Team China will look like the Canadian Spengler Cup teams.
Minus the Canadians.
Meanwhile, their U18 team lost 7-3 to Spain today.
Maybe they should play the preliminary round like they did in Nagano. For example China, Kazakstan, Latvia, Denmark, Slovenia, Germany, Belarus and Norway would play preliminary round and four (?) teams would continue to play against the top six nations. That would give China opportunity to play in olympics and play tight games.
Well, that is precisely what they are doing. Zach Yuen, Brandon Yip, Brayden Jaw, Luke Lockhart, Cory Kane, Sam Hu, Mikaël Tam...China has to purchase Canadians, the more the better, if they want to avoid humiliation. Thats how it is.
I hate when China is labeled as "communists." They're really not.
Right. They're the beacon of freedom, and censorship is unheard of there.
Because if you're not communists you must be a "beacon of freedom" where "censorship is unheard of."
How does this make any sense?
Having had a native Chinese girlfriend in the past, I'm quite familiar with their culture regarding athleticism. And it plays a major part in their national education system. They are not thin just because of what they eat. Their PE system is thorough, diverse and also mandatory for everyone through the entire education path from pre-school until degree programmes. They have a rock solid foundation on a national level, in terms of base fitness for any kind of professional sports.[mod]
As I briefly touched upon earlier, in the context of history and culture, China has for the longest time (dating back to at least the creation of imperial examinations during the Han Dynasty) been largely focused on academics and schooling (a quality that has likewise spread to other nations in the Sinosphere). This could have a possible negative effect on the development of athletics in China, but in an ideal case, due to the sheer population size of China, there will likely always be a decent amount of people who may at the end of the day just feel like being athletes instead, regardless of what their parents or societal norms tell them to do.
Because a Chinese kid would never move to Sweden without his parents at an early age and dedicate his entire life to this strange sport, which has absolutely no perspective of putting bread on the table for him and his family in China.Can you imagine if Kopitar was Chinese, Korean or Japanese. How big having him alone would've made ice hockey in those countries. We know what Yao Ming did to basketball & China. I used Kopitar as a reference as Slovenia has silly low amount of registered ice hockey players and still produced a player like that. Why couldn't one of the asian countries do the same?
Right. They're the beacon of freedom, and censorship is unheard of there.