You're free to deduce how a Chinese public official ostensibly making less than $100 per month sends her kid to Stanford.
You are free to invest some time into educating yourself first about how chinese elites work, then how american elites work and then maybe how elites work in general.You're free to deduce how a Chinese public official ostensibly making less than $100 per month sends her kid to Stanford.
That is conjecture.There is no Chinese hockey project beyond this tournament, at the World Championships they will again rely on the usual roster of Chinese-born players which is simply nowhere near good enough to establish itself at a higher level.
That is conjecture.
The imported KRS players have not been able to play for the national team because of eligibility issues. Now this issue appears to be fixed as these players are partaking in the Olympics.China's regular national team has not ceased to exist during this project.
Unless they were citizens, they were not.Some of these import players would have been eligible to represent China already at the 2019 World Championships, yet none played a single game for China before this tournament.
Unless they were citizens, they were not.
And now they have them, rendering them eligible to represent China in future tournaments.Come on now, they were going to be issued passports whenever convenient.
And now they have them, rendering them eligible to represent China in future tournaments.
Which also does not mean that none of these players would represent China in the future....which does not equal any intention to do so, neither from the side of the players nor from the side of the Chinese national team.
Cyrus has a good video on Americans choosing to represent another nation.
These athletes had a choice, they have different journeys, and in a previous video he mentioned that over 180 olympics have represented a country they were not born in.
How common is dual citizenship in China? They seem to officially disallow it but it also seems like they’re making exceptions for Gu + the hockey team imports so I was just curious if that’s typical or a new thing and how that’s viewed over there by regular folks.
Yea..still doesn't change anything about how I'd feel. I guess I can see where they were coming from, but representing China and playing against the US? I'd feel ill.
How common is dual citizenship in China? They seem to officially disallow it but it also seems like they’re making exceptions for Gu + the hockey team imports so I was just curious if that’s typical or a new thing and how that’s viewed over there by regular folks.
I hate to rain on your bigoted parade, but quite a few American Olympians were born in other countries. Hell, we are a country of immigrants. I am a foreign-born American. If I play sports and represent the US, will it be OK or not?
Quite a few *Americans* were born in other countries. What % of China’s population is foreign-born?I hate to rain on your bigoted parade, but quite a few American Olympians were born in other countries. Hell, we are a country of immigrants. I am a foreign-born American. If I play sports and represent the US, will it be OK or not?
Quite a few *Americans* were born in other countries. What % of China’s population is foreign-born?
And not only that, it also hurts other nations hockey development. There's no reason why Kazakhstan and Belarus, with most of their key players coming from North America, should play in the top World Championship division over the likes of France or Austria, or why they should steal points from Slovakia, Latvia or Germany who they'd never be competitve against otherwise.
My point is China isn’t attracting immigrants. Less than .1% of their population is foreign-born. There are 3x more Chinese expats in the US than there are expats of any origin in China.I am not sure what your point is. Why can't other countries, let alone world superpowers, attract immigrants?
And yes, including for athletic reasons. In World Cup 1998, US soccer team featured a guy named David Regis, who was naturalized very quickly specifically to help us on the soccer field. That stuff happens a lot.
My point is China isn’t attracting immigrants. Less than .1% of their population is foreign-born. There are 3x more Chinese expats in the US than there are expats of any origin in China.
If it happens a lot why is your only example 1 guy from 25 years ago. This isn’t one guy, it’s 11. Half their roster. Most (if not all?) have never represented China before.
I just think 50% of the team being foreigners seems a little farcical. Especially for a country that is .1% foreigners. I don’t even get caught up much in the patriotism or rooting for national teams just because. I do not follow or blindly root for team USA.Are you questioning the principle or the quantity? Is there an acceptable limit of foreign-born athletes on a national team?
I’m not faulting anyone for doing whatever they want to do. I don’t consider them “traitors” if that’s what you’re implying. At the same time I think it’s not something I’d do. Like I’d probably be good enough to represent some undeveloped tropical countries in ice hockey but if hypothetically I were asked I wouldn’t do that because it seems a little… ridiculous. Like what’s even the point of international tournaments if you can just play for whoever will let you?You can't possibly fault an athlete for accepting an Olympic invitation from another country (especially the one where they're playing sports professionally) if their own country doesn't think they're good enough.