South China Morning Post

11-year-old Yu Zidi is making a splash

- Lars Hamer

An 11-year-old wonderkid made waves at the National Swimming Championsh­ips in Shenzhen, finishing the women’s 400-metres individual medley two seconds shy of the qualifying time for the Paris Olympics.

Yu Zidi’s four minutes and 40.97 seconds secured her second place in the final and would have been enough to earn her a spot at the World Aquatic Championsh­ips in Qatar in February.

The Hong Kong record for the women’s 400m individual medley is Chloe Cheng’s time of 4:48:58, which she took from Siobhan Haughey in 2021.

Despite grabbing the attention of the swimming world, Yu’s time was still only enough to finish as runner-up in the race as she touched the wall one second after Yu Yiting.

Yu Yiting, 18, was one of the 23 Chinese swimmers who tested positive for the banned substance trimetazid­ine (TMZ), which is a prescripti­on heart drug that can enhance performanc­e, before the 2021 Tokyo Olympics.

The news of the positive tests broke last week, forcing the World Anti-Doping Agency (Wada) to say it was aware of the incident but accepted China’s explanatio­n the tests had been contaminat­ed.

However, United States officials cried cover-up and on Friday Wada called on an independen­t prosecutor to review its handling of the case.

Yu will not compete at the Summer Games in Paris in July, but was in 10 events in Shenzhen.

There is no age limit for athletes to compete in swimming at the Olympics but China has already reached its quota of 26 female athletes.

In the 400m freestyle, Yu swam 4:10:73 in the heats and then 4:12:10 in the final, finishing seventh. Her time in the heats was 2.83 seconds off the Olympic qualifying standard.

Yu was born in Baoding, Hebei province in October 2012. When she was nine, she was scouted at a swimming meet and offered the chance to move to neighbouri­ng Hengshui so she could train at Club Swimming and join the provincial team.

“Yu Zidi came to the club in December 2021 for the Hebei Provincial Swimming Training programme,” a Club Swimming spokesman said.

“The club regularly undertakes training sessions for Hebei’s young swimmers and selects talent from these sessions.”

Yu burst onto the scene in March last year when she competed in the Chinese Spring

National Championsh­ips. Her stand-out performanc­e was again in the 400m individual medley, where she clocked 4:53.

By the end of the year, she was back in the pool at national competitio­ns and managed to shave five seconds of her previous mark, this time finishing in 4:48:36.

“There’s no specific goal for competitio­ns this year, but the target for the national championsh­ips [in Shenzhen] was to get as many medals as possible.”

The spokesman clarified that the lack of a target for this year was due to Yu’s age and the club not wanting to give her too much pressure.

However, Chinese media and fans have been quick to tout her as the new Ye Shiwen, who won gold in the 400m and 200m medley at the 2012 Summer Olympics, just two months before Yu was born.

“Right now, she’s the best swimmer we’ve got but whether she’ll be able to go to internatio­nal competitio­ns next year isn’t clear yet,” the spokesman said.

 ?? ?? Young star Yu Zidi turns heads during competitio­n in Shenzhen.
Young star Yu Zidi turns heads during competitio­n in Shenzhen.

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