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China's Olympic effort was solid gold - 08/24/2008 - MiamiHerald.com BEIJING Seven years ago, when Beijing was awarded the 2008 Olympic Games, China set out to sow gold, following the old proverb that says, ``To believe in one's dreams is to spend all of one's life asleep.'' When the Olympics conclude Sunday with the celebratory farewell of athletes inside Bird's Nest Stadium, China's Great Leap Forward will be complete. Counting preparation costs, it spent nearly $1 billion per gold medal, but to a nation seeking superpower status, every ounce of sweat was well spent. With one day of competition remaining, China was one short of the heady number of 50 gold medals, a feat accomplished only twice in non-boycotted, modern Olympics, by the Soviet Union in 1972 (50) and 1988 (55). China will win the gold count for the first time, supplanting the United States, which will win the overall medal count. The International Olympic Committee doesn't recognize the medal scorecard by country, but countries do in this festival of nationalism. For China, which shunned the Olympics from 1960 to 1984, the success of royal doulton bone china the Beijing Games represent a milestone that will reverberate through many levels of society. Worries about pollution and political protests were dwarfed by images of giant basketball star Yao Ming. Complaints about China's authoritarian government were muted by its graceful divers and nimble table tennis players. Wariness about the Communist Party's human rights record was supplanted by the attention lavished on the stunning Water Cube and Bird's Nest venues. ''China has successfully used the Games to win glory and respect,'' said Xu Guoqi, a Chinese-American professor and author. Masses of courteous and industrious volunteers put a harmonious face on a nation seeking to emerge from behind its Great Wall of isolation. China's rise in sports mirrored the rapid growth of its economy and overshadowed another excellent performance by the U.S. Olympic team, which will win medals in at least 21 of 38 disciplines and, with a few notable disappointments and surprises, fulfill its expectations. ''We knew we'd be the underdog and China would have the home field advantage,'' said Steve Roush, chief of sport performance for the U.S. Olympic Committee. ``The key with any host country is whether they maintain momentum.'' China continues to fall short in its two favorite sports richmond china bus -- men's basketball and men's soccer. And its tiny female gymnasts, who beat the United States for the team gold, are diversity awareness china now the subject of an investigation for possible doctoring of birth dates. Hurdler Liu Xiang hobbled off the track with a foot injury. ''Heads will roll in soccer,'' said Susan Brownell, an anthropologist who lives here and a former U.S. track and field athlete who also competed for Chinese teams. ``Liu's withdrawal will provoke discussion about whether he was pushed too hard or put under too much pressure.'' But the sport of diving illustrated the gap China china news is widening between itself and the United States. Chinese divers won seven of eight diving medals in a sport the United States once dominated while the United States was left without a medal for the second consecutive Olympics. While China set out through its state-run sports system to maximize medals even in obscure sports, the United States won golds in women's basketball and women's soccer, plus silvers in women's volleyball, women's water polo and softball. The men's basketball and water polo teams are playing for gold medals Sunday. ''Team sports have been phenomenal,'' Roush said. ``We'll have 12, 15, 18 members of teams wearing medals but the medal table only shows one.'' The United States made inroads in fencing, sailing, shooting and fencing, but it was disappointed in boxing, wrestling and track cycling. China also excelled in weightlifting, gymnastics and badminton, and it gained in swimming, tennis, beach volleyball, archery and rowing. ''With both their resources and effort in every single sport, we're going to have to redouble our effort,'' USOC chairman Peter Ueberroth said. Baltimore's Michael Phelps was the biggest individual winner of the Olympics, capturing eight gold medals -- seven in world-record time -- to break Mark Spitz's record. Jamaica outshone the United States in track and field, winning five of the six sprint gold medals. The 6-5 Usain Bolt won three golds and set three world records while both U.S. 400-meter relay teams dropped the baton in qualifying heats. China's gymnasts won nine gold medals, but American Nastia Liukin won the coveted all-around gold, and the U.S. men grabbed a team bronze even without Paul Hamm. South Florida athletes had mixed results. Anna Tunnicliffe won gold in sailing, but sprinter