CN US-born Chinese figure skater Zhu Yi falls AGAIN and breaks down in tears at Olympics... - a day after being branded a 'disgrace' by her countrymen for finishing last after giving up American citizenship to compete for Beijing

(article)
  • Figure skater Zhu Yi, 19, was left in tears after falling again in the women's short program team event today
  • Yesterday she finished with the lowest score on day two of the event falling twice during her Olympic debut
  • Zhu, born Beverly Zu, decided to compete for China in Olympics and changed her name and US citizenship
  • But some people have also questioned why the California-born athlete was allowed to represent China
The American-born Chinese figure skater who gave up her US citizenship to compete for China at the Winter Olympic in Beijing was left in tears after falling again in the women's short program team event today.

Beverly Zu, 19, who changed her name to Zhu Yi to compete for the Communist country, finished with the lowest score of the event at Beijing's Capital Indoor Stadium yesterday after she failed to land a jump and fell on the opening combination, and botched another jump later in her short program.

Today, the figure skater, who has faced widespread scorn from many in her adopted country, broke down in tears on the ice after falling again in the free skate - the final event in the team competition.

It comes just a day after Zhu was branded a 'disgrace' by fellow countrymen for finishing last and knocking China from third to fifth place in the team event.

Yesterday the 19-year-old, who has previously come under fire from Chinese fans on the social media platform Weibo, scored 47.03 after she tumbled on her first combination triple flip-triple toe-loop jump, crashed into the wall, and bungled her triple loop later in the set while skating to Paint It Black by The Rolling Stones.

The fall triggered a backlash on Chinese social media that critiqued her performance and raised questions about her selection for the Olympic team.

The hashtag 'Zhu Yi has fallen' quickly began trending on China's Twitter-like Weibo platform, gaining 200 million views in just a few hours as some took to social media to slam the athlete.

However some members of the Chinese public urged sympathy and said 'she represents China'.

A man, who gave his surname as Hu, told Reuters in Beijing: 'As long as she represents China, or no matter which country she represents, even though she fell down, we have to be tolerant.

'There should be no politicisation and narrow-mindedness to treat this matter, sportsmanship must come first.'

Meanwhile Hu Xijin, a prolific commentator who recently retired as editor-in-chief of the nationalist Global Times tabloid, said on his official Weibo account that the attacks on Zhu were speculative and 'too much'.

'I hope that some people will stop humiliating themselves and our country without any bottom line,' he said, defending the decision by Zhu, who was born and raised in the United States in a Chinese immigrant family, to represent China.

China has staffed some Olympic sports with foreign-born players, such as its ice hockey teams for the Beijing Games.

Freestyle skier Gu, whose Chinese name is Ailing and who is one of Team China's most popular athletes, was also born and raised in the US. Her decision to compete for China has been criticized by Fox News host Tucker Carlson.

'Chinese netizens generally like Gu Ailing but their rebuke of Zhu Yi is rude and uncalled for,' Hu said. 'I want to say that we should all be more open-minded than Fox and more civilized.'

Gu also trended heavily on Weibo on Monday after participating in the Big Air qualifier.

Zhu decided in 2018 to compete for China in the Olympics and changed her name and gave up her American citizenship, however, she is still facing criticism for not being fluent in Chinese.

Her poor debutant performance also now has some questioning why the California-born skater was picked to represent China instead of a figure skater who was born in the country.

Zhu was born in Los Angeles to Chinese parents and given the name Beverly, and grew up with a privileged background.

Her father, Zhu Songchun, is an award-winning scientist who joined the staff at Beijing's Peking University in 2020. He previously worked at the University of California, Los Angeles.

The
Olympian started figure skating when she was seven years old.

In 2018, she won the novice division while competing at the United States Figure Skating Championships in San Jose, California.

Later that year, she made the decision to represent China in the Olympics, a move that followed the nation's efforts to attract top athletes to their team.

She surrendered her American citizenship so she could compete for China and subsequently changed her name to Zhu Yi.

Zhu, during her first season skating for China, finished fourth at the 2019 Chinese Figure Skating Championships in Harbin. She then won bronze at the Sofia Trophy.

The young skater also took 11th place on her ISU Grand Prix debut at the 2019 Cup of China.

While analysts argued it was unlikely that Zhu would be in medal contention during the Winter Olympic games, she faced a lot of pressure ahead of her debut.

After her last-place performance, the skater was reportedly inconsolable.

'I'm upset and a little embarrassed,' Zhu told the media. 'I counted over and over again last night to see how many points I need to collect today to help my team advance.'

'I guess I felt a lot of pressure because I know everybody in China was pretty surprised with the selection for ladies' singles and I just really wanted to show them what I was able to do but unfortunately I didn't,' she added.

Despite her failed performance, Chinese figure skater and two-time world bronze medalist Jin Boyang, 24, has asked that people grace Zhu with kindness.

'Zhu is a hard-working girl, and should not be blamed for her first performance on the Olympic stage, whether it's good or bad,' he told Xinhua News.

