No injuries: coach contracts

BEIJING, Dec 7 (Reuters) - China’s gymnastics coaches will be forced to sign contracts promising not to let their athletes get injured before the Beijing Olympics, team leader Zhang Peiwen told Friday’s China Daily.

China will be relying on their gymnasts for a bumper haul of gold medals at next August’s Games and officials are anxious to avoid a repeat of the injury which has kept double Olympic champion Li Xiaoping out of competition this year.

“In the coming days, all the Chinese national coaches will sign contracts with the gymnastics administrative centre to prevent serious injuries from happening before the Beijing Games,” he told the paper.

“We don’t want injuries to destroy our prospects for the Beijing Games. I hope we can reduce injuries to a minimum by signing these contracts.”

The Chinese team for the world athletics championships earlier this year signed contracts committing them to minimum achievements in Osaka
Zhang, speaking at a test event for the Beijing Olympics, said he was pleased with how things were going with eight months to go even though Li Xiaoping’s recovery was “slow”.

“This is our best Olympic preparation ever,” Zhang said. “Apart from Li, none of the team is troubled by injuries. They can put their best efforts into the coming winter training camp.”

China won eight golds at the 2006 world championships and another five at the Stuttgart worlds earlier this year as well as dominating the Olympic test event.

Zhang was particularly pleased with Lu Bin, who returned from more than a year out injured, to win four titles last weekend.

“That was a remarkable achievement,” Zhang said. “Faced with serious injury, he did not give up. I just love that spirit, and that will inspire the whole team to better prepare for the Olympic Games.”

But Lu’s heroics will not be enough to guarantee him a spot in the squad for the Beijing Games, Zhang said.

“Even Lu knows only next year’s form counts.”
(Writing by Nick Mulvenney; editing by Greg Stutchbury)

The terms of the contract would make interesting reading. I anticipate that these contracts would have inherit “slavery clauses”.

Nothing to worry about. Just a bit about ‘organ donation after trial’.

That’s alright. They usually only take one kidney. I don’t think they’ve moved onto vital organs yet. The heart and liver are safe for the moment.

Not after a trial! They do tissue typing on prisoners charged with capital offences and when a ‘customer’ is ready, the trial is held, and, a few hours later, an organ is available.

It’s almost science fiction. Human beings that are convicted for capital offenses are cut up, dissected and sold. Like meat at the butcher. It’s hard to grasp this concept if it was in a movie. The fact that it’s real is almost incomprehensible. At least back in the 60’s Dylan would contemporise such issues through music. In this day and age, the world remains silent. The IOC legitimises China with an Olympic Games.