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Age North Korea WAG

2014: Cha Yeong Hwa and the FIG’s Changing Passport Governance

In September 2014, the International Gymnastics Federation issued a disciplinary notice withdrawing the license of a North Korean gymnast, fining her federation, and annulling her results.

The gymnast was Cha Yeong Hwa (차영화), and once again, the charge was age falsification.

What made the case significant was not the accusation itself—by then, age manipulation was a familiar problem—but how quickly it was detected and how comprehensively it was punished. Compared with earlier North Korean cases, Cha’s discrepancy was smaller. The response was not.

Hong Su Jeong, 1st place; He Ning, 2nd place; Cha Yeong Hwa, 3rd place; Uneven Bars, 2006 Asian Games

Uemura Miki of Japan would eventually take Cha’s third-place spot.

From Passports to “Gymnastics Passports”

For decades, the FIG relied on national federations and state-issued passports to determine age eligibility. Birthdates were checked at competitions, passports were inspected, and contradictions—if they surfaced at all—often took years to register.

Birthdates were rarely cross-checked across competitions. As a result, a gymnast like Kim Gwang Suk could appear at three successive major meets under three different birthdates. In other cases, gymnasts competed as juniors under one birthdate, only to acquire a different one upon entering the senior ranks—a pattern particularly visible at the Druzhba competitions among Eastern Bloc countries.

Eventually, the FIG constructed something new: a centralized identity system designed to follow gymnasts across competitions and seasons. When the federation announced the project in March of 2008, it did not invoke age falsification. Instead, the executive committee framed it as “a project geared toward creating a license to allow for more efficient management of the administrative files of delegation members, gymnasts, and their surrounding personnel.”

By May of that year, the FIG announced that, as of January 1, 2009, any senior or junior gymnast wishing to compete internationally would be required to hold such a license. The license fixed an athlete’s name, nationality, discipline, and—crucially—date of birth in a central database. Without it, an athlete could not compete.

Licenses—often called “gymnastics passports”—were time-limited and subject to renewal. Each renewal required federations to resubmit documentation consistent with what the FIG already had on file. Any discrepancy—especially in a gymnast’s date of birth—could now be flagged.


How Cha’s Discrepancy Surfaced

And that’s exactly how Cha’s case began—with a license renewal.

At the 2006 Asian Games in Doha, Cha had been registered as a 16-year-old with a 1990 birthdate. That date had passed into the FIG’s records without incident, as thousands of others had before it. She went on to compete at several major competitions, including at the 2008 Beijing Olympics, where she appeared in qualifications. A fall on her Def kept her out of the uneven bar finals.

Years later, in 2014, when Cha’s FIG license came up for renewal, the documents submitted by the North Korean federation listed her birth year as 1991.

The change was small—just one year—but the license system existed to catch exactly that. The FIG now held two incompatible identities for the same gymnast, both submitted by the same federation.

FIG officials determined that the discrepancy did not stem from a clerical error but from a falsified passport, and the matter quickly escalated from administrative review to disciplinary action.


Fewer contradictions, harsher consequences

Measured numerically, Cha’s case looked less egregious than earlier scandals involving North Korea.

Kim Gwang Suk had been registered with three different birthdates across the 1989 World Championships, the 1991 Worlds, and the 1992 Olympics—an absurdity that made denial impossible. When the FIG finally acted, it barred North Korea’s women’s team from the 1993 World Championships, then moved on.

In 2010, Hong Su Jeong was found to have competed under three different birth years over seven seasons. The FIG responded more aggressively, imposing an emergency suspension days before the World Championships, later converting it into a two-year ban and a fine.

Yet by 2014, even a single verified inconsistency—detected within the FIG’s own licensing system—was enough. As in earlier cases, the federation emphasized that responsibility lay with the national federation, not the gymnast herself. Passports were prepared by officials; licenses were submitted by administrators; athletes competed under the identities they were given. Nevertheless, the FIG withdrew Cha’s athlete license under Article 43.2 of its statutes and suspended her from all international competition through the end of 2015.

Medals and prize money were ordered returned within sixty days; the federation was fined 25,000 Swiss francs and required to cover the costs of the proceedings.

