China's swimmers will only get faster

By Alfred Chan / Expert

Ye Shiwen’s blistering performances in the pool are a sign of things to come. If drug allegations are the only plausible answer to the questions raised after unprecedented performances, we have a series of marred Olympic Games to come.

Producing a final split faster than USA’s Ryan Lochte in the men’s 400m individual medley, the sport has never seen a woman beat a man’s time in the same professional event.

Prior to the 2012 Games, Ye’s personal-best time was 4:33.39 which she beat in the heats and again in the final for an improvement of five seconds.

Ye’s overall time was still slower than Lochte’s time by 23 seconds.

After the 16-year old’s dominant gold-medal winning performance in the women’s 400m medley relay, USA swimming official John Leonard labelled Ye’s performance as “unbelievable” and “impossible”.

USA Swimming released the following statement.

“John Leonard … is not an employee, representative or spokesperson for USA Swimming, nor is he a member of the U.S. Olympic Swim Team or a part of the U.S. delegation here in London.”

The damage, however, had been done but was handled excellently by the Chinese team. Ye later went on to win the 200m individual medley, defeating Australian Alicia Coutts by half a second.

“I like to believe innocent until proven guilty. As far as I’m concerned I think she is an amazing swimmer and it’s just amazing that I got to be as close as I was with how amazing she is,” said Coutts in a show of true Australian sportsmanship.

For professional athletes, drug allegations and cheating are insults of the highest order.

Damage to confidence is the major blow and although it has not been proven, Leonard’s comments are one way for the USA to unsettle the Chinese camp.

We see it every day among coaches as they publicly bicker, but making drug allegations is taking it to an unacceptable level.

More civilised ways to handle the situation do not involve the media.

Unfortunately for Australia (but for the good of world security), Ye still went on to win gold in the 200m individual event.

With censorship the way it is in China and language difficulties, Ye may not have been affected as much as other athletes would in terms of mentality entering the event.

Having undoubtedly been shielded by the events occurring in between her two gold medals, such allegations had the potential to ruin her campaign.

In terms of USA strategy, Leonard having no official role on the US delegation made him the ideal scapegoat and forced the Chinese camp into unnecessary damage control.

Sadly for USA, we are in a phase of succession in that China will be leading the gold-medal count for years to come due to the programs they put in place years prior to the 2008 Beijing Games.

Spending money in the training and development of athletes from an early age, the 2008 Beijing Games was only the beginning.

From then on, Chinese athletes have only been improving in terms of talent and times.

With a vast population to choose from, we are only seeing the first generation of what will soon be super athletes whose professions are decided from very early ages.

From there on out, their entire life will revolve around being the best in the world and anything less will bring shame to their family name.

2008 was the first time since 1992 that USA did not top the gold medal count.

With the Chinese team growing larger in number for the past few Olympic Games, there is little doubt that the Chinese Olympic team is the fastest developing in the world.

For those interested, dancer Li Cunxin’s autobiography Mao’s Last Dancer provides an excellent account of the requirements for Chinese athletes in attaining excellence and the sacrifices they have to make for the good of the state.

We are only seeing the first generation of Chinese Olympic supremacy. Let’s hope USA can spend less time cultivating controversy and more time developing their athletes.

At just 16 years of age, Ye Shiwen is only going to get better.

The Crowd Says:

2012-08-02T13:45:42+00:00

JVGO

Guest


No, swimming needs to be seen as a mainstream part of our culture because it is essential to our outdoor lifestyle and the enjoyment of our climate. Every kid in Australia needs to learn to swim and to see swimming as a mainstream activity. The iconography of our olympic swimmers is important for this.

2012-08-02T09:35:33+00:00

Rabbitz

Roar Guru


Actually I hope China continue to dominate international swimming. With any luck, as Australian swimmers start to miss out then this media driven obsession with "our heroic swimmers" will fade and some of the other minor sports will get a look in.

