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Age China WAG

2026: Fan Yilin Misstates Her Age in a Social Media Video

In 2016, Chinese gymnasts once again faced questions about their ages. The domestic press responded swiftly, emphasizing that every member of the team met the eligibility requirements:

According to the FIG Council, female athletes must be at least 16 years old to compete in major international gymnastics competitions. Although this polished response successfully deflected what was framed as provocative questioning from foreign media, it also underscored a simple point: the five athletes who represented China in the women’s team final at the Rio Olympics were, on paper, all of age—Shang Chunsong, 20; Fan Yilin, 16; Tan Jiaxin, 19; Mao Yi, 16; and Wang Yan, 16. By this account, the doubts raised abroad appeared entirely unfounded, and China’s gymnasts had every reason to hold their heads high.

Archived here.

根据国际体联理事会的要求,女选手必须年满16周岁才能参加体操国际大赛。虽然漂亮的回答成功化解了外媒刁难,但事实上,中国队参加本次里约奥运会体操女团决赛的五名选手也完全符合年龄要求:商春松20岁、范忆琳16岁、谭佳薪19岁、毛艺16岁、王妍16岁。由此看来,外媒的质疑毫无依据,中国体操队员也应该理直气壮。

Yet the clarity of that official picture has become cloudy over time. With an official birthdate of November 11, 1999, Fan Yilin should have been 16 during the Rio Olympics, turning 17 afterwards. But in a recent social media video, she stated that she was 15 at the time. If taken at face value, that would place her birth year in either 2000 or 2001. (Chinese bloggers interpreted her remark to mean that she turned 15 in 2016, pointing to a 2001 birth year.) Under either scenario, being 15 in Rio would also imply that she was underage at the 2015 World Championships, where she shared the uneven bars gold with Madison Kocian, Viktoria Komova, and Daria Spiridonova.

The video was quickly deleted, and an apology was issued. A summary of the incident can be found below.

Fan Yilin, Viktoria Komova, Daria Spiridonova, and Madison Kocian — all scored 15.366 for a four-way tie for first place at the 2015 Glasgow World Championships.
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Age China WAG

2010: Satirizing Age Falsification in Chinese Gymnastics

On March 15, 2010 — global Consumer Rights Day — the Beijing News published a piece of institutional satire disguised as an investigative report on the Dong Fangxiao age fraud case. Its target was not the gymnast herself, but the official explanation that she had reduced her own age after retirement — a claim so implausible that the article treats it as a joke and follows it to its logical conclusion.

Framed as a mock “anti-counterfeiting” report, the piece recasts Dong’s age as a defective product, Sydney as its place of origin, and the Gymnastics Center director as its “quality inspector.” The implication is mordant: the same authority responsible for the irregularity is now certifying the investigation into it.

From there, the satire widens. What begins as a single case becomes a broader portrait of a sporting world full of “counterfeits,” including members of the 2008 team, and it culminates in a deliberately absurd proposal: implant electronic chips in newborns to prevent age fraud. “That way, there would be no fear of athletes changing their ages — and no worry about officials changing them either.” The line gives the game away: the power to falsify records does not belong to the athlete, yet it is the athlete who is to be controlled.

Dong Fangxiao, November 2000, Stuttgart
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Age China WAG

Who Bears the Responsibility for Age Falsification in Chinese Gymnastics?

Within China, age falsification in sport is less a subject of dispute than an accepted reality. As Chao Bai wrote in the Southern Daily in 2010, “We do not need foreigners to point it out. We already know that the ages given for many Chinese athletes are far from reliable.” (我们不须外国人道来,我们也知道我国很多运动员的年龄都不大靠谱。)

The harder question—the one that Chinese commentators, academics, and journalists have wrestled with more seriously than foreign observers tend to realize—is not whether falsification happens, but who is responsible for it.

In February 2010, the International Gymnastics Federation confirmed that Dong Fangxiao had competed at the 2000 Sydney Olympics at fourteen years old, three years younger than her registered age. The Chinese women’s team lost its bronze medals from the 1999 World Championships and the 2000 Olympics. The official response from the Chinese Gymnastics Association was prompt and consistent: Dong’s falsification had been a purely personal act.

But many Chinese commentators refused to accept that framing. Together, their articles trace a line of responsibility that runs from a broader sports culture all the way to China’s Gymnastics Center itself. What follows examines age falsification through the lens of Chinese newspapers, beginning with the official narrative.