What distinguished the case was not the suspension itself, but its retroactive scope. Unlike earlier sanctions against North Korea, which imposed forward-looking constraints—bans from future competitions intended to prevent further violations—the FIG reached backward, annulling all of Cha’s individual results dating to August 2006 and all team results from competitions in which she had participated. Cha’s name remains on start lists but disappears from the official results, surviving only in medal photographs and on websites that have not been updated since 2014.

Beth Tweddle, 1st place; Cha Yeong Hwa, 2nd place; and Jiang Yuyuan, 3rd place; Uneven Bars, 2009 Summer University Games

Hong Eun Jong was originally in 4th place.

Passport Limits

Between Kim’s sanction in 1993 and Cha’s in 2014, the FIG transformed age enforcement from reactive scandal management into routine administrative control. The introduction of the “gymnastics passport” was a step forward. Renewal forced comparison. Comparison exposed contradictions. Contradictions triggered discipline.

In an earlier era, Cha’s one-year discrepancy might have produced confusion, debate, or jokes. In 2014, it produced action.

The gymnastics passport system is not perfect. It saves the FIG from the public embarrassment of having a gymnast compete with three different birthdates (e.g., Kim Gwang Suk and Hong Su Jeong). It prevents federations from last-minute birthdate changes (e.g., Olga Bicherova). But it does not prevent a program with early talent selection and a modicum of foresight from altering a gymnast’s birthdate even before she reaches the junior ranks. It is plausible that, say, the Romanian federation could have navigated the passport system on Daniela Silivaș’s behalf without incident. She was identified as an extraordinarily talented gymnast early on and was fast-tracked through the Romanian age-group categories. It’s likely that shifting her birth year before her first junior competitions would have been an easy step to take.

In that sense, the gymnastics passport does not guarantee truth; it guarantees that contradictions, once visible, no longer continue.


Appendix A: The Official Disciplinary Statement from the FIG

Disciplinary decisions – The FIG takes action

17/09/2014 

Following the disciplinary procedures concerning the birth year of North Korean gymnast Cha Yong Hwa and the non-certified mats produced by equipment manufacturer American Athletic Inc. (AAI), the FIG Disciplinary Commission has released the following decisions.

Concerning the North Korean gymnast, the FIG Disciplinary Commission has made the decision to withdraw Cha Yong Hwa‘s license, pursuant to Article 43.2 of the FIG Statutes. Cha Yong Hwa is suspended from participating in any and all FIG and other international events until 31 December 2015. All results obtained by Cha Yong Hwa and the Democratic People’s Republic of Korea Gymnastics Federation‘s (DPRKGF) Women’s Artistic Gymnastic team in all events at which Cha Yong Hwa participated as a team member from August 2006 onwards are cancelled and all medals and/or prize money received by Cha Yong Hwa and/or the DPRKGF Women’s Artistic Gymnastics team during this period are to be returned to the FIG within 60 days of the date of this decision.

DPRKGF is ordered to pay a fine of CHF 25,000 to the FIG. The DPRKGF is blamed for submitting a fake passport for Cha Yong Hwa and is not to repeat this conduct in the future. The DPRKGF is ordered to pay the costs of these disciplinary proceedings. 

Pursuant to the FIG Statutes in force, the gymnast and the DPRKGF may lodge an appeal within 21 days following notification.

Manufacturer sanctioned

The FIG Disciplinary Commission has found that the American Apparatus Manufacturer American Athletic Inc. (AAI) has sold and delivered 20cm landing mats since 15th March 2012 that are different from the mats tested and approved by the FIG Testing Institute. AAI has voluntarily agreed to a number of remedial actions, including an appropriate fine, and the matter has been resolved.

Pursuant to the FIG Statutes in force, AAI may lodge an appeal within 21 days following notification.

Note: The passport system was in place when Hong Su Jeong was sanctioned in 2010. However, the FIG’s press release did not mention license renewal. Instead, it mentioned that the federation found the discrepancy upon reviewing the nominative roster for the 2010 World Championships.


