PDA

View Full Version : Olympian Eileen Gu ruffles US skiers with decision to compete for China



Teh One Who Knocks
02-02-2022, 12:42 PM
By Michael Kaplan - New York Post


https://i.imgur.com/2Lg39ZA.jpg

She could be America’s next Olympic darling — a stunning 18-year-old skier who signed with Victoria’s Secret and plans to attend Stanford after she vies for gold in Beijing.

But Eileen Gu won’t be competing for the US.

Instead, in a move that’s baffled members of the American skiing community, San Francisco-born and -bred Gu has joined Team China.

“I have decided to compete for China in the 2022 Winter Olympics,” Gu announced in a 2019 tweet, months after she earned her first World Cup win in Italy at 15.

“The opportunity to help inspire millions of young people where my mom was born, during the 2022 Beijing Olympic Winter Games is a once-in-a-lifetime opportunity to help promote the sport I love.”

Others in the sport are questioning why Gu, an ultra-athletic freeskier and favorite to claim as many as three gold medals when the games begin Friday, would side with the host nation, which is accused of abusing human rights and engaging in unfair trade policies.

https://i.imgur.com/O8itoHk.png

“It is not my place to judge, but Eileen is from California, not from China, and her decision [to ski for China] seems opportunistic,” said Jen Hudak, a former Winter X Games gold medalist for the USA women’s team.

“She became the athlete she is because she grew up in the United States, where she had access to premier training grounds and coaching that, as a female, she might not have had in China,” Hudak told The Post. “I think she would be a different skier if she grew up in China.

“This makes me sad,” added Hudak, who retired in 2014 after knee injuries derailed her career and has since co-founded Escapod Trailers. “It would be nice to see the medals going to America.”

https://i.imgur.com/orgAxJt.png

Gu, a US citizen, made her decision with input from her Chinese mother, Yan, an outspoken “Tiger Mom,” and an American father who keeps a low profile, said one of her former coaches.

“All roads to Eileen go through Yan,” said Mike Hanley, head of school at Wy’East Mountain Academy in Oregon, a training facility for Olympic skiers such as Nick Goepper and Alex Beaulieu.

“Yan is very pleasant but one of the most intense human beings I have ever met in my life. She smiles and tells you how great you are. But then you find out, after the fact, what the requests are. She loves her daughter and wants her daughter to get priority.”

https://i.imgur.com/2HqyVSD.jpg
https://i.imgur.com/xGdzqmu.png

There could be an economic incentive, too.

“She is the golden star for the country with the fastest-growing economy,” Hanley said. “She can be the Tony Hawk of winter sports in China.”

Gu is not the first American to cross from West to East.

Beverly Zhu and Ashley Lin, both figure skaters, were both born in the US and now compete for China. But neither is at Gu’s level in their sport.

“Most people compete for other countries because they can’t make the American team,” Hudak said.

Gu’s talent is undeniable.

https://i.imgur.com/3XEMHp6.png

In November, at the Steamboat Freeski Big Air competition, she became the first woman to pull off a tricky stunt that once seemed impossible for females to execute: a “1440 double cork.” She shot up a ramp and into the sky, then completed four 360-degree rotations, before landing flat on her skis. A blown-away NBC announcer gushed that Gu “absolutely stomped the field.”

Freeskiing blends the gravity-defying acrobatics of snowboarding with the challenges of alpine racing. The event features the kinds of tricks, jumps and obstacles often seen in skateboarding competitions.

“She is the gold medal favorite,” said Hudak, noting that Gu will compete in three events in Beijing: big air, half-pipe and slopestyle.

“I don’t think anyone is at her level. I can see her getting medals in all three events this year.”

https://i.imgur.com/RmVgwE1.png

In America, Gu’s sponsors include Red Bull, Cadillac, the Apple-owned Beats by Dre headphones and Victoria’s Secret. In the pages of Harpers Bazaar, Gu modeled the lingerie brand’s activewear in an image that showed her flying through the air.

