Wednesday, April 24, 2013

http://digitalcommons.wku.edu/ijes/vol1/iss1/1/

Abstract

The gold medal success of China in recent Olympic Games can be traced to the advancement of the state-sponsored sport system (SSSS). While the program was developed initially through socialist ideals, it is more than a centralized government system to monopolize resources for glorified sport performance. Participation in competition is an inherent part of the human condition. Success in athletics is associated with national identity and has economic, social, and cultural implications. Because of this, it is essential that the SSSS adjust and improve to keep pace with other facets of China’s quickly changing national reform. In association with emerging economic reform, some sports now receive equal or more funds from private investments compared to government allocation. The state-sponsored sport system must continue to adapt to maintain the Chinese tradition of excellence in competition.

Recommended Citation

Cao, Jie and Zhiwei, Pan (2008) "On a State-sponsored Sport System in China," International Journal of Exercise Science: Vol. 1: Iss. 1, Article 1.
Available at: http://digitalcommons.wku.edu/ijes/vol1/iss1/1

Sport in China heavily influenced by government

This is an excerpt from International Sport Management edited by Ming Li, Eric MacIntosh, and Gonzalo Bravo.


Role of Government in Sport in China

Before the 1980s the Chinese sport governance system was a huge state-run enterprise. The Chinese government was responsible for funding and overseeing sport-related affairs and operations under a centrally planned, hierarchical economic system (Jones, 1999). The country’s adoption of the open-door policy in the 1980s led to the transformation of the sport system in China. The sport governance system then gradually evolved under the free-market system to become more self-sufficient (Hong, 2003). The State Sports Commission was restructured to become the State General Administration of Sport in 1998. Although the sport governance system has been reformed considerably in the last two decades, the governments at all levels still has extensive control of sport operations in China.
p. 209 art.png   The State General Administration of Sports (SGAS) is an administrative unit under the State Department. As shown in figure 9.4, it has three branches, administrative departments, sport competition management centers, and other support and services institutions. The SGAS is closely tied to the All-China Sports Federation and the Chinese Olympic Committee. Besides forming strategies for sport development, overseeing their implementation, and developing mid- and long-range sport development plans, the SGAS is responsible for a number of functions:
  • Creating a national sport framework
  • Promoting physical activity and exercise participation in schools and local and regional communities
  • Organizing national sporting events
  • Organizing international sport events in China
  • Enforcing antidrug and anticompetitive measures
  • Liaising and cooperating with Hong Kong, Macau, and Taiwan
  • Supporting research into the development of sport
  • Implementing regulations governing the sport industry, sport market, and sport-related business activities
  • Implementing national physical training standards and supervising public health in coordination with the Ministry of Health
  • Overseeing sport activities with foreign associations and teams, and sport-related cooperation and communication with countries and regions outside the mainland
To fulfill the nation’s Olympic strategies and ambition, the SGAS and sport authorities at the provincial level have played a key role in promoting sport development in China. One of the strategies is sponsorship of the Chinese National Games (CNG). Modeled after the modern Olympic Games, the CNG are the largest and most important sport extravaganza in China. Each province-level administrative unit sends a team to compete in the CNG. The preparation for and competition at the CNG allow the government to cultivate elite Chinese athletes for major world competitions.
p. 210 art.png   The essence of Chinese Olympic strategies and ambition is a unique system of selecting and training elite athletes (figure 9.5). China is one of the few countries in the world that dedicate and use spare-time sport schools extensively to train and prepare future elite athletes. A spare-time sport school is a boarding school specialized in sport and established to train Olympic hopefuls. Students are selected for their athletic talent. They take academic classes in the morning and engage in rigorous sport training sessions in the afternoon. These sport schools serve as a reserve pool for elite sport teams at the provincial and national levels. Currently, 360,000 students attend about 3,000 sport schools at all levels in the country. Many issues are associated with this centralized athlete development system, including early entry (e.g., diving starts at age four or five), arbitrary selection methods, poor training facilities and conditions, inhumane training methods, and inadequate education. On the other hand, this system provides China with an advantageous position for winning medals in the Olympic Games and other world sport competitions, leading to tremendous national pride among its citizens.
The Sports Law of the People’s Republic of China became effective on October 1, 1995, becoming the first fundamental legal document for sport since the current regime was established in 1949. The Sports Law establishes the main tasks and key principles in managing the sport industry, confirms the importance of mass sport, and identifies the duties and responsibilities of sport-related organizations. Essentially, the law sets the framework for the development of sport in China (Jones, 1999). The enactment of the law signified that the sport industry in China has entered a new era under the protection of the country’s legal system. Based on the Sports Law, local governments at provincial and city levels have the right and authority to make their own rules for managing sport within their jurisdictions.
The Plan for Olympic Glories was released by the SGAS in 1995. The plan outlined three goals: (a) restructuring the system in elite sport training and management, (b) enhancing the elite athlete delivery pipeline and system (including sport schools), and (c) maintaining the nation’s leading position in world sport competition, particularly the Summer Olympic Games (Chinese Olympic Committee, 2009).
In 1995 the State Council promulgated the guidelines for a national fitness program. The guidelines were drafted with the aim of improving the health and the overall physical condition of the general population. The guidelines encouraged everyone, especially children and adolescence, to engage in at least one sporting activity every day, learn at least two ways of keeping fit, and have a health examination every year. The hope was that by 2010 about 40 percent of China’s population would be regularly participating in physical activity and that clear improvement would take place in the physical fitness level of Chinese citizens (Chinese Olympic Committee, 2009).

