I was sitting in my Toronto apartment last week, craving some hometown sports action. The China Open was happening back home, and I’d seen snippets on social media about these incredible women tennis players – you know, the ones with that fierce determination that makes you proud to be Chinese even when you’re thousands of miles away.
My WeChat groups were buzzing with clips from 《体坛零距离》 featuring these athletes. One friend sent a video of a player wiping sweat from her brow between points, her eyes fixed with that particular intensity I remember seeing in my cousin during her university entrance exams. Another shared a moment where two teammates hugged after a tough match, their red and yellow uniforms looking like moving flags against the green court.
But when I clicked the official CCTV Sports link my aunt sent me, all I got was that dreaded spinning wheel of death. The video would load for three seconds, show a player smashing an overhead, then freeze right at the moment of impact. I could almost hear the collective groan from Chinese sports fans worldwide experiencing the same frustration.
It’s funny how technology works – or doesn’t work. Here we are in 2024, where I can video call my grandmother in Fujian and she can see the snow falling outside my Canadian window in real time, but I can’t watch a tennis match happening in Beijing without it buffering every ten seconds.
The worst part was missing that special segment about ‘Chinese Tennis Women’ that everyone was talking about. My cousin described it perfectly over WhatsApp: ‘It’s not just about individual players, it’s about how they lift each other up. Like when Li Na retired but her legacy inspired a new generation.’ She said the cinematography made the sweat on their faces look like morning dew, and you could practically hear the tension in the silence between serves.
I remember thinking about my own sports days back in high school – not tennis, but badminton. Our coach used to say the same thing these tennis players were expressing: ‘Alone we can do little, together we can do much.’ It’s that collective spirit that makes Chinese athletes so compelling to watch, even when you’re watching from another continent through glitchy streams.
After refreshing the page for what felt like the hundredth time, I finally accepted defeat and called it a night. But that longing to connect with home through sports didn’t go away. There’s something about watching athletes compete under our flag that hits different when you’re overseas – it’s not just entertainment, it’s a piece of home.
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