Ed Wang & Co. bring American football to Beijing
Thursday, 24th February 2011 ~ Maggie ~ Link ~ Comments (0)
Buffalo Bills LT Ed Wang and kids from Play to Win in Beijing
Yesterday, though, the latest contingent to stop in China's capital was a little different. It was somewhat of a homecoming for Ed Wang, who became the NFL's first player of full Chinese descent to play in the NFL after the Buffalo Bills drafted him last year. Wang (whose Chinese name is Wang Kai, or 王凯)visited Beijing along with Minnesota Vikings wide receiver Sidney Rice, and retired players Barrett Green and Jack Brewer.
Sidney Rice, Barrett Green and Jack Brewer (l-r) with the Play to Win kids
As the players mixed it up in a flag football game with local college students, and tossed balls with a group of kindergartners, I had a great chat with Ed's parents, Nancy and Robert, who were taking in the scene together with some of their former teammates and friends.
The Wangs were on China's national track and field team in the 1970s and 1980s, and played a big role in Ed's development as an athlete, as detailed by this excellent article from The Buffalo Story Project (The Rookie: Chinese, and in the NFL). "Nancy was in charge of his speed training, and I took care of weightlifting," Rob says. Ed loves the game himself, but his parents did encourage him to play football, based on his size and athletic gifts (he now stands 6'4" and weighs over 300 pounds). Robert adds that he wishes he had had the chance to play the game himself; he was an accomplished high jumper, and most of his team sport experience was in handball.
Wang family
Football, American-style, only has a tiny fan base in China. But Robert Wang is a ready evangelist for the sport, and believes it has a good chance to catch on in his birth country. "There is no question about it. Football is the best game in the world," he says. "It's the ultimate team sport, and it teaches kids discipline and toughness. These are things Chinese parents want for their kids today."
Can football really catch on in China? It's a question I hear often, and there are certainly some characteristics that make the sport a difficult sell in this market. The game is violent, and people here seem to show a general preference for games with less contact. It's also a complex game, not easily understood by the casual viewer, which has yet to catch on outside of North America.
Ed's parents, much more familiar with China than their son, don't think that either of these are deal-breakers for the sport here. "Injury is part of sport," says Nancy, whose hurdling career was plagued by injuries. "Just because the percentages are higher in football, that's not a reason not to play." As for the game's opacity, the Wangs have fielded questions about rules and strategy from their old friends throughout their son's career, and say that, once people learn a little, the game's intricacy adds to its appeal.
After a losing season in which he saw limited action, Ed's offseason focus needs to be on his own game, not the future of the sport in the country where his parents grew up. But at the end of the afternoon at Beijing's Shijingshan Gymnasium, he said what he had seen Tuesday made him optimistic. "To be honest, I had no idea there were organized groups playing here," he says. "If you understand the game, of course you start to enjoy it more."
If you want to know more about Wang's path to the league, the above-mentioned The Rookie: Chinese, and in the NFL, from The Buffalo Story Project, is an excellent profile.
Tags: Ed Wang, football, NFL, 王凯
This Week in China Sports: NFL Draft, new CBA champion, Olympic gymnasts stripped of Sydney medal
Friday, 30th April 2010 ~ Maggie ~ Link ~ Comments (0)
Ed Wang was, indeed, picked up in the NFL draft. He went to the Buffalo Bills with the 140th pick, becoming the first Chinese-American drafted by an NFL team. Titan Sports News, China's top sports newspaper, featured Wang on its front page.The Guangdong Southern Tigers beat the Xinjiang Flying Tigers 103-94, winning their sixth Chinese Basketball Association title. Guangdong took the series 4-1. Only the Bayi Rockets, the Chinese army team, have won more titles (8), and Guangdong has been the CBA champion all but one of the last seven years. (Xinhua)
Bob Donewald, coach of the Yao Ming-owned Shanghai Sharks of the CBA, was tapped to coach the Chinese men's national basketball team through the end of the year (Washington Post). Donewald coached NCAA basketball at several different Midwestern universities throughout the 80s and 90s. He will lead a Yao-less team at the world championships in August and the Asian Games in November.