China on way to sport system transformation

China on way to sport system transformation


    By Sportswriter Ma Xiangfei
    BANGKOK, Aug. 18 (Xinhua) -- Sending a large member of registered college students to the Bangkok Universiade, China is on a way to combine sports with education in a bid to earn a sustainable development of the sports.
    After enjoying standings' top positions in Beijing 2001 with 54gold, 25 silver and 24 bronze medals and Daegu 2003, China met with the sudden fall of gold medals, which happened as the right to organize the Universiade delegation transferred from the State General Administration of Sports to the Ministry of Education in late 2003.
    "In the past, China regarded Universiade as the best place to put their athletes to test before the Olympic Games. So it is natural that we had good results with top Chinese athletes in team," said deputy chef de mission Guo Jianjun.
    These top-flight athletes are a group of special students who are admitted into the universities thanks to their good results in sports events but have missed out a dozen years of formal education before that. And they can hardly take academic lessons on a regular basis.
    Promoting the idea of combining formal education with sport training, China is trying to change the situation.
    "Now we are leaning towards athletes trained in the universities in our efforts to integrate the sport system and formal education," said Guo.
    The current sport system is called the "three-level" training system or the "whole nation system", which will see sport talents go from local sport schools to provincial team before reaching the national team if they are both excellent and lucky.
    "The whole nation system is concentrating the country's resources on training certain sport talents and it has been proved very successfully," said SGAS vice president Cui Dalin.
    The system, according to statistics of the Chinese Olympic Committee, produced 1,692 world champions as of 2003 for China and 114 Olympic titles in seven Olympic Games, both summer and winter.
    Its side effect, however, raised concerns when thousands of athletes failed to create good results at national or international level and retired with little means of making a living.
    In many cases, even accomplished athletes lived in poverty. ZouChunlan, a former weightlifting national champion, found lack of education denied her of all decently-paid jobs after her retirement.
    "I don't think the whole nation system will be canceled after the Beijing Olympics but the product of central planning era will be added new content in the socialist market economy," said Cui.
    "With the economy growing, government will not be the only place cultivating our sport talents. Universities or clubs may join in," he said.
    On the other hand, millions of Chinese students mostly lack physical exercise, which resulted in the government ordering in May to ensure at least one hour of physical exercise for students each day.
    Zhang Xinsheng, vice minister of education, thought that cultivating athletes on campus can both raise the sport level of the nation on the whole and solve the problem of retired athletes.
    "China is following the trend (that universities produce high-level athletes)," said Zhang. "Some advanced countries like the United States have realized the integration."
    "Parents support that their children receive formal education while being trained as an athlete. If these educated athletes are successful in sport field, that's good. But if they are not, they still can do well in the society," he said.
    "On the other hand, sports will not only build up students' body but also provide them valuable experience they can never have from books," he said.
    China is moving towards the direction. Tsinghua University has been playing a vanguard role as it set up its own diving, shooting and athletics teams.
    The "Flying Spectacle Man" Hu Kai, men's 100m winner in Izmir, was pursuing his master degree in Tsinghua.
    But on the whole, China has greatly improved their results from the 21 gold, 9 silver and 16 bronze medals from Izmir, Turkey four years ago to today's 33-30-27.
    "This does reflect the improvement of our university sports," said Yang Liguo, executive chef de mission. 

