The comeback dream of China's star diver Tian Liang dimmed as
China's leading swimming officials said the recent "pardon moves"
which happened in tennis and basketball, will not be seen in diving
national team.
Tian, the 2000 and 2004 Olympic champion, was once again denied
when team officials refused to let him return to the national team
during a press conference in Beijing on Tuesday.
"There is no similarity between diving and other sports," said
Li Hua, director of China's Swimming Administrative Centre (SAC).
"Every sports team has its own way to solve problems and you can
not mix them up at any time."
A possible project, which is called "pardon project" by local
media, has emerged in China's sports field since 2005.
It is believed to bring back the "trouble making" famous
athletes to the field for a strongest ever line-up to the 2008
Beijing Olympics.
Local media reported that the National General Sports
Administration is said to enact such project after its head Liu
Peng's visit to Shaanxi Province to watch Tian's training last
December when he said: "No matter who they are, if athletes can add
to the 2008 Olympics, then bygones will be bygones and they will be
welcomed back."
In Feburury, Li Yuanwei, director of the China Basketball
Administration Centre, met China's 2.16 metre forward-centre Wang
Zhizhi for his possible return during the NBA All-star weekend in
the US and the Tennis Administrative Centre recruited maverick
player Peng Shuai to the national team last November. Both athletes
refused to play for national teams.
But Li denied the project's existence.
"As far as I know, the so-called "pardon project" is not
official," he said.
Zhou Jihong, China's national diving team manager, echoed Li's
point of view, saying the SAC will not call back Tian.
"We don't have any plan to recall Tian to the national side
right now," she said.
"For breaking the the rules of SAC, it's clear that he is only a
member of Shaanxi provicial team and is not able to come back to
the national team."
According to Zhou, Zhang Ting, Tian's coach as well as a leading
official of Shaanxi Sports Bureau, visited the SAC in January, but
no substantial progress has been made on the issue.
The bureau has been lobbying the SAC to recall Tian, who was
appointed as its senior official last September.
The 27-year-old Tian, the Olympic gold medallist in 10-metre
platform in Sydney Games in 2000 and the synchronized platform in
Athens in 2004, has been expelled from China's national team for
taking too many commercial activities and allegedly refused to come
back to the team after the Athens Olympics.
After a convincing victory at the individual platform event at
the Tenth National Games in 2005, when he outclassed the Athens
Olympic gold winner Hu Jia, the voice of recalling Tian has
becoming louder and louder among fans and media who suspect there
are personal run-ins between Tian and SAC.
"For sure there is no hatred between us and he is definitely not
a victim or somebody like that," Zhou said.
"As a high-profile athlete, he must put national duties above
personal interests but he did not do enough to behave himself and
he had some bad influences on society and on our team's
preparations for the 2008 Olympics.
"We would not take him differently just because he is an Olympic
champion."
Tian frequently joined in dozens of business endeavours,
including product endorsements and public appearances after the
Athens Games.
That triggered tension between Tian and SAC who claimed part of
these business activities were not approved by relevant sports
organizations.
According to SAC's regulation, any business endeavours
profitable to the athletes must get approvals..
What makes things worse is that Tian then failed to return on
time when the national team called back its divers for winter
training camp in November in 2004 after the team's two-month
break.
"Tian broke the rules and he should be responsible for his
misbehaviour," Zhou said.
(China Daily March 16, 2006)