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A passion for baseball

Posted: Tuesday, July 03, 2007 2:32 PM
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Jinan, Shandong Province –  "You see," Wang Liqiang gestured through the windshield at a taxi that had cut our car off at the traffic light. "This is what I'm talking about."

Wang, an otherwise laidback Shandong native sporting a small potbelly, was working up to his argument.

"China's changing all the time," he continued. "People used to behave okay.  Now with all this development, it's chaotic all the time, and the young people have lost a sense of who they are."

He turned to me.  "Baseball will bring that sense of order back."

Baseball? 

VIDEO: America's pastime catches on in China

"It teaches people manners," Wang was hitting his stride now.  "Baseball is a nine-person sport. Everyone has a position to play. Everyone knows what he needs to do. Everyone has to work together."

‘Baseball is like life’
Spend time in Wang's company and you soon discover how impassioned the 38-year old is about making America's pastime into China's too.

The former businessman runs the Shandong Zhanwang Baseball and Softball Club from a tiny office in the Shandong capital of Jinan. His goal is to increase China's exposure to the ballgame by bringing the sport to young boys across his hometown province.

Wang's zeal for baseball originated when he first saw it played in 1990 – "at the National Games," he said. "The national team wasn't very strong. But the sport was rather quiet and peaceful."

Wanting to learn more, he went out in search of a book explaining baseball. Then he began following the Chinese national baseball team across the country to watch their games. Before long, other aspects of the sport clicked with him: not just the emphasis on mental aptitude but also courtesy. "Players are required to bow when they meet their coach!"

As China stepped up the pace of its rapid economic development in the 1990s, Wang came to the conclusion that baseball was essential. "Life is like finding your position on a baseball field," he said. "The rules of baseball can help you regulate your life and find your goal. Many people don't have goals. Baseball trains the Chinese people…to fight for their goals, fight for their whole life."

So Wang quit his job in marketing and advertising. He sold his home. He sold his car.  And on April 18, 2002, he founded the Shandong Zhanwang Baseball and Softball Club.

Adrienne Mong/NBC News
Wang critiques his team.

‘One ball, one soul’
Slogans like "One ball, one soul" in Chinese characters decorate the walls of Wang's office, housed in a school where baseball isn't played and where he says he might be evicted from since the authorities don't see any benefit to having him there.

Wang shrugged and batted away the suggestion that he’d ever leave – an attitude that has served him well in overcoming challenges during the five years he's run the club. 

These challenges – the sport’s lack of visibility, coaching/instruction, fields, equipment – stem from baseball's patchy history in China. Although it arrived as early as 1863 (four years before Japan), it never gained the same foothold here as it did with neighboring countries, particularly as baseball was banned during the Cultural Revolution.

The game has since flourished in Japan, South Korea, and Taiwan, where leagues for all different levels of play have developed and from which strong talent has emerged – but has languished in China.

Take equipment. Although Chinese factories manufacture mitts and baseballs for foreign companies, those products aren't widely available to buy in China. So the resourceful Wang has worked relations with potential sponsors and connections to other baseball clubs in Japan and South Korea to obtain bats, balls, and mitts – often well used and broken in. 

"Mr. Wang is crazy about baseball," said Harry Shi, a Hong Kong-based businessman who met the club owner four years ago. Shi was so impressed by Wang's passion that he persuaded his employer at the time, American sporting goods company SSG, to sponsor the club.  SSG donated 120 baseballs, 24 bats, and one pitching machine – all of which were extremely difficult to come by in China, let alone a small coastal city like Jinan.

Wang also has had to find different ways to fund the club apart from his own money --he's sunk more than $130,000 since 2002.  He just doubled the $10 annual dues to enroll their boys in his baseball club.  It's a nominal training fee he uses to help pay for basic office expenses, playing in competitions, and, of course, travel.

The club's teams try to travel around China, as well as South Korea and Japan, to see ballgames since they're rarely broadcast on Chinese television.  (In fact, we "discovered" Wang and one of his teams in Tianjin. The team had driven five hours by bus to the port city as soon as the boys had finished school at 2 p.m. that Friday in order to catch the Tianjin Lions play the Shanghai Eagles.)

Adrienne Mong/NBC News
One of the mantras decorating Wang's office walls: "One ball, one soul."