Is the US Olympic System as Abusive as China's?


Is the US Olympic System as Abusive as China's?



The spectacle of the 2012 London Olympics should be subtitled “The Bashing of the Chinese Athlete.” Yesterday, Andrew Jacobs of the New York Times published a much-discussed piece called “Heavy Burden on Athletes Takes Joy Away From China’s Olympic Success.” In it, all kinds of “concerns” are raised about the toll “the nation’s draconian sports system” is taking on the country’s athletes. It tells tales of poverty, loneliness and despair amongst China’s sports stars once the cheering has stopped. Their athletes are described as being exploited by an unfeeling government monolith that acted as a surrogate family until they were no longer of any use. Parents of China’s Olympians are quoted saying, “We accepted a long time ago that she doesn’t belong to us. I don’t even dare think about things like enjoying family happiness.” Other parents tell of not being able to recognize their own children after years apart.
The other dominant story about China are the continuing unfounded allegations that 16-year-old Chinese swimmer Ye Shiwen took performance-enhancing drugs to win gold. Executive Director of the American Swim Coaches Association John Leonard called Shiwen’s world-record 400-meter individual medley swim “disturbing.” He is also continuing to describe her closing freestyle leg of 58.68 seconds as “impossible.”
There have been a series of ugly articles about Shiwen, none uglier perhaps than a piece by UK’s Daily Mail’s David Jones titled “Forging of the Mandarin Mermaid: How Chinese children are taken away from their home and brutalized into future Olympians.” Not “trained” but “brutalized.”
Then there was Bob Costas’s handling of the issue on NBC, which involved the raising of an unfounded accusation on the basis of it’s being news and then using it to advance the allegation. I’m surprised Costas didn’t turn to special guest Michelle Bachmann to speak about rumors of Shiwen’s time in the Muslim Brotherhood. There is zero evidence but Shiwen is guilty in the Western media with no avenue to prove her innocence.
None of this is to defend China’s state-run system of producing athletes. But it seems rather painfully obvious why we are seeing this tidal wave of suspicion, drug allegations and concern for the “children.” China is the chief economic rival in the world to the United States. Just like during the cold war, the Olympics have become a proxy war where “medal counts” connote more than bragging rights but are a comment on the health of a nation. China is rivaling the United States in medal counts so its dominance has to be explained in as critical, ugly and even as racist a way as possible. The message is that the Chinese have medals because they just don’t love their kids.
If the New York Times is that concerned about the brutalization of young athletes, that battle begins at home. US athletes don’t have to navigate a state-run athletic system but something perhaps far more pernicious. Unlike China, US athletes get no government subsidies whatsoever. Their number one obstacle to the medal stand isn’t ability but poverty. As one study by the USA Track and Field Foundation demonstrated, “Approximately 50% of our athletes who rank in the top 10 in the USA in their event make less than $15,000 annually from the sport (sponsorship, grants, prize money, etc.).”
Both systems create “collateral damage.” Both systems are in need of reform. The only difference is the narrative. When we hear that swimmer Ryan Lochte’s parents are facing foreclosure on their home, or that track star Lolo Jones’s family was homeless, or that gymnast Gabby Douglas was sent from her mother in Virginia Beach to live with strangers at the age of 14, those are tales of heroism and sacrifice. We celebrate their pain instead of condemning it or even being disturbed by it.
The US system also contains its share of countless broken bodies and broken lives, discarded in pursuit of gold. The ongoing sexual abuse scandal in USA Swimming is an example of this. As ESPN’s T.J. Quinn and Greg Amante wrote in 2010, “Youth swimming coaches, many certified by USA Swimming, the sport’s national governing body, have been able to molest young swimmers and then move from town to town, escaping criminal charges and continuing to victimize other under-aged swimmer…. ESPN found the abusive coaches, some of whom molested young swimmers for more than 30 years, avoided detection because of a number of factors: USA Swimming and other organizations had inadequate oversight, many local coaches, parents and swimming officials failed to report inappropriate contact they witnessed, and some parents, driven to see their children succeed, ignored or did not recognize what should have been red flags.” [My emphasis.]
Then there is USA Gymnastics. Joan Ryan, in her brilliant 1995 book, Little Girls in Pretty Boxes, wrote the following about our system for producing gold medal gymnasts: “What I found was a story about legal, even celebrated child abuse. In the dark troughs along the road to the Olympics lay the bodies of girls who stumbled on the way, broken by the work, pressure and humiliation. I found a girl whose father left the family when she quit gymnastics at the age of 13, who scraped her arms and legs with razors to dull her emotional pain and who needed a two-hour pass from a psychiatric hospital to attend her high-school graduation. Girls who broke their necks and backs. One who so desperately sought the perfect, weightless gymnastic body that she starved herself to death.”
Imagine for a moment if Bob Costas or the New York Times had stories like this to tell about China. If they did, we’d know them by heart. Instead, the pain of US athletes remains in the shadows. The message to all US critics of China’s Olympic system should be, “Physician, heal thyself.” The battle to make Olympic training more humane begins at home.

