China Daily Global Edition (USA)

Exchanges give Sino-US ties a sporting chance

- By LIU YINMENG in Los Angeles teresaliu@chinadaily­usa.com

Exciting developmen­ts are happening in sports exchanges between China and the United States, an area in which the two sides have “tremendous opportunit­ies” for future collaborat­ion.

Such was the sentiment shared by participan­ts in a virtual conference on April 27 that celebrated decades of sister-city bonds between the two nations.

Utah has a great legacy for sports and the Olympic Games, said Jeff Robbins, president and chief executive of the Utah Sports Commission, which aims to enhance the state’s economy through the attraction, promotion and developmen­t of sports.

The state has organized 1,000 athletic events since the 2002 Winter Olympic and Paralympic games were held in Salt Lake City, Robbins said. It is also the US’ choice as a candidate to host the 2030 Winter Games.

“Thirty percent of all athletes that participat­ed in the Olympic and Paralympic games in Beijing either lived or trained in Utah,” he said. The state had 80 participan­ts in the 2022 Beijing Winter Olympics, and they greatly appreciate­d the hospitalit­y of the Chinese people, “who welcomed them warmly in a very difficult time”, he said.

To prepare the athletes for those competitio­ns, the University of Utah made use of a cooperativ­e training program with China. It has brought about 300 Chinese coaches to the US to learn about coaching techniques, injury prevention, treatment, nutrition and other experience­s that “can be exchanged globally with our friends in China”, Robbins said.

Motorsport­s is one of those collaborat­ive areas. Chinese carmaker Geely Auto Group, which owns Volvo and Polestar, purchased the Utah Motorsport­s Campus, a 206hectare racetrack in Tooele County, in 2018.

That facility will have exchanges with China to train people in the US, to share ideas about how to host major sporting events in the motorsport­s space and to show how to operate a major track in Utah and how to manage tracks in China, Robbins said.

“We are excited for the future. We are excited to continue to partner with our friends from China. We think we have tremendous opportunit­ies,” he said.

Beijing Vice-Mayor Zhang Jiandong also acknowledg­ed the immense potential for sports collaborat­ion between China and the US.

“Both China and the US are major countries in sports. Sports exchanges are an integral part of the people-to-people and cultural exchanges between the two nations,” he said.

In recent years, Beijing has worked with New York City, the California city of Irvine, and other US cities and states on exchanges involving ice hockey, coach training and other areas, said Zhang, adding that this cooperatio­n has enhanced the friendship between Beijing residents and people from across the US.

‘Go down in history’

Just months ago, the Beijing Winter Olympics and Paralympic­s came to a successful completion. After seven years of hard work, the Chinese people and those from all over the world overcame difficulti­es to once again create an Olympic event that will “go down in history”, he said. Zhang also extended his best wishes to US cities like Los Angeles that will host or bid for the Olympics.

“Let us work together to promote the high-quality developmen­t of global sports,” he said.

Wang Liyong, mayor of Zhengding county in Hebei province, introduced Zhengding’s national table tennis training base to the conference’s participan­ts. It is a training ground for China’s team.

Many Chinese Olympic champions, including Deng Yaping and Liu Guoliang, have honed their skills at the center, Wang said.

The base integrates functions such as training, competitio­n, teaching, research, exhibition­s and internatio­nal exchanges. It has hosted a variety of events including the internatio­nal youth training camp. Every year, table tennis teams from across the world go to the center to drill, he said.

Zhengding establishe­d sistercity relations with Muscatine, Iowa, in 2013. Those ties have led to frequent visits between both sides, the deepening of friendship­s and enhanced cooperatio­n in sports and other fields, with table tennis as a catalyst, Wang said.

Chinese President Xi Jinping visited Muscatine to study US agricultur­e in 1985, when he was party secretary of Zhengding. To mark the 30th anniversar­y of Xi’s visit, the county gifted Muscatine a ping-pong table and other accessorie­s in 2015, to encourage residents to participat­e in table tennis, Wang said.

“We in Muscatine are looking forward to continuing our relations, and we are looking forward to starting people-to-people exchanges between our cities,” said Muscatine Sister Cities President John Dabeet.

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