An uphill battle
It's also been tough trying to raise the profile of baseball in schools. In a country where there are only 60 full baseball diamonds, one of Wang's tasks has been to persuade school authorities in Jinan just to provide a small space for boys to practice catching.  That means vying with basketball courts and soccer fields – two sports that are far more popular in China.

Wang said 2005 and 2006 were tough years.

But whenever he considered quitting, he thought about the boys. "I see the kids love it so much," he said. "How could I do that to them?"

His perseverance has paid off. One of his club's teams won third place in the 2004 national junior competition. And while only two schools in Jinan had baseball in 2002, there are now about a dozen participating in his club.  Wang hopes one of the club’s alumni, just about to finish university, will come back to help coach the teams.

Roughly 200 boys, ages six to 17, play on the 14 teams – including his 14-year-old son, a nephew, and a cousin. "It's a family business!" he laughed.

Team sports a good thing single child China
In fact, Wang has found staunch support from the Parents' Association to develop the club. At a practice session that afternoon in Jinan, parents came out to watch their sons play in a concrete schoolyard.

"Each kid is the only child in the family [and] they often get lonely," said Jiang Ai-xia, the mother of 12 year old Zuo Shou-qie, who just started playing baseball this year.  "Letting them play baseball helps cultivate their team spirit and encourages them to play with other kids."

Adrienne Mong/NBC News
Mr Wang's team lines up for drills every afternoon.

Zuo's performance as first baseman may have been a little erratic, but it didn't diminish his enthusiasm. "Baseball teaches us the power of cooperation…and skills," he said.  "Although my skills are not that good."

The boys grin bashfully when they're being interviewed, only allowing their enthusiasm to shine off the field when they talk about baseball's future here, "China is just starting….  Once we start loving baseball, we definitely will beat the other countries," said one boy.

Another explained why they like the Yankees, "Their pitchers throws super fast. They hit also very hard and very far!"

Wang, who is normally stern coaching his team from the sidelines, beamed with pride.

"Five years ago, when I started [this] baseball [team], many people thought I was crazy," he said, especially since he wasn't in it for the money. "Five years later, many people think we are the best in Shandong."

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In 1995, my-then 14 year old son flew to Beijing from Chicago's O'Hare airport with two teams of 14 to 17
year old young men and their adult coaches and a few
parents, to play in a "Far East Baseball Tournament.
One of the teams, the White Sox, sponsored by you-know-
who won the tournament, while the second team, the
Wisconsin Snappers (a type of turtle) didn't fare as
well, but did get a win against the eventual champion
White Sox. The local Beijing team also did not fare
well, but all-in-all, the Chinese did get to see some
pretty good youth baseball and, hopefully, the Beijing
team learned from the experience. Almost all of the
players traded uniform caps, with my son and a South
Korean player making the trade.

BTW: all of the  games were played on very good fields.
China needs democracy. not baseball.  Boycot the Olympics and force them to respect human rights.
Who cares about baseball or posion food in China. We should all be scared of the posion food in the Good Ol USA (e coli in spinach anyone?) and the USA baseball players that can only get by by using steriods. Using the previous xenophobic posters' logic we should ban all food produced in the USA and exile all steriod users to China.  
Baseball is a great game and America's ambassador to the world.  Like when we occupied Japan, the far east and the caribbean we should be teaching the Iraqis baseball.  That would bring them together better than any political solution.
I've got a sport for China to try: Democracy.

baseball is a perfect sport for the Chinese. They are
big on sports and that is factual. this game I learned
what it was all about at age 4, and 50 years later I
am still learning something. it is like a game of chess and only those who understand that know what I mean.
RE: It's great to see a world power like China catching the sports fever we have here. Sports like baseball keep us entertained and peacefull. If only the Middle Eastern countries would catch the fever.