The International Olympic Committee stripped China of its bronze medal in the gymnastics team competition in the 2000 Olympics in Sydney, after Dong Fangxiao was ruled to have been underage. The bronze now goes to the United States team. Ironically, Dong was outed by her accreditation papers for working as an official at the 2008 Olympics in Beijing. That paperwork has her birth date as January 23, 1986, and not January 20, 1983, as she had declared in Sydney. Olympic gymnasts must turn 16 in the year they compete in an Olympics, per restrictions set by the Federation Internationale Gymnastique (AP via ESPN).
Kenny Huang is NOT denying rumors published in the Sunday Mirror that he is in talks to buy Liverpool Football Club. He only denies speaking to a reporter from the paper, and said he would not comment on the rumor.
China may not have a team in the FIFA World Cup, but they do have a presence. Many of the South African flags currently selling well in the host country, are made in China and apparently the imports were not quite printed right (Mail & Guardian)
Tags: basketball, Bob Donewald, CBA, FIFA World Cup, Guangdong Tigers, gymnastics, IOC, Kenny Huang, NFL, Olympics, Shanghai Sharks, Xinjiang Tigers, 黄建华
Ed Wang: First Chinese player in the NFL?
Thursday, 22nd April 2010 ~ Maggie ~ Link ~ Comments (1)
Ed Wang at the 2010 NFL Combine
Wang is 6'5" and 315 pounds. He grew up in Virginia and moved from tight end to the offensive line at VT. He graduated with a business degree before the 2009 season. And he's just one generation removed from China—his parents were track and field athletes on the country's Olympic team in 1984.
This report from Northwest Asian Weekly has some great background on Wang. He speaks Mandarin, and his teammates call him Godzilla (wrong East Asian country, guys...). While he says he experienced racism on the field as a very young player, things apparently smoothed out by the time he reached high school. It probably helped that he pushes guys around like he does in these videos at CBSports.com and YouTube.
In this NFL video, Wang talks about the draft his Chinese heritage. Follow his pursuit of his pro football dream at his NFL Players blog.
Like Yao Ming, Wang is really tackling a stereotype by excelling at a big man's position. Unlike Yao, he's chosen a sport that almost no one in China plays.
Ed Wang NFL Combine image: NFLPlayers.com
Tags: American football, Ed Wang, NFL, Virginia Tech
Beijing Boyce's roundup of Super Bowl watching parties
Tuesday, 3rd February 2009 ~ Maggie ~ Link ~ Comments (0)
Jim Boyce, aka Beijing Boyce, is Beijing's best-known English-language eating and drinking blogger. Unlike this CST editor, who enjoyed the entire game from the same bar stool at the Goose & Duck, Boyce scoured the city for Beijing's best Super Bowl watching experience. Luckily for me, he decided that the Goose & Duck was the best spot in town for watching the Steelers win their sixth Super Bowl.Boyce writes that he noticed an overall decline in numbers at Beijing's sports bars for the big game. He blames the matchup (last year's game featured the NY Giants and the New England Patriots, teams with bigger Beijing fan bases) and the fact that "there are fewer people around," in 2009. Beijing has seen a decline in its American expat population, which spiked in the Olympic year and has taken an additional hit with the slumping world economy.
Beijing Boyce's full account can be read here.
Tags: Beijing, football, NFL, sports bars, Super Bowl
Got your Super Bowl ads right here
Monday, 2nd February 2009 ~ Maggie ~ Link ~ Comments (0)
If you watched Super Bowl XLIII in China, you missed out on what is often the best part of the show--the commercials that advertisers pay obscene amounts of money to air during the game. You can see them all and vote for your favorites here.If China can do for Super Bowl voting what it does for NBA All-Star voting, this ad for the NBC drama Heroes might do well:
Tags: advertising, football, NFL, sports marketing, Super Bowl