Sanya Richards settled for bronze in her specialty, the 400 meters. Dara Torres, the 41-year-old Supermom, won three silvers in swimming. In basketball, Sylvia Fowles made a big contribution to the gold-medal winning women, and Dwyane Wade did the same for the men, who seemed headed toward dogs in china gold. Hurdler Bershawn Jackson won bronze with Northwest Express Track Club coach Jesse Holt watching from the stands. Beach volleyball player Misty May-Treanor, wife of Marlins catcher Matt Treanor, won her second consecutive gold with partner Kerri Walsh without losing a match. The Olympics promoted as High-Tech, Safe and Green were also mostly clean, if drug testing is an accurate measure. The IOC conducted more than 4,500 tests and only a handful came back positive. China's government didn't escape criticism. It set up three protest zones in the guise of allowing free expression, then granted zero permits to applicants. Security was omnipresent, with olive green-clad soldiers standing guard at street corners and venue entrances or marching in formation down sidewalks. Attempted protests in Tiananmen Square or at sue in china the Olympic Green -- such as the unfurling of a ''Free Tibet'' banner -- were quickly shut down and demonstrators were detained or deported. 'The 2008 Beijing Games have put an end once and for all to the notion that these Olympics are a `force for good,' '' said Sophie Richardson, Asia advocacy director for Human Rights Watch, referring to IOC president Jacques Rogge's stated motivation for awarding the Olympics to China. But overall, China overcame the bad publicity of the Torch Relay and violent crackdown in Tibet and the sorrow of the earthquake in Sichuan that preceded the Olympics to stage the pageant it had so painstakingly prepared. Its 3,000-school sports system faces reform as athletes seek more freedom and money and the people press for more investment in recreation and fitness, Xu said. The Olympics also pushed open discussions on ''Thought Liberation'' in the Reform Era -- some even televised, Brownell said. ''Invite guests for your wedding, and you put out your best dishes,'' Brownell said. ``When the world is gone, a lot of questions and political infighting will remain.'' 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gold Florida Democrats rally around Biden Analysis: Biden seen as safe choice A fairy-tale romance takes a tawdry turn Russia withdraws from strategic Georgian road More Most Popular Stories Big plays have Dolphins fans cheering again Dolphins fans can think the unthinkable Dolphins' Ginn begins to turn the corner Dolphins' Pennington tired of arm criticism Battle for positioning on Dolphins' depth chart heats up Missing Lauderdale wife was seeking restraining order Jewish children part of 1960s Pedro Pan exodus from Cuba Dolphins' TE Fasano beginning to connect Gimpy players showing progress for Dolphins Miami Dolphins staff not wasting time News On The Go News by Mobile News by Email RSS feeds Podcasts China's Olympic effort was solid gold China won the count in gold medals and managed to keep many concerns at bay, major successes for a country emerging from isolation. Posted on Sun, Aug. 24, 2008 reprint print email Facebook Digg del.icio.us AIM BY LINDA ROBERTSON lrobertson@MiamiHerald.com ITSUO INOUYE / AP Kenya's Samuel Kamau Wansiru crosses the finish line to win gold in the the men's marathon, the last event of the athletics competitions finishing in the National Stadium at the Beijing 2008 Olympics in Beijing, Sunday, Aug. 24, 2008. Gallery | Joe Rimkus Jr. at the Olympics Interactive | Olympics results and schedule The latest Olympics news WEB VOTE What was the best moment from the Olympics in Beijing? Phelps 100-meter butterfly gold by 0.1 Jason Lezak, U.S. win 400 freestyle relay The dominance of Usain Bolt U.S. men's basketball team's run The Opening Ceremonies Something else Your vote has been counted, thank you for voting. BEIJING -- Seven years ago, when Beijing was awarded the 2008 Olympic Games, China set out to sow gold, following the old proverb that says, ``To believe in one's dreams is to spend all of one's life asleep.'' When the Olympics conclude Sunday with the celebratory farewell of athletes inside Bird's Nest Stadium, China's Great Leap Forward will be complete. Counting preparation costs, it spent nearly $1 billion per gold medal, but to a nation seeking superpower status, every ounce of sweat was well spent. With one day of competition remaining, China was one short of the heady number of 50 gold medals, a feat accomplished only twice in non-boycotted, modern Olympics, by the Soviet Union in 1972 (50) and 1988 (55). China will win the gold count for the first time, supplanting the United States, which will win the overall medal count. The International Olympic Committee doesn't recognize the medal