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China’s serious
coaching resolve
Monday 30 October 2006
There
is no doubting the determination of the Chinese Athletics Association (CAA)
to advance their sport in the lead-up to the 2008 Olympic Games in
Beijing. After consulting many international coaches and athletes over
recent years, the most famous being World 200m and 400m record holder
Michael Johnson (USA), to help their technical development, the latest
to be signed up is 1976 Olympic 200m champion and 100m silver medallist
Don Quarrie from Jamaica.
Well, true to say Quarrie will be
returning to China, as the announcement last week that the 55-year-old,
with the approval of the Jamaica Amateur Athletics Association (JAAA),
had been invited by the CAA to assist the development of Chinese
sprinting, comes nearly a year after Quarrie made an initial 10 day trip
to a National Training Camp in Guangzhou, Guangdong Province.
Quarrie, the multiple World record
breaking 100m and 200m sprinter whose 9.9 (1976) and 19.8 (1975) were
the last officially ratified hand-timed marks for the two distances,
will assist in the Chinese team’s final preparations ahead of the 15th
Asian Games which begin in Doha on 1 December. The athletics competition
schedule commences on 7 December.
As a part of the initial reciprocal
agreement between the two nations, Jamaican athletes will be invited to
China to participate in warm-up races prior to the 2008 Beijing
Olympics.
China put in their best ever overall
Olympic performance in Athens, ending up with 32 golds and 63 medals to
rank second to the United States in the medal table. Specifically in
Athletics they also topped all previous efforts with the victories by
Xing Huina (women’s 10,000m) and Liu Xiang (men’s 110m Hurdles) their
best ever showing.
Xiang’s win was the first ever gold by
a Chinese male track and field athlete with Zhu Jianhua’s High Jump
bronze in 1983, the previous best performance. The Race Walking golds of
Chen Yueling (10km -1992) and Wang Liping (20km- 2000), and Wang
Junxia’s 5000m win in 1996, were the sum total of China’s victory tally
prior to Athens. China also brought home six other top-8 point scoring
performances from Athens underlining their long awaited but now growing
power within the Olympics’ number one sport.
More recently at 11th IAAF World Junior
Championships in Beijing, Chinese athletes topped the medal table with
17, with only Kenya (15) above them on the overall standing given that
they had 6 gold medals to China’s 5 titles.
So even without mentioning any further
the outstanding achievements of a certain Mr. Liu Xiang it is clear that
track and field athletics is on the ascendant in China, and the CAA is
proactively trying to assist its development.
Prior to the Quarrie’s involvement the
most famous individual coaching collaboration had been with the multiple
World and Olympic champion Michael Johnson. That cooperation with the
CAA started in 2004, with Johnson holding a training camp in Beijing
prior to the Athens Games, after which a small group of Chinese
sprinters travelled to Waco, Texas, to gain further experience under the
tutelage of Johnson and his coach Clyde Hart.
The current Chinese dealings with
Jamaica are a part of a wider set of multi-national sporting agreements
that China has put in place ahead of the 2008 Games. In the autumn of
2004 sporting memorandums were drawn up with Australia, Britain and
Kenya for the sharing of information on sports science, the exchange of
coaches and experts, and the opportunity for athletes to compete in each
others countries.
Chris Turner for the IAAF
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