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.