Appendix B: Past License Documents

2009

2010

2016

2023

Thanks to Hardy Fink for tracking down and providing several of these documents.

More on Age

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Doping Interviews & Profiles Romania WAG

2002: Rodica Dunca – “At Deva, It Was a Concentration Camp”

In October 2002, more than two decades after Romania’s women’s gymnastics team won gold in Fort Worth, Rodica Dunca broke a long silence. Speaking to Pro Sport, the former international gymnast described daily life inside the Deva training camp not as a center of excellence, but as a place of hunger, surveillance, fear, and physical coercion. Her testimony names teammates whose faces became global symbols of grace—Nadia Comăneci, Melitta Rühn, Emilia Eberle (Trudi Kollar), Dumitrița Turner, Teodora Ungureanu—and places their medals alongside scenes of beatings, escapes intercepted by the Securitate, and bodies pushed beyond collapse. What Dunca recounts is not a single shocking incident, but a system: one in which control over food, water, movement, pain, and obedience defined her adolescence.

Like Eberhard Gienger, Dunca recalls being given an obscene number of pills and injections; unlike Gienger—who admitted to returning many of them to the pharmacy—she was compelled to take everything she was given. Dunca does not identify the substances involved, making it impossible to determine whether any appeared on the IOC’s banned list. She was competing, moreover, in an era when the FIG did not conduct systematic testing, and when the reliability of the drug controls at the 1980 Olympics remains questionable at best. Even had prohibited substances been involved, a positive test would have been unlikely.

Yet the absence of a positive test is not the absence of a problem. Dunca’s account instead directs attention to the medical regime under which Romanian gymnasts trained and competed. The forced ingestion of dozens of unidentified tablets each day, the routine administration of injections associated with prolonged amenorrhea, and the later emergence of drug dependence—all point to a system of non-therapeutic, coercive medical management that regulated young athletes’ bodies for performance, not health.

Set against official narratives of discipline, sacrifice, and triumph—most famously associated with Béla Károlyi—Dunca’s interview exposes the cost hidden behind the perfect smiles and historic scores. It is a reminder that Romania’s golden era in women’s gymnastics was built not only on innovation and talent, but also on practices that blurred the line between training and punishment, medicine and control, excellence and abuse.

Below, you’ll find a translation of ProSport‘s interview with Dunca from October 26, 2002.

Rodica Dunca (the second gymnast from the left), 1980 Olympics
Categories
Age North Korea WAG

The Twin Deception: How North Korea Fooled International Gymnastics for Years

In August 2006, at the Asian Artistic Gymnastics Championships in Surat, India, Hong Su Jeong stood on the vault podium with a silver medal around her neck. The gold went to her younger sister, Hong Eun Jeong—a result that seemed to mark an early challenge to the sibling hierarchy. Four months later, at the Asian Games in Doha, Qatar, the order reversed. Hong Su Jeong again won silver on vault, but that time, she finished ahead of her younger sister, who took bronze.

The results fit neatly into the story that surrounded them. Hong Su Jeong was cast as the elder sister—more experienced, more seasoned—while Hong Eun Jeong, three years younger, was presented as the promising successor rising in her wake. A profile in the Beijing Evening News in 2006 reinforced the contrast, noting that Hong Su Jeong had trained for nine years, while her younger sister had trained for only six.

The story of two sisters competing together was endearing, and over the years, the math was stable, with the sisters always being three years apart.

But it turned out to be false.

Cheng Fei, 1st place; Hong Su Jeong, 2nd place; Hong Eun Jeong, 3rd place; Asian Games, 2006

Note: Throughout this piece, I’ve bolded Hong Su Jeong’s name to help visually differentiate her name from her younger sisters’ name.

Categories
Age North Korea WAG

Kim Gwang Suk: The First Official Case of Age Falsification in Women’s Gymnastics

In early January 1993, the International Gymnastics Federation announced a decision that was unprecedented in the sport’s history: the Democratic People’s Republic of Korea’s women’s gymnastics team would be banned from that year’s World Championships in Birmingham. The reason? The federation had entered Kim Gwang Suk into international competition with three different birthdates—October 5, 1974, at the 1989 World Championships; February 15, 1975, at the 1991 Worlds; and February 15, 1976, at the 1992 Barcelona Olympics.