http://www.thenation.com/blog/169310/us-olympic-system-abusive-chinas#

China’s Sports System Delivers Party’s Glory, Individual Pain


China’s Sports System Delivers Party’s Glory, Individual Pain


Former national female weightlifting champion Zou Chunlan was forced to do menial labor for several years and then worked at a public bathhouse as a masseuse.
Zhang Shangwu, a gold medal-winning gymnast at the 2001 World University Games in Beijing was also left destitute after his athletic career abruptly ended. After an Achilles’ tendon injury in 2002, he retired from the sport in 2005 with a pension barely enough to cover his living costs.
Zhang was also forced to sell off two of his gold medals for a grand sum of less than $20, reported ABC News in 2011. In 2007, Zhang was sentenced to four years in prison for stealing laptops and cell phones at a Beijing sports school. After his release in April 2011, Zhang resorted to begging and performing stunts on the streets for money to care for his sickly grandfather.
Retired basketball player Huang Chengyi’s tragic fate has also aroused attention. Huang, who is 7 feet 1 inches tall and once challenged former Houston Rockets center Yao Ming in China’s national training camp, is now paralyzed. He lives in an abandoned hut on a construction site and is completely dependent on his trash collector mother, according to the Asia Health Care Blog.

The Party’s Interests

The Chinese regime has faced widespread criticism about its sports system for indoctrinating athletes with its single-minded pursuit of Olympic gold medals, while depriving athletes of their personal life and education and providing them no means of living after their retirement from sports.
Huang Jianxiang, one of China’s best known sports commentators, told NTD Television: “I oppose this warped gold medal production line, this system that deprives people of their basic rights. Only the gold medalists benefit; all the others are the cannon fodder of the system, worse off than the hundreds of millions of people who were deprived of their sporting rights.”


