BEIJING, July 24 -- A former senior international cycling official has
launched a broadside at Chinese administrators, accusing them of retarding the
sport's progress by failing to adopt advanced selection processes and foreign
training methods.
Past International Cycling Union (UCI) administrator Lucien Bailly, who was
once charged with developing the sport globally, has implored officials and
athletes alike to embrace the training and recruitment regimes of professional
offshore teams after the best-placed Chinese rider at last week's Tour of
Qinghai Lake finished almost half an hour behind overall winner Maarten
Tjallingii.
"CCA (China Cycling Association) is responsible for the main lack of an
ongoing system," the distinguished Canadian claimed, holding no punches while
engaged as a technical advisor at the sixth annual Qinghai event.
"I often told them that of all the riders they had selected, they should
have left half of them to go fishing or do something else. They are not the
people for cycling."
Bailly cites Chinese Olympic medal hope Guo Shuang, an Asian and world
champion women's sprinter, as a beacon of success nurtured abroad.
"She was detected in a special program of talent investigation especially
focused on the women's sprint riders.
"This is how we knew her talents and sent her for specific training in the
World Cycling Center in Switzerland," Bailly, who helped found the Swiss
facility, said.
"After years of development, she has five junior titles in different
sprinting events.
"She is a potential medalist for the 2008 Beijing Olympics after she won
the sprint world women's championship last year."
Bailly implored officials and athletes alike to have the confidence to look
abroad to learn from, and in turn take on, the world's best riders.
"I strongly recommend that they should open to the idea of integrating
their riders in professional structures," the former Sydney Olympics track
coordinator told the China Daily.
Chinese riders were first included in offshore teams two years ago.
In last week's Tour for example, four competed for two separate
professional outfits.
Jin Long, Ji Cheng and Fang Xu pedaled for the Netherlands-based
Skil-Shimano (SKS) team, while national champion Li Fuyu was an integral member
of the race's sole ProTour team, Discovery Channel.
"Whether in discovery or Shimano, it is good and helpful," Bailly advised.
But the 64-year-old cycling expert said current migration levels were far
from adequate.
"Firstly, we need a good talent investigation system," he averred.
"This is also what we have recommended and implemented."
A chief official from CCA agreed that greater numbers of Chinese
competitors need to be sent abroad.
"The result of cycling competition depends on many things such as road
conditions, the weather, the tactics of rivals and therefore experience is more
important than strength and will," CCA secretary-general Jiang Guofeng said. "A
lack of professional cycling teams has choked the development of the sport in
China and we are definitely making efforts to have more riders in overseas pro
teams before China has its own."
Discerning eye
Bailly, a past advisor to the French national team, has visited China many
times in the past 17 years and witnessed the glacial advance of domestic
cycling.
"I was a national technical director for cycling and then I had a technical
position in UCI for nine years until 2005," he said.
"Gradually, I had the chances, co-operation and years-of-opportunity to
give advice and to try to help the development of the sport."
As well as working as a technical advisor, his present task in China is to
help create new events and races like the successful Qinghai Tour.
Bailly said specific training regimes were paramount for cycling success
and integral to an athlete's improvement.
"In some sports, you can be successful training and get straight to the
high-level competition," said the Qubec Cycling Sports Federation hall of fame
member.
"But never in cycling." Bailly says he eagerly awaits the formation of a
professional Chinese team.
"It is only a matter of time ," he predicted.
"Just working the right way step by step, I will continue to do my job here
in China and hope to see China produce its own pro teams soon."
Around 50 top-level professional races are held around the world each year.
But sadly for a country dubbed the "Kingdom of Bicycles", China has yet to form
its own professional outfit: at any level.
"We have to admit that the level of Chinese riders has to be improved," CCA
boss Jiang confessed.
"We know that practice makes perfect, yet Chinese riders have hardly any
opportunity.
"We have to send athletes to overseas pro-teams to make them improve."
(Source: China Daily)