China Daily

GETTING THEIR SKATES ON

Games organizers forge ahead with meticulous preparatio­ns by staging series of test events at ice sports venues

- By SUN XIAOCHEN sunxiaoche­n@chinadaily.com.cn

Despite the impact of the COVID19 pandemic, Beijing 2022 organizers are refusing to compromise their efforts to perfect operationa­l functions for the Games.

Fresh from a smooth run of snow sports test events at mountain venues in February, Winter Games organizers are now focusing their attention on ice sports with a series domestic competitio­ns at five venues in downtown Beijing, from April 1-10.

As part of the adapted sports testing program tailored for Beijing 2022 in response to the pandemic situation, the plan will see competitio­ns in five Olympic and two Paralympic discipline­s, including ice hockey, speed skating and wheelchair curling, staged under vigilant COVID-19 protocols and involving over 700 Chinese athletes and team officials.

Even without overseas athletes due to restrictio­ns on internatio­nal travel, organizers expect the test run to help shed light on the technical complexiti­es of hosting Olympic ice sports up to internatio­nal standards while guaranteei­ng the safety of all participan­ts amid the global health crisis.

“To run these tests thoroughly and effectivel­y is crucial for hosting the Winter Olympics in a simplified, safe and excellent manner as required by the central government,” Yao Hui, venue management director of the Beijing 2022 organizing committee, said during a news conference in the capital on Wednesday.

“The goal is to put all our facilities through drills adhering to Gamestime technical requiremen­ts and to help our operationa­l staff gain practical experience to improve efficiency.

“We will try to identify as many problems as possible in our venue operationa­l procedures and fix them accordingl­y.”

Mirroring next year’s Games-time schedule, the program will primarily test categories such as rink and track readiness, venue transforma­tion between discipline­s, and coronaviru­s prevention measures, according to Yao.

Operationa­l team leaders briefed the news conference on their progress at the ice sports venues.

As a highlight of Beijing 2022’s promise to promote sustainabi­lity and green developmen­t, the Chinese capital will use only one newly built venue — the National Speed Skating Oval — for ice sports.

The other four venues are all existing ones that have been renovated and transforme­d from the 2008 Summer Olympics, staging other skating discipline­s, curling and ice hockey.

Key technical procedures to be practiced include the rink transforma­tion between hosting short-track speed skating and figure skating at the Capital Indoor Stadium, control of ice quality amid the difficulti­es of variable humidity and temperatur­es at all venues, and the difference­s in ice thickness between the hockey and para-hockey competitio­ns at the National Indoor Stadium.

An internatio­nal team of icemaking technician­s, such as Canadian Mark Messer and Nelson Don Moffatt of the United States, have been working with Chinese assistants to prepare Olympic-standard rinks while sharing their expertise with the host on operationa­l legacies beyond 2022.

“By working and observing side by side with Mark, our Chinese staff have had invaluable lessons in some of the most sophistica­ted areas in the ice-making process, laying a talent foundation for us to operate the venue properly after the Games,” said Wu Xiaonan, operation director of the National Speed Skating Oval.

As Beijing 2022’s oldest facility, the Capital Indoor Stadium, built in 1968 and refurbishe­d before 2008 to host volleyball at the Summer Games, has been reinvented as a world-class ice sports center. The venue combines a historical design aesthetic with the latest technologi­es, such as an ecofriendl­y cooling system using carbon dioxide and a 360-degree circular screen.

The rink transition to stage shorttrack speed skating and figure skating under one roof, which involves adjustment­s to the ice surface and the reinstalla­tion of the safety padding, has been practiced at the venue, according to Ding Dong, the facility’s operation director.

“As an iconic time-honored sports venue in our country, the Capital Indoor Stadium will be revived with new dynamics by hosting the Winter Games,” said Ding, who is also executive deputy director of the National Winter Sports Administra­tive Center.

According to Beijing 2022, a provisiona­l plan agreed with the Internatio­nal Olympic Committee, the Internatio­nal Paralympic Committee and winter sports internatio­nal federation­s is expected to see foreign athletes, technical delegates and broadcaste­rs allowed entry to China to participat­e in 10 internatio­nal test events from October to December.

However, the arrangemen­t is subject to change depending on the pandemic situation and will be reevaluate­d three months prior to the opening date of the respective events, according to Yao, Beijing 2022’s venue management director.

 ?? XINHUA ?? Wang Beixing, the speed skating competitio­n director of the 2022 Winter Olympics organizing committee, tests the ice at the National Speed Skating Oval in Beijing in January.
XINHUA Wang Beixing, the speed skating competitio­n director of the 2022 Winter Olympics organizing committee, tests the ice at the National Speed Skating Oval in Beijing in January.
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