China Daily Global Edition (USA)

Not all Olympians are created equal

- Contact the writer at murraygrei­g@chinadaily.com. cn

“Korean” hockey players from Canada.

“Nigerian” bobsledder­s from the United States.

A “Canadian” gold medalist speed skater from the Netherland­s.

And there were dozens of other athletic travelers competing at the Pyeongchan­g Winter Olympics, which finished Sunday.

Team China’s total of nine medals ranked near the middle of the pack, but in terms of national pride and integrity, the Chinese athletes were pure gold — simply because they were all homegrown.

According to global mobility company CapRelo, the Games featured 178 athletes who competed for nonnative nations. The list included 37 US-born Olympians who switched countries, 20 from Canada and 19 from Russia.

Alpine skiing (32) and figure skating (26) were the top two events for flag-changers.

South Korea’s men’s hockey team — augmented by six Canadians and one American — and the three US-bornand-trained “Nigerian” bobsledder­s were feel-good stories at the Games.

But for every flag-changer, a homegrown athlete was denied a chance to compete for one’s nation.

Nigerian skeleton racer Simidele Adeagbo was born and raised in Canada, while the first women’s bobsled team to ever represent Africa at the Winter Games was composed of Seun Adigun, Ngozi Onwumere and Akuoma Omeoga — a trio of American track stars.

Alpine racer Kilian Albrecht, who represente­d his native Austria at the 2002 Salt Lake City Games, skied under Bulgaria’s flag eight years later.

“It wasn’t about the Olympics for me; I skied for myself, not my country,” Albrecht, now the agent for US downhiller Mikaela Shiffrin, told CNN Sports last week. “I just wanted to continue racing. That wasn’t possible in Austria, so I looked for an option and ended up skiing for Bulgaria.”

I’d bet TV viewers were much more impressed by the reaction of China’s Liu Jiayu after she won silver in the women’s halfpipe — the nation’s first medal in Pyeongchan­g and first ever in snowboardi­ng.

“For me to win a medal is exciting personally, but to draw more attention to the sport back home and to promote its spirit around my country makes me happier,” said Liu. Murray Greig

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