Dong Fangxiao, November 2000, Stuttgart
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Age North Korea WAG

1998: Questions Over North Korean Ages at the Asian Games

At the 1998 Asian Games, the ages of the North Korean gymnasts were questioned, largely because they appeared unusually young. Organizers reviewed their passports, and in the end, the North Korean gymnasts were deemed age-eligible, though Chinese coverage still raised the possibility that the passports themselves had been altered.

In the history of age falsification, this episode is revealing for a different reason, as well. In controversies surrounding Chinese gymnasts, one common defense has been to invoke racial generalizations—that athletes of Asian descent tend to look younger than their actual age. But this case complicates that argument. The skepticism did not come from Western observers projecting assumptions onto Asian bodies, but from within Asia itself, with one group questioning whether another Asian team’s gymnasts appeared overly young.

Below are Chinese, Korean, and English accounts of the incident.

Members of the North Korean gymnastics team watch the competition with their coach during the individual all-around at the 13th Asian Games in Bangkok. The North Korean team is under investigation following accusations that some of the women are underage for the competition. (Photo by YOSHIKAZU TSUNO/AFP via Getty Images)
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Age China WAG

Too Young in September, Gold in December: The Rewriting of Xu Jing’s Age

During the September 1998 National Championships, several emerging Chinese gymnasts made a strong impression. Among them was Xu Jing. But as the People’s Daily, China’s official state newspaper, noted at the time, Xu was too young to compete at the December Asian Games. And yet, just a few months later, she was in Bangkok, winning gold medals with the team and on floor.

So when was Xu Jing born? It’s not easy to say with precision. What follows is the documentary record—the paper trail that traces how her age has been reported over time.

Xu Jing at the 13th Asian Games at a gymnasium in Muang Tohong Thani, northern Bangkok, 10 December, 1998.

Photo by YOSHIKAZU TSUNO / AFP via Getty Images
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2008 Age China WAG

Yang Yilin and the Persistence of Her 1993 Birth Year

On the website for CCTV, Yang Yilin’s athlete profile no longer loads. The page it once pointed to is gone. But the underlying source code—the part of the page that tells a browser what to render—was never fully updated. Embedded in it, invisible to any reader who does not know how to look, is a birthdate: August 26, 1993.

Yang Yilin’s official birthdate is August 26, 1992. The difference of one year is not trivial. Under International Gymnastics Federation eligibility rules, a gymnast born in 1993 would have been too young to compete at the 2007 World Championships in Stuttgart and the 2008 Beijing Olympics. She competed at both. Her results stand in the FIG’s database, her eligibility certified, the case formally closed.

What remains is the discrepancy. The page is gone, but the data persists on the website for China’s official state broadcaster—an earlier value embedded in a system that was never fully overwritten.

Left to right: Nastia Liukin, He Kexin, Yang Yilin
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Age China WAG

From 2005 to 2004: The Re-Aging of China’s Gymnasts

After the Chinese women’s team finished sixth at the 2022 World Championships, the Chinese press searched for explanations. One recurring theme was a perceived lack of talent. In 2018, Chinese officials had lamented the absence of gymnasts born in 2001 and 2002. By 2022, the concern had shifted forward: now there was said to be a shortage of athletes born around 2005 and 2006.

China’s team final lineup consisted of Tang Qianjing, Zhang Jin, Ou Yushan, Luo Rui, and Wei Xiaoyuan. Three of them — Tang Qianjing, Zhang Jin, and Ou Yushan — were members of the Chinese women’s team at the Tokyo Olympics. Because women’s gymnastics turns over quickly, most gymnasts have a competitive window of only one or two Olympic cycles. As the Paris cycle began, most of the leading nations used this World Championships to carry out a major generational overhaul. China’s women’s team, however, found itself somewhat stretched for options: the squad is in the midst of a transition, its core preparation group still consists largely of athletes from the previous cycle, and gymnasts born in 2005 and 2006 have yet to emerge in sufficient numbers, leaving an apparent gap that has affected the team’s overall strength.

Archived here.

女团决赛中国队派出的队员为唐茜靖、章瑾、欧钰珊、罗蕊、韦筱圆,其中唐茜靖、章瑾、欧钰珊三人都是东京奥运会中国女团成员。由于女子体操更新换代较快,大部分小花只有一至两个奥运周期的“花期”,进入巴黎奥运周期,大部分强队都在本次世锦赛实现了“大换血”,但中国女团在人员调配上有些“捉襟见肘”,队伍正处在新老交替的过程中,重点备战队员还是上个周期的选手,2005至2006年出生的选手出现一定断档,整体实力受到影响。

Note: Similar langauge about an age gap was used in 2018.

