Liu Xuan is remembered as one of Chinese gymnastics’ most enduring figures: an Olympic balance beam champion at twenty years old, the first Chinese female gymnast to compete at two Olympic Games, and a gymnast who refused to follow the sport’s unwritten rule that a woman’s competitive prime ends in her teens. This 2007 Southern People Weekly profile captures her at a moment of reinvention—now seated at the judges’ table.
What the profile does not mention is that Liu Xuan’s longevity came with a hidden asterisk. During her career—and even today—two different birthdays appear in the record. For competition purposes, she was registered with a 1979 birth year, and journalists sometimes used that date when calculating her age. Yet some sources, including the article translated below, use 1980 as her birth year.
The difference of a single year carried real consequences at the beginning of her career. Under the age rules in effect in 1994, a gymnast born in 1980 would have been too young to compete at the Hiroshima Asian Games, where Liu won team gold and a silver on uneven bars, and too young for the Dortmund World Championships, where China finished fourth as a team. With a birth year of 1979, she cleared the eligibility threshold in both cases. By the end of her career, the discrepancy had become little more than a statistic. Was she twenty or twenty-one when she won beam gold and the all-around bronze in Sydney? The answer does not matter all that much.
Liu herself preferred to frame her career less in terms of numbers than in terms of curiosity and experimentation. “I like trying new things. At first, you don’t know where your potential lies, so you have to try,” she remarked in Southern People Weekly. That spirit runs through the articles below. From experimenting with one-armed giants to competing in two Olympic Games to pursuing a career in the entertainment industry to judging elite gymnastics, Liu was always trying something new.
What follows is a translation of the Southern People Weekly profile, along with several People’s Daily articles that trace the contours of her career.








