China Daily

National Games will benefit all levels of athletes

- By SUN XIAOCHEN in Tianjin sunxiaoche­n@ chinadaily.com.cn

Innovation­s in the National Games are poised to benefit the country’s sports developmen­t at both elite and grassroots levels.

The 13th Chinese National Games will kick off at Tianjin’s Olympic Center Stadium on Sunday with the expectatio­n that reforms and sustainabi­lity will boost the athletic performanc­e of profession­als and the sports participat­ion of the public.

The National Games are the highestlev­el multisport meeting in China that take place every four years. The Tianjin games have attracted 10,217 athletes from 38 provincial delegation­s to compete in 33 sports through Sept 8.

The new format to allow cross-delegation squads to compete in 49 team events of 10 sports, including swimming, table tennis and cycling, is one of the most significan­t reforms adopted at the games.

Under the new rules, top athletes from different delegation­s could join hands to compete in their respective team event, aimed at improving their chemistry through the high-profile test to prepare for bigger events such as the 2020 Tokyo Olympics.

Each of the delegation­s involved in the mixed squad will be rewarded equally with respective medals if their athletes win the competitio­n.

In table tennis, eight out of the 16 pairs that qualified for the mixed doubles final round are cross-delegation teams.

China’s world champion diving duo Shi Tingmao and Chang Yani won the women’s 3-meter springboar­d final in Tianjin on Wednesday as a mixed-province pair after their victory at the Budapest World Aquatics Championsh­ip in July.

Diving is one of events at the National Games that began ahead of the opening ceremony.

“The new rule allows us to keep testing our synchroniz­ation through big competitio­ns,” Shi said. “It also gives each of our teams a decent chance to obtain better results than before.”

“Hopefully, this reform improves the allocation of resources and provides more flexibilit­y for elite team athletes to improve their skills to the utmost,” said Yang Guoqing, principal of Nanjing Sport Institute.

To inspire greater public participat­ion in sports, the Tianjin organizing committee accepted square dancing as a demonstrat­ion event at the National Games for the first time. A team made of 128 senior square dancers selected from an online contest will perform during the opening ceremony.

“To involve mass sports enthusiast­s such as these dancers will ignite the passion of the public for fitness activities,” said Yang Guangyu, an official from the General Administra­tion of Sport of China’s mass sports department.

The National Games will also leverage its infrastruc­ture resources to benefit mass sports participat­ion as 15 out of 21 new venues were built on campuses and urban centers in Tianjin funded by universiti­es and the private sector.

The games will use 26 existing venues, with 15 of them refurbishe­d not only for staging the competitio­ns but also providing better exercise facilities for the public.

To involve mass sports enthusiast­s ... will ignite the passion of the public for fitness activities.” Yang Guangyu, official from the General Administra­tion of Sport of China’s mass sports department

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