环球雅思学校,北京环球雅思,北京雅思学校
当前位置:中招首页 -> 外语培训 -> 外语天地 -> 行业英语 -> 体育英语 -> 体坛快讯 -> 
What National Games are about?

2005-11-16 17:11:11 来源:未知
National Games: Can we digest from China's domestic version of Olympics, as a sneak preview of Beijing 2008?


By Dong Jun, CRI Sports Commentator

Not all, maybe not many or just a few, countries have a similar sporting event as the one now underway in China---National Games. Even a sub-continental meet may not necessarily be up to the scale of the latest Chinese domestic version of Olympiad in the eastern Jiangsu province.

What on earth are these games about? How did they come about? Why do Chinese deem them relevant now that the real Olympics will show up in less than three years in Beijing?

Well, involving more than a dozen thousand athletes from scores of delegations (as NOC delegations for the Olympics, these groups represent the country's provinces, municipalities, the military sports entity and the special administrative regions of Hong Kong and Macau) and consuming billions of dollars in venue construction and human dedication, these national games are indeed HUGE and costly. Nevertheless, equally enormous factors have contributed to their existance and probably further growth.

History

The inaugural National Games were held in Beijing in 1959 when the People's Republic was celebrating her tenth anniversary. The idea was endorsed by the communist leadership, many members of which, including Chairman Mao Zedong, were avid sports fans and had long been advocating athletic activities in the military both during and after wartimes. The style of the Chinese "Nationalympiad" resembled somewhat the Olympics, largely thanks to tips from the Soviet Union, a sports powerhouse and a one-time communist ally. When the Olympic medals were beyond reach, the Chinese, already the largest population in the world, decided to compete against themselves for the highest domestic accolades. Nearly 11 thousand athletes participated, for more than 11 hundred medals on offer. Even four world records were shattered in Beijing!

The great start was soon to be ensued unfortunately by economic chaos and political disruptions that would throw the fledging but fragile sporting system of New China into disarray. The second edition of National Games was pushed back to 1965 and the 3rd didn't come until 1975. The end of the notorious "Cultural Revolution" paved the way for the games to completely stay together and follow the Olympic routines – developing into a once-every-four-year event. From 1979 to 2001, Beijing, Shanghai and Guangdong rotated to host the games six times, with the only two-year delay in the early 1990s because of Beijing's duty to host the Asian Games. A parallel development during this period was China's return to the international Olympic family and ascendance to a major force in the Olympic arena.

If the rotation system were to stay, it would be Beijing to shoulder the responsibility now, disrupting its preparations for the 2008 Summer Olympics. So the top sports administrators were happy to hear four years ago that several provinces were keen to "topple" the tripartite regime and bid for the 2005 Games to be held in a fourth place. The monopoly system was immediately abolished and Jiangsu emerged as the host province, leaving future editions open to a long least of candidates starting Shandong in 2009.

What to Watch: Is it too local and irrelevant for an unbiased foreigner to watch China's domestic competitions? Well, sort of. We are not even sure that all domestic fans would be interested. But given the country's prowess in such sports as table tennis, badminton, diving, shooting and weightlifting, many of the finals will be arguably as spectacular as their Olympic medal contention. Rivals, especially those from Asia, would have many reasons to bother to follow the competitions closely for their own benefits in terms of corresponding tactics.

Any stars to follow? Well, the only though biggest name missing in the gallery is Yao Ming. That's right -- the giant center is already back in Houston for his NBA season. But leading the field are such super stars as Olympic 110m hurdle gold medalist Liu Xiang and the diving queen Guo Jingjing. Dozens of others maybe lesser known internationally, but are quite popular among Chinese fans, especially those from home provinces or regions.

For the third time in a row, athletes from Hong Kong and Macau are participating in the mainland's traditional games. Even before the games' opening ceremony, Steven Wong has already claimed a gold medal for Hong Kong, crowning in the men's Bike Moto Cross (BMX), a new event the Jiangsu games adopted to follow Olympic practice.

In fact, these games have been adopted in accordance with the Olympics, with the only exception of Wushu, the Chinese martial arts that China has been trying but yet to succeed to include in Olympic sports list. Softball and baseball may have to be eliminated in the London Olympics in 2012, but they remain official events in Jiangsu. (357 medal events of 32 sports are being contended)

Therefore, it's no exaggeration to say that China is taking this year's national games to rehearse for Beijing 2008 in terms of both organization and competition. Apparently convinced, the International Olympic Committee has sent a delegation to Nanjing for Wednesday’s opening ceremony. IOC President Jacques Rogge hopes to take sneak preview through it how spectacular the Beijing gala will be in less than three years.

Isn't it too costly to practice for the Olympics by heavily investing in an extravaganza of a similar scale? Well, Jiangsu and related authorities have been insisting that they have strictly followed a money-saving guideline throughout the whole games. Even though it may still turn out to be an expensive event (the main stadium -- Nanjing Olympic Center, along has been built on over 100 million US dollars), many argue it's worth the money which would otherwise go into commercial competitions before they take shape in China. To some extent, the National Games are filling some vacuum left by grass-root and professional leagues yet to take off.

   关键词  >>体坛快讯
 
四级考试
BEC 四六级新托福
北京雅思学校
北京雅思学校
北京环球雅思学校
北京环球雅思学校
北京新航道学校
新航道学校秋季课程
李阳疯狂英语学校
李阳疯狂英语学校
上海环球雅思学校
上海环球雅思学校

  ■ 最新推荐课程

 ·新航道雅思高中生5.5保分班  ·雅思中学生半年脱产班保6分  ·北京雅思高中生5.5分保分班
 ·新航道雅思6分慢速精讲保分班  ·环球雅思中学生6段式保6分班  ·北京雅思基础6分保分培训班
 ·新航道雅思6.5慢速精讲保分班  ·环球雅思6.5高分保分培训班  ·北京雅思6.5高分保分培训班
相关文章
没有相关文章!
论坛热贴
 【发表评论】
 昵称:
 内容:
 
 【最新评论】 更多...
中招在线版权与免责声明:
① 凡本站注明“稿件来源:中招在线”的所有文字、图片和音视频稿件,版权均属本网所有,任何媒体、网站或个人未经本网协议授权不得转载、链接、转贴或以其他方式复制发表。已经本站协议授权的媒体、网站,在下载使用时必须注明"稿件来源:中招在线",违者本站将依法追究责任。
② 本站注明稿件来源为其他媒体的文/图等稿件均为转载稿,本站转载出于非商业性的教育和科研之目的,并不意味着赞同其观点或证实其内容的真实性。如转载稿涉及版权等问题,请作者在两周内速来电或来函联系。
热点聚焦
  环球雅思半年脱产班  
英语实用信息
本周院校排行榜
最新资源排行榜
 
关于中招 - 广告服务 - 网站建设 - 版权声明 - 联系我们 - 英才加盟 - 网站地图 - 友情链接 - 免责声明 - 设为首页
Copyright @ 2005-2008 zhongzhao.com All Rights Reserved.
中招在线 版权所有