Off the wire
Xinhua China news advisory -- Feb. 26  • Russian duo Makarova/Vesnina crowned at 2017 Dubai Duty Free Tennis Championships  • Youth training Bayern's weakness, says Hoeness  • Feature: Fall in love with ski for lifetime  • Svitolina into women's tennis top 10 with Dubai Open triumph  • Xinhua world news summary at 0030 GMT, Feb. 26  • Roundup: 3 killed, 9 injured in 2 separate fire incidents in Bangladesh capital  • Bayern crush Hamburg, Leipzig edge Cologne in German Bundesliga  • Malaysian airport declared "safe zone" after VX nerve agent found in dead DPRK man  • Research looks into neural circuitry behind human visual experiences  
You are here:   Home

Winter Asiad lays bare uneven development in continental winter sports

Xinhua, February 26, 2017 Adjust font size:

The Asian Winter Games in Sapporo didn't welcome a new medal winner country until the penultimate day of the week-long event. Two decades after it was launched in Sapporo, the Asian version of the Winter Olympics remains dominated by an elite club of a few countries.

The Democratic People's Republic of Korea won its first medal in Sapporo on Saturday to become the only fifth country on the medal table as Ryom Tae Ok and Kim Ju Sik finished third in the figure skating pairs event.

Ahead of DPR Korea are Japan, South Korea, China and Kazakhstan - the typical "Big Four", as always.

The list is short - and embarrassing, to the Olympic Council of Asia (OCA), considering 30 Asian delegations are competing for medals.

As the largest ever Games in number of participating delegations, the Sapporo Asiad also welcomed Australia and New Zealand to compete as guests, not for medals.

Only 10 countries have touched medal in eight versions of the Games. As for gold, the number is down to eight which includes three one-timers.

DPR Korea's first and only gold came from the first Games in 1986 while Lebanon had one in 2003.

Uzbekistan claimed its sole Asiad gold in 1999 despite having reached the medal table four times.

With Asia set to host two straight Winter Olympics - PyeongChang in 2018 and Beijing in 2022, plus the 2020 Summer Games in Tokyo, the OCA is hoping the continent is living up to the billing as a hub of the Olympic Games.

OCA President Sheikh Ahmad Al Fahad Al Sabah said he believed the Sapporo Games would open "a period of unprecedented growth" in winter sports throughout the continent.

The official expects China to play a bigger role in the popularization of winter sports.

"China is expected to introduce 300 million people to winter sports during this period, so the next few years are pivotal in establishing a vast, new winter sports scene outside of the traditional markets of North America and Europe," he said. Enditem