In a country of more than a billion people, it is difficult to believe that China simply produced very few talented gymnasts born in 2005 and 2006. But there is another possibility: China did produce a substantial group of elite gymnasts born in 2005, yet many of them later appeared in official records with 2004 birth years instead.

Guan Chenchen, August 3, 2021, Tokyo Olympics
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Age China WAG

Chen Yile and the Paper Trail Pointing to 2003

In 2018, Chen Yile enjoyed a remarkable senior debut. She won team bronze at the Doha World Championships and captured three gold medals — team, all-around, and balance beam — at the Asian Games in Jakarta. Yet according to articles published by both the Chinese Olympic Committee and the General Administration of Sport of China, Chen Yile was still only fifteen years old in 2018 and therefore not old enough to compete as a senior under FIG rules.

The timeline presented in the articles is unambiguous. Both state that Chen Yile was fourteen during the 2017 National Games and fifteen during the 2018 Asian Games, clearly pointing to a 2003 birth year, even though she was officially registered with a 2002 birthdate.

From Left to Right: Liu Tingting, Chen Yile, Wang Yan, National Games, September 2017
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Age China WAG

Before the FIG Ever Knew Her: The Shifting Birthdate of Luo Huan

At the end of 2018, Ye Zhennan, team leader of the national gymnastics squad, acknowledged that the women’s national team had entered a difficult period. One reason, he explained, was the lack of eligible athletes born in 2001 and 2002:

“This has been an extremely difficult year for the women’s team. Athletes born in 2001 and 2002 are almost entirely missing from the pipeline. The premature retirement of Wang Yan — the All-National Games double champion in vault and floor — combined with serious injuries to key athletes, including Mao Yi, Fan Yilin, and Li Qi, has left the team noticeably weakened. Through the coaching of head coach Qiao Liang and the experience gained at the Asian Games and World Championships, the athletes have undergone a remarkable transformation in both their training level and their mental outlook.”

“女队今年是非常困难的一年,2001、2002年龄段出生的队员几乎断档,全运会跳马、自由操双料冠军王妍的过早退役以及毛艺、范忆琳、黎琪等重点队员出现严重伤病,使队伍实力上有所欠缺。通过乔良主教练在训练水平上的弥补,和在亚运会、世锦赛的历练让队员在训练水平和精神面貌有了焕然一新的改变。”

Archived here.

In a country of more than a billion people, it is difficult to believe that China simply produced very few gymnasts born in 2001 and 2002. There are, however, several possible explanations. Perhaps the national team focused so heavily on preparing the 1999 and 2000 cohorts for the Rio Olympics that the next generation was neglected. Or perhaps some gymnasts born in 2001 and 2002 had their ages adjusted in order to make them eligible for the Rio Olympics.

Luo Huan’s case points to that possibility. Her reported birth year appears to shift from 2002 to 2000. But the significance of her age extends beyond a single discrepancy. It offers a window into a broader pattern: a system in which age alterations appear not as rare exceptions, but as something closer to routine practice — often taking place during early childhood, long before a gymnast ever reaches the international stage.

Luo Huan, 2018 Asian Games in Jakarta
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Age China WAG

Wang Yan – A Gymnast Born in the 2000s

At the 2016 Rio Olympics, Chinese gymnasts again faced questions about their ages. Although the controversy received little attention in the United States — likely overshadowed by the emerging abuse scandal surrounding USA Gymnastics — it was widely discussed in China.

One exchange, in particular, stood out after the team final, where the Chinese team won bronze. “Many viewers watched the competition and were surprised by how young the Chinese team members look” (“很多观众看了比赛,他们对中国队员的年轻感到吃惊”), a foreign reporter remarked. “They seem very small, as if they might not quite be of eligible age” (“感觉看起来很小,似乎不是很够(参赛)年龄?”).

The question placed the gymnasts in an uncomfortable position. Any careless or ambiguous wording could easily have been amplified by foreign media and turned into another international controversy. But, according to Chinese media, the athletes responded calmly and confidently.

“We just look relatively young” (“我们只是看起来比较年轻”), team captain Shang Chunsong answered first.

“We do look young” (“我们就是看起来比较小”), Fan Yilin added, “but one of the American team members is actually younger than us” (“但是美国一名队员比我们还要小呀”).

Then Shang Chunsong concluded matter-of-factly: “Tan Jiaxin is from 1996; the rest of us are from 1999” (“谭佳薪是96年的,其余都是99年的”).

There was only one problem with that response: in the weeks leading up to Rio, Chinese state media had repeatedly described Wang Yan as belonging to the “post-2000s generation.”

Wang Yan, August 11, 2016, Rio Olympics, Paul J. Sutton/PCN Photography