But those big names are dwarfed by the deals being made in China, where the national broadcaster, CCTV, has described Gu as “the perfect child next door.” Others in China have dubbed her the “Snow Princess.”

So far she’s inked more than 20 endorsement deals in her adopted homeland, signing with companies such as the Bank of China, China Mobile and milk company Mengniu. She is also the spokesperson for Luckin’ Coffee, the Starbucks of China. According to campaignasia.com, a single endorsement deal with the skier costs about $2.5 million.

When the Olympics start, Gu’s biggest challenger could be France’s big air specialist, Tess Ledeux, who last week executed four-and-a-half rotations for a 1620 double cork during an X Games competition.

https://i.imgur.com/G2eplTT.jpg
https://i.imgur.com/6uE1bXW.png

That new record planted a seed of doubt among some Gu watchers. In a video that went viral on China’s equivalent of TikTok, a poster suggested, “Chinese fans, let’s not put too much pressure on Gu.” Unaccustomed to doubters, Gu replied to her fans, “Why don’t you have more faith in me?”

Gu’s success stems from her dedication, said Peter Olenick, who coached Gu at a Red Bull training camp.

“She has a ton of talent and passion for the sport, but, in the end it is her work ethic,” he told The Post. “She is the first one at training and the last to leave. She competes in multiple events; then she goes home to run and train. That is unusual.”

Being fearless also helps.

“She came up with the mentality of following guys around and doing tricks that they do,” Elijah Teter, the athletic director at Wy’East Mountain Academy, told The Post.

https://i.imgur.com/zRebzYw.png

“She’s used to crashing and that is tricky for women. A couple summers ago, on Mount Hood, Eileen clipped the deck and got a very bad concussion. That took her out for a week. It’s an injury that can make people fearful. Not Eileen. She gets past the fear.”

Her intelligence is also obvious, Olenick said. Gu notched a nearly perfect 1580 SAT score, speaks fluent Mandarin and has already been accepted to Stanford.

“Eileen is incredibly smart and likes to make the skier boys feel dumb,” he said. “She uses bigger words than they do. She talks about things that go beyond skiing and hanging out. She throws chemistry stuff at them.”

Skiing isn’t her only sport. While attending a private school in the Bay Area, Gu became an elite runner. “She was one of the top long distance runners in California,” said Hanley.

https://i.imgur.com/nTdxhGh.png

But Gu ultimately focused on freeskiing because of her mother. Yan saw her daughter take up downhill skiing at the age of 3 and was concerned about how fast she was whooshing down the slopes. Hoping to temper her speed, Yan enrolled her daughter in freestyle lessons, not realizing the sport involves even more risks and greater danger than standard alpine ski racing.

But Gu took to it all. She focused on winning events and Yan served as her biggest booster, according to Hanley.

“Yan is not going to back down,” he said. “These sports are very expensive. So many of the Americans ask for favors. Yan was willing to pay, which is very rare in the action sports industry. She paid for coaching and travel.”

https://i.imgur.com/qiryqyZ.jpg
https://i.imgur.com/lsXjywq.png

Meanwhile, in China, Gu will be supported by the government, said a former X Games athlete who asked not to be identified. “The amount of money and the amount of support she gets from China will be so much higher than what she would get in America,” he said.

Two years after that World Cup victory in Italy, Gu became the first Chinese athlete to win gold in the X Games and the first rookie to snag the top medal for the superpipe event in January 2021.

And now it’s on to Beijing — to compete for China.

It’s a decision that to Hanley “seems practical and pragmatic, just like every decision she makes.”

Muddy
02-02-2022, 03:19 PM
:muddy: Is she a Chinese citizen?

Teh One Who Knocks
02-02-2022, 03:21 PM
:facepalm:


Gu, a US citizen, made her decision with input from her Chinese mother, Yan, an outspoken “Tiger Mom,” and an American father who keeps a low profile, said one of her former coaches.

