The Power of the X Chromosome: Chi Cheng

If 1968 was the year that put Taiwan back on the sporting map, Chi Cheng was the face that place it there. In that Olympian year, she was one of the world’s three top hurdles by earning bronze in the women’s 80-meter hurdles during the track-and-field competition in the Mexican metropolis –staged at 7,349 feet above sea level. The event was dominated by Eastern Europe and the States.

After securing her country’s second Olympian medal and becoming the first Asian woman in history to accomplish that feat, she gained a special status in her homeland and her name was immortalized on national stamps by the island’s rule. Indeed, it was an important success for the small nation that had not won a medal since 1960. Women’s sport was relatively rare among Asian states during this period (with the exception of Japan).

Over a sporting career that spanned more than seven years, she won a number of international medals inside and outside Taiwan and her “biggest fans” were boys and girls in those wonderful years. From the beginning, she easily broken the national records.

Due to her perseverance,discipline,talent,and patriotism, this California-based sprinter received high praises from internationasl experts and Olympian journalists. By 1971,they crowned Chi Cheng as the “Best Athlete of the world” (surpassing Edson do Nascimento, the top-class footballer from Brazil).

Unequivocally, Chi Cheng was one of the two most popular women on the island, alongside former First Lady Soong May-ling (or Madame Chiang-Kai-shek), an American-oriented woman who had won important financial aid to her country during the early decades of the Cold War.

In Asia, Africa, Latin America, only 15 countries have had world record holders— among them China, Cuba, Brazil, Ethiopia, Haiti, Kenya, Iran, Mexico, Panama, South Africa, South Korea, Tanzania, Uganda, and Taiwan. On July 12, 1970, Chi Cheng, a born-hurdler, confirmed her international stature by breaking the women’s 200-meter record in the Federal Republic of Germany, with a time of 22.44 seconds, becoming the first sprinter from Asia to do so (up to now) and reviving flashes of Taiwanese’s brilliant past.

Throughouther his athletic career, this track star produced six national/continental records in different events at home and abroad. Incredibly, she set four international records in the space of 17 days -No other sportswoman from that continent had ever established 4 regional marks in less than three weeks. On July 12, 1970, she enhanced her growing fame when she had a new Asian record of 12.93 seconds in the women’s 100m hurdles, becoming one of the Planet’s top hurdlers at that year. In the same day, she generated a new mark in the 200 meter-dash. Less than a week after, by Jul. 18, Chi Cheng followed that with other historic record in the 100 meter-dash with a time of 11.22 seconds (which still unbroken). Nearly two weeks after, by the end of July, she caused a plash by establishing another record in the 400m race with a mark of 52.56 seconds. Besides all that, the world record holder also had regional marks in the long jump and 80m hurdles. On the other side, she also was part of the country’s 4×100-meter team.

By the end of 1972, the nation’s second greatest athlete was the highest hope for a medal in the Games of the 20th Olympiad in Munich ( Federal Republic of Germany). Chi Cheng had been named as one of the members of the country’s Olympic national team. Soon afterwards, she, however, did not take part in West Germany. Around this time, the world record holder announced her retirement from sports after some injuries. For a brief time afterward, by 1975, in the International Year of the Woman, Chi Cheng was widely regarded as one of the world’s most prominent sportswomen, alongside Martina Navratilova, Liudmila Tourischeva, Shane Gould and other world-class champs.

Dark Horses

After Chi Cheng’s Olympian experience on the Latin American continent, the Asian republic has produced high-profile Hollywood figures such as Ang Lee and Tsai Ming-liang, or Nobel Prizes as Lee Yuan-tseh and Daniel C. Tsui, but it can not produce world titles and global records in spite of being one of the most powerful economies on Earth and one of the Continent’s major liberal democracies.

Gone are the days when the country’s athletes established world records. Fortunately, however, there is an important athletic potential that should receive major attention -for example: The national youth side gave Taiwan a shock win over the USSR (now Russia) at the 1989 Women’s Volleyball Junior World Cup in Lima, on Peru’s Pacific coast).

