Medals are less important than breakthroughs in new fields. Even though China didn’t win many medals in athletics this time, we saw breakthroughs and records broken in multiple areas China isn’t traditionally competitive in.
Honestly, although I would've loved to see China top the medal table and I hope China continues to improve in the Olympics and continues its investment into sports, the Olympic medal count just doesn't matter that much in the grand scheme of things.
Winning the most gold medals in the Olympics would bring no tangible benefits to China. No nation is going to avoid going to war with China or decide to align itself with China based on whether or not China won the most gold medals (as some members have suggested).
I am not saying winning gold medals is not important, but some members are making beating the US in Olympic medal count seem to be much more important than it actually is. China does not need to beat the US at the Olympics to surpass the US as a superpower, and there are other fields where it is much more important to being number one in.
Funny, if you replaced 'China' for 'India', you hear the Indians say echo the exact same sentiment, that medal count don't matter, no real benefit, India will still surpass China as a superpower, that other fields matter more. Funny how Indians think the same way too.Honestly, although I would've loved to see China top the medal table and I hope China continues to improve in the Olympics and continues its investment into sports, the Olympic medal count just doesn't matter that much in the grand scheme of things.
Winning the most gold medals in the Olympics would bring no tangible benefits to China. No nation is going to avoid going to war with China or decide to align itself with China based on whether or not China won the most gold medals (as some members have suggested).
I am not saying winning gold medals is not important, but some members are making beating the US in Olympic medal count seem to be much more important than it actually is. China does not need to beat the US at the Olympics to surpass the US as a superpower, and there are other fields where it is much more important to being number one in.
Honestly, if the US is winning the most medals overall it's probably going to win the most golds. I understand a lot of people made fun of the NYT and WaPo for using total medals to rank, and those outlets totally deserved it, but total medals is a measure of breadth of competitiveness. The more sports you can compete at the top level in, the more likely you will get the most golds too.
It's sad that karate is gone though. We need more Asian sports in the games.
Saw that. I was thinking yeah, China lost by some bad judging but at least we didn't lose a fight were we knocked the other guy out. There are memes all over the Chinese internet with the Japanese gymnast and his foot out of bounds; imagine the uproar if a Chinese guy KO'd his Japanese opponent in karate only for the judges to tell him he lost... That's when Chinese people stop watching the Olympics cus that's no ordinary level of rigging.I’m ok with karate if they didn’t enforce such stupid rules in the game. The Saudi player literally lost the gold medal because he knocked out his opponent. I mean seriously???
There's a huge difference between being consistently in the top three versus struggling to win a single medal. To be taken seriously as a superpower, China needs to be a strong performer in the games. This does not necessarily mean that China has to be number one. Being able to remain consistently in the top three is sufficient.Funny, if you replaced 'China' for 'India', you hear the Indians say echo the exact same sentiment, that medal count don't matter, no real benefit, India will still surpass China as a superpower, that other fields matter more. Funny how Indians think the same way too.
The only difference is the world laughs at Indians as small and physically weak. While nobody can laugh at China. This is worth immeasurable soft power and respect that Indians secretly dream of but cannot achieve.
I agree, one or two gold medals is meaningless in grand scheme of things, but THANK GOD I am not an Indian. I can't imagine the cognitive dissonance of trying to defend such an abysmal Olympic record while shouting Jai Hind Super Powah 20XX status at the same time.