The women from China’s far northeast, who spent childhood winters whipping around on frozen lakes and rivers, towered menacingly over the other team as they faced off for puck drop.
At China’s national ice hockey championships last month, the Harbin squad vanquished contenders from China’s sultry southern city of Guangzhou with a lopsided score of 51-0, with Kong Minghui slapping shot after shot into the net.
Despite their dominance, Kong and her skillful teammates might not be enough to power China’s national team to medal glory when the country hosts the Winter Olympics in Beijing in 2022.
Eager to move up in the medals table, the national hockey team might bend the nation’s rigid single-citizenship rules to recruit overseas talent and beef up their squad.
“What we have to do going forward is play in more international tournaments and get more practice playing with top teams,” Kong told reporters.
The highly unusual move to seek foreign talent is a sign of how far China is willing to go for success at its home Winter Olympics, a tournament at which it has enjoyed only fleeting success.
With a population of nearly 1.4 billion, China is pushing hard to promote ice hockey and other winter sports ahead of the Games after winning just nine medals, including a lone gold, at this year’s edition in Pyeongchang, South Korea.
China’s men and women hockey teams are to compete in the Games, since host countries traditionally earn a spot in the competition regardless of world ranking.
The national and local governments have been pouring money into new facilities, equipment and training for players and coaches in the past few years, with the majority of the new ice rinks being built in shopping malls.
However, it remains to be seen whether Beijing will grant citizenship to foreigners to strengthen their rosters, following in the footsteps of Seoul for the Pyeongchang Olympics.
Out of 25 players on South Korea’s men’s ice hockey team during the Games, seven were foreign nationals, with six coming from Canada, including goalie Matt Dalton.
Mark Dreyer, editor of Web site China Sports Insider, said China would likely recruit only foreign players with Chinese roots.
“There’s been no official policy saying this, but recruiting policy has been clear throughout tryouts in North America. New recruits must have at least some Chinese ancestry,” Dreyer told reporters.
Such a move would allow China to expand its player pool, while encouraging engagement with the Chinese diaspora — something Beijing has been keen to do at all levels.
However, China does not currently recognize dual citizenship.
To become a naturalized Chinese citizen, a foreigner would have to give up their previous citizenship, making the option undesirable to many foreign hockey players.
“Would the players be able to keep their other passports? If this does somehow happen in ice hockey — which now seems possible — we would likely see other sports following suit,” Dreyer said.
In March, at the Canadian Women’s Hockey League final, China burst onto the international hockey scene with a new squad that was a special mix of Chinese nationals and overseas Chinese.
Kunlun Red Star, one of two private teams formed this year to prepare Chinese talent for the 2022 Olympics, has a special mix of Chinese nationals and overseas Chinese for its male and female teams.
The Kunlun women shocked hockey observers by making it all the way to the Clarkson Cup finals in Toronto, narrowly losing to Ontario’s Markham Thunder after an overtime goal — but proving that Chinese teams can compete with world-class clubs.
In May, the Kunlun teams went through a grueling official Olympics training camp alongside foreign players and coaches in Shenzhen, China.
Participation in Kunlun is optional for China’s national team players, and provides them with more opportunities to play in top world tournaments.
“[We] are now choosing the best Chinese and overseas players to cultivate talents for the Chinese women’s hockey team for 2022,” Kunlun manager Zhou Song told reporterse.
“We assembled 22 outstanding overseas Chinese-origin players. They will have a chance to fight for their country in the future,” Zhou said, notably calling China “their country,” despite them being foreigners.
Kunlun provides a competitive salary plus bonuses for players, with the help of private sponsors such as Chinese real-estate developer Vanke.
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