logo
Too much too young? China's 12-year-old phenom Yu sparks wonder and concern

Too much too young? China's 12-year-old phenom Yu sparks wonder and concern

Malay Mail4 days ago
MELBOURNE, Aug 12 — Beating a 12-year-old rival was once child's play for an elite swimmer but it has become an unlikely badge of honour when China's Yu Zidi is in the race.
Only the very best in women's swimming were able to beat Yu at the world championships where the prodigy became the youngest medallist in the global meet's 52-year history.
Yet even as the swimming world marvelled at Yu's talent, her age raised questions about the ethics of someone so young competing at the highest level.
In a sport where the mental and physical toll can prove overwhelming for adults, Yu's success at the world championships was viewed dimly by some child protection advocates.
'Twelve-years-old is incredibly young in swimming,' author Linda Flanagan, a vocal opponent of children competing in elite sport, told Reuters.
'A 12-year-old does not train like an 18 or 20-year-old because their bodies aren't equipped to handle the work involved.
'And also emotionally, it's not in their best interest.
'It flies in the face of what psychologists say about what's healthy for kids, which is not to put all your eggs in one basket, to spread your interests so you don't become this narrow person.'
Adolescents are hardly rare in swimming, particularly in women's competition where athletes tend to reach peak performance earlier than men.
Dane Inge Sorensen was 12 when she won the 200 metres breaststroke bronze at the 1936 Berlin Olympics. She remains the youngest Games medallist in individual events.
Sharron Davies swam for Britain at 11 and made her Olympic debut at the 1976 Montreal Games at 13.
Far from being concerned about Yu's wellbeing, Davies said the Chinese wunderkind, who won a relay bronze and came fourth in three individual events on her world championships debut, would have found it a thrill.
'It is a total misconception that that young girl would have been extremely nervous. It would have been the opposite,' Davies told Reuters in an interview.
'(When) I made that Olympic Games, I was just on cloud nine.
'There was nothing for me to lose and everything to gain. And it would have been the same for her: she had nothing to lose and everything to gain.'
More intense
There was little sign of Yu being overawed as she recorded personal bests in the 200m and 400m individual medley (IM), and 200 butterfly.
Her time of 4:33.76 in the 400 IM final would have taken the Paris Olympic bronze medal away from 23-year-old American Emma Weyant.
Yu told Chinese media the Singapore meet was more intense than she had imagined but the atmosphere was great.
'This relay bronze motivates me to keep working hard,' Yu told Xinhua.
'Right after the race, I talked to my family. I want to bring back the medal.... to share the joy with them.'
Yu's may be the last world swimming medal won by a 12-year-old pending a World Aquatics review.
Although the global swimming body has a minimum age of 14 for Olympics and world championships, its by-laws allow younger swimmers with qualifying times to compete.
Yu qualified at the national championships in May.
World Aquatics Executive Director Brent Nowicki said the governing body would have to take a look at the age rule.
'I didn't think I'd have this conversation, but now I think we have to go back and say, 'Is this appropriate?'' Nowicki told reporters in Singapore.
'Do we need to do other things? Put other guard-rails up? Do we allow it under certain conditions? I don't know the answer.'
An International Olympic Committee consensus statement on elite youth athletes published last year noted adolescent athletes are more susceptible to 'musculoskeletal injuries' while the intense physical and mental demands of sport can bring 'psychosocial strain' and mental health challenges.
China's state broadcaster CCTV reported that Yu nearly quit swimming last year when she was 11 because she felt pressure before the national championships.
'I was just overwhelmed with emotion and didn't want to train anymore,' Yu said in comments published by the broadcaster in May.
But 'patient encouragement' from her coach and family helped her persevere.
The Chinese Swimming Association and China's General Administration of Sport did not respond to requests from Reuters to interview Yu or her coaches, or for comment on the national swim team's safeguarding protocols for child athletes.
Australia head coach Rohan Taylor said he would be cautious about selecting a 12-year-old for open competition at a major global meet—but would not rule it out.
'I would go through a process to make sure everything was in place to support that athlete and that we felt we weren't putting any expectation or pressure,' he told Reuters.
'There's a lot of hurdles before we put (athletes) in that situation.'
Three years out from the Los Angeles Olympics, rivals and pundits see a big future for Yu.
But predictions of super-stardom may not bear out, according to Michael Bergeron, co-author of the IOC's consensus statement on youth athletes and a sport science expert with the Women's Tennis Association.
Citing IOC data, Bergeron said just over 30% of under-18 athletes who competed at Olympics returned as adults.
'Maybe she is going to be a superstar down the road but the ones that usually excel at a young age are rarely the ones to excel as an older adolescent, never mind as an adult,' he said. — Reuters
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Cricket-Australia win T20 series against South Africa after Maxwell heroics
Cricket-Australia win T20 series against South Africa after Maxwell heroics

