China's star diver Tian Liang said he did not understand the
country's swimming officials, who refused to let him return to the
national team.
"As a veteran athlete, I need respect and I am now dying for the
excitement of standing on the Olympic podium," he said.
Speaking to a press conference on Wednesday, Zhou Jihong,
China's national diving team manager, said the team doesn't have
any plans to recall Tian, saying that the 27-year-old diver should
be responsible for his misbehavior.
"What kind of mistake did I make?" cried Tian, during the book
release in Beijing on Tuesday for his autobiography The Shining Ten
Years. "I don't understand their decision."
Now training with the Shaanxi provincial team, Tian - the
Olympic gold medallist in 10-metre platform in the 2000 Sydney
Games and the synchronized platform in Athens in 2004 - has been
kicked out of China's national team for taking "too many commercial
activities" and for refusing to come back to the team after the
Athens Olympics.
The Swimming Administrative Center (SAC) subsequently announced
last year that it would expel him from the national team on January
26.
The SAC said that part of these business activities were not
approved because according to its regulation, any business
endeavours profitable to the athletes must first get the green
light.
But Tian denied their accusations.
"The officials disbanded the national team on October 25 in
2004, and then we all went back to provincial teams," said Tian.
"So I was part of the Shaanxi team, not the national team."
"I did take some commercial activities, but I got the permission
from the Shaanxi Sports Bureau... so which regulation did I
break?
"It's much like the situation if I once worked in HP and then
moved to IBM, but HP suddenly came to me some day and said I broke
their rules. It doesn't make sense."
The deadlock appeared ready to dissolve when the National
General Sports Administration head Liu Peng visited Shaanxi
Province to watch Tian's training last December.
And the speculation then heated up as the China Basketball
Administration Center leading official met China's 2.16-meter
center Wang Zhizhi for his return during the NBA All-star weekend
in the United States, and the Tennis Administrative Center picked
up Peng Shuai for the national team last November.
But the SAC head Li Hua said they would not deal with other
athletes in the same way.
"I heard two sounds - that really made me confused," said Tian.
"Liu encouraged me very much when he came to my gym in Shaanxi, but
now I don't know which official I can follow."
(China Daily March 20, 2006)