Muddy
02-02-2022, 03:25 PM
I saw she was a us citizen.. I just couldn't be arsed to read the entire thing to see if she had dual-citizenship or anything? I don't see how this is legal? Maybe she is trying to to become hated here in America for being a traitor to a bunch of fkn commies..?

Someone should ask her what her thoughts are on 'China and the Uighurs..'

Teh One Who Knocks
02-02-2022, 03:34 PM
https://i.imgur.com/Zgrt8xb.png

I can't read the article to get more info because it's behind a paywall.

Teh One Who Knocks
02-02-2022, 03:37 PM
This is from an article on ESPN:


Born in San Francisco to a Chinese mother and American father and raised by her mother and maternal grandmother, Gu announced in June 2019, at age 15, that she would switch country affiliations and compete for China in the Beijing Games. "This was an incredibly tough decision for me to make," Gu wrote in an Instagram post at the time. "The opportunity to help inspire millions of young people where my mom was born, during the 2022 Beijing Olympic Winter Games is a once-in-a-lifetime opportunity to help to promote the sport I love. Through skiing, I hope to unite people, promote common understanding, create communication, and forge friendships between nations."

The announcement came as a surprise to many in the sport. It is rare for a top U.S. athlete to switch countries, and rarer still for a U.S. citizen to acquire a Chinese passport. Many questioned whether Gu, a high school sophomore at the time, understood the impact of her decision. She was called a traitor on social media and accused of making the choice for financial gain and allowing herself to be used as a political tool by the Chinese government.

Through her agent, Gu declined to comment for this story and has never confirmed whether she renounced her American passport. But the International Olympic Committee requires athletes to hold passports for the countries they represent, and China does not recognize dual citizenship.

Gu often says when she is "in the U.S., I'm American and when I'm in China, I'm Chinese." Now, she will drop into her first Winter Olympics at a fraught moment in U.S.-China relations and as China comes under increasing international criticism for its human rights practices. Deftly navigating her two worlds can be incredibly lucrative. But the stakes are high.

Muddy
02-02-2022, 03:52 PM
What a crock of shit.

Teh One Who Knocks
02-02-2022, 03:53 PM
What a crock of shit.

Agreed. She wants to be a Chinese citizen without having to live in China so she can reap the benefits of living in the United States. After the Olympics, she should just stay the fuck over there.

Muddy
02-02-2022, 05:23 PM
Agreed. She wants to be a Chinese citizen without having to live in China so she can reap the benefits of living in the United States. After the Olympics, she should just stay the fuck over there.

I'm down with that idea..!

DemonGeminiX
02-02-2022, 09:30 PM
If she has Chinese citizenship, then she would have to have a visa to live in the USA. Pull her visa and deport her back to China. Refuse her entry into the US.

Muddy
02-03-2022, 01:03 AM
Lol.. get her dun Demon.. :coat:

Teh One Who Knocks
02-03-2022, 12:29 PM
Is it wrong for me to hope that she says something wrong that the Chinese don't like and she get's the Peng Shuai treatment? :-k

Muddy
02-03-2022, 01:27 PM
Nah.. fk this little traitor.

DemonGeminiX
02-09-2022, 04:52 AM
... and the little traitor cunt won gold.

Muddy
02-09-2022, 02:11 PM
What a shame... The American Media is still glorifying her.

Muddy
02-11-2022, 07:02 PM
I looked at CNN today for a second and what do you know, they are gushing about how wonderful this little traitor is.

lost in melb.
02-12-2022, 01:07 AM
It's one Big World now :dunno:

Might as well give China full access. What could go wrong?

DemonGeminiX
02-12-2022, 02:24 AM
It's one Big World now :dunno:

Might as well give China full access. What could go wrong?

:huh:

Let's give China full access to Australia. What could go wrong?

You're insane.

lost in melb.
02-12-2022, 04:16 AM
:huh:

Let's give China full access to Australia. What could go wrong?

You're insane.

I was joking.

DemonGeminiX
02-12-2022, 08:22 AM
I was joking.

