries "jointly develop the sport of curling in China", according to the China sports administration website.

In a cold classroom in Harbin in 1995, coach Zhang recalled, Japanese curlers taught China's first-ever class on the sport's combination of precise stone throwing and tactical sweeping.

The deeply strategic sport sees athletes "throw", or slide, heavy, circular granite stones across a long stretch of ice towards a target, with two sweepers wielding brooms rushing along the stone's path in an attempt to influence its track without touching, or "burning", the rock.

Icy nations such as Canada and Sweden have long dominated the sport, which secured an official Winter Olympic billing at Nagano in 1998.

But within a few years of the class in Harbin, Chinese teams were competing abroad, and officials "saw that we might be able to get good results in a relatively short time", Zhang said.

Harbin city funded China's first professional men's team in 2001, hiring coaches from Canada to raise standards, but it was the women curlers -- nicknamed the "five gold flowers" -- who took the country's first world title.

With the last strike of the 2009 final, captain Wang Bingyu carefully unleashed a perfectly paced and targeted shot that knocked out two Swedish scoring stones, secured gold for China -- and triggered a blood-curdling scream of victory from one of her team-mates.

The men's squad scooped a bronze at the 2010 Winter Olympics, and both are currently ranked in the world's top five.

- Olympic glory -

Zhang said that curling was "very suitable for Asians, as Asians have flexible thinking". But despite a population of almost 1.4 billion, China is thought to have just a few hundred curlers, almost no grassroots teams, and only three venues.

Government spending was key to the teams' success, he said, and investment aimed at securing medals is expected to increase in the run-up to 2022.

"All the sports which China is promoting are government-sponsored sports, there is only a very small grass-roots sports movement in China," said Xu Guoqi, a Hong Kong based professor and author of a book on China's Olympic movement.

"In major Winter Olympic sports like skiing, China will have trouble because it will take ages to train the best athletes. But for curling, I guess within a few years you can do very well if you train players full time," he added.

The next generation of Chinese curlers train at the Linxian Curling club in Harbin, where average daily temperatures plunge as low as -24 degrees Celsius (-11 Fahrenheit) in January.

"Most of the funding for curling comes from the government. No matter if it's money for training, competitions, coaches or players, it's the state which provides a guarantee," said the school's head Wang Jingang.

Conditions on their frozen training pitch are basic, with muddy footprints covering the ice, but the two dozen teenage curlers train for six hours a day.

"Curling is like chess on the ice," said youth captain Zhang Zehong, 17, who said he hopes to "contribute to my motherland's efforts" as part of the 2022 Olympic team competing on home territory.

"It tests your thinking, and ability to keep calm," he said as the clunk of colliding stones echoed through the room.

Nearby, a banner next to a large Chinese flag read: "Health for the People, Glory in the Olympics".
Source: AFP

egypttoday
egypttoday

Name *

E-mail *

Comment Title*

Comment *

: Characters Left

Mandatory *

Terms of use

Publishing Terms: Not to offend the author, or to persons or sanctities or attacking religions or divine self. And stay away from sectarian and racial incitement and insults.

I agree with the Terms of Use

Security Code*

chinas statebacked curlers hope for winter olympic sweep chinas statebacked curlers hope for winter olympic sweep



GMT 09:05 2013 Thursday ,14 March

Continued violence in South Pakistan kills 3

GMT 05:39 2013 Friday ,27 September

Israel delays home resettlement for legal reasons

GMT 10:04 2019 Monday ,19 August

Live a tense and noisy atmosphere

GMT 05:27 2013 Monday ,26 August

Facebook rallies thousands to Philippines protest

GMT 21:08 2015 Monday ,27 April

Apple quarterly profit jumps 33% to $13.6bn

GMT 15:53 2014 Saturday ,18 October

In praise of figs for us

GMT 17:34 2015 Friday ,09 October

ERC opens 10 schools in Aden

GMT 06:36 2017 Monday ,30 January

New wave of robots set to deliver the goods

GMT 14:49 2012 Thursday ,09 February

Extracting your sweet tooth

GMT 15:29 2017 Tuesday ,31 January

Saudi, Kuwait equity markets retreat
 
 Egypt Today Facebook,egypt today facebook  Egypt Today Twitter,egypt today twitter Egypt Today Rss,egypt today rss  Egypt Today Youtube,egypt today youtube  Egypt Today Youtube,egypt today youtube

Maintained and developed by Arabs Today Group SAL.
All rights reserved to Arab Today Media Group 2021 ©

Maintained and developed by Arabs Today Group SAL.
All rights reserved to Arab Today Media Group 2021 ©

egypttoday egypttoday egypttoday egypttoday
egypttoday egypttoday egypttoday
egypttoday
بناية النخيل - رأس النبع _ خلف السفارة الفرنسية _بيروت - لبنان
egypttoday, Egypttoday, Egypttoday