The Star

time25 minutes ago

  • The Star

Cricket-Australia win T20 series against South Africa after Maxwell heroics

FILE PHOTO: Cricket - ICC Men's Champions Trophy - Group B - Australia v England - Gaddafi Stadium, Lahore, Pakistan - February 22, 2025 Australia's Glenn Maxwell in action REUTERS/Akhtar Soomro/File Photo (Reuters) -Australia's Glenn Maxwell produced an unbeaten half-century in a tense chase to help the hosts edge out South Africa by two wickets in the third and final Twenty20 International and complete a 2-1 series victory in Cairns on Saturday. Maxwell's unbeaten 62 off 36 balls helped Australia chase down a 173-run target with one ball to spare in a thrilling decider at the Cazalys Stadium. After 18 overs of their innings, it was a run-a-ball target for Australia with Maxwell in the middle. South African Corbin Bosch (3-26) claimed two wickets in the penultimate over and kept Maxwell away from the strike. Needing 10 off the last over from Lungi Ngidi, Maxwell took six from the first four balls before reverse sweeping the bowler for a four to seal Australia's dramatic victory. "It was a little bit nerve-wracking," Maxwell said after being adjudged player of the match. "I probably had to do the majority of the striking but, yeah, it was nice to get a couple out of the middle right near the end." Earlier, put in to bat, South Africa overcame a top order wobble to post a competitive 172-7 with Dewald Brevis (53) top-scoring for them. The tourists were 49-3 inside seven overs but Brevis looked unfazed and hit Aaron Hardie for four sixes in an over, throwing the pacer out of the attack. Brevis raced to a 22-ball fifty but Maxwell took a brilliant running catch near the rope to dismiss him off the bowling of Nathan Ellis (3-31). Tristan Stubbs contributed 25 and Rassie van der Dussen made 38 not out down the order but South Africa still fell short of the 175-mark. Skipper Mitchell Marsh (54) led Australia's robust reply, dominating his 66-run opening stand with Travis Head (19). Kagiso Rabada floored a return catch from Marsh when the batter was on 26 and Aiden Markram gave a similar reprieve to Head off his own bowling. Head could not capitalise on it though and fell to Markram in the same over. Bosch bowled Josh Inglis for a first ball duck before South Africa's teenaged left-arm quick Kwena Maphaka dismissed Marsh and Cameron Green (nine) in the same over to turn the match on its head. Rabada also produced a two-wicket over, dismissing Tim David and Hardie but Maxwell stayed calm to guide Australia home. The three-match one-day international series between the sides begins in Cairns on Tuesday. (Reporting by Amlan Chakraborty in New Delhi; editing by Ken Ferris)

Shuttlers told to aim high despite no BAM target for World Championships
Shuttlers told to aim high despite no BAM target for World Championships