Country Background. Education: A Key To Taiwan

The entire Asian country is little bigger than Maryland (U.S.). It is located between East and South China seas. Its capital is Taipei, one of the most modern and spectacular cities in the continent. Twenty-five million people live on the island.

Owing to its status as an unrecognized country by United Nations since the early 1970s, the Asian republic has had many hurdles as a member of the global community. On the international stage, it is only recognized by 23 states from Latin America, sub-Saharan Africa, and South Pacific. Traditionally, the island has a rocky relationship with the Chinese mainland.

Under an ambicious and multi-billion educational project backed by its Constitution (“Expenditures of educational programs, scientific studies and cultural services shall not be, in respect of the Central Government, less than 15 percent of the national budget…”), this East Asian country paved the way for a prosperous society. Following over two decades of troubles, the project began to pay off as Taiwan to become one of the most influential and dynamic economies in Far East after having been one of Asia’s poverty-ridden countries throughout the 1950s.

Unequivocally, the building of its education system has been one of Taiwan’s biggest success stories. In fact, its educational program and economic model has inspired most of the republics of the Third World and other regions on Earth, from Botswana and Mauritius to Chile and Thailand.

Since the year 2000, it is a democracy (one of the world’s newest democracies) following a period of authoritarian regimes. On the other side, women’s rights on Taiwan are among the most advanced in the West Pacific.

Taiwan At The 1960 Italy Summer Games

For the 1960 Games, the national contingent arrived in Rome to begin its participation, but the delegation was the center of controversy when was forced to compete under the banner of Formosa (a name designed by Portugal’s explorers in 1544) instead of the “Republic of China”. Since then, this changed of name was subjected to worldwide criticism. During the Parade of Nations of the Games of the XVII Olympiad, the country’s Olympic Committee also protested.

After a good performance in the early 1960s, the national delegation made a trip to Japan to take part in the 1964 Games. On that occasion, its ill-equipped team did not win medals. From 1964 through 1968, it participated under the banner of Taiwan. Then, by 1972, the anti-Marxist state appeared as the Republic of China (ROC). Since 1984, nonetheless, it competes with the name of Chinese Taipei after an agreementing between Beijing, the island and the International Olympic Committee (IOC), marking the end of Taiwan’s isolation in the global sports arena.

Upon snaring a bronze in the world’s greatest sporting event in the United Mexican States four years earlier, the island’s sporting officials sent a 22-person delegation to Munich’72, participating in ten disciplines: aquatics (3 entries), archery (1), athletics (8), boxing (1), cycling (1), judo (4), sailing (1), shooting (1), weightlifting (1), and wrestling (1). Expectations weren’t high for the nation’s Olympian squad after Chi Cheng’s retirement.

Swimmer Hu Tung-hsiung was one of the 39 entries, among them Mark Spitz of the States, from 27 countries -from Singapore and Colombia to the Philippines and East Germany/German Democratic Republic (GDR)-who competed in the 200m butterfly. Before taking part in the multi-sport event, most of Taiwan’s sportsmen and women had attended the 1970 Continental Games in Southeast Asian nation of Thailand, where was one of the 12 top contingents.

Yang Chuan-Kwang: Breaking Stereotypes In The 20th Century

By the beginning of the 1960s, Taiwan produced a great champion in a time when the island –shapped like a tobacco leaf-was just one of the poverty-stricken countries on the Planet (with per capita GDP equal to most of Africa’s black republics) and also among Asia’s most unstable nations. His name: Yang Chuan-kwang, who represented most Taiwanese’s hopes for an Olympic medal in those years.

By 1963, this sportsman was focus of the attention of the world press: he was one of the first individuals from Asia to establish a world record with 8,089 points in the men’s decathlon, breaking the stereotypes of what makes a great decathlete.

Throughout most of his athletic career, Yang Chuan-kwang set several international records on the island and foreign soil, but he reached his peak as Chinese-Taipei’s decathlon champion when, on September 6, 1960, he won the nation’s first Olympian medal (and first medal in track) upon finishing second in the world’s greatest sporting event on Italian soil, after an epic showdown with America’s Rafer Johnson (who won the James Sullivan Memorial Trophy that year). That day, the audience had all eyes on Taiwanese Yang Chuan-kwang. In fact, his popularity throughout the 1960s added to Taiwan’s international fame. On the other hand, he was one of UCLA’s top athletes.

