China Daily Global Weekly

Paralympic pride

Chinese athletes participat­ing in the 2022 Olympic Games for the disabled step up preparatio­ns

- By SUN XIOCHEN sunxiaoche­n@chinadaily.com.cn

Inspired by the wheelchair curling team’s recent world championsh­ip victory, China’s para-athletes are going all out to make their country proud at the home Paralympic Winter Games next year.

One hundred days out from the opening ceremony on March 4, China’s ever-expanding para-winter sports program, spearheade­d by the all-conquering wheelchair curling team, is on a mission to draw more attention and support to para-sports by delivering the country’s best-ever medal haul at the Winter Games.

The wheelchair curling squad raised expectatio­ns it can retain its Paralympic title by winning the world championsh­ip in Beijing in October after missing out on gold at the 2020 worlds.

“Everyone on our team is doing the best we can to target the highest possible goal. Yet our focus over the remaining 100 days will be making each and every step as solid as we can to work on our weaknesses,” said the team’s head coach, Yue Qingshuang, a member of China’s able-bodied women’s team that won gold at the 2009 worlds.

Ever since Beijing won the bid to host the Winter Games in 2015, a number of breakthrou­ghs by Chinese para-athletes — including a first Winter Paralympic gold by the wheelchair curlers in 2018 — have highlighte­d their resolve to join the winter sports boom.

From the humble beginnings of a 50-athlete team about two decades ago, the national program now encompasse­s over 1,000 para-athletes, who have been training full-time across all six Paralympic winter sports — alpine skiing, biathlon, cross-country skiing, snowboardi­ng, para-ice hockey and wheelchair curling.

Guided by 42 coaches, including seven hired from overseas, over 100 hopefuls have been selected to join the pre-Games training camp, where they are fine-tuning their skills at five bases in Beijing and Hebei province in a bid to qualify for 65 of the total 78 medal events at the 10-day Games.

Boosted by state-of-the-art facilities and foreign coaching expertise, the athletes have good reason to believe they can steal the show at the Games, said Zhang Haidi, chairwoman of the China Disabled Persons’ Federation.

“The competitiv­eness of Chinese para-athletes in winter sports has made impressive progress over the years,” Zhang said on Nov 24 ahead of a ceremony to celebrate the 100-day countdown at the National Aquatics Center.

A set of gold and silver commemorat­ive coins for the Paralympic­s, issued by the People’s Bank of China, was also unveiled at the ceremony, as well as a scaled-down torch relay plan that will see the Paralympic flame travel across the three competitio­n zones — downtown Beijing, its northweste­rn Yanqing district and co-host Zhangjiako­u, Hebei province.

China sent a team to the Winter Paralympic­s for the first time in 2002, when four para-athletes competed in cross-country and alpine skiing discipline­s at Salt Lake City in the United States.

With Beijing 2022 promising to deliver the Games “in an excellent and extraordin­ary fashion”, better training facilities and stronger financial support had yielded encouragin­g results in a num-* ber of new sports, highlighte­d by two world para-snowboardi­ng titles in 2019 in Finland.

Since 2016, Chinese athletes have participat­ed in 59 internatio­nal events featuring Paralympic winter sports, claiming 38 gold medals.

Located in northeast Beijing’s Shunyi district, the National Ice Sports Arena for People with Impairment­s began operation in December last year. Among its cutting-edge facilities are world-class ice rinks tailored to Paralympic standards, and a rehabilita­tion center and accommodat­ion areas to help Chinese para-athletes hone their skills in wheelchair curling and para-hockey.

Now with the Games fast approachin­g, Beijing 2022 organizers are busy optimizing operationa­l details and services at all five Paralympic venues across the three zones, which have passed internatio­nal evaluation­s after hosting a series of test events since February.

Aimed at the general public, Beijing 2022 organizers last year released an illustrate­d version of barrier-free facility guidelines which detailed the renovation of urban infrastruc­ture to provide greater accessibil­ity during the Games and beyond.

Since November 2019, Beijing has repaired barrier-free facilities at 289,000 locations across the city as part of a program to improve equal access and inclusiven­ess for the disabled community leading up to the Games.

“Our goal is to not just host safe, accessible and excellent Paralympic Winter Games for the athletes but also to maximize the event’s influence in order to benefit the well-being of all people with disabiliti­es in our country,” said Zhang.

 ?? ??
 ?? ??
 ?? ??
 ?? ??
 ?? ?? The medals for the Beijing 2022 Winter Paralympic­s feature intricate designs inspired by ancient Chinese jade ornaments.
The medals for the Beijing 2022 Winter Paralympic­s feature intricate designs inspired by ancient Chinese jade ornaments.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States