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UPDATED: September-5-2008  
Disabled Ready to Win In Barcelona
 
By CHENG GANG

Barcelona, Spain, in the spotlight of world attention when the revered flame of the 25th Olympic Games was lit last July, will again be in the forefront of world events when the Ninth Paralympics open this September. China will send 24 disabled athletes to the games.

Zhao Tiliang crossed the high jump bar at 1.82 metres at the Third National Games for the Disabled held last March, well surpassing the world record for the disabled limbs group. "Perhaps 1.82 metres means nothing to you, for the current world record is 2.42 metres," he said. "However, no one will ever know how good I felt when I jumped that height. I felt my life and spirit had reached perfection. And now my dream is to relive the feeling at the Ninth Paralympics in Spain."

Zhao spoke for all China's disabled athletes. At the Third National Games for the Disabled, 22 contestants broke 28 world records on 44 occasions. Almost all expects to score even better in Barcelona.

The State Physical Culture and Sports Commission and the China Federation for the Disabled have selected 24 best athletes to participate in five events in track and field, swimming, weight-lifting, table tennis and shooting at the Ninth Paralympics. Each has previously set world records and is a consistent performer in his or her field. They have all been granted leave from work and are currently training under professional coaches.

This will be the third time China has attended the Paralympics.

A Long Cherished Dream

The 1.92-metre-tall Zhao Tiliang looked forward to competing in the Olympic Games when he was young. Before the 1980 accident which resulted in the amputation of his left leg, he was a competitor in the hurdles and the triple jump at an amateur sports school in Tongxian, Beijing. With his high scores, his prospects for the future looked good. However, his dream of becoming an athlete was almost crushed when he lost his left leg. One day his father, a physical education teacher, brought him a picture album of the Paralympics. After looking through it, Zhao told his father that he believed he could still do well in sports.

Two years later he again appeared on the sports ground, now fitted with an artificial limb which he sometimes loved, sometimes hated. The prosthesis enabled him to run and jump, but the domestically made product was poor in quality. He would often bleed after races because of the ill fit. Blood and sweat would cover the artificial limb after training. Sometimes the pain was so great he fainted, and when he was angry he would lash out at the prosthetic leg with his fists. But after a good jump, he would stretch his fake limb, seeming to say in praise "well-done."

Experts from a sports research institute believe that if his limb could be replaced by a lighter artificial limb with good anastomosis and elasticity, Zhao's jumping height could increase by 15 to 20 cm, even if his skill remains unchanged. However, Zhao says, "I must be grateful for this 5-kg artificial limb, for it has helped me realize my childhood dream of attending the Olympic Games."

Making Up for Her Loss

Since China attended the First Paralympics in 1984, Liu Yukun has been awarded every gold medal for the javelin, discus and shot put competitions for the women's disabled limbs group. This 35-year-old woman with two artificial legs has an iron will. On the competition ground, she always carries a smile. She says that she has only cried twice. When she came out of her coma after an industrial accident and discovered she had lost her legs, she was choked with sobs. The second time was in 1988.Imbued with confidence that she would distinguish herself at the Eighth Paralympics in Seoul, she was stunned and tears trickled down her face when told that she would not be allowed to take part in the women's javelin, discus and shot put events. "I cherish every opportunity to compete. I am not reconciled to losing even one chance," said Liu.

Because of her strong will to participate, Liu overcame the problems caused by her disability and has made great achievements in both her work and sports competitions, which have given her the greatest happiness. She is currently a business manager of a large state-owned heavy industrial enterprise in Qiqihar, Heilongjiang Province and enjoys a happy family life. Her husband courted her after her legs were amputated, a great comfort for her broken heart. For the past decade he has taken good care of her. When she is preparing to leave for a competition, he always packs her luggage and escorts her to the railway station with their son.

Liu said she is content with her work and life. The only thing still missing is a gold medal from the Paralympics. At the Third National Games for the Disabled, she regretted that her performance was not up to peak. Even so, she still was the only contender to break records in three events, giving her the chance to go to Barcelona to make up for her regrets.

Liu had not given any thought to developing her sports talents before she lost her legs. It was the sudden accident, three operations and two amputations that stimulated her wish to prove herself a victor in sports.

She has endured many hardships during training. The approach for the javelin throw and the wind-up for the discus throw cause a lot of pain in her legs. In winter, the cold discus that nestles against her neck often peels the skin off. Touching the scar left on her neck, Liu said, "I'm determined to take back the gold medal that I should have been able to win at the last Paralympics."

A Champion's Wish

When talking about sports competitions for China's disabled, Deng Pufang, chairman of the China Federation for the Disabled, always proudly mentions that disabled athletes' Paralympics victories made the first contributions to China's bank of Olympic-class gold medals.