Historically, Yang Chuan-kwang was considered by several experts and sportswriters to be the island’s greatest native-born athlete. Furthermore, the islander was one of the first Aboriginal athletes to win an individual Olympic medal, along with Jim Thorpe of America. Curiously enough, the nation’s greatest sportsman was member of the Ami Indigenous tribe, one of Taiwan’s ten major tribes, well-known for its matrilineal society and their unique pottery.

Montreal 1976 Olympics: Stolen Dreams

The island was scheduled to participate in the quadrennial Games at Montreal (Quebec, Canada) in the mid-1970s. From the beginning, it had expressed its interest in competing in North America after being expelled from the 1974 Continental Games in Iran, but by July 1976, the Asian republic had difficulties to attend the Montreal Olympics when Canada’s Premier Pierre Trudeau -Beijing’s Cold War ally-refused to issue visas to the national delegation under the name of “Republic of China”.

Overnight, inexplicably, the Canadian rule defended its position in the face of criticism from Washington’s administration and Taiwan’s Latin American diplomatic partners. Owing to this, on July 17, 1976, the island’s uncontested leader, Chiang Ching-kuo, cancelled the Olympic participation rather than compete with the banner of Taiwan; just when some Taiwanese representatives had already arrived in North America.

Notable athletes lost the opportunity to compete in the multi-sport event in Quebec, such as regional champs: Tan Wwang (1500m), Tai Shih-jan (110m hurdles), Chen Chin-long (triple jump), Chen Ping-huan (javelin throw), Lee Chiu-hsia (800m, 1500, and 3000m), Lin Yet-hsing (100m hurdles and long jump), and Chen Fu-mei (400m hurdles).

Track and field Tai Shih-jan was one of the finest members of the country’s national squad in the Second Athetics Asian Championships, by June 1975, when he was two-time gold medalist by defeating national-class hurdlers from Malaysia, Japan, and Kuwait in the finals.

Throughout the 1970s, Tai Shih-jan was the top Taiwanese in the men’s 110m and 400m hurdles. Meanwhile, Lee Chiu-hsia was the Tournament’s most outstanding female athlete in Korea upon capturing three Asian golds following a hard battle against Masae Namba of Japan in the women’s 800m. Trying to qualify for the 1976 Montreal Games, Taiwan’s would-be star finished the event in 2 minutes and 8 seconds. Upon her wins as one of the greatest middle-distance runners from Asia in 1975, her fame spread beyond the nation. At the time, from 1974 through 1978, she was bitterly disappointing when the Asian Olympic Committee refused to allow athletes from Taiwan to attend the Asian Games in Iran and Thailand.

Lee Chiu-hsia had a great potential of becoming a world champ in athletics. Nevertheless, toward the end of the 1970s, her career was hit again when her dream of competing at the 1980 Moscow Summer Olympic Games did not come about. Why? The nation’s sports administrators refused to take part in the multi-sport event with the name of Chinese-Taipei.

A Tortuos Path: Taiwan Faced An International Boycott

In practice, Taiwan is viewed as a “hostile province” by Beijing since 1949 when the government of the Generalissimo Chiang Kai-shek established the island as the seat of the Republic of China. Under China’s pression, Taiwan’s international status as an Olympian nation was uncertain at the turn of the 1970s. The Asian republic was banned from international sports competitions around the globe, becoming an isolated nation on the sporting map, alongside Rhodesia’s racist regime (present-day Zimbabwe), South Africa’s white minority rule, and the Vietnamese-occupied Cambodia.

At the beginning of the 1970s, the Chinese administration on Taiwan was ousted from the world community of nations when it was replaced by the People’s Republic of China as a member of the United Nations. Throughout the 1970s, over 60 states severed diplomatic ties to Taipei’s rule, including Japan (on September 29, 1971), Thailand (on July 1, 1975), and Washington (on January 1, 1979). Also, the island was on the Kremlin administration’s black-listed of states where the Soviet athletes could not compete, alongside Pinochet’s Chile, Stroessner’s Paraguay and Park Chung Hee’s South Korea.