Jin, who argued it's understandable for an Olympic debutant to fumble in their performance, believed the young skater was likely under a lot of pressure.

'I fully understand her position. I was there too,' he explained. 'She's under huge pressure as China's last performer in the team event short program and the sole skater in women's figure skating, especially after her selection over the two other girls.

He added: 'The Olympic Winter Games is a lifetime opportunity for every competitor. Hopefully we can gain more strength from the fact that we've gone all out and made history and leave the frustration of past errors behind us.'

However, many Chinese citizens did not take well to Zhu's fumble with sympathy and instead blasted her on social media.

'Zhu Yi has fallen' was trending on Chinese social media platform Weibo, with some users slamming her for alleged false patriotism.

'Please let her learn Chinese first, before she talks about patriotism,' one Weibo user wrote.

'This is such a disgrace,' another commented, gaining 11,000 likes from other users.

'Anyone would question how she was chosen to the team. Is it because she has a scientist father?' echoed another.

One Weibo user added: 'Zhu Yi, how ridiculous your performance is! How dare you skate for China? You cannot even hold a candle to an amateur!' echoed another.

Waiting for a storm that belongs to Zhu Yi, but really. What is this slipping?' a different user stated.

Although the 19-year-old was mostly met with derision, a few Weibo users offered her some kindness.

'I hope people don't say this (insults) to Zhu,' one wrote.

'The level of our team is still far behind Russia and the US. It already showed courage by coming to the stage. No one who competes for the first time can perform perfectly. It's okay if she can adjust her condition in the next competition,' said another.

China has recruited at least a dozen foreign-born athletes in recent years to compete on its Olympic teams, CNN reported, with Zhu being one of them.

Analysts allege the social media attack on the performer highlights the pressure naturalized athletes face while competing under the Chinese flag.

California-born athlete, freestyle ski star Ailing Gu, also joined China's team. She announced her intent to switch in June 2019.

However, unlike Zhu, 18-year-old Gu has allegedly charmed the China's public by speaking fluent Mandarin and being well versed in Chinese culture. The teen had grown up spending summers in Bejing.

Some argue Gu has become China's unofficial face of the Winter Olympics. She has been heavily featured in state media coverage and advertisements for Chinese brands.
 
wtf is with all the crying at the Olympics this time around? Is China making this shit THAT unbearable for everyone?
If news articles are to be believed, yes.

Chinese Winter Olympics.png
 
Tldr they become homeless bums with no earning potential and even have to sell off their medals to get some income. The chick from the OP might end up better off because she grew up American, but apparently Chinese athletes don't get to go to normal school so they lack normal work skills.
Here’s What Happens to Chinese Olympians if They Fail
Ryan General
August 23, 2016

China is known to have a very aggressive Olympic sports development program, but with hundreds of thousands of young prospective athletes trained for many years to develop, only a few make the cut.

Those who fail to stand out are discarded from the program and are left to fend for themselves after years of sacrifice.
Plucked from schools as young as four years old, the children are denied a normal education and are subjected to hours of grueling training daily.

At the age of 12, Zhang Shangwu was selected to train for a spot on the national Olympic team. Through hard work, the boy from northern China’s Hebei Province would later become a brilliant gymnast at the age of 18, winning two gold medals at the 2001 Beijing Summer Universiade. His success gained him some short-lived fame, with local sites calling him a “rising star” of the sport, according to the Epoch Times.

An unfortunate accident during training the following year, however, left Zhang with a torn Achilles tendon. His injury prevented him from competing in the 2004 Olympics. He would later leave the program in 2005 without compensation. With very little options, he used the only skill that he learned to make some money: performing gymnastic stunts on the streets.
Struggling to get a decent living, Zhang remained homeless and slept under bridges or computer shops. His gold medals have long been sold for around $15 each.

A few years later, Zhang began stealing from various sports schools in Beijing. He was later caught and sentenced to over four and a half years behind bars.
Without any form of safeguard for the ill-fated trainees who have missed out on secondary and university education, the rejected athletes are then left with very few options to find decent employment.

State-run news agency Nanjing Daily reported in 2010 that around 45% of Chinese athletes become unemployed after their retirement from sports. There are also some athletes who are representing the country but are not employed directly by the state.

These players reportedly do not have any benefits waiting for them after retirement, according to the Nanjing Daily. It reported that out of the 33,294 total active athletes playing for China, only 17,444 of them are on the official payroll, and those who are entitled to benefits receive a monthly compensation of about $150.
With Olympic victory largely valued as a source of national pride, the country’s notorious hunger to accumulate as much gold as possible has placed tremendous pressure upon the athletes to succeed. State media quickly brands victors as heroes while those who fail to perform well are deemed as failures.
In the end, the painful truth is that they really do fail in life but it’s hardly their fault.

