(C) U.S. State Dept This story was originally published by U.S. State Dept and is unaltered. . . . . . . . . . . Triumphant Asian American athletes inspire tomorrow’s superstars [1] [] Date: 2022-05-13 04:03:37+00:00 Whether they are flying down a mountain, passing a ball or landing a complicated spin, Asian Americans are excelling in sports. “Asian Americans participate in sports broadly, everything from mainstream sports — basketball, football and baseball — to a variety of others, both team and individual,” says Stan Thangaraj, associate professor of anthropology, gender and international studies at the City College of New York. These athletes are finding new entry points into sports, he says, sometimes through their admiration of superstar mentors who share a similar heritage. Among those role models are recent Asian American Olympians. At the 2022 Winter Games, U.S. snowboarder Chloe Kim (whose parents were born in South Korea) won her second gold medal in the halfpipe at just 21 years old, and figure skater Nathan Chen (whose parents immigrated from China) picked up gold. At the delayed 2020 Summer Olympics, when American gymnast Simone Biles couldn’t compete, Sunisa Lee (whose mother and stepfather are of Hmong descent and immigrated to the U.S. from Laos) stepped into a starring role and won the all-around gymnastics title. And volleyball player Justine Wong-Orantes (who has Chinese heritage on her mother’s side) helped her team win a gold medal. “People assume we just broke through,” says Constancio Arnaldo, assistant professor of interdisciplinary, gender and ethnic studies at the University of Nevada, Las Vegas, and a second-generation Filipino American. But Asian American participation in sports goes back to colonial times, he says. In the Philippines, for instance, Americans built YMCAs and promoted sports. It is no coincidence that the Philippines’ basketball league is the second-oldest professional hoops league in the world, after the NBA, he points out. Arnaldo, who loved playing team sports as a child, says Asian American competitors get pleasure and a sense of belonging — whether to a team, a community or — in the case of the Olympics — a country. “Sports has been a way to become part of the American national fabric,” he says. With more Asian Americans competing at the highest levels, there are more adults who can guide the next generation of sports stars, more leagues to nurture them and even more networking opportunities for those in professional sports careers, Thangaraj says. Kim, skaters Michelle Kwan and Apolo Anton Ohno, and basketball player Jeremy Lin have reached young people around the world through State Department programs promoting sports participation. Asian Americans have had to deal with many stereotypes such as that they are brainy, “model minorities” who aren’t physically gifted, or that female Asian Americans are delicate and extremely feminine and males not very masculine, Arnaldo points out. But early trailblazers and recent Olympians alike have worked to break such stereotypes and help others see Asian Americans as more complex and nuanced individuals, Arnaldo says. Basketball player Jeremy Lin, whose parents immigrated to the United States from Taiwan and who led the NBA’s New York Knicks on an unexpected winning streak in 2012, told the New York Times that his athleticism itself is his reaction to the stereotype that Asian Americans are quiet or passive: “For me, to play basketball at the highest level is going to do more than words can say.” Today’s sports stars follow many earlier Asian American groundbreakers: Diver Victoria Manalo Draves, whose father was Filipino, became the first Asian American Olympic champion, winning gold medals in springboard and platform diving in 1948. Fellow diver Sammy Lee, of South Korean heritage, also won a gold in platform diving at the same Olympics. Kristi Yamaguchi, whose grandparents on both sides were Japanese, dominated the sport of figure skating as part of a line of Asian American stars. She won an Olympic gold in 1992. Figure skater Michelle Kwan, whose parents are Chinese immigrants from Hong Kong, is a five-time world champion and two-time Olympic medalist, winning a silver in 1998 and a bronze in 2002. Apolo Anton Ohno, who was raised by his Japanese-born father in Seattle, raked in eight Olympic medals in speed skating from 2002 to 2010. Tiger Woods, whose mother has Thai and Chinese ancestry and whose father is part Chinese, is arguably among the greatest golfers of all time. Hines Ward, whose mother is originally from South Korea, played for the Pittsburgh Steelers football team for 14 seasons. Jeremy Lin kicked off “Linsanity” (a play on his surname and the word “insanity”) in 2012 when he helped turn the New York Knicks’ string of losses into a seven-game winning streak. Lin recently told NBC that “society has always tried to say Asians can’t do this. Asians you can’t do that. You hear about the ‘bamboo ceiling.” “What that moment meant was just being able to compete in the same court, in the same arena. And then to defeat and to overcome and to win. I think that’s what I’m really proud of,” he said. Lin was a seminal figure in both inspiring athletes and in changing how Asian Americans are viewed, says Thangaraj, author of a book on Asian American basketball players. (Thangaraj grew up toggling between India, where he played cricket, and the U.S., where he played basketball and baseball.) “It was something we were all jumping to hang onto,” he says of Linsanity. “Cool had not been associated with Asian Americans. It was beautiful.” [END] --- [1] Url: https://share.america.gov/asian-american-athletes-inspire-tomorrows-superstars/ Published and (C) by U.S. State Dept Content appears here under this condition or license: Public Domain. via Magical.Fish Gopher News Feeds: gopher://magical.fish/1/feeds/news/usstate/