Unequivocally, the People’s Republic also banned its competitors to visit Taiwan until the early 1990s when two mainland Chinese basketball squads departed for Taipei to play local teams.

Within a span of two decades, the Taiwanese representatives were not allow to attend the Asian Games (Tehran’ 74, Bangkok ’78, New Delhi’ 82, and Seoul ’86). Although three countries –Indonesia, Malaysia, and Thailand-made common cause with Taipei, by September 1973, the island was excluded from the Olympic Council of Asia (OCA). It sent its top Olympic leaders to the OCA to argue their case, but they failed. Twenty years earlier, by the beginning of the 1950s, South Africa’s apartheid and Taiwan were considered “pariahs” by the International Table Tennis Federation.

By 1974, in Mexico City, the FIVB -the world volleyball’s governing body- was one of the major sporting organizations to break ties to Taipei after China’s admission. Inexplicably, the island was expelled by a vote of 54 in favor, 18 against, and 3 abstentions. In spite of these hurdles, the country’s sporting officials sent many athletic contingents to Taiwan’s diplomatic partners throughout the world. Within these years, for example, a swimming team -integrated by seven locals and five American-trained athletes- departed for Latin America. During their tour, they astonishingly gained a Buenos Aires meet, upon capturing twenty-two events. A couple of years earlier, the islanders came in third place at an Uruguay meet by bagging nine medals -behind America (40 trophies) and Argentina (15).

In anti-Communist times, the Taiwanese capital hosted the William Jones Basketball Cup; over 50 basketball teams, including Britain, Sweden and Bolivia, were offered an all-expense paid trip o Taipei to attend the international meet. Chinese-Taipei was also one of the first states in Asia to maintain close ties with the Spanish-speaking world. At the time, for example, two national coaches headed for La Paz to train the Bolivian national team for the 1977 Bolivarian Games.

Overcoming Obstacles

In an attempt to isolate the island, the Communist China had boycotted the Games in the space of three decades to protest Taiwan’s Olympic participation. But during Los Angeles 1984 Olympics, it -after an absence of 12 years- and the People’s Republic marched for the first time in the Parade of Nations. Thereafter, Taiwan was a pariah no longer.

By 1984, the Chinese mainland made its Olympian debut and the island its ninth appearance after competing at Los Angeles’32, Berlin ’36 – where the Taiwanese anthem was honored as the world’s best piece- London ’48, Melbourne ’56, Rome’60 (debut with the name Formosa), Tokyo ’64, Mexico ’68, and Munich’72.

In California, its international return this year could not have been better: Surprisingly, Taiwan won its first medal since 1984 as it was medalist in the weightlifting competition with Tsai Wen-yee. Unequivocally, he was the key figure behind Taiwan’s return.

As well as snaring a medal in the weightlifting event, the nation’s baseball got the bronze in the Demonstration Tournment. On this occasion, Kuo Tai Yuan became one of the top baseball players in Southern California.

To prepare for the 1984 Olympiad, Chinese Taipei’s baseball entered many international meets. A year earlier, they finished third at the 1983 Intercontinental Cup,which was held in Belgium, after having participated in the 28th Seoul World Tournament. Around this time, the baseball team departed for the Caribbean to attend a Cuba meet. On the other hand, this baseball-mad nation earned the Junior 1983 Global title – the nucleus of the country’s baseball squad at the 1992 Spain Olympics.

During the Los Angeles XXIII Games, Taiwan’s Olympic team was represented by 59 élite competitors (51 sportsmen and 8 women). On that occasion, there were islanders in more than a dozen disciplines: archery (6 entries), athletics (10), baseball (20), boxing (2), cycling (2), fencing (2), judo (5), modern pentathlon (1), sailing (2), shooting (3), swimming (5), tennis (1), weightlifting (4), and wrestling (2). Likewise, the national delegation was accompanied by thirty sports officials.