New Straits Times

time6 hours ago

  • New Straits Times

Shuttlers told to aim high despite no BAM target for World Championships

KUALA LUMPUR: Malaysia are heading to the World Championships in Paris from Aug 25-31 with one of their strongest line-ups in history. While no official targets have been set by the Badminton Association of Malaysia (BAM), expectations could not be higher. With high seeds across three disciplines and buoyed by a string of solid displays this season, the national shuttlers have been urged to aim high and justify their world rankings. BAM president Tengku Datuk Seri Zafrul Abdul Aziz confirmed that his council did not discuss or set a specific target, but pointed out that the players should at least perform according to their seedings. "There is no official target set by BAM, but of course expectations are high. Looking at the rankings, there is a minimum expectation that they play to that level. "For doubles, reaching the finals would be the natural assumption," said Zafrul after chairing the BAM council meeting on Saturday. He singled out men's doubles world No. 2 Aaron Chia-Soh Wooi Yik and women's doubles world No. 2 Pearly Tan-M. Thinaah as the country's best medal bets. "For players like Aaron-Wooi Yik, they are already among the top two, so the expectation is clear — try and win it. "Pearly-Thinaah have won the Thailand Open this year, and as world No. 2, we hope they can at least reach the finals," he added. The recent track record supports his optimism. In men's doubles alone, Malaysia's Paris-bound quartet have captured seven titles this year: Aaron-Wooi Yik (Asia Championships, Singapore Open, Thailand Open), Man Wei Chong-Tee Kai Wun (Indonesia Masters, Malaysia Masters), Goh Sze Fei-Nur Izzuddin Rumsani (India Open), and Yap Roy King-Wan Arif Junaidi (Macau Open). Pearly-Thinaah added to the tally with their Thailand Open victory. They also emerged runners-up on three other occasions — the Indonesia Masters, Indonesia Open and Japan Open. Malaysia's depth is further underlined by Chen Tang Jie-Toh Ee Wei, seeded fourth in the mixed doubles, giving the country genuine medal hopes in three of the five events in Paris. The nation finally broke their World Championships duck in 2022 when Aaron-Wooi Yik captured the men's doubles crown, ending a painful wait since the tournament's inception in 1977. With momentum on their side and several pairs seeded among the top four, Paris presents a golden chance for Malaysia to add to that historic breakthrough and stamp their mark as genuine badminton powerhouse.

Man-Tee wary of potential clash with Korean duo, but won't overlook earlier pairs
Man-Tee wary of potential clash with Korean duo, but won't overlook earlier pairs

The Star

time16 hours ago

  • The Star

Man-Tee wary of potential clash with Korean duo, but won't overlook earlier pairs

Determined: Tee Kai Wun (left) and Man Wei Chong hope to avoid the same heartbreak at the World Championships in 2023. PETALING JAYA: The men's doubles competition is fierce at the moment, leaving seventh seeds Man Wei Chong-Tee Kai Wun with no clear advantage despite heading to the World Championships in Paris from Aug 25-31 as one of the top pairs. Based on the draw conducted on Wednesday, Wei Chong-Kai Wun have already mapped out their route to the podium. This time, they are determined not to suffer the same heartbreak as in 2023, when they came close to winning a medal but fell in the quarter-finals on their World Championships debut. Now competing as seventh seeds, they have the advantage of a first-round bye and are expected to face brothers Toma Junior and Christo Popov in the second round. The Malaysians hold a 2-0 record against the French duo. If they advance, the pair are likely to take on England's Ben Lane-Sean Vendy. Lane has just recovered from surgery to remove a small extra bone behind the ankle joint known as the os trigonum. Even so, it is no reason for them to underestimate Lane and Vendy, who are still capable of posing a serious threat. Wei Chong-Kai Wun's main concern is a potential quarter-final clash against South Korea's Kim Gi-jung-Kim Sa-rang. Since 2021, they have faced the world No. 74 pair three times but have yet to win. 'This seeding is important in some ways and not so important in others because even the unseeded pairs are strong. Maybe it gives us a slight advantage, but the most important thing is our performance. 'In the round of 32, we might face France's Popov brothers. Matches against them are always tough and it's not a guaranteed win, especially since they will be playing at home, so we need to be well prepared. 'After that, I think we will meet the English pair, who have just recovered from injury. Then there is the Korean pair, Kim Gi-jung-Kim Sa-rang, whom we have never beaten before. Hopefully, we can perform well,' said Wei Chong. Apart from Wei Chong-Kai Wun, Malaysia will also have three other pairs in the men's doubles, led by 2022 world champions Aaron Chia-Soh Wooi Yik, world No. 3 Goh Sze Fei-Nur Izzuddin Rumsani and debutants Wan Arif Wan Junaidi-Yap Roy King.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store