Hundreds of millions of Chinese viewers will be glued to Athens
Olympics on the television over the next 17 days.
The four-yearly Olympic mania has swept through China since 1984
when the country sent its first delegation to the Games in Los
Angeles.
With the Beijing
2008 Olympics in mind, the nation seems to have even more
enthusiasm in the Athens
Games. The connection between Athens and Beijing has actually
become so evident that it can be felt everywhere from the Chinese
Olympic squad and media reports to the preparations for the 2008
Games.
China has sent its biggest Olympic delegation ever -- 407
athletes and 230 coaches and officials -- to Athens, hoping to
relive its glory at the Sydney Games in 2000.
Four years ago the country came third in the medal table behind
the United States and Russia, its best ever Olympic finish.
Li Furong, vice-president of the Chinese delegation, has
disclosed that China has selected younger athletes this time with
an eye towards preparing a competitive team for the Beijing
Olympics.
Even the Chinese public has demonstrated a wide-ranging
interests in the Athens Games, sharply contrasting with their past
preoccupation with the number of gold medals won by the Chinese
Olympians.
"We used to pay attention to only the performance of our Chinese
athletes because it was something that concerned us most," says a
Beijing-based taxi driver Liu Fu.
He explains that for him the Olympic Games was just another
sports event.
"But given that it will be Beijing's turn to hold such a
spectacular event next time, we Beijingers now have more to care
about this year and we have never felt so close to the Olympic
Games," Liu says.
Wang Yan, a student at the University of International Business
and Economics, says the Athens Olympics are an important prelude to
the Beijing Games in 2008.
"The two cities, both cradles of human civilization, have shared
many aspects in their long history and ancient culture," she
says.
"So what we see in the Athens Games may be the same as what will
happen in Beijing and this may be the main reason for our great
passion for this year's event."
For instance, both Athens and Beijing face the problem of how to
ensure that the style and landscape of their Olympic projects
conforms with their traditional architectural styles.
What's more, Wang adds, it is natural for people to compare the
host cities of the Olympics, which may also encourage the Chinese
people to focus more on Athens.
At the same time, Olympic-related organizations in China have
taken advantage of their participation in the Athens Games to
prepare for the 2008 event.
China Central Television (CCTV), the country's flagship media
organization, has sent a team of 160 reporters and technicians to
cover the Athens Games.
It also has more than 400 people working around-the-clock at its
Beijing headquarters to broadcast the event to the nation.
Preparation bid
Renting a total of six satellite lines, CCTV plans to air 1,400
hours of programs covering about 2,200 events -- twice the amount
of coverage of the Sydney Games -- on six channels, including a
24-hour sports channel and two subscription channels.
CCTV has also been entrusted by the International Olympic
Committee for the first time to help offer TV footage of matches in
table tennis, badminton and modern pentathlon for international
transmission.
CCTV Sports Center Director Ma Guoli hopes wide coverage of the
Athens Olympics will help lay solid foundation for its broadcasts
of the 2008 Games.
"We are trying to train more presenters and commentators, using
the Athens Games as part of our preparatory work for the 2008
Games," he says.
"I do hope our team will benefit from its experience in Athens
so that we are able to do a better job of broadcasting the Beijing
2008 Games to the whole world."
Yi Jiandong, an associate professor at Beijing Sport University,
says the Athens Games will be of great significance to organizers
of the Beijing event.
"The organizers of the Beijing Olympiad can learn a lot from the
Athens Games," he told China Daily.
Yi, a leading researcher on Olympic studies in China, notes that
preparations for the Athens Games have proven to be of immense
importance in establishing a strong leadership and drafting a sound
and reasonable plan for the Beijing Games.
Excellent management of the preparations and effective
co-ordination among related departments are both vital to the final
success of the Beijing Games, he says.
In the meantime, preparation of both hardware and software
facilities for the Beijing Games should be given equal
emphasis.
"Compared with Athens, it seems Beijing should do more and
harder work in improving the software environment, such as the
training of volunteers and the education of the audience," the
associate professor says.
The Chinese media has also urged the country to take concrete
moves to enhance the quality of potential Chinese spectators.