Following Taiwan’s participation at Los Angeles’84, the Asian athletes began its return to global sporting events, attending the Men’s Volleyball World Cup in Paris (France), between September and October 1986, where the national side placed 15th by defeating heavily favored Venezuela (runners-up at the South American Cup in Caracas) with a score of 15-5, 12-15, 15-10, and 15-3. Subsequently, the women’s basketball team headed for Moscow – the capital of the Soviet Empire– to attend the Global competition despite a troubled history between the island and the Kremlin. Soon afterwards, the hockey national squad was one of the competitors in the World Cup in Colombia. Likewise, for the first time a Taiwanese was medalist in the Junior IAAF Global Athletics Tournament in Canada when the up-and-coming Hui-Fang Nai got the bronze in the men’s long jump with a mark of 7,77m.

Summer Olympics in South Korea

At the 1988 Seoul Games, many Asian nations won individual medals (for example: Mongolia, Philippines, Thailand, and the Islamic republic of Iran), but not Taiwan-one of the most disappointing results in its history. Its once flourishing athletic system had been in decline. Fortunately, however, its fighters, Chin Yu-fang and Chen Jiun-feng, obtained medals, gold and bronze, in the Taekwondo competition, which was introduced as a demonstration sport in the 1988 Olympiad.

In Korea, the baseball squad narrowly missed the bronze when they were one of the four best teams, among eight competitors in the demonstration event. By 1984, they got the bronze in the under-20 World Cup on Canadian soil and climbed even higher at the Senior Global Championship two years later, capturing the silver medal.

On September 25, 1986, the Taiwanese Olympic Committee was readmitted to the Olympic Council of Asia (OCA), after withdrawing 13 years earlier. Four years on, the sports leaders announced that the rule will allow their athletes to compete in mainland China with the name of “Chinese Taipei”. Shortly afterwards, on September 17, 1990, a 200-member contingent departed for the People’s Republic for the nation’s first attendance of the Asian Games since 1970. Then, there were 186 islanders at the First East Asian Games at Shangai. By 2001, Chinese Taipei’s 106 élite athletes departed for Beijing to attend the World University Games.

Chinese Taipei’s Baseball At The 1992 Barcelona Olympics

By 1992, the international governing organization for baseball ruled that professional players were eligible to participate in the Summer Games on Barcelonese soil. This decision favored to many countries with professional athletes abroad, among them Taiwan. In team sports, for the first time the nation won an official berth in the Olympiad when the baseball national squad won the right to represent Asia in the Barcelona Games in the Continental Olympic Qualification Tournament.

Throughout Taiwan’s national passion, baseball –which was introduced by America- Chinese Taipei had one of its most memorable Olympics when it advanced beyond the first round and gained silver medal in the First Baseball Tournament in the 1992 Games, remembering the golden years of Taiwan’s baseball (1970s).

In Spain, they lose to Cuba (a long-standing competitor in the baseball world) in the gold-medal game-Taiwan’s first medal during Post Cold War (and team sports). Since then,the country’s baseball players majority had played in top clubs in the States. Liao Ming-hsiung was one of the most gifted players of the silver-medal-winning baseball team.

Prior to participating on Spaniard soil, this baseball-mad nation won several trophies, special awards, and medals in the Western Hemisphere, from the United States and Cuba to Canada: the Little League World Series twice in 1990 and 1991 after being runner-up in 1989 and winning the international title for the third time in a row (1986, 1987 and 1988). Aside from that, by the beginning of the 1990s, the islanders obtained a pairs of medals in the Intercontinental championship and the Junior World Cup. Thus, the Taiwanese contingent was regarded as one of the top contenders on Barcelonese soil.

Baseball is at the top of Taiwan’s list of favorite sports, followed by taekwondo. There are more than 720 baseball stadiums on the island. In fact, one of the most notable moments of the country’s baseball occurred in the early 1970s when the Asian republic became the second country to win back-to-back the Little League World Series.