scorecard by country, but countries do in this festival of nationalism. For China, which shunned the Olympics from 1960 to 1984, the success of the Beijing Games represent a milestone that will reverberate through many levels of society. Worries about pollution and political protests were dwarfed by images of giant basketball star Yao Ming. Complaints about China's authoritarian government were muted by its graceful divers and nimble table tennis players. Wariness about the Communist Party's human rights record was supplanted by the attention lavished on the stunning Water Cube and Bird's Nest venues. ''China has successfully used the Games to win glory and respect,'' said Xu Guoqi, a Chinese-American professor and author. Masses of courteous and industrious volunteers put a harmonious face on a nation seeking to emerge from behind its Great Wall of isolation. China's rise in sports mirrored the rapid growth of its economy and overshadowed another excellent performance by the U.S. Olympic team, which will win medals in at least 21 of 38 disciplines and, with a few notable disappointments and surprises, fulfill its expectations. ''We knew we'd be the underdog and China would have the home field advantage,'' said Steve Roush, chief of sport performance for the U.S. Olympic Committee. ``The key with any host country is whether they maintain momentum.'' China continues to fall short in its two favorite sports -- men's basketball and men's soccer. And its tiny female gymnasts, who beat the United States for the team gold, are now the subject of an investigation for possible doctoring of birth dates. Hurdler Liu Xiang hobbled off the track with a foot injury. ''Heads will roll in soccer,'' said Susan Brownell, an anthropologist who lives here statuues of warriors in china and a former U.S. track and field athlete who also competed for Chinese teams. ``Liu's withdrawal will provoke discussion about whether he was pushed too hard or put under too much pressure.'' But the sport of diving illustrated the gap China is widening between itself and the United States. Chinese divers won seven of eight diving medals in a sport the United States once dominated while the United States was left without a medal for the second consecutive Olympics. While China set out through its state-run sports system to maximize medals even in obscure sports, the United States won golds in women's basketball and women's soccer, plus silvers in women's volleyball, women's water polo and softball. The men's basketball and water polo teams are playing for gold medals Sunday. ''Team sports have been phenomenal,'' Roush said. ``We'll have 12, 15, 18 members of teams wearing medals but the medal table only shows one.'' The United States made inroads in fencing, sailing, shooting and fencing, but it was disappointed in boxing, wrestling and track cycling. China also excelled in weightlifting, gymnastics and badminton, and it gained in swimming, tennis, beach volleyball, archery and rowing. ''With both their resources and effort in every single sport, we're going to have to redouble our effort,'' USOC chairman Peter Ueberroth said. Baltimore's Michael Phelps was the biggest individual

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winner of the Olympics, capturing eight gold medals -- seven in world-record time -- to break Mark Spitz's record. Jamaica outshone the United States in track and field, winning five of the six sprint gold medals. The 6-5 Usain Bolt won three golds and set three world records while both U.S. 400-meter relay teams dropped the baton in qualifying heats. China's gymnasts won nine gold medals, but American Nastia Liukin won the coveted all-around gold, and the U.S. men grabbed a team bronze even without Paul Hamm. South Florida athletes had mixed results. Anna Tunnicliffe won gold in sailing, but sprinter Sanya Richards settled for bronze in her specialty, the 400 meters. Dara Torres, the 41-year-old Supermom, won three silvers

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in swimming. In basketball, Sylvia Fowles made a big contribution to the gold-medal winning women, and Dwyane Wade did the same for the men, who seemed headed toward gold. Hurdler Bershawn Jackson won bronze with Northwest Express Track Club coach Jesse Holt watching from the stands. Beach volleyball player Misty May-Treanor, wife of Marlins catcher Matt Treanor, won her second consecutive gold with partner Kerri Walsh without losing a match. The Olympics promoted as High-Tech, Safe and Green were also mostly clean, if drug testing is an accurate measure. The IOC conducted more than 4,500 tests and only a handful came back positive. China's government didn't escape criticism. It set up three protest zones in the guise of allowing free expression, then granted zero permits to applicants. Security was omnipresent, with olive green-clad soldiers standing guard at street corners and venue entrances or marching in formation down sidewalks. Attempted protests in Tiananmen Square or at the Olympic Green -- such as the unfurling of a ''Free Tibet'' banner -- were quickly shut down and demonstrators were detained or deported. 