A recent commentary in the Outlook news magazine says
the opening of the Athens Games will prompt the international
community to pay more attention to China, as well as the behavior
of its people.
It adds that by holding the Olympic Games the host country will
open a window for the outside world to determine its overall
national strength and the quality of its people.
While international opinion is confident that China's
fast-rising national strength will ensure a successful Games in
2008, the quality of the Chinese people has yet to be tested,
according to the article.
It suggests that the Athens Games will provide the Chinese
public with an opportunity to learn about how to be a good host in
2008.
Learning from Athens
Li Wei, an anti-terrorism expert at the China Institute of
Contemporary International Relations, says the huge security cost
at the Athens Games should also be a lesson for Beijing.
Greece has so far spent an unprecedented 1.2 billion euros
(US$1.5 billion) on the Games' security, five times more than that
of the Sydney Games.
"That reminds us of the significance of guaranteeing security
for the 2008 Games amid a deteriorating security environment," he
says.
"Many security measures should be phased in now although the
Games are for another four years."
In fact, China has already began to learn from Greece in how to
organize a cost-effective Olympic Games.
Gu Yaoming, secretary-general of the Chinese Olympic Committee,
says he has been greatly impressed by the frugal and practical way
of Greece in hosting the Games.
"The Greek people have done a very practical work rather than
engaging in only elaborate things," he says.
"I strongly feel we should use their experience as
reference."
As one of the signs that the host of the 2008 Games is learning
from this experience, Beijing has moved to revise its plans for the
construction of Olympic stadiums in line with the principle of
saving costs and reducing potential financial risks.
Du Wei, deputy director of the Beijing Association for Olympic
Economy Studies reportedly said Olympic projects will undergo
appropriate cutbacks.
More existing stadiums will be brought into full use, while the
size and standard of new stadiums will be appropriately adjusted,
Du was quoted as saying by the Guangzhou-based 21st Century
Business Herald.
These savings will be ploughed back into infrastructure
construction, such as addressing traffic congestion and air
pollution in the capital city.
The revision is expected to help cut costs by billions of yuan,
according to Du.
As the first step in the revision, Beijing has halted
construction on the 100,000-seat "bird's nest" stadium, designed as
a centerpiece venue for the 2008 Olympics with a budget of 3.5
billion yuan (US$423 million).
Media reports said the ambitious design, with bands of steel
stretching every which way to resemble a bird's nest, was
originally designed with a retractable roof, but will now be an
open-air venue.
A roofless design would save an estimated 400 million yuan
(US$48.37 million) and 10,000 tons of steel, top engineering
consultant Shen Shizhao of the Chinese Academy of Engineering was
quoted as saying.
On the other hand, the deadline for the completion of all
Olympic projects has also been postponed from the end of 2006 to
the end of 2007, the 21st Century Business Herald
reported.
"The idea of delaying the completion deadline is inspired by the
Athens Games, which saw the completion of its main stadium just in
time for the opening of the Games," says Ge Jiaqi, chief structure
engineer at the Chinese Institute of Aviation Plan and Design.
"In comparison, our original demand for completion of all
Olympic projects in the second half of 2006 appears quite
unnecessary."
Sports researchers says completing Olympic projects too early
will increase operational cost.
On Friday, the Beijing organizing committee officially confirmed
the delay of venue construction upon the advice of the IOC
Co-ordination Commission for the 2008 Olympic Games.
"The venue construction should be completed at a right time,
neither too early nor too late," Liu Jingmin, executive
vice-president of Beijing organizing committee, told a press
conference in Athens.
"What we said in the bid book is to complete the construction of
the stadiums by the end of 2006, then we will do the installation
and testing by 2007, so it doesn't run contradictory to the IOC
request." said Liu.
He added that all the venues will be ready in succession in the
year of 2007.
In Athens, one final connection to the Beijing Games is a
symbolic ceremony at the August 29 closing of the Games where
Beijing Mayor Wang Qishan will be handed the Olympic flag,
signaling the formal transition of the Games to Beijing.
Then 170 Chinese performers will stage an eight-minute
traditional Chinese art performance, entitled "From Olympia to the
Great Wall."
Earlier reports said that the performance will be directed by
world-famous Chinese film director Zhang Yimou.
(China Daily August 14, 2004)