Taiwan: Democracy & Sports

In spite of having one of the top Olympic centers in Far East -Tsoying National Sports Training Center and the Northern National Sports training Center — there was a lack of athletic progress in the Centennial Games staged in Atlanta, U.S. On that occasion, the nation’s sports administrators sent seventy-four islanders -among Taiwan’s largest delegations in the 100-year-history of the Modern Olympic Games– but their sporting squad only earned a silver when, on July 30, 1996, Cheng Jing, a former sportswoman from the People’s Republic, was second in the women’s table tennis singles, the nation’s first individual medal since 1984.

In the XXVIII Summer Games in Australia in 2000, Taiwan’s sport had a good performance after receiving five individual medals (one silver and four bronze)-just at a time when Taiwan abandoned its 50-year-old anti-Communist style one-party state. On this occasion, about 80% of the nation’s total medal count came from female Olympians.

Chinese-Taipei’s 2000 Olympic delegation was represented by a 74-member team with entries in a dozen disciplines: archery, athletics, badminton, diving, cycling, sailing, softball, swimming, table tennis, taekwomdo, tennis, and weightlifting. On this occasion, the Asian republic did not take part at the Olympic Baseball Championship for the first time.

Taiwan: A Sleeping Giant in the World of Weightlifting

In Sydney 2000, the Taiwanese delegation won two weightlifting medals in the women’s Olympic tournament. On September 18, once more a sportswoman put the national flag on the Olympic stage as Li Feng-ying was runner-up in the women’s 53-kilogram category after beating Sei Indrayi of Indonesia. The next day, on September 19, the world-class lifter dominated the front-page headlines in Taipei. In the meantime, her fellow countrywoman Yi Hang-kuo earned a bronze in the 75-kilogram category. A few years ago, the women’s national squad made history in the 68th World Weightlifting Cup in Chiangmai, Thailand, when they were second with total of 817 points, behind only China (1,309 points).

The Asian republic took two taekwondo bronze medals in Oceania: Chih-Hsiung Huang, placed third in the men’s 58-kilogram category behind Greece’s Michail Mouroutsis and Gabriel Esparza of Spain (silver), meanwhile Shu Ju-chi was medalist in the women’s event. Aside from that, the island’s table tennis star Jing Chen came away with a bronze in the women’s singles, behind Nan Wang and Ju Li, both players from the People’s Republic. Chen had been medalist foru years ago.

Chun Mo-yen: A New Star In The Taiwanese Sky

At the Games of the 28th Olympiad in Athens, the 2004 national delegation picked up a total of six medals in two disciplines-Taiwan’s best performance in the 108-year-history of the Modern Olympics. On this occasion, sportswomen won two medals.

The island’s sports czars sent a 87-person contingent to Greece and competing in the following disciplines: archery, athletics, badminton, baseball, cycling, judo, rowing, shooting, softball, swimming, table tennis, taekwondo, tennis, and weightlifting.

Chinese-Taipei’ long dream of winning an Olympian title was realized at the 2004 Athens Olympics by gaining a pairs of individual golds with Chun Mo-yen (men’s flyweight) and Chen Shih-hsian (women’s flyweight), both titles were won in taekwondo competition. In fact, an important milestone in the development of Taiwanese sport. Through two major medals, they also contributed to give the island’s athletes more respect on the Planet. Historically, Taiwan is a powerhouse in taekwondo on Earth, having amassed 73 medals (14 gold, 23 silver, 36 bronze) during the World competitions -behind only South Korea and Spain.

Of the country’s eighty-seven elite competitors at Athens 2004, Chun Mo-yen was one of the favorites to capture a gold after capturing a gold in the 2003 Taekwondo World Cup. It was one of the most memorable moments of his life when the gold medal was placed around his neck, becoming the first male from Taiwan to win that honor. Immediately, there were celebrations on the island. Chun Mo-yen was a respect figure in the group of talented fighters that flourished in the first years of the 21st century. In fact, he is already national hero in his home nation.

The nation’s best previous finish in the Games were silvers at Sydney 2000 (women’s weightlifting), Atlanta 1996 (women’s table tennis) and Barcelona 1992 (men’s baseball).

