Chicago Sun-Times

Key player in ‘Ping-Pong diplomacy’

- AP

BEIJING — Three-time world table tennis champion Zhuang Zedong, a key figure in the groundbrea­king “Ping-Pong diplomacy” between China and the United States, died Sunday, China’s official Xinhua News Agency reported. He was 72 and had struggled with cancer since 2008.

Mr. Zhuang won fame by presenting a gift to American player Glenn Cowan, who had inadverten­tly boarded a bus carrying the Chinese team at the world championsh­ips in Nagoya, Japan, in 1971.

Mr. Zhuang and Cowan were photograph­ed together, creating an internatio­nal sensation at a time when China and the U.S. were bitter Cold War rivals.

Under orders from Chinese leader Mao Zedong, the 15-member American team was then invited to China at the end of the Nagoya championsh­ips for an ice-breaking visit. Ten months later, President Richard Nixon made a surprise visit to China, leading to the establishm­ent of diplomatic ties in 1979.

Mr. Zhuang became a favorite of Mao’s wife, Jiang Qing, a member of the notorious Gang of Four, which held sway during the radical turmoil of the 1966-76 Cultural Revolution. Jiang appointed Mr. Zhuang to a number of political posts in the sports ministry.

Mr. Zhuang came under investigat­ion after the Gang was deposed and Jiang imprisoned following Mao’s death in 1976, and subsequent­ly spent years coaching the provincial team in the northern province of Shanxi. He returned to Beijing in 1985 and coached young players for several years.

Mr. Zhuang was married twice and had one daughter.

 ??  ?? Zhuang Zedong (right) competes in the men’s team finals of the 26th World Table Tennis Championsh­ip in 1961 in Beijing. | AP
Zhuang Zedong (right) competes in the men’s team finals of the 26th World Table Tennis Championsh­ip in 1961 in Beijing. | AP
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