The two texts translated here—a 2001 profile from New Sports and a 2004 Sina.com chat transcript—capture former Chinese gymnast Li Xiaoping during a new phase of his life. One of the world’s leading pommel horse specialists in the early 1980s, Li won the world title in 1981, helped China to its first men’s team world championship in 1983, and earned an Olympic team silver medal at Los Angeles in 1984 before retiring because of injury. By the time these pieces appeared, he and his wife, Wen Jia, herself a former member of the Chinese national team, had built a successful gymnastics club in Southern California while raising a family far from the country where they had made their names.
The New Sports article introduces the couple through Beijing’s successful bid for the 2008 Olympics, describing Li’s emotional reaction to the announcement before recounting their move to the United States, years of financial struggle, and eventual success as gymnastics coaches. The later Sina.com interview is more conversational, allowing Li and Wen Jia to reflect on immigration, entrepreneurship, family life, and their enduring ties to China. Together, the two pieces provide an unusually personal look at two former elite athletes as they navigated life after competition while remaining closely connected to the sport—and to the country—that had shaped them.

Note: Li Xiaoping and Li Xiaopeng are two different gymnasts. Newspaper articles and photo archives often confuse the two. To make matters more confusing, Li Xiaoping is the father-in-law of Li Xiaopeng. Li Xiaopeng, the 2000 and 2008 gold medalist on parallel bars, married Li “Angel” Anqi, who is one of Li Xiaoping’s daughters.








