Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

U.S. edges China in gold count

- By Hannah Beech

The United States has won the most medals at the Tokyo Olympics and will be the only country to take home more than 100. But on the last day of competitio­n, the race for the most gold medals was a tight contest between the United States and China.

That race is particular­ly important to China, which has tried to harness its youth for Olympic glory ever since rejoining the summer Olympic movement in 1984.

The United States clinched the race Sunday afternoon by reaching 39 golds.

As the day began in Tokyo, China had 38 gold medals to 36 for the United States. But American teams then won gold medals in women’s basketball and women’s volleyball, and Jennifer Valente won the women’s omnium in track cycling, putting the United States into the lead by one.

China had two opportunit­ies for golds, but finished fourth in the rhythmic gymnastics group all-around final and with a silver in women’s middleweig­ht boxing.

Boxer Richard Torrez Jr. of the United States lost a super heavyweigh­t final Sunday, but the Americans had already clinched the most golds. Torrez earned a silver medal, part of a four-medal effort that was the Americans’ best in boxing since the 2000 Sydney Games.

To establish itself as a sports superpower, China’s government years ago developed an official “gold medal strategy” that depended on thousands of full-time sports schools, with coaches scouting young talent in villages and cities alike. In addition to traditiona­l stronghold­s like table tennis and badminton, Chinese officials deliberate­ly targeted sports that were underfunde­d in the West, such as women’s sports, or less high-profile pursuits with many medals on offer from multiple weight divisions or event categories.

On home turf in 2008, China met its ambitions by topping the gold medal count for the first time. But the country slipped in London in 2012 and Rio de Janeiro in 2016, amid public reservatio­ns about whether the sports system was worth it.

Even as government officials stressed that they wanted to encourage mass sports and overall physical fitness, the drive for gold continued.

It paid off in Tokyo. China scored golds in the sports it has dominated in the past, such as weightlift­ing, diving, gymnastics and table tennis. But it also claimed victories in canoeing, cycling, rowing and athletics, and underscore­d its growing strength in swimming.

 ?? Justin Setterfiel­d/Getty Images ?? Jennifer Valente’s gold medal gave the Americans one more than China.
Justin Setterfiel­d/Getty Images Jennifer Valente’s gold medal gave the Americans one more than China.

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