China Wins 1st Women’s Gymnastics Team Olympic Gold by Cheating?

Chinese “Women” Cheat their Way to Gymnastic Gold?
Do you think they cheat? Olympic Committee regulates that participants have to be 16 years old by the time they compete in olympic games gymnastics.
When I watched the tournament on August 12, I saw one of the Chinese gymnasts had missing upper canines. Usually girls lose their upper baby canines at the age of 11 to 13. This suggests at least one Chinese gymnast is around 12 years old, since she lost her upper baby canines recently and her upper adult canines are not yet fully erupted.
So, do you think the Chinese government fakes the girls’ passports? I mean, they have faked the fireworks and lip singing at the opening ceremony already. They don’t mind their integrity and ethics, as long as they win gold medals and appear “nice” superficially.
Comment your thought on this issue below.
State-media story fuels questions on gymnast’s age
BEIJING—Just nine months before the Beijing Olympics, the Chinese government’s news agency, Xinhua, reported that gymnast He Kexin was 13, which would have made her ineligible to be on the team that won a gold medal this week.
In its report Nov. 3, Xinhua identified He as one of “10 big new stars” who made a splash at China’s Cities Games. It gave her age as 13 and reported that she beat Yang Yilin on the uneven bars at those games. In the final, “this little girl” pulled off a difficult release move on the bars known as the Li Na, named for another Chinese gymnast, Xinhua said in the report, which appeared on one of its Web sites, www.hb.xinhuanet.com
The Associated Press found the Xinhua report on the site Thursday morning and saved a copy of the page. Later that afternoon, the Web site was still working but the page was no longer accessible. Sports editors at the state-run news agency would not comment for publication.
If the age reported by Xinhua was correct, that would have meant He was too young to be on the Chinese team that beat the United States on Wednesday and clinched China’s first women’s team Olympic gold in gymnastics. He is also a favorite for gold in Monday’s uneven bars final.
Yang was also on Wednesday’s winning team. Questions have also been raised about her age and that of a third team member, Jiang Yuyuan.
Gymnasts have to be 16 during the Olympic year to be eligible for the games. He’s birthday is listed as Jan. 1, 1992.
Chinese authorities insist that all three are old enough to compete. He herself told reporters after Wednesday’s final that “my real age is 16. I don’t pay any attention to what everyone says.”
Zhang Hongliang, an official with China’s gymnastics delegation at the games, said Thursday the differing ages which have appeared in Chinese media reports had not been checked in advance with the gymnastics federation.
Read more: yahoo.com
China makes history by winning its first Team gold in Women’s Gymnastics
(BEIJING, August 13) — China made history today by winning its first Olympic gold medal in the Team event of Women’s Gymnastics. China won the gold medal with a total of 188.900 points.
The United States won the silver medal with a total of 186.525 points and Romania won the bronze with a total of 181.525 points.
China entered the Team final as favorites, but it was pushed all the way by a determined United States. The two sides’ first rotation was the Vault, with the United States taking a slender lead.
The second rotation for China and the United States was the Uneven Bars, which is regarded as China’s specialty. China did not disappoint, gaining the lead with a dominant display on the apparatus.
He Kexin and Yang Yilin were outstanding in the Uneven Bars, scoring 16.850 and 16.800 respectively. Despite the best efforts of the United States’ Nastia Liukin, who scored 16.900, the United States could not overcome China’s dominance of the apparatus.
The United States gained slightly more points than China in the Balance Beam, a rotation that was marked by the mistakes of the United States’ Alicia Sacramone and China’s Cheng Fei. Sacramone was clearly affected by her mistake and also performed poorly in the next rotation, the Floor Exercise.
Read more on: beijing2008.cn
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