Like in Azerbaijan (shooter Zemfira Meftakhetdinova), Colombia (weightlifter Maria Isabel Urrutia), Costa Rica (swimmer Claudia Poll) and the former Soviet republic of Estonia (cyclist Erika Salumae), a womam (Chen Shih-hsian) had the distinction of being the first individual from Taiwan to earn the Olympic title, paving the way for new titles.

In 2004, the baseball national side came in 5th in the Olympic Championship, behind Cuba (gold), Australia (silver), Japan (bronze),Canada (fourth) and ahead of Holland (sixth), Greece (seventh) and Italy (last) -having won the right to do so by capturing a berth in the Asian Tournament. The team was represented by star pro players, who had placed second at the 2002 Busan Asian Games after losing to Japan in the finals (4-3). A year ago, the national side obtained a bronze at the 34th Baseball World Cup. In Far East, this land is producing more talent players than any other nation after South Korea. Chinese-Taipei’s professional pitcher Wang Chien-Ming, who played for the New York Yankees, was one of the best players in the early 2000s.

London 2012 Olympics

During Beijing’s bid to host the 2008 Olympics, Taipei’s rule supported the Olympian project with sports exchanges with the Chinese mainland. By 2008, Chinese-Taipei’s sporting administrators sent élite competitors to Beijing. On that occasion there were national delegations in archery, athletics, badminton, baseball, cycling, judo, rowing, sailing, shooting, softball, swimming, table tennis, taekwondo, tennis, and weightlifting.

Its women’s national side was one of the eight competitors in the Softball Olympic Competition at Fengtai Sports Center, site of the Beijing Olympic softball events. The Asian Republic also gained an Olympian berth in the Baseball Tournament, alongside America, Canada, Cuba, Japan, Netherlands, South Korea (winner),and the host nation. In team sports, however, the women’s basketball team of Chinese-Taipei failed to qualify for the Beijing Games in the Continental Olympic Qualification Tournament.

Chinese-Taipei’s 2008 Olympian squad earned only four bronzes: Chen Wei-ling and Lu Ying-chi (women’s weightlifting), and Chun Mu-yen and Sun Yu-hi (men’s taekwondo). Chun Mu-yen became one of the first national competitors to bag medals in two Olympics. On the other hand, Lai Sheng-jung was named as the flag bearer of the national contingent at the Opening Ceremony.

Two years earlier, the Asian republic had finished 10th in the medal count at the Continental Games in staged Doha (Qatar), ahead of Malaysia, Singapore, Saudi Arabia, Bahrain, and Hong Kong.

Taiwan’s 2012 Olympian squad at London will be represent by elite athletes in more than a dozen disciplines: aquatics, archery, badminton, cycling, fencing, gymnastics, judo, martial arts, rowing, sailing, shooting, table tennis, tennis, track-and-field, weightlifting, and wrestling. By contrast, Chinese-Taipei will not compete in team sports after failing in the Continental pre-Olympics in basketball, field hockey, handball, soccer, and volleyball. Best medal chances are likely to come in disciplines such as archery, badminton, martial arts, and weightlifting.

At last year’s worlds in South Korea -the indisputed capital of taekwondo– Western Europe, the nation won a handful of medals with top-class competitors such as Wei Cheng-yang (taekwondo), Cheng Shao-chieh (badminton),and Huang Shih-hsu (weightlifting). In women’s singles, Taiwan’s would-be star Cheng Shao-chieh lost to China’s badminton player Wang Yihan in the gold-medal match at the BWF World Cup in England in August 2011. In the past months, the athletic delegation also obtained several trophies on home soil and abroad.

The 2012 Olympic delegation also might win medals in judo, shooting and table tennis. On the other side, at the Asian Games in Chinese mainland, a couple of years earlier, the national representatives amassed 67 medals (13 gold, 16 silver, 38 bronze), finishing 7th in the medal count. They were the nucleus of he country’s Olympian squad at the 2012 London Olympics.

In today’s globalised society, Taiwan has not foreign-born athletes on their Olympic delegations, being one of the few industrialized nations without foreign-born athletes on the Olympic stage.