2007 Aug 03 Life's a (Beijing) Beach
Ahh, summertime in Beijing: sweltering hot days, festering street food, increased cockroach activity, a cloud of smog hovering around the city, taxi cab rides with less-than-fragrant drivers, and of course, beach volleyball cheerleaders.
Beach volleyball cheerleaders? Wait a second here … while the rest of us have been wallowing in the summer heat over the past few weeks, the official beach volleyball stadium for the 2008 Olympics, replete with 17,000 tons of sand imported from Hainan, has been quietly taking shape in the northern end of Chaoyang Park.
Last weekend, cheerleader tryouts were held for the first event to take place at the new venue, the FIVB (Federation Internationale de Volleyball) Women’s Beach Volleyball Challenger, due to take place Monday, Aug 13 through Sunday Aug 19.
Pairs from from China, Brazil, Thailand, Canada, the Philippines, the US and several other countries will volley for USD 50,000 in prize money and valuable points to help them in their quest for a berth into the 2008 Olympics.
Most countries are not sending their premier duos, but the top matchups at Chaoyang Park should prove to be a potential meet between the two top-ranked pairs in the tourney, Heidi Ilustre and Diane Pascua of the Philippines and Ji Linjun (right) and Zhang Ying of China. Ji and Zhang will hope to avenge their loss to Ilustre and Pascua last May at the Singapore Women's Open.
Tickets for the event are a modest RMB 10 (nosebleed seats, preliminary rounds) to RMB 150 (good seats, finals) and can be purchased at the venue or via piao.com here (tickets via piao.com must be purchased more than 3 days in advance of the start of the event.) A full event schedule is available here.
Ogling of bikini-clad athletes and cheerleaders at the event is apparently officially endorsed, according to the organizer’s notes on the Etiquette of Beach Volleyball:
When watching the beach volleyball competitions, spectators should not only care about the results that who win the gold medals but also enjoy the matches, the pleasure that the nature, the physical beauty and sport provide. Spectators may yell and applaud for the good performance and release their wonderful feelings under the sun and on the beach. A sunny day is suitable for the competition. But spectators should use some protective lotion on the skin in order to prevent the ultraviolet radiation. It is necessary for watching the competition to wear sunglasses and bring drinks.
And for those of you so impressed by the irrepressible peppiness of the cheerleading squads on display at the tourney, no need to be jealous: you can be one too, if you've got the right stuff: Olympic cheerleader tryouts are currently underway nationwide (and the great news is that you don't even have to be sleeping with the quarterback of your school's football team to be eligible).
Organizers are seeking 200 "啦啦宝贝" ("lala babes") -- aka cheerleaders -- to be the official cheerleading squads for the Olympic Games next year. Preliminary competition rounds are taking place around the country from now through October, with the finals to take place in Beijing in December.
Should you feel so inspired, signups are open to all at the Chinese-language website DDUp (sorry laowai, no English version), both women as well as men, and individual performers as well as groups. On the site you can check out video clips of the contestants' routines and cast a ballot for your faves.
Meanwhile, it may come as a surprise to learn that sitting atop the 2007 Beach Volleyball World Rankings as of Aug 1 are not tandems from traditional powerhouses such as Brazil, the US or Australia, but two Chinese pairs: Tian Jia and Wang Jie (#1) and Xue Chen and Zhang Xi (#2).
Links and Sources:
FIVB: Beach Volleyball World Rankings 2007
Official 2008 Olympics Website: Beach volleyball cheerleaders get a first-hand experience of performing
Official 2008 Olympics Website: Final load of Olympic sand arrives in Beijing
Official 2008 Olympics Website: Chaoyang Park Beach Volleyball Ground
Good Luck Beijing: Etiquette of Beach Volleyball
Good Luck Beijing: Full Beach Volleyball event schedule
Good Luck Beijing: How to purchase tickets
You might also be interested in :
US wheelchair rugby team ready for revenge at paralympics
With plenty of tickets to the Wheelchair Rugby still available - they're a steal at RMB 30 each - we decided to re-run this article from the September issue of the Beijinger magazine. The competiton runs from Sep 12-16 at Beijing Science & Technology University Gymnasium with the Canadian and US teams going head to head on Sep 14.When it comes to dynamic-sounding names for a sport, few can match the term Murderball, the original name for Wheelchair Rugby (or Quad Rugby as it's known in the United States). The sport is coming to Beijing this September as an event in the Paralympic Games, and starting Friday, September 12, Beijingers will get the chance to see first hand why the sport wholly deserves its traditional violent epithet. As soon as the opening whistle sounds and you witness the athletes smashing chairs, the game will ride roughshod over any preconceptions you may have about the wheelchair-bound.
Wheelchair Rugby was developed in Canada in the late 1970s. At the time Wheelchair Basketball was the most popular team-sport for wheelchair users, but its reliance on upper body mobility was a turn off to the majority of quadriplegic athletes, who suffer functional impairments to the upper and lower limbs. As a combination of wheelchair basketball and ice hockey, the sport offers quadriplegic athletes the chance to play in both offensive and defensive roles. Played on a basketball court with a volleyball, the aim of the game is to score points by carrying the ball over the line in between the opponents goalposts. The sport shares little resemblance with traditional rugby except for its name and a full contact nature that often unseats participants from their wheelchairs.
BMX Finals