“This is not a case of doping, and under no circumstances is she guilty,” FIG Secretary General Norbert Bueche told reporters in Geneva. “The dates of birth were deliberately falsified by the association. Such actions cannot be tolerated.”

Kim Gwang Suk’s case marked the first time the FIG had publicly exposed and sanctioned age falsification in elite gymnastics, though the practice was widely suspected to have occurred for years. The case revealed both the lengths to which some federations would go to gain a competitive advantage and the challenges international sports bodies faced in enforcing their own age eligibility rules.

Thirty years after Kim Gwang Suk’s competitive career ended, her life is still a mystery. What survives are fragments: competition reports, newspaper descriptions, brief quotations filtered through translators—almost all produced outside North Korea. This essay follows the traces she left on the international stage between 1989 and 1993, as recorded by foreign journalists and officials, and concludes by examining the narrow but consequential precedent her case set for how the FIG would confront age falsification in the years that followed.

Kim Gwang Suk, 1989
Categories
1981 Age European Championships USSR WAG

Alla Misnik: The 13-Year-Old Doing the Gymnastics of the Future

In April 1981, a gymnast from Kharkov stepped onto the podium at Leningrad’s Yubileiny Sports Palace and won the USSR Cup in artistic gymnastics. Alla Misnik, training under coach Valentin Shumovsky, announced herself as one of Soviet gymnastics’ brightest new talents. Her uneven bars routine featured what Sovetsky Sport called “a magnificent cascade” of elements—a Tkachev, a Jaeger, clear-hip circles with pirouettes, a double-back dismount—forming what one judge described as “a routine of the future.”

A month later, Misnik traveled to Madrid for the 1981 European Championships. There, the Soviet Union’s leading gymnast did not win. She finished third in the all-around behind East Germany’s Maxi Gnauck and Romania’s Cristina Grigoraș, and earned silver medals on uneven bars and floor exercise. For a debut at a major international championship, the results were impressive.

Yet they were results that required explanation in the Soviet press. Why had the Soviet team failed to win a single gold medal? Internationally, the outcome ignited debates about the direction of women’s gymnastics. Was it really a women’s sport anymore?

What went largely unremarked at the time, however, was a more basic fact: Misnik was too young to be competing in Madrid at all.

Misnik on the cover of International Gymnast
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1978 Age Bulgaria World Championships

Thirteen in Strasbourg: Krassimira Toneva at the 1978 World Championships

In October 1978, gymnasts gathered in Strasbourg, France, for the XIX World Artistic Gymnastics Championships. Among the Bulgarian women was Krassimira Toneva, who, like many gymnasts in the sport’s history, was technically too young to be there. She was born in 1965.

Krassmira Toneva, via the Krassmira Toneva Foundation
Categories
1993 Age Netherlands

1993: The Dutch Federation’s Bungled Attempt at Age Falsification

In the summer of 1993, a minor act of deception briefly exposed a much larger truth about international gymnastics. At the European Championships in rhythmic gymnastics, a thirteen-year-old Dutch athlete was entered into competition using a teammate’s passport—an expedient decision made to avoid a poor result, and one that unraveled almost immediately. What followed was not a dramatic scandal, but something quieter and more revealing: admissions of responsibility, careful hedging of language, and a collective effort to keep consequences manageable.

The Dutch press covered the episode in a restrained, procedural tone. Reports in De Telegraaf and NRC Handelsblad detail how officials within the Dutch Gymnastics Federation (KNGB) knowingly circumvented age-eligibility rules, how the European Gymnastics Federation (UEG) investigated the breach, and how blame was diffused among coaches, administrators, and judges. The prose is sober; the facts are clear. Yet beneath this matter-of-fact surface lies a familiar pattern—one that challenges easy assumptions about where and how age manipulation occurs in the sport.