:slap:

Use sarcasm tags, dammit!

lost in melb.
02-12-2022, 08:27 AM
Fair enough. On this occasion it was a bit ambiguous :)

Godfather
02-12-2022, 08:38 AM
We have a weekly poker game over Zoom with friends from around the province who can't get together. We always pause for a poll break and everyone submits questions. Our polls are usually really juvenile :lol: My question last night was pro or anti Gu. It came out 7/9 anti and 2/9 pro. The two pro guys were basically of the opinion "I don't give a shit, go do whatever makes you the most money, nationalism is stupid anyways."

I personally think if it was a Canadian going to represent Ireland or whatever, it wouldn't even make the news (it happens often with guys who can't make the Canadian hockey team but want to play in the Games and I'm fine with that).

... but China? How do you defend going to represent a tyrannical regime committing genocide against religious groups, poisoning the earth, and doing it all for money from what I can tell. She grew up in a neighborhood with average home prices of $5m and went to a $55k/year private school so it's hard to even understand why she would sell out. Wonder how much they actually paid her...

Godfather
02-12-2022, 10:56 PM
Eileen Gu's VPN comment reportedly censored on Chinese social media

The American-born Olympic skier reportedly recommended people use VPNs in China, where they're illegal.

Olympic skier Eileen Gu made it sound like using Instagram is easy in China when she replied to a commenter on the social media service, according to a screenshot noted by Protocol on Thursday. Now her description of how to bypass China's firewall to use Instagram has reportedly been censored.

The exchange started when a commenter asked Gu, who won a gold medal in big air freestyle skiing, how she could use the Instagram photo-sharing service, which is blocked in China.

"Anyone can download a VPN its literally free on the App store," Gu replied, according to the screenshot. CNET couldn't verify the comment.

China's government has banned the use of VPNs, or virtual private networks, for individuals. The services hide internet traffic from internet service providers, often letting users bypass firewalls. According to Protocol, Gu's remarks about the VPN were removed from a screenshot shared on Weibo, a popular Chinese social media service.

Gu didn't immediately respond to a request for comment sent on Instagram. Neither Instagram nor Weibo responded to requests for comment.

In addition to blocking services such as Instagram, Facebook and Twitter, the Chinese government requires cooperation from domestic tech companies in keeping specific content from appearing in social media feeds. As a result, companies filter out images and videos, altering what regular people see. Research conducted in 2019 of WeChat, another social media site in China, revealed that photos of the infamous "Tank Man" incident in Tiananmen Square and posts about the arrest of Huawei CFO Meng Wanzhou were blocked.

According to Protocol, people expressed outrage on Weibo in response to Gu's suggestion to use a VPN. One person was quoted as saying, "Literally, I'm not 'anyone.' Literally, it's illegal for me to use a VPN. Literally, it's not fxxking free at all."


https://www.cnet.com/tech/services-and-software/eileen-gus-vpn-comment-reportedly-censored-on-chinese-social-media/


Ya this is going swimmingly :lol:

deebakes
02-12-2022, 11:25 PM
she really has no idea what she has gotten herself into

RBP
02-12-2022, 11:38 PM
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_UEcXvQzV_I

lost in melb.
02-13-2022, 12:46 AM
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_UEcXvQzV_I

Can't view it, even with vpn

RBP
02-13-2022, 02:05 AM
Can't view it, even with vpn

https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCqZQlzSHbVJrwrn5XvzrzcA

That's the NBC sports channel

Godfather
02-13-2022, 07:11 AM
Can't see it in my region either. Got time to give us 2nd world country fellas the TL-DR? :lol:

lost in melb.
02-13-2022, 07:24 AM
I've tried various vpns in different countries and they are sniffing me out :)

lost in melb.
02-13-2022, 07:24 AM
https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCqZQlzSHbVJrwrn5XvzrzcA

That's the NBC sports channel

I have made it to the channel. Do you have the title of the video?

DemonGeminiX
02-13-2022, 09:39 AM
Eileen Gu's HUGE final run grabs big air gold from Tess Ledeux

RBP
02-13-2022, 03:15 PM
What he said.