'The 2008 Beijing Games have put an end once and for all to the notion that these Olympics are a `force for good,' '' said Sophie Richardson, Asia advocacy director for Human Rights Watch, referring to IOC president Jacques Rogge's stated motivation for awarding the Olympics to China. But overall, China overcame the bad publicity of the Torch Relay and violent flowblue china scinde pattern crackdown in Tibet and the sorrow of the earthquake in Sichuan that preceded the Olympics to stage the pageant it had so painstakingly prepared. Its 3,000-school sports system faces reform as athletes seek more freedom and money and the people press for more investment in recreation and fitness, Xu said. The Olympics also pushed open discussions on ''Thought Liberation'' in the Reform Era -- some even televised, Brownell said. ''Invite guests for your wedding, and you put out your best dishes,'' Brownell said. ``When the world is gone, a lot of questions and political infighting will remain.''   Join the discussion The Miami Herald is pleased to provide this opportunity to share information, experiences and observations about what's in the news. Some of the comments may be reprinted elsewhere in the site or in the newspaper. We encourage lively, open debate on the issues of the day, and ask that you refrain from personal comments and remarks that are off point. In order to post comments, you must be a registered user of MiamiHerald.com. Your username will show along with the comments you post. Not a registered user? It's Free! Register here. Thank you for taking the time to offer your thoughts. Quick Job Search Enter Keyword(s): Enter City: Select a State:  – All United States –  Alabama Alaska Arizona Arkansas California Colorado Connecticut Delaware District of Columbia Florida Georgia Hawaii Idaho Illinois Indiana Iowa Kansas Kentucky Louisiana Maine Maryland Massachusetts Michigan Minnesota Mississippi Missouri Montana Nebraska Nevada New Hampshire New Jersey New Mexico New York North Carolina North Dakota Ohio Oklahoma Oregon Pennsylvania Rhode Island South Carolina South Dakota Tennessee Texas Utah Vermont Virginia Washington West Virginia Wisconsin Wyoming Select a Category:  – All Job Categories –  Accounting Admin & Clerical Automotive Banking Biotech Broadcast - Journalism Business Development Construction Consultant Customer Service Design Distribution - Shipping Education Engineering Entry Level Executive Facilities Finance General Business General Labor Government Health Care Hotel - Hospitality Human Resources structures important to ancient china Information Technology Insurance Inventory Legal Legal Admin Management Manufacturing Marketing Nurse Other Pharmaceutical Professional Services Purchasing - Procurement QA - Quality Control Research Restaurant - Food Service Retail - Grocery Sales Science Skilled Labor - Trades Strategy - Planning Supply Chain Telecommunications Training Transportation Warehouse Search by Category Advanced Job Search NATIONAL NEWS VIDEO News Sports Entertainment Business Tropical Life Opinion Classifieds Services +/- Partners: WLRN|Miami Herald News| CBS 4 WFOR-TV| Newspaper in Education| More Partners About Us| About the McClatchy Company| About the Real Cities Network| Terms of Use & Privacy Statement| Copyright Copyright 1996-2008 The Miami Herald Media Company| User Agreement and Privacy Policy| Rights and Permissions Help| Contact Us



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NBCOlympics.com - China: Faulty paperwork caused confusion To view nbcolympics.com fully make sure you have Macromedia Flash Player version 7 or higher. Click here to download. MSN home | Hotmail MSN Home Hi, @DISPLAYNAME My Profile - Logout Register | Login To view nbcolympics.com fully

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make sure you have Macromedia Flash Player version 7 or higher. Click here to download. Home TV & Online Listings Results & Sched. News Center Video Photos Medals Sports TOP SPORTS Basketball Beach Volleyball Gymnastics Swimming Track & Field ALL SPORTS Archery Badminton Baseball Basketball Beach Volleyball Boxing Canoe/Kayak Cycling Diving Equestrian Fencing Field Hockey Gymnastics Handball Judo Modern Pent. Rhythmic Gym. Rowing Sailing Shooting Soccer Softball Swimming Sync. Swimming Table Tennis Taekwondo Tennis Track & Field Trampoline Triathlon Volleyball Water Polo Weightlifting Wrestling Countries Team USA Athletes Local Coverage Mobile Games En Español SkipNavigation Gymnastics > News & Features China: Faulty paperwork caused leftons hand painted