Age falsification in gymnastics is often narrated as an Eastern Bloc pathology: the product of centralized authority, pliable civil registries, and authoritarian sports systems willing to rewrite identity in service of medals. The Dutch case unsettles that narrative. Here was a Western European federation operating within a democratic state, an independent press, and formal oversight mechanisms—yet subject to the same pressures and incentives. Fear of finishing low in the rankings, institutional expectations of success, and the belief that everyone else was bending the rules proved sufficient to justify deliberate deception.

The mechanics of the fraud are themselves instructive. Lacking the ability—or political cover—to alter official documents, Dutch officials resorted to substitution rather than fabrication: entering an underage gymnast under another athlete’s passport and trusting that inspections would be cursory. This was not naïveté but pragmatism shaped by structural constraint. It reveals how rule-bending adapts to local conditions, even as its underlying logic remains constant.

Equally telling is the response from governing bodies. Despite explicit admissions that fraud had occurred, there was little appetite within the European Union of Gymnastics (UEG) for severe punishment. Officials emphasized their own inspection failures, spoke of shared responsibility, and repeatedly downplayed the likelihood of a suspension. The prevailing tone was conciliatory rather than corrective—a preference for containment over confrontation. Read together, these articles illuminate a sport in which age manipulation was widely understood, unevenly enforced, and, so long as it avoided public embarrassment, often met with indulgence rather than meaningful consequence.

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Age China Interviews & Profiles WAG

1986: A Profile of Chen Cuiting – “Like a Spring Swallow Arriving Gracefully”

In 1986 and 1987, Chinese media presented Chen Cuiting as a gymnast perfectly timed for inheritance: the nation’s elegant answer to Romania’s Daniela Silivaș. Reporting from the Seoul Asian Games, a People’s Daily correspondent lingered on her “spring swallow” lightness, praising the ease with which she carried herself to the all-around title. Both that article and a subsequent China Pictorial profile placed her age at fifteen—young, but properly arrived.

The China Pictorial piece, published in February 1987, filled in the arc behind the moment. Born on July 15, 1971, in Changsha, Hunan, Chen had risen from a raw “tumblebug”—a nickname earned for her explosive tumbling—into a national champion who, as the magazine put it, had learned to “smile spontaneously to the music.” It was a familiar story of discipline refined into artistry, told at precisely the point when promise seemed to be turning into permanence.

From today’s vantage point, however, that narrative no longer sits so easily. Across both Chinese- and English-language websites, Chen’s birthdate now appears as November 15, 1972. If accurate, she would have been only thirteen, turning fourteen, during the 1986 season—below the minimum age of fifteen required for senior international competition. The confident certainties of the mid-1980s press thus coexist uneasily with a digital record that rewrites the calendar.

Whatever the truth of her age, Chen Cuiting’s competitive record is unmistakable. She dominated Chinese women’s gymnastics through the late 1980s, breaking out internationally at the 1986 Asian Games with team gold, all-around gold, floor gold, and vault silver. She remained the country’s leading all-arounder at home, winning the title at the 1987 National Games and the 1988 National Championships. Though her Seoul Olympics yielded no individual medals—fourteenth in the all-around, sixth with the team—she rebounded at the 1989 World Championships with team bronze and top-six finishes in the all-around, beam, and floor. Her career closed where it had begun to crest: at the 1990 Asian Games in Beijing, she again swept gold in the team, all-around, and floor, adding another vault silver before retiring. In just five years, she anchored the national team through a transitional era, her dominance unquestioned even as the story told about her grew more complicated.

Chen Cuiting, 1986, Goodwill Games
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1981 Age China Interviews & Profiles WAG

1981: A Profile Ma Yanhong – “She Trains Diligently as Always”

When Ma Yanhong scored 19.825 on uneven bars at the 1979 World Championships in Fort Worth, Texas, she became the first Chinese gymnast to win a world title. The moment carried weight beyond sport. It was December 1979, just months after the United States and the People’s Republic of China had established full diplomatic relations, and American spectators watched the five-star red flag rise in a Texas arena. A fifteen-year-old from the Bayi military sports team had arrived on the world stage at a pivotal moment in both gymnastics history and geopolitical realignment.