French rider Anne-Caroline Chausson made history this morning when she became the first person to ever win Olympic gold in the BMX. Going into the last turn Chausson was neck and neck with race favorite Shanaze Read of Great Britain, but when Read tried to pass on the inside, she clipped the back wheel of the French rider and crashed out of the race. Chausson's team mate Laetitia le Corguille avoided Read to nab the silver and American Jill Kintner finished third.
Olympic Nightlife: Battle of the Beers and a chance to win tickets to Club Bud

Come the Games, come the parties. They dubbed it the "No-fun Olympics,” but after waking up this morning with a couple of snow leopards, a mariachi band and a Cadillac parked in my front room, I beg to differ. Beijing is awash with parties, events and more beer than I can get my clammy little hands on – no wonder there are so many empty seats at the Olympic venues. But before my liver quits and I’m lost to an August of indignity and iniquity, I’ll give you an update of the goings on and ongoings at some of Beijing’s hottest Olympic party spots. Well, two of Beijing's hottest party spots – The Heineken House and Club Bud. These two places have two things in common: a hop-based beverage and location. But other than this, they're very different venues.
How to get your hands on some Olympic tickets

Weren't in town for round one? Thought you skip the rigmarole of round two and just buy direct in round three? Get caught on a page that never finished loading during stage three? Only find out about round four when it was too late? Whatever the cause, you now have to endure countless conversations revolving around who's got what and are forced to listen as friends and colleagues brag about that great game of beach volleyball they watched last night or how they're really looking forward to watching the 110m hurdles live. To add salt to the wound, when you watch the games on TV you see hundreds of empty seats smiling mockingly at you from the screen! No matter how it came about, if you've found yourself in the Olympic city without a ticket and you still want to see some events, keep reading below for some tips of how to get close to the action:
What the Opening Ceremony Looked Like From the Inside

Standing eerily still and in machine-like formation over square tables, the army of thousands assembled before us portended something big. From one angle, they resembled angry youth, standing at attention before their school desks. Another interpretation might imagine them as factory workers listening attentively to morning loudspeakers before getting down to work. And then there is the obvious comparison with the theatrical image of soldiers lined up in uniform that has become shorthand for the Chinese government.
But this wasn't about that China, at least not overtly. This was about a China of the past and the future, a China transcending a half-century of difficulties to reach backwards and forwards at once. It's a China defined by a sense of tradition and a capacity for innovation in the arts and sciences - a far cry from the reputation China has for, say, mass politics, rote learning, knock-offs and copy-paste manufacturing.
"I've never seen a country spend so much time showing itself off," a Chinese friend mentioned after watching the ceremony. She made a comparison to North Korea's Mass Games. "But I guess we have a lot to show."
Indeed it's a history and culture that remains unknown to most Westerners, and, as many Chinese will remind you, goes back 5,000 years. Of course, because successive dynasties interspersed with drastic upheavals, that number's not completely accurate. But that didn't stop director Zhang Yimou from attempting to pack it all in to a typically epic, spectacular ceremony.




Guest
Re: tbjblog: Life's a (Beijing) Beach
Starts today ... unfortunately the Philippines pair is not in the schedule, not sure why:
Mon August 13
9:00-15:00 -- Preliminary Round, Session 1 (6 matches)
18:00-24:00 -- Preliminary Round, Session 2 (6 matches)
Tue August 14
9:00-15:00 -- Preliminary Round, Session 3 (6 matches)
18:00-24:00 -- Preliminary Round, Session 4 (6 matches)
Wed August 15
9:00-21:00 -- Preliminary Round, Session 5 (12 matches)
23:00-23:50 -- Lucky-loser Matches (2 matches)
Thu August 16
9:00-13:00 -- Round of 16, Session 6 (4 matches)
18:00-22:00 -- Round of 16, Session 7 (4 matches)
Fri August 17
9:00-11:00 -- Quarter-finals, Session 8 (2 matches)
20:00-22:00 -- Quarter-finals, Session 9 (2 matches)
Sat August 18
9:00-11:00 -- Semi-finals, Session 10 (2 matches)
Sun August 19
9:00-9:50 -- Bronze Medal Match
10:00-10:50 -- Gold Medal Match
11:10-11:30 -- Medal Ceremony