china confusion Posted Saturday, August 23, 2008 11:48 AM ET Associated Press The Chinese gymnastics team poses for a picture with their medals find map of china before a news conference at the Samsung Pavilion at the 2008 Beijing Olympics. BEIJING (AP) - China's deputy sports minister has attributed the confusion about the age of one of its gold medalist gymnasts to a paperwork mistake during a team transfer. At last year's China's Cities Games, Chinese officials decided to move He entry requirements china Kexin, who won two gold medals during the Beijing Games, from a local team to the geographic features of china national team. China's deputy sports minister Cui Dalin said Sunday that it was during this transfer that a "misunderstanding appeared" about her age. "Last year at the all-city competition, He Kexin moved from one team to another and during the process of registering during the move, there appeared this age discrepancy," Cui said during a news conference. "So it was the appearance of a mistake in the process of transferring teams that the misunderstanding appeared. However, I can right here accurately say that the ages of the members of our gymnastics delegation entirely conform to the requirements for participation in the Beijing Olympic Games." It was at last year's China's Cities Games that the Chinese government's news agency, Xinhua, identified He as one of "10 big new stars" who made a splash at the event and gave her age as 13 in a Nov. 3, 2007 report. 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 to clinch China's first women's team Olympic gold in gymnastics. Cui's explanation comes as officials from the International Gymnastics Federation pored over documents in hopes of putting to rest, once and for all, persistent questions about the ages of all but one member of the six-person team. Chinese gymnastics officials handed over passports, ID cards and family residence permits after the FIG - at the request of the International Olympic Committee - asked for additional documentation on He, Yang Yilin, china precision Jiang Yuyuan, house in china DENG Linlin and Li Shanshan. Gymnasts must turn 16 during the Olympic year to be eligible. Some media reports and online documents have suggested they could be as young as 14. "All information is in Chinese and the (federation) is making as thorough analysis as possible of the papers," the FIG said in a statement china s goverment Saturday. "This process may take some time, but in due course, the FIG will make a full report of our

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findings to the International Olympic Committee." Videos Gymnastics Stromotion: Nastia Liukin government china s and He Kexin on bars NBC's Stromotion compares Nastia Liukin and He Kexin's uneven bar routines during event finals. Gymnastics: Women's team final, China uneven bars Gymnastics: Women's team final key moments Women's team final: NBC full replay Photos Underage? A look at the controversial gymnasts of the Chinese women's team.  Early training Inside Look: Event finals Day 2 Yang Yilin - Beijing 2008 Women's Team Finals: The day in pictures Related Stories Abrahamson FIG to investigate China's He Kexin wins tiebreaker for bars gold There is no deadline for the investigation, and the Chinese have insisted the entire team is old enough to compete. "The international federation has required the delivery of birth certificates la belle china patterns and all the documents like family books, entries in schools and things like that," IOC president Jacques Rogge said Sunday. "They have received the documents, and at first sight it seems to be OK." Cui said the Chinese Gymnastics Federation had "actively cooperated" with the FIG and that checks had confirmed "the ages of the members of our gymnastics delegation entirely conform to the requirements for participation in china facts the Beijing Olympic Games. " If evidence of cheating china tourist attractions is found, four of China's six medals could be affected. In addition to the team gold, He won gold on uneven bars and Yang got bronze medals on uneven bars and the all-around. He was a last-minute no-show at a concert Saturday night with other Chinese gold medalists, and no explanation was given. Cheng Fei, the only team member whose age hasn't been questioned, was there, but china viet news did not do interviews. Earlier this month, the AP found registration lists previously posted on the Web site of the General Administration of

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Sport of China that showed both He and Yang were too young to compete. He was born Jan. 1, 1994, according to the 2005, 2006 and 2007 registration lists. Yang was born Aug. 26, 1993, according to the 2004, 2005 and 2006 registration lists. In the 2007 registration list, however, her birthday has changed to Aug.