2012-08-02T09:09:05+00:00

TW

Guest


Your second paragraph is spot on - Has everyone forgotten Soviet Russia and East Germany whose systems produced a huge emphasis on sport. Yes we know those systems failed eventually but they did share the Chinese view of sport. China is about to undergo a big change internally government wise- The "Princelings are about to assume power for the first time and will ensure they remain in power for the forseeable future.

2012-08-02T09:05:05+00:00

Mella

Guest


I think as China gets richer there will be less people willing to go through these sacrifices for the long shot of becoming an Olympic athlete. I know a girl in China who was chosen to go to one of these sports schools, didn't like the idea of being in the sun training all day and having big leg muscles so quit and went into a different career. 10 years ago it probably would of been her best option, not any more. Just one example.

2012-08-02T07:52:52+00:00

Alexander Grant

Roar Pro


No I think it's a fair statement. Eastern concepts of honour are incredibly potent even today.

2012-08-02T07:36:16+00:00

amazonfan

Roar Guru


That book also depicts events that occurred some time ago. It's not exactly a 100% accurate depiction of the modern day China.

2012-08-02T07:34:33+00:00

JVGO

Guest


Not these damn stereotypes again....I don't know where they even come from. My daughter attends an academically selective HSC factory high school where 80% of the girls are chinese...and she's the best swimmer there...but go figure?? Next thing you'll be trying to convince me that Aussies aren't just dumb drunk and racist or something.

2012-08-02T07:06:33+00:00

Terry Tavita

Roar Pro


that's big from US officials..the biggest drug cheats are Americans..Marion Jones and Colin Montgomery anybody? clear scandal? how about Jutin Gatlan..wasn't he caught cheating too?..and why is he still running next week?

AUTHOR

2012-08-02T06:38:15+00:00

Alfred Chan

Expert


Hi Steve, you're absolutely right that Olympic spending could have been better spent on humanitarian issues in China but I can't imagine we will ever see a figure as to how much they have spent on athletic development against other areas of need. I was recently in Beijing and it was astonishing as to how neglected the lower class are. You can read more about it here: http://alfredsadventure.wordpress.com/2012/07/24/beijing-welcome-to-communism/ Chinese culture is much like American sporting culture in the sense that it is all about winning and as an event (the Olympics)which encapsulates the entire world, they see it as another opportunity to flex their muscle as a symbol of 'supposed' world supremacy, which the State views as a very good thing.

2012-08-02T06:27:37+00:00

Les the mess

Guest


@tonysalerno - "If Yi is cleared of any wrongdoing..." There's no "IF", read your newspaper.

2012-08-02T06:25:06+00:00

tonysalerno

Roar Guru


The drug allegations comments are getting louder as they centre around the Chinese Olympic team. It is amazing a 15 year old girl can become an Olympic gold medallist in such a short amount if time. If Yi is cleared of any wrong doing by Olympic officials, it is a credit to the money spent on resources and infrastructure by the Chinese team. If their current Olympic success is anything to go by, China will be an absolute powerhouse in London.

2012-08-02T06:15:39+00:00

Steve

Guest


Good article Alfred, and I don't mean to pick more holes, but saying Mao's last Dancer' shows sacrifices being for the 'good of the state' seems a little ironic given the content of the book: taking it further, claiming Olympic victories are 'for the good of the state' (any state) is also a bit of an uncomfortable statement. There are always issues as to whether Olympic spending would be better spent on alleviating poverty etc, and whether governments misuse the Olympics as a distraction from internal problems or to prop up their legitimacy (plenty of discussion of that in the UK right now)

AUTHOR

2012-08-02T05:46:00+00:00

Alfred Chan

Expert


Apologies for the confusion. I just meant they need to spend less time complaining if they want to get anywhere.

2012-08-02T05:33:57+00:00

BigAl

Guest


"Let’s hope USA ..." !!! Why on earth is that Alfred ???

2012-08-02T03:55:22+00:00

JChou

Guest


"From there on out, their entire life will revolve around being the best in the world and anything less will bring shame to their family name. " Don't you think this is way overboard? Where do you see a systemic pattern of athletes heaping shame on their family name if they are not the "best"? This is projecting a Western stereotype of an oppressive China sports factory culture (and Chinese culture in general)

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