Those first athletes were 16-year-old Zhao Jihong, a blind girl from Shanghai, and another Chinese contender. They both won two gold medals in the long jump competitions at the Seventh Paralympics held in Los Angles in 1984.

Today, 24-year-old Zhao's many years of experience in international competitions make her a veteran among China's disabled athletes.

At the Eighth Paralympics held in Seoul in 1988, she brought home a gold and a silver medal in the long jump and sprint competitions for the women's totally blind group.

At the Far East and South Pacific Regional Games for the Disabled held in 1989, she set a new long jump record of 5.40 metres for the women's totally blind group. The world record still stands.

Someone said that watching the blind racing was the most exciting, and nerve-racking, of all the sports events for the disabled. A runner once left the track and fell down, but he got back up and continued to finish the race. He didn't realize it when he dashed across the finish line and kept on running. Zhao Jihong has also had such an experience. Howeve. r, she found confidence in it and it has helped her to distinguish herself among other athletes.

Her coach said Zhao has a lot of will power and can bear hardships. She now has a good sense of direction and distance and, instead of her eyes, uses her heart to look at the track, finish line and the take-off board for the long jump.

So that she can train, Zhao has been released from her work till the end of the Paralympics. Besides vowing to be a three-time champion in the Paralympics long jump competition, she is determined to try her best to win a gold in the sprinting event, a weak area for the Chinese athletes. She wants to reward her parents and the teachers who discovered her sports talents, encouraged her, and made her one of the first to represent China in international games for the disabled.

Aiming High

In the minds of many Guangzhou people, 33-year-old Quan Yongchang is a hero. One reason for their admiration is that he twice broke the 52 kg class world record for the bench press during the Third National Games for the Disabled. But more amazingly, Quan dares to compete in areas not limited to persons with handicaps. During the three years from 1982 to 1984, he entered standard competitions, and even won the championship at a fitness competition in Guangzhou.

Polio struck Quan at the age of three, leaving his left leg partially paralyzed. Although he could still walk, it was by no means easy for him. He was not very active afterwards, and became quite weak. In 1980 he started taking a fitness course in Guangzhou. Unexpectedly, he became keen on it and made rapid progress.

Last October, Quan heard that competing in the Third National Games for the Disabled could result in the opportunity to participate in the 1992 Paralympics.He closed his grocery and threw himself wholeheartedly into training. "Closing the shop, of course, means a financial loss,but it is worth it to have the chance to show my abilities in the Paralympics," he said.

When Wu Shaozu, minister in charge of the State Physical Culture and Sports Commission, congratulated him for breaking the world record, Quan said, "1 didn't even put all my effort into it. In September I think you will see a new world record written down under my name."

Excellence in "3 Irons"

Zheng Peifeng is a music student in a vocational middle school in Putian City. She is not only accomplished at the erhu (atwo-stringed musical instrument played with a bow), but also sings beautifully. Without witnessing it themselves, most people would never think this pretty 19-year-old blind woman is a competitor in the "three irons" (the shot put, discus and javelin) and a competitor who excels --she won the championship in the three events at the Third National Games for the Disabled, breaking world records in the discus and shot put events with 29.98 metres and 10.31 metres respectively.

Zheng happily hung these three gold medals around her own neck and the necks of her mother and her coach for a picture. She told her parents, who had accompanied her to Guangzhou for the competition, "You won't be able to go with me to Spain, but I will do my best at the Paralympics. When I get back, I will take another picture with you wearing the medals I win there."

When she was 13, a retina disease caused Zheng to lose her eyesight. When the colours of the world faded from her sight, she cried until she had shed all the tears she had. But because her two sisters were also blind, she knew that she was not the only one upon whom misfortune had fallen, and gradually became accustomed to a life without sight. Although her family was not well-off, her parents saved their money by living frugally and were able to send her to a school for the blind in the provincial capital. There, she mastered Braille and immersed herself happily in the acquisition of knowledge. She graduated with excellent marks in 1989 and, because she loves music, entered the vocational school where she is presently studying.

The school's physical education teacher Huang discovered that Zheng, whose only physical impairment is her blindness, has a good sense of direction and much patience. When he heard that city and provincial organizations for the disabled would be selecting athletes to participate in the national games for the disabled, he began training Zheng in the "three irons." She was in training from noon to supper time, and her mother used to take her to and from the school sports ground each day. When Zheng did well, her mother applauded and praised her. And when she made a mistake, the teacher would patiently explain what she was doing wrong and, with her hands in his, show her the proper movements. He also encouraged her to find methods which felt right to her.

The rigorous training greatly increased her abilities. Huang says, "Little Zheng is very clever and has made rapid progress. In only three months of hard training, she increased her discus throws by five metres and shot put tosses by two. There is every reason to believe she will do well in Spain."

(Beijing Review p.21 No. 35, 1992)


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