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Chen Yanqing

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Chinese weightlifter (born 1979)
In thisChinese name, thefamily name isChen.
Chen Yanqing
Chen in 2008
Personal information
Born (1979-05-04)May 4, 1979 (age 45)[1]
Suzhou,Jiangsu Province[1]
Height158 cm (5 ft 2 in) (2004)[1]
Weight58 kg (128 lb) (2004)[1]
Sport
SportWeightlifting
Updated on 3 July 2014

Chen Yanqing (simplified Chinese:陈艳青;traditional Chinese:陳艷青;pinyin:Chén Yànqīng; born May 4, 1979) is aChineseweightlifter who competed in the2004 Summer Olympics and the2008 Summer Olympics. She won the gold medal in the 58 kg class in both competitions,[2][3] making her the first woman to win gold medals in weightlifting in two consecutive Olympics.[4]

Chen was born inSuzhou,Jiangsu. She won her first gold medal in 1995 at the Junior Asian Women Weightlifting Championship, and another at a 1998 world championship. She was slated to compete at the2000 Summer Olympics but was scratched from the Chinese Olympic lineup for strategic reasons a short time before the games began.[3] She has also won the National Games and East Asia Games[5] and set the world record in her weight class in the snatch and lift in 2006.[3]

Personal life

[edit]

Chen was born to a poor rural family who live in a small farming village called Xishan (西山) on an island nearSuzhou, two hours west ofShanghai.[3] Her parents are bothfruit growers.[4] In 1989 her parents sent her to a state athletic school after coach and former weightlifter Cao Xinmin discovered her at a sports match in Suzhou. Her parents have mixed emotions about her career in weightlifting,[3][5] but her earnings have helped raise her family's standard of living.[3]

After she was scratched from the 2000 Summer Olympics, she retired in 2001 to study business atSoochow University inSuzhou. She returned from retirement to compete in the 2004 and 2008 Summer Olympics.[3]

References

[edit]
  1. ^abcd"Chen Yanqing".en.olympic.cn.Chinese Olympic Committee. Retrieved3 July 2014.
  2. ^"Yangquin Chen Olympic medals and stats". databaseOlympics.com. 2006. Archived fromthe original on 2008-09-29. Retrieved2008-09-22.
  3. ^abcdefgBlumenstein, Rebecca (2008-08-09)."Lifting China: In Beijing's Pursuit of Olympic Gold, Weightlifter's Family Pays a Price". The Wall Street Journal. Retrieved2008-08-26.
  4. ^ab"China's sporting public still faces hurdles after Olympics". Xinhua. 2008-08-23. Archived fromthe original on August 24, 2008. Retrieved2008-09-22.
  5. ^ab"'Ugly' Weightlifting Olympic Record Breaker".Nanjing Morning Post. All-China Women's Federation. 2008-08-13. www.womenofchina.cn. Archived fromthe original on 2008-08-24. Retrieved2008-09-22.
  • 58 kg (2000–2016)
  • 59 kg (2020–)
  • 56 kg (1987–1992)
  • 59 kg (1993–1997)
  • 58 kg (1998–2017)
  • 59 kg (2018–)
  • 60 kg (1987–1992)
  • 64 kg (1993–1997)
  • 63 kg (1998–2017)
  • 64 kg (2018–)
1990:56 kg • 1994:59 kg • 1998–2018:58 kg • 2022:59 kg
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