Toronto Star

China’s Olympic dreams hit a detour

Highly prized foreign recruits left to train in Russia, far away from rest of women’s team

- SETH BERKMAN

The players most crucial to Chinese women’s ice hockey reside in a hotel about 110 kilometres south of Moscow. The quasi resort’s expansive grounds contain horses, stray cats and a speleocham­ber — a salt cave designed to improve breathing.

That these players are in Russia and not Beijing, 5,800 kilometres away, symbolizes how far China, whose women’s ice hockey team last qualified for the Olympics in 2010, has moved away from its grand plans in the sport.

“Not seeing it come to fruition and deviate is a disappoint­ment,” said Maddie Woo, who was recruited to play in China and occasional­ly skated with China’s national team over the past three years. “There was so much potential. There still is. It’s just the time sensitivit­y of it now. It’s shocking.”

Woo was one of several North Americans of Chinese descent who signed in 2017 with the newly formed Kunlun Red Star, a team now known as the Shenzhen KRS Vanke Rays. With China hosting the 2022 Winter Olympics, the Chinese Ice Hockey Associatio­n, the national governing body, assigned the club to manage the women’s national team.

KRS hired Woo and other players to be sport ambassador­s, training and playing alongside less experience­d Chinese nationals in hopes of elevating the homegrown players’ skills.

In a 2017 interview with The New York Times, Billy Ngok posited that players like Woo might become Chinese citizens, making them eligible for the Olympic team. For the 2018 Games in Pyeongchan­g, host South Korea deployed a similar tactic, although China has stricter passport policies.

Now, just15 months before the opening ceremony — when teams begin paring their rosters — the North American imports would ideally be with the Chinese nationals in Beijing, where a training bubble has been set up by the hockey associatio­n.

Claire Liu, the general manager of KRS, attributed the separation to the coronaviru­s pandemic limiting travel into China. But current and former KRS players and coaches added that communicat­ion between them and the hockey associatio­n had diminished to sporadic messages passed along by a bilingual intermedia­ry.

Rachel Llanes, a Filipino American forward who also hopes to represent China, said she still trains as if she’s “on call” for the national team. For now, Llanes plays only for KRS in Russia’s Zhenskaya Hockey League with six North Americans of Chinese descent who harbour similar Olympic dreams. KRS won the league title in the 2019-20 season, but this year the team has had 10 games reschedule­d because of the pandemic.

“I hope to be at the Olympics, but I know it’s not guaranteed,” Llanes said. “If you’re banking on it, I don’t recommend thinking that way. If we don’t get called, we’ll get four years of

“It’s a dream to be able to come here and focus on hockey.” LEAH LUM CHINESE-CANADIAN FORWARD

experience no one else can say they had.”

Since 2017, KRS has invested millions to create an environmen­t uncommon in women’s hockey. Digit Murphy, an American who had coached in college and the profession­al ranks, was hired to lead the women’s program. She enticed recruits with a simple, yet novel, approach.

KRS not only pays livable salaries of about $70,000 (U.S.) per year, but provides amenities expected of a pro team like firstclass airfare, an equipment manager and ice times when the sun is still shining.

That hasn’t been the case for North American women’s hockey, despite Canada and the United States reigning as the sport’s powerhouse­s. Founded in 2015, the National Women’s Hockey League, which has six teams across North America, had a highest reported salary of $15,000 last season.

In October, Secret, the deodorant brand, contribute­d $1 million to the Profession­al Women’s Hockey Players Associatio­n, a rare instance in which a party proclaimin­g interest in elevating North American women’s hockey gave more than just crumbs.

“We’re pretty spoiled, I’m not going to lie,” said Llanes, who worked three jobs while playing in Boston for teams in North American leagues. “We don’t have to worry about anything. You’re hockey players.”

In 2017, KRS staff also ran junior national teams and two franchises in the now-defunct Canadian Women’s Hockey League. Rob Morgan, who coached one of the Chinese teams in the CWHL and is now an adviser for KRS, said when he first met the Chinese national players, “we could see in their eyes they were just numb” from practising four times per day.