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26, 1992. "It's not just china s religious me. The parents of our athletes are all very indignant," coach Lu Shanzhen said Friday. "They have faced groundless suspicion. Why aren't they believed? Why are their children suspected? Their parents are very angry." Until it directed gymnastics official to look into the age map of changzhou china allegations one last time, the IOC had said it checked the girls' passports and china tibetan conflict deemed them valid. The FIG has said repeatedly that a passport is "accepted proof of a gymnast's eligibility." But the controversy never quite went away, with new reports of age discrepancies surfacing every few days. Neither the FIG rubber slippers made in china nor IOC has said what qualcomm china prompted the IOC to ask the federation to investigate, especially since competition was already over, but both said it wanted the matter resolved quickly. --- Associated Press Olympics Columnist kpm china marks John Leicester and AP writer Christopher Bodeen contributed to this report. Copyright 2008 by STATS LLC and Associated Press. Any commercial use or distribution without the express written consent of STATS LLC and Associated Press is strictly prohibited. Rating: Print this Email this Add Widget RSS: News Photos Video More Gymnastics Artistic News Olympic gymnasts to be honored China: Faulty paperwork caused confusion Why dragonware china tea lithophane restrict ages anyway? FIG to investigate Dream fulfilled, Artemev comes home See all news >> Exclusive Gymnastics Video Johnny R: 'Don't throw Alicia under the bus' Bob Costas interviews Shawn and Nastia Nastia Liukin's gold medal routines Shawn Johnson's silver medal routines Stromotion: Liukin and He on uneven bars Ring the Bela: Episode 1 LiveReplayHighlights Olympics On TV FULL COVERAGE: NBC Universal will show 3,600 hours of the Beijing Olympic Games, the most ambitious single media project in history. complete tv listings Olympics On TV Plus get bonus local coverage from Olympic zone. Inside this Sport Gymnastics The Beijing chart of religions in china competition will feature a new twist: a revamped scoring system. Learn about it Inside This Sport. Basics Scoring System Overview New Code Q&A Qualification Team Final Inside this Sport >> Images telematics china of the Games << >> 1 of 10 Slideshows See all photo galleries >> Gymnastics Features 'Don't throw Alicia under the bus!' Johnny R. breaks it down for us and explains why it WASN'T HER FAULT! Inside look: Men's all-around final Men's Team Final In her food map of china own words: Shawn Johnson Artemev's Olympics Gymnasts flipping for YouTube videos Upstaging Dad More features >> The Best of MSN Go behind the scenes with Team USA’s LeBron James Celebrity Buzz: The latest photos, antique china videos and hot gossip Beyond Beijing: Check out China’s top sights in photos Main News & Features Results & Sched. Medals Videos Photos Blogs Athletes Inside This Sport Day by Day Recap ALL SPORTS Archery Badminton Baseball Basketball Beach Volleyball Boxing Canoe/Kayak Cycling Diving Equestrian Fencing Field Hockey Gymnastics Handball Judo Modern Pent. Rhythmic Gym. Rowing Sailing Shooting Soccer Softball Swimming Sync. Swimming Table Tennis Taekwondo Tennis Track & Field Trampoline Triathlon Volleyball Water Polo Weightlifting Wrestling Home Olympic Spirit Olympic Culture Get LocalUpdate Localization Preferences Privacy Policy Terms of Use Plug-ins Needed RSS Widgets Site Map ©2008 NBC Universal. All rights reserved. Any use, reproduction, modification, distribution, display or performance of this material without NBC Universal's prior written consent is prohibited. MSN Privacy Legal ©2008 Microsoft



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NBCOlympics.com - China: Faulty paperwork caused confusion To view nbcolympics.com fully make sure you have Macromedia Flash Player version 7 or higher. Click here to download. MSN home | Hotmail MSN Home Hi, @DISPLAYNAME My Profile - Logout Register | Login To view nbcolympics.com fully make sure you have Macromedia Flash Player version 7 or higher. Click here to download. Home TV & Online Listings Results & Sched. News Center Video Photos Medals Sports TOP SPORTS Basketball Beach Volleyball Gymnastics Swimming Track & Field ALL SPORTS Archery Badminton Baseball Basketball Beach Volleyball Boxing Canoe/Kayak Cycling Diving Equestrian