“I went to the sports college at 15 and I retired at 25,” Liu Chengju, a former weightlifter and widow of a fellow weightlifter told Sina. “This ten-year-stretch of my life was like blank space—it slipped away in an instant.
Diagnosed with breast cancer in 2013, Liu ended up accumulating around 70,000 yuan ,about $10,500, in debt.
 
If news articles are to be believed, yes.

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For all the rightful worrying about Chinese power and influence, you have to remember that it's a paper tiger.

Socialism incentivizes corruption and ineptitude. Why would they *not* have that in spades?

Western money is all that is keeping the CCP afloat. They're every bit as in debt as the US, if not more so, and their population is about to implode.
 
For all the rightful worrying about Chinese power and influence, you have to remember that it's a paper tiger.

Socialism incentivizes corruption and ineptitude. Why would they *not* have that in spades?

Western money is all that is keeping the CCP afloat. They're every bit as in debt as the US, if not more so, and their population is about to implode.
China is not "socialist" in any meaningful sense and hasn't been for decades. The funny thing is that the phrase "Paper Tiger" was actually popularized by Mao.
 
China is not "socialist" in any meaningful sense and hasn't been for decades. The funny thing is that the phrase "Paper Tiger" was actually popularized by Mao.
Okay, but that's not my point. My point is that China is a society held together with an authoritarian government, duct tape, and spit. It's not this unstoppable ascendant force destined to inherit the earth.
 
Okay, but that's not my point. My point is that China is a society held together with an authoritarian government, duct tape, and spit. It's not this unstoppable ascendant force destined to inherit the earth.
I really don't see much evidence for this, China honestly seems more stable than the US and Europe these days. For better or worse I just don't see the PRC collapsing in the same way the USSR did anytime soon. What I can maybe see happening is China doing what Cambodia did, removing references to socialism from its constitution and national symbolism without fundamentally changing who is in charge.
 
I really don't see much evidence for this, China honestly seems more stable than the US and Europe these days. For better or worse I just don't see the PRC collapsing in the same way the USSR did anytime soon. What I can maybe see happening is China doing what Cambodia did, removing references to socialism from its constitution and national symbolism without fundamentally changing who is in charge.
They're every bit as corrupt and feckless as Western leaders. Corruption and fecklessness do nothing but mortgage one's political future for the sake of short-term gains. They bite you in the ass sooner or later.

They're just hoping that the US and Europe go kaput before they do. Which coincides with the convenient timing of a bad case of the sniffles coming out of the same city where their bio-weapons research happens...
 
I think the one girl Gu or whatever is under 18 or got grandfathered in so she has dual citizenship still. China is fairly restrictive with their citizenship policy, but I really don't get these women giving up American Citizenship to go back over there. Shit bitch most of your friends were likely almost aborted. California sucks ass because of lack of investment in infrastructure and importation of illegal immigrants to subsidize the states increasingly shitty policy making.

Chinese in the States are weird, though. A lot of them feel like birds of passage when they have no real reason to send money back. I mean it's probably some Han bullshit, but a I think the women want to be around their own. I knew a few Chinese guys who went back because their parents wanted them to see the homeland and they just fucking hated it. One guy had a bit of a drug problem, this was around 2010 so actually the best time for him to go on a bender there, and his entire problem was how many people are just trying to shake you down or the poverty outside of the cities. He said Hong Kong was kinda neat because the culture was different, but that mainland was people without common decency. Dude joined a church in the states because he wants his kids to grow up with some moral background because Confucian and Buddhist shit is not big in his family.
 
I'm wondering if maybe that kind of pressure was used to make her give up her American citizenship in the first place... I mean considering she did so badly maybe China is the only country that would let her represent them, and idK how the Olympics works maybe they prohibit dual citizenships. But I can't help but wonder...

This happens more than you know to first gen-ners. Go through rebelious teen phase, think that America is shit with all our problems (that rightfully do exist) while have absolutely no idea what real life is like in the homeland country. I had a co-worker, her teen son getting patriotic about country he knows nothing about, getting CCP swag etc. They are even more retarded than native American liberals, because they are not 100% American (thanks to parents still speaking, cooking, watching same shit they grew up with) but def not Chinese by any stretch of imagination.

There are some refugees who come legit trying to get away from corruption and persecution. Most immigrants aren't like that. If going gets tough they just pack up and go home with their stash of cash or find another country to leach in.

Rodnina was a superfamous, top figure skater from USSR. When SHTF, she immigrated to US, gave birth to daughter but never cared to become a citizen. During Barry Soetoro reign she posted shit like this:

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ngl, it's fucking hilarious, but now US state department flat out refused to give her visa to stay or visit US and she is bitching about it. Living in Russia is OK if you got lots of cash, but she is kind of washed up and you can cash in fame for so much, especially that she's long time have been that most Russians don't remember.
 
If news articles are to be believed, yes.

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After seeing the pics of school lunches that could only be served in the lower ranks of Hell, and rooms that are less roomy than the back of an ambulance, I have to say this is torture and the athletes aren't being whiny.
 
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