Advertisement

First priority

Reading Time:2 minutes
Why you can trust SCMP

As you cheer China's Olympic gold medallists, spare a thought for the winners of silver and bronze medals. They toiled as long and as hard to bring glory to the motherland, but get little or no acclaim. This state-sponsored gold fever afflicts other countries too, but at least their runners-up are often celebrated at the team level.

Advertisement

A system that lauds only gold medals raises disturbing questions. What happened to the Olympic creed that values participation? And what does this gold fixation say about the values promoted by the Chinese government?

China's state-run system for producing national athletes is still modelled on the Soviet 'sports factories' that train potential Olympians from a young age. Their sport is chosen for them and becomes their life. Like China's world-beating consumer goods, Chinese Olympians are intensely engineered products manufactured in factories, to be discarded when they reach the end of their life cycle. Of the hundreds of thousands enrolled in sports schools in China, only 396 made it to this year's Olympic team. Their singular goal: to win gold. Anything less amounts to losing.

Due to a public outcry, China has recently begun to give some recognition to its silver and bronze medallists. Asking them to join the gold medallists during their post-Olympic 'victory lap' in Hong Kong would be a good start.

The gold medallists will also be rewarded with cash, cars, apartments and positions arranged by the government. After the 2008 Olympics, for example, each received US$51,000 from the General Administration of Sport; nothing was announced for the silver and bronze winners. When the gold medallists visit Hong Kong, local tycoons give them more goodies. Raised only to excel in their sport, most have no marketable skills. The government has yet to come up with an official plan to address the needs of retired athletes.

Advertisement

You only hear about the few who do move on to a viable future: Li Ning, the winner of six medals in gymnastics (three gold) in the 1984 Olympics, who built a sportswear empire; Deng Yaping, who won four table-tennis golds in the 1992 and 1996 Olympics, then went on to study at Tsinghua University and later earned a doctorate at Cambridge in Britain.

Advertisement