Veteran wins first gold for Team China
Fan Kexin and her short-track speed skating relay squad race to top spot
Twelve years after joining the national team, Fan Kexin finally stood up on the highest podium at the Olympic rink. Together with teammates, the 28-year-old new Olympic champion won the mixed team relay gold medal late in the evening on Feb 5 at the Beijing Winter Olympic Games.
It was also the first gold for the host country at the Beijing Games, which received congratulations from the central leadership.
“On behalf of the Central Committee of the Communist Party of China and the State Council, I express warm congratulations to the gold medalists and the Chinese sports delegation,” Vice-Premier Sun Chunlan wrote in a congratulatory letter on Feb 6.
Sun said she expects the Chinese delegation to gain more glories for the country with fighting spirit.
Fan, the leading figure of the Chinese women’s short-track speed skating team, has long dreamed of winning Olympic gold.
“I’ve been waiting for this gold medal for 12 years. I’ve waited for it for so long,” Fan said after the victory, in tears. “I have always believed in the team. From the day I entered the national team, I have always believed in my teammates.”
Fan was born in September 1993 in Qitaihe, a city in Northeast China’s Heilongjiang province, which is a cradle for a number of world-renowned short-track speed skaters, including China’s first Winter Olympic gold medalist Yang Yang and four-time Olympic champion Wang Meng.
Since 2003, when Fan was selected by her first coach, Ma Qingzhong, to train as a short-track speed skater, she worked hard at training, getting up every day at 4 am for a one-hour training session before going to school.
In 2010, Fan was selected for the national team, and the following year she claimed the gold medal in the women’s 500m at her world championships debut. She has dominated the event ever since, earning 14 world championships medals, including five golds in both the 500m and relay. She became the leader of the Chinese women’s team after team leader Wang Meng injured her ankle in 2014.
Despite her world championship success, Fan only had one Olympic medal to her name — a silver in the 1,000m in 2014. That year in Sochi, she had been the favorite to win gold in the 500m, but fell in the second lap in the semifinals and ranked fifth overall. Four years later in Pyeongchang, Fan was again the 500m favorite but was disqualified in the semifinals. Then, in the relay final, Fan was judged to have impeded Choi Min-jeong from the Republic of Korea, leading to disqualification for China.
The Olympic gold in Beijing came after Fan’s persistence, as well as that of the whole team.