The new staff incorporat­ed shorter practices with weightlift­ing, nutrition lessons or meetings with a sports psychologi­st and the Chinese players responded positively to the changes, Morgan said. Murphy said North American players teased Chinese players for hiding snacks in their bags — many were shocked they could freely leave their rooms to eat, instead of being limited to having meals at their training facility’s dining hall.

“The first year, in terms of helping the Chinese players, was probably the most collaborat­ive and most effective,” said Melanie Jue, a Chinese-Canadian defenceman on KRS.

But toward the end of KRS’s first year, higher-ups within Chinese hockey began making unexpected alteration­s. The national hockey associatio­n changed leadership, and junior teams training in the U.S. were disbanded.

Regional hockey organizati­ons with political clout grumbled about the resources afforded to KRS.

In interviews with current and former KRS players and coaches, none said they knew where the partnershi­p between their club and the CIHA currently stood. The Chinese nationals currently on KRS are mostly older players not expected to compete at the next Olympics.

Liu, the team’s general manager, said that the “relationsh­ip is still there” and that the roster compositio­n was different because of the pandemic. The hockey associatio­n declined interview requests.

Because of the coronaviru­s pandemic, KRS relocated to Russia this season to reduce travel. The hockey associatio­n has reason to be cautious of bringing internatio­nal players into its bubble. In March, two Chinese players training with a travel squad in the United States tested positive for the coronaviru­s shortly after returning to Beijing.

Since July, about 40 Chinese homegrown players have been in Beijing, playing against youth teams and practising multiple times a day when most of the women’s hockey world was on pause.

That won’t necessaril­y create an advantage at the Olympic tournament, though. China ranks 19th in the world, but has an automatic bid as the host.

“If they really want a great showing in 2022, based on what I’ve seen, it needs to include Chinese North Americans,” said Bob Deraney, who coached KRS in 2018.

Deraney and Morgan added that they expected the North American contingent to eventually get called up, and Liu believed it was still a possibilit­y, although another hurdle remained. Since China does not recognize dual nationalit­y, Canadians and Americans would have to surrender their passports.

There are political ramificati­ons to representi­ng China, which has been roundly criticized for human rights abuses and holds a souring reputation in the West.

Rose Alleva, a forward from Minnesota who played one year with KRS, said giving up her American passport was “a deal breaker” and decided not to continue with the program.

“It’s definitely something you have to grapple with,” said Woo, who left KRS to begin her career in biomedical engineerin­g. “You can’t be ignorant to the idea someone will hand you a Chinese passport and everything will be fine, and you’ll still be Canadian or American.”

Xu said there could be one workaround if players got passports from Taiwan or Hong Kong. When former NBA player Jeremy Lin obtained his Taiwanese passport last year, he became an eligible “domestic” athlete for China under new rules instituted by the Chinese government, allowing him to play in the Chinese Basketball Associatio­n.

Whether or not the imports play for China in 2022, there have been potent take-aways.

China once built rinks in a decommissi­oned war bunker, but now state-of-the-art sheets are popping up throughout the mainland. According to the Internatio­nal Ice Hockey Federation, there are 822 rinks in China.

Leah Lum, a Chinese-Canadian forward, noted that when KRS runs youth clinics around the country, there’s an indescriba­ble pride in seeing Chinese children engaged in her sport. Playing hockey in China has also allowed Lum and her teammates to connect with their families’ heritage in ways that were impossible before.

“It’s a dream to be able to come here and focus on hockey,” Lum said. “Experienci­ng our culture and ancestry — China, that’s who I am.”

 ?? SHENZHEN KRS VANKE RAYS THE NEW YORK TIMES ?? Several North Americans of Chinese descent play for the KRS team, which manages the women’s national team.
SHENZHEN KRS VANKE RAYS THE NEW YORK TIMES Several North Americans of Chinese descent play for the KRS team, which manages the women’s national team.

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