Robertas Dackus/Euroleague Basketball, via Getty Images
The
Chinese Basketball Association suspended and condemned Fan Bin, far
right, for his violent behavior; the coach was reinstated after he
promised to change his ways.
By DAN LEVIN
Published: August 18, 2011
BEIJING — Perhaps it was the latest bruise turning
purple, or those final flecks of spit wiped away while walking off the
court, or the curses echoing off the bleachers. Whatever the reason,
the members of China’s national junior basketball team decided one day
in April that enough was enough. So they wrote down their plea in
teenager scrawl, signed their names with ink-stained fingerprints and
sent it to the Chinese Basketball Association.
Guangzhou Daily
An
image, taken with a player's cellphone, of the letter that China's
national junior team sent to the Chinese Basketball Association asking
that their coach, Fan Bin, be replaced.
“Coach
Fan Bin has repeatedly insulted our team over the past three years by
beating and verbally abusing us, and we can no longer bear his
treatment,” read the letter, which was swiftly leaked to the news media.
“We submit this protest to the central officials and request that he
be replaced.”
Chinese athletes, once dutiful ambassadors who obediently spent their
lives in pursuit of patriotic glory, are no longer willing to just grin
and bear it. A series of recent controversies is shedding light on how
young athletes are beginning to expose abuse, challenge exploitation
and reject official interference in their careers — risky moves in a
country where there is no separation of sport and state. Their struggle
is a microcosm of the clash in contemporary China between the push for
personal liberty and the grip of an authoritarian government.
Like a growing number of Chinese, athletes have found a voice on the
Internet and in the news media, publicizing conflicts and complaints the
government would rather keep quiet.
“What’s happening now is the younger generation of athletes has so many options to communicate, through
microblogs and
social networking, that they want to stand up and speak out,” said Jiang Yi, the managing editor of Sports Illustrated China.
Yet athletes face a formidable opponent: the state-run sports system — a
bureaucracy of training schools, teams and government organizations
that selects and coaches more than 250,000 young people for the purpose
of winning gold medals.
The system offers many athletes the chance to bring honor to their
families and country through competition. But some of these athletes
find that the Olympic rings become shackles that bind them for years in
indentured servitude to a government that frequently neglects their
scholastic education and ignores their injuries while taking a sizable
cut of their earnings, all in the name of national pride.
It is a recipe that leaves many athletes unprepared to compete in the
real world once they can no longer perform in a stadium. According to
the state news media, 240,000 retired athletes suffer from injuries,
poverty and unemployment.
One of those is Zhang Shangwu, 28, a former gymnastics champion who was
discovered last month begging on a Beijing street. Selected at age 5 by
the Hebei provincial government, Zhang won two gold medals before he
injured his Achilles’ tendon during practice in 2002. He was forced by
his coach to continue training. Sports officials then denied his request
to study academic subjects and finally parted ways with him in 2005
with a pension of 38,000 renminbi, or $4,750, he said. “It was barely
enough for food and the clothes on my back,” he told The Beijing News.
Unskilled and unable to work because of his injury, he sold his medals
for the equivalent of $13 and then was caught stealing. After being
released from prison, he turned to panhandling.
The ensuing publicity of Zhang’s plight fueled outrage against the
sports system and drew sympathy from the public, prompting a Chinese
billionaire to offer Zhang a job as a personal trainer.
Success is also fueling rebellion within the athletic ranks among those
talented enough to challenge the system. The tennis star Li Na, 29, was
forced to choose between her career and her country in 2008 when she
left the Chinese national team after sports officials refused to
relinquish control of her life....
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