Fencing Field Hockey Gymnastics Handball Judo Modern Pent. Rhythmic Gym. Rowing Sailing Shooting Soccer Softball Swimming Sync. Swimming Table Tennis Taekwondo Tennis Track & Field Trampoline Triathlon Volleyball Water Polo Weightlifting Wrestling Countries Team USA Athletes Local Coverage Mobile Games En Español SkipNavigation Gymnastics > News & Features China: Faulty paperwork caused confusion Posted Saturday, August 23, 2008 11:48 AM ET Associated Press The Chinese gymnastics team poses for a picture old china with their medals before a news conference sexual education in china at the Samsung Pavilion at the 2008 Beijing Olympics. BEIJING (AP) - China's deputy sports minister has attributed the confusion about the age of one of its gold medalist gymnasts to a paperwork mistake during a team transfer. At last year's China's Cities Games, Chinese officials decided to move He Kexin, who won two gold medals during the Beijing Games, from a local team to the national team. China's deputy sports minister Cui Dalin said Sunday that it was during this transfer that a "misunderstanding appeared" about her age. "Last year at the all-city competition, He Kexin moved from one team to another and during the process of registering during the move, there appeared this age discrepancy," Cui said during a news conference. "So it was the appearance of a mistake in the process of transferring teams that the misunderstanding appeared. However, I can right here accurately say that the ages of the members of our gymnastics delegation entirely conform to the requirements for participation in the Beijing Olympic Games." It was at last year's China's Cities Games that the Chinese government's news agency, Xinhua, identified He as one of "10 big new stars" who made a splash at the event and gave her age as 13 in a Nov. 3, 2007 report. If the age reported by Xinhua was correct, that would have meant china images He was too young to be on the Chinese team that languages of china beat the United States to clinch China's first women's team Olympic gold in east china school district michigan gymnastics. Cui's explanation comes as officials from the International Gymnastics Federation pored over documents in hopes of putting to rest, once and for all, persistent questions about the ages of all but one member of the six-person team. Chinese gymnastics officials handed over passports, ID cards and family residence permits after the FIG - at the request of the International Olympic Committee - asked for additional documentation on He, Yang Yilin, Jiang Yuyuan, DENG Linlin and Li Shanshan. Gymnasts must turn 16 during the Olympic year to be eligible. Some media reports and online documents have suggested they could be as young as 14. "All information is in Chinese bluetooth headset china and the (federation) is making as thorough analysis as possible of the papers," the FIG said in a statement Saturday. "This process may take some time, but in due course, the FIG will make a full report of portugal jesuits in china our findings to the International Olympic Committee." Videos Gymnastics Stromotion: Nastia Liukin and He Kexin on bars NBC's Stromotion compares Nastia Liukin and He Kexin's uneven bar routines during event finals. Gymnastics: Women's team final, China uneven bars Gymnastics: Women's team final key moments Women's team final: NBC full replay Photos Underage? A look at the controversial gymnasts of the Chinese women's team.  Early training Inside Look: Event finals Day 2 Yang Yilin - Beijing 2008 Women's Team Finals: The day in pictures Related Stories Abrahamson FIG to investigate China's He Kexin wins tiebreaker for bars gold There is no deadline for the investigation, and the Chinese have insisted the entire team is old enough to compete. "The international federation has required the delivery of birth certificates and all the documents like family books, entries in schools and things like that," IOC president Jacques Rogge said Sunday. "They

