日韩大陆av,av激情亚洲男人的天堂国语,中文欧美亚洲欧日韩范冰冰,国产成人AV免观看

Global EditionASIA 中文雙語Fran?ais
Sports
Home / Sports / China

Chinese snowboarding's collective progress makes a strong statement to the world

By Sun Xiaochen | chinadaily.com.cn | Updated: 2025-12-05 22:11
Share
Share - WeChat
China's reigning snowboarding Olympic champion Su Yiming takes off from the Shougang Big Air slope to perform a trick during the qualifying round at the FIS Freeski and Snowboard Big Air World Cup in Beijing on Friday. [WEI XIAOHAO / CHINA DAILY]

With three riders making it to a World Cup final together for the first time, Chinese snowboarding has backed up its collective rise with a history-making confidence boost at Beijing's iconic Olympic slope.

The night session of the International Ski and Snowboard Federation's Big Air World Cup event in Beijing ended up a milestone for the host on Friday after three Chinese men, Ge Chunyu, Su Yiming, and Zhao Yingxu, rode on a collective momentum to qualify together for Saturday's final round at west Beijing's Shougang Industrial Park.

It marked the first time that three Chinese men's snowboarders would appear in a World Cup event's final session, across all disciplines, in the 31-year history of the top-flight FIS series.

The trio's final run in Beijing was followed by an inspiring double delight delivered by Su and Ge finishing one-two on the podium at the Cup series' season opener in Chongli, Hebei province, last week.

Big air involves skiers or snowboarders tackling a vertical drop and performing a variety of flips, spins and grabs before they land. Each of the 63 snowboarders signing up for the qualifying round gets three attempts, with the combined score of their two best runs being counted. The top 10 from the qualifying session advance into the final round.

Japan's Yuto Miyamura led the qualifying field with a combined 173.25 points from his first two qualifier runs, followed by 19-year-old Ge, who scored 88.75 points from a massive frontside triple 1440 trick in his third run to come all the way down to finish second among all qualifiers.

China's 19-year-old snowboarder Ge Chunyu finishes 2nd overall in Friday's qualifying round to make it to Saturday's final of the FIS Freeski and Snowboard Big Air World Cup in Beijing. [WEI XIAOHAO / CHINA DAILY]

China's reigning Olympic champion Su maintained his consistent performance, following his season-opening Cup win in Chongli, to score 166.5 points from his first two runs to settle with fourth, while unheralded teen prodigy Zhao Yingxu scored just enough to make the final cut with 143.75 points from his first two runs, which helped him rank 10th in the qualifying round.

Zhao, a 16-year-old talent, will be the youngest in Saturday's 10-athlete final, and he just feels stoked about making his career-first Cup final appearance on home snow.

"I didn't land my third run, falling a little bit short of my own expectations, but overall it was a good night for me," said Zhao, who is competing in just his second World Cup event in Beijing, following his debut last week in Chongli.

"It was a great learning curve for me, which helped me gain more experience and be more mentally mature at this level.

"More importantly, all the Chinese snowboarders riding together makes me feel so good, like a family."

Su, who won the big air gold medal at Beijing 2022 at exactly the same slope in Shougang, said the collective progress of Chinese snowboarding is making a strong statement to the world.

"My shared podium finish last week with Chunyu already proved that Chinese snowboarding is improving fast. Now we are riding together with more teammates on the World Cup stage, which has further enhanced our confidence," said Su, who also won a silver medal in slopestyle at the Beijing Winter Olympics.

China's 16-year-old snowboarding prodigy Zhao Yingxue performs a trick during his qualifying run at the FIS Freeski and Snowboard Big Air World Cup in Beijing on Friday. Zhao became the youngest Chinese men's athlete to have ever qualified for a snowboarding World Cup event's final round. [WEI XIAOHAO / CHINA DAILY]

sunxiaochen@chinadaily.com.cn

Most Popular

Highlights

What's Hot
Top
BACK TO THE TOP
English
Copyright 1995 - . All rights reserved. The content (including but not limited to text, photo, multimedia information, etc) published in this site belongs to China Daily Information Co (CDIC). Without written authorization from CDIC, such content shall not be republished or used in any form. Note: Browsers with 1024*768 or higher resolution are suggested for this site.
License for publishing multimedia online 0108263

Registration Number: 130349
FOLLOW US