The two articles translated here—one an immediate dispatch from Xinhua News Agency filed from Fort Worth, the other a 1981 profile from the People’s Daily—show how Chinese state media framed this breakthrough. They follow familiar patterns of socialist sports journalism: diligence and endurance, sacrifice of personal comfort for collective glory, the coach’s discernment, and the athlete’s humility in victory.

At the same time, these reports preserve a vivid record of elite athletic life in late-1970s China. They describe a life of extreme (and unhealthy) discipline: cracked lips from dehydration, severely restricted food intake, and hands hardened by hundreds of repetitions of release moves. This is sports journalism in the service of a state narrative, but it is also lived reality. These accounts capture details that help us understand China’s re-emergence as a world power in women’s gymnastics.

Read closely, the articles also hint at unresolved questions. The ages they cite—fourteen at the 1978 Asian Games and fifteen in December 1979—imply a 1964 birth year. When International Gymnast interviewed her in 1999, the magazine reported her birthdate as March 21, 1964. However, at the 1984 Olympics, Ma’s official competitive date of birth was July 5, 1963. Under either birth year, Ma was age-eligible to compete at the 1979 World Championships. The puzzle, then, is not eligibility but motive: why alter her date of birth at all?

Unfortunately, the articles do not answer that question. Nonetheless, I hope that you can enjoy these articles about Ma, whose bar work, according to International Gymnast, possessed “a quality that has never been surpassed.”

Ma Yanhong, 1984 Olympics

For more historical context, see:

Categories
1981 China Interviews & Profiles MAG

1981: A Profile of Li Ning – “A New Star of Gymnastics”

These three People’s Daily articles, spanning fourteen years from 1981 to 1995, trace the arc of Li Ning’s transformation from teenage gymnastics prodigy to business entrepreneur. Read together, they chart not only an individual career but a broader shift in Chinese sport and society, as the values and constraints of Mao-era athletic culture gradually gave way to new possibilities.

The first piece, published on August 30, 1981, introduces Li Ning at eighteen as a rising talent who had just won China’s first gold medal at the World University Games in Bucharest. Its narrative structure would become familiar in Chinese sports journalism: early discovery, setbacks overcome through ideological commitment, and moral guidance from exemplary teammates—in this case, Tong Fei. Li Ning appears here as a product of the state sports system at its ideological peak, his achievements framed primarily in terms of collective honor, discipline, and service to the nation rather than personal advancement.

By the end of the 1980s, both Li Ning’s career and China itself were entering a period of profound transition. Following the death of Mao Zedong in 1976, Deng Xiaoping initiated a series of economic reforms that gradually loosened the rigid command economy of the Mao years. Limited private enterprise and selective engagement with foreign capital were introduced, even as Communist Party control remained firmly in place. In the early 1980s, these reforms were tentative and uneven; by the early 1990s, they had begun to reshape everyday life, labor, and ambition, including elite sport.

It is against this backdrop that the second article, published in October 1990, finds Li Ning navigating unfamiliar terrain. Retired from gymnastics, he had joined Jianlibao, a state-owned sports drink manufacturer, to help develop China’s first indigenous sportswear brand. The piece reveals an athlete unsettled by the indignity of competing in foreign-branded clothing and determined to create a Chinese alternative. In a familiar literary trope about emerging markets, we witness Li Ning trying to cut across time and space in impossible ways. The writer even suggests that, for the retired gymnast, time itself has become three-dimensional.

The final piece, from March 1995, is an obituary for Li Ning’s mother. Qin Zhenmei, who died of cancer at fifty-four, is presented as the archetype of the self-sacrificing Chinese mother—a mother who went to great lengths to sew her son a training uniform and who promoted her son’s clothing brand from her deathbed. Yet the article is equally structured around Li Ning’s confession of filial failure—his admission that years of relentless work left him scarcely present at her bedside, sharing only three meals with her in her final year. Here, personal loss and moral regret serve to place commercial success within an acceptable moral framework, ensuring that entrepreneurial achievement does not appear to override traditional obligations.

Enjoy this longitudinal view of Li Ning’s biography, as refracted through the People’s Daily.

Li Ning, 1984