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have received the documents, and at first sight it seems to be OK." Cui said the Chinese Gymnastics Federation had "actively cooperated" with the FIG and that checks had confirmed "the ages of the members of our gymnastics delegation entirely conform to the requirements for participation in the Beijing Olympic Games. " If evidence of cheating is found, four of China's six medals could be affected. In addition to the team gold, He won gold on uneven bars and Yang got bronze medals on uneven bars and the all-around. He was a last-minute no-show at a concert Saturday night with other Chinese gold medalists, and no explanation was given. Cheng Fei, the only team member whose age hasn't been questioned, was there, but did not do interviews. Earlier this month, the AP found registration lists previously posted on the Web site china replacement of the General Administration of Sport of China that showed both He and Yang were too young to compete. He was born Jan. 1, 1994, according to the 2005, 2006 and 2007 registration lists. Yang was born Aug. 26, 1993, according to the 2004, 2005 ancient calligraphy china and 2006 registration lists. In the 2007 registration list, however, her birthday has changed to Aug. 26, 1992. "It's not just me. The parents of our athletes are all very indignant," coach Lu Shanzhen said Friday. "They have faced groundless suspicion. Why aren't they believed? Why are their children suspected? Their parents are very angry." Until it directed gymnastics official to look into the age allegations one last time, the IOC had said it checked the girls' passports and deemed them valid. The FIG has said repeatedly that a passport is "accepted proof of a gymnast's eligibility." But the controversy never quite went away, with new reports of age insultek china discrepancies surfacing every few days. Neither the FIG nor IOC has said what prompted the IOC to ask the federation to investigate, especially since competition was already over, but both said it wanted the matter resolved quickly. --- Associated Press Olympics Columnist John Leicester and food safety in china AP writer Christopher Bodeen contributed to this report. Copyright china s xiaoping 2008 by STATS LLC and Associated Press. Any commercial use or distribution china map quiz without the express written consent of STATS LLC and Associated Press is strictly prohibited. Rating: Print this Email this Add Widget RSS: News Photos Video More Gymnastics Artistic News Olympic gymnasts to be honored China: Faulty paperwork caused confusion Why restrict ages anyway? FIG to investigate Dream fulfilled, Artemev comes home See all news >> Exclusive Gymnastics Video Johnny R: 'Don't throw Alicia under the courtship in china bus' Bob Costas interviews Shawn and Nastia Nastia Liukin's gold medal routines Shawn Johnson's silver trusty construction china medal routines Stromotion: Liukin and He on uneven bars Ring the Bela: Episode 1 LiveReplayHighlights Olympics On TV FULL COVERAGE: NBC Universal will show 3,600 hours of the Beijing Olympic Games, the most ambitious single media project in history. complete tv listings Olympics On TV Plus get bonus local coverage from Olympic zone. Inside this Sport Gymnastics The Beijing competition will feature a new twist: a revamped scoring system. Learn about it Inside floyd china This Sport. Basics Scoring System Overview New Code Q&A Qualification Team Final Inside this Sport >> Images of the Games << >> 1 air china airlines of 10 Slideshows See all photo galleries >> Gymnastics Features 'Don't throw borders around china Alicia under the bus!' Johnny R. breaks it down for us and explains why it WASN'T HER FAULT! Inside look: Men's all-around final Men's Team Final In her own words: Shawn Johnson Artemev's Olympics Gymnasts flipping for YouTube videos Upstaging Dad More features >> The Best of MSN Go behind the scenes with Team USA’s LeBron James Celebrity Buzz: The latest photos, videos and hot gossip Beyond Beijing: Check out China’s top sights in photos Main News & Features Results & Sched. Medals Videos Photos Blogs Athletes Inside This Sport Day by Day Recap ALL SPORTS Archery Badminton Baseball Basketball Beach Volleyball Boxing Canoe/Kayak Cycling Diving Equestrian Fencing Field Hockey Gymnastics Handball Judo Modern Pent. Rhythmic Gym. Rowing Sailing Shooting Soccer Softball Swimming Sync. Swimming Table Tennis Taekwondo Tennis Track & Field Trampoline Triathlon Volleyball Water Polo Weightlifting Wrestling Home Olympic Spirit Olympic Culture Get LocalUpdate Localization Preferences Privacy Policy Terms of Use Plug-ins Needed RSS Widgets Site Map ©2008 NBC Universal. All rights reserved. Any use, reproduction, modification, distribution, display or performance of this material without NBC Universal's prior written consent is prohibited. MSN Privacy Legal ©2008 Microsoft