According to Epoch Times commentator Xia Xiaoqiang, the athletes exist for the system.
“Under this kind of cruel system, these talented athletes have practically enslaved themselves to the state-owned organization,” Xia wrote. “They must give thanks to the Party and the country.”
Chen Kai, a former national Chinese basketball team player told Sound of Hope Radio, “In China, sports are used to meet the needs of power. It is a tool to glorify the CCP. It is not the true choice of an individual athlete. Therefore, sports in China are distorted.”
Meanwhile, netizens on the Chinese microblogging platform Sina Weibo have started a movement called, “Even if you are not a gold medalist, you are still a hero,” urging everyone to treat athletes equally and to stop pressuring them to win gold medals.

http://www.theepochtimes.com/n2/china-news/china-s-sports-system-delivers-party-s-glory-individual-pain-276521-page-2.html

Sport in the People's Republic of China


Sport in the People's Republic of China

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Although China has long been associated with the martial arts, sport in China today consists of a variety of competitive sports played in China, including mainland China, Hong Kong and Macau. Traditional Chinese culture regards physical fitness as an important aspect, and, since the 20th century, a large number of sports activities, both Western and traditionally Chinese, are popular in China. The country has its own national quadrennial multi-sport event similar to the Olympic Games, the National Games of the People's Republic of China.
Cuju, an ancient form of football from China
Badminton, football, basketball and table tennis are the main sports in China. Prior to the 1990s, sport in China, as in some other countries, was completely government-funded. Some top athletes had quit at the height of their careers because they were uncertain about life post retirement. The situation began to change in 1994 when Chinese football became the first sport to take the professionalization road and in its wake similar reforms were carried out in basketball, volleyball, ping pong and weiqi. The process brought with it commercialization; sport associations became profit-making entities and a club system came into being; professional leagues formed, improving China's sports environment; and commercial management systems took shape. The professionalization of sports has encouraged the emergence of a sports management market and business-structured systems. Sports club operations now cover ticket sales, advertising, club transfers, commercial matches, television broadcasting and other commercial activities. Another aspect of the reform is that some Chinese athletes have joined foreign professional leagues. For instance, basketball star Yao Ming entered the NBA in the 2002 draft.[1]
China led the gold medal count (51) at the 2008 Summer Olympic Games, which were held in Beijing from 8 August to 24 August 2008.[2]


http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sport_in_the_People%27s_Republic_of_China

How China's 'whole nation' system works - Telegraph

How China's 'whole nation' system works - Telegraph

How China's 'whole nation' system works

China's Soviet-style sports system China has changed dramatically since it began reforming its Communist system three decades ago. But one vestige of Soviet-style central planning remains in its "juguo" or "whole nation" sports system.


By Malcolm Moore in Shanghai

1:04PM BST 18 Jul 2011

Under the "whole nation" system, China roots out talented young children and puts them in special academies from as young as four years old.

If they are able to progress, athletes who make the cut are put into a relentless training programme, filled with targets they must regularly hit, and paid by the government a monthly wage of between 1,000 yuan and 3,000 yuan a month (£96 to £288).

Each year, the best athletes are sent to national training centres in Beijing, where they compete to enter China's national team. If they succeed, they will move with their families into the training centre and live there all year round.

Outsiders who have glimpsed inside the Chinese National Gymnastics centre, like Sir Matthew Pinsent, have been dismayed by what they saw.

"I know it is gymnastics and that sport has to start its athletes young," he said, before the Beijing games. "But I have to say I was really shocked. I do think those kids are being abused." One note, found pinned to the wall of the training centre before the Beijing Olympics simply read: "Leaders put pressure on us, subordinates put pressure on us, pressure each other. Pressure yourself. There will be no breakthrough without the hardest hardship. You cannot be a champion without going through the ultimate pressure".
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For as long as they are successful, the national team members benefit from perks including air tickets for their parents to watch them compete and, in some cases, sponsorship deals.

Gymnasts who win medals in international competitions, or with national titles, can attend university after their career ends, with the tuition paid for by the state.

The ones who do not win medals, however, have to take the notoriously difficult university entrance exams.

The success of the whole nation scheme has been evident from China's ever-rising tally of gold medals at successive Olympic Games, culminating in Beijing when China won 51 golds to the US' 36 and Russia's 23.

Since the Sydney Olympics in 2000, China also adopted Project 119, a plan to boost its gold medal haul by pouring funding into sports that the country has traditionally been weaker at: track-and-field, boxing, swimming and rowing, among others.