East Bay Times

Olympian Gu working for Salt Lake Games bid

- By Stephen Wade

Eileen Gu, the San Francisco-born athlete who won two gold medals for China in freestyle skiing at the recent Beijing Olympics, has signed on to work for Salt Lake City's bid for the 2030 or 2034 Winter Olympics.

Tom Kelly, a spokesman for the bid committee, confirmed Gu's participat­ion to The Associated Press on Tuesday as an “athlete representa­tive.” Gu made the announceme­nt earlier at the Time100 Summit, calling herself an “ambassador.”

“She is working with us,” Kelly said, “but we haven't chosen her exact title.”

The choice could be controvers­ial or inspired.

The 18-year-old Gu was born in the Bay Area to a Chinese mother, but competed for China almost four months ago and won two gold and one silver medal in Beijing.

In explaining her choice, she often said she wanted to inspire young Chinese women.

In announcing her role with Salt Lake at the Time event, she said skiing and her position with the bid committee was a “beautiful example of globalism.”

Gu is expected to attend Stanford University this fall.

Her passport status has come under scrutiny. China does not officially allow dual citizenshi­p, and Gu has never clarified if she still holds American citizenshi­p, has renounced it, or if she has a Chinese passport.

The state-controlled Chinese media never seemed to raise the issue, initially welcoming the medals she won for her mother's homeland.

To the non-Chinese media, she often offered unclear answers. Some of the scrutiny was viewed as unfair, although she was placed in the spotlight by lucrative commercial deals offered by China.

Gu's announceme­nt was a trending topic on Chinese social media where opinion was divided but largely positive. Many pointed out that Time referred to her as “China's Eileen Gu,” saying this showed the global influence of a top-level Chinese athlete.

Others, however, questioned what they characteri­zed as her divided loyalties.

Her move to work for the American bid could eventually damage her popularity in China as memories of Beijing fade, and particular­ly in a time of heightened geopolitic­al tensions between the two countries.

Gu attended an assembly of Chinese Olympians in early April at the Great Hall of the People in Beijing, where Xi Jinping — the general secretary of the Chinese Communist Party — singled her out for recognitio­n.

“Gu Ailing loves to eat Chinese pies,” Xi said, using her Chinese name, going off script, and drawing some laugher. He was referring to Gu being seen a few times during the Olympics enjoying a Chinese dumpling.

Salt Lake is bidding for the 2030 Winter Olympics along with Sapporo, Japan, and Vancouver, British Columbia. Spain has also expressed interest.

The Internatio­nal Olympic Committee is expected to name the venue at meetings in May 2023 in Mumbai, India. It could also select the venue for 2034.

The IOC has lined up the Summer Olympics for Paris in `24, Los Angeles in `28 and Brisbane, Australia in `32. The 2030 Winter Olympic venue is the next open slot on the calendar.

Kelly, the Salt Lake spokesman, said Gu would not travel next week to Lausanne, Switzerlan­d, with a delegation from Salt Lake to meet IOC officials. Kelly said the head of the bid, Fraser Bullock, and American skier Lindsey Vonn would be going.

 ?? EZRA SHAW — GETTY IMAGES ?? Eileen Gu of Team China reacts after winning the gold medal during the women's freestyle halfpipe ay the Beijing 2022Winter Olympics at Genting Snow Park on February 18.
EZRA SHAW — GETTY IMAGES Eileen Gu of Team China reacts after winning the gold medal during the women's freestyle halfpipe ay the Beijing 2022Winter Olympics at Genting Snow Park on February 18.

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