They do have the fever, they just participate in their own way.  Where we throw the baseball, they like throwing grenades.  Where we box, they enjoy beating captives.  Where we duck-hunt from a blind, they enjoy hunting with I.E.D.'s.  It's great that we all share the same values, tho, despite those quirky regional differences.
If baseball takes off in China, 10 years from no or sooner, there will be the Yao Ming of baseball coming to a USA ball park near you. I say hooray for the man who brought joy into the young hearts, Boo to all the naysayers.
It will never be successful on a USA scale. If baseball was introduced here today, it wouldn't make it. It's too slow. That's why football has kicked it's ass in popularity. It only works here because of tradition and who knows how long that will sustain it. Basketball is much more likely to prosper.
Well go China!  But as usual another thing the Chinese will invade of ours.  It's it enough that they invade our country.  Now their going to take over our favorite pass time.  I think as Americans we've givin all these foreigers more than enough.
Holly Garfield hit it right.  The Little League World Series games are the best baseball has to offer.  Those kids exhibit the heart and soul of baseball - no jaded, tainted adult outlook.  When I grew up as a farm kid in California, there weren't many acceptable sports activities for girls (our community was really into restriction), but softball was okay even at church. I joined a girls softball team and played backlot baseball with the boys any chance I got.  My sons, though, are not interested in baseball like that, but given the chance, any kid can develop that passion for the game my friends & I had.  I can just imagine Chinese kids in the Little League games.  Those kids, out on the field, immediately speak the same language and are working toward the same thoroughly understandable goal.  We all understand congratulating the other team after the game; win or lose. People who freak out about poisoned food and accuse all Chinese of social crimes, when these may be corporate actions or the low dealings of a few, are predjuciced and don't get the point.
GO WANG GO!!!!
i think its nice.
EnglishWillow,
Your point about international relations makes a better argument for baseball than cricket. China's relations with Japan, South Korea, and Taiwan are a much bigger issue than it's relations with South Asia.

Anyway, soccer and basketball seem to be the clearly dominant international sports. Cricket has a large following but it is basically only in places that were directly colonized by the British. Other sports have been more successful at spreading on their own merits.

But I'm all for more baseball in China- as long as it results in a lot more Red Sox fans:)
These are the type of stories from China that I like to hear.  Mr. Wang has the right idea about promoting baseball in his country.  All I can do is wish him the best in his work.
As a long-time teacher in China, I can say that not one student has-ever-been able to explain baseball to me or shown any interest at all. It's truly an uphill battle. Kobe and Yao reign supreme here, it seems...
To All of the people huffing and puffing about the tainted food coming from China instead of the topic at hand... "Is this not a sports page? Meaning the topics discussed here are sports related." Maybe you should stick to the continually depressing 7:00 o'clock news and leave this to the professionals.
Good for them (China).  In fact, maybe it'll wake up some of the so-called all-stars in the USA.  And not just talking about the professionals either.
Japan's home run king, Sadaharu Oh, is Chinese on his father's side. It's a little like Ted Williams being Mexican on his mother's side; no one knows it.
Great post.  I am a lifelong baseball fan yet I had never thought of the game in this light until now.  
Mr. Wang is my kind of guy.  We need to focus on our common stregths ... not our differences.

Someone further up the page mentioned the Chinese food imports issue.  Fact is ... all the cases of eccoli outbreaks have been the result of failures by US growers and distributers in the San Joaquin and Sacramento Valleys (California ... which grows 2/3rds of the fruit and vegetables consumed by the World!!) ... not China ... despite the headlines.
Actually, more than 10 years ago, there were several guys in my college which is in Shanghai played baseball , it is interesting game, I can enjoy it. However, I guess it could be very hard to populize this game in China since it takes too much space as well as money to play.

Take me out to the ball game take me out with the crowd, buy be some peanuts and cracker jack, I don't care if hever get back and it's root root root for the home team and if they don't win it's a shame, for it's one, two, three strikes you're out at the old ball game.  Go CHINA go.  Baseball is one of the few games in the US of A that has kept its honesty.
Take me out to the ball game take me out with the crowd, buy be some peanuts and cracker jack, I don't care if hever get back and it's root root root for the home team and if they don't win it's a shame, for it's one, two, three strikes you're out at the old ball game.  Go CHINA go.  Baseball is one of the few games in the US of A that has kept its honesty.
Well yes, it is a great idea to play in team sport to help develop certain skills and camarderie.  However calling it America'a pastime, well I have to disagree, because I come from the USA and this is one bame which I could care less about.
who had chosen who and done what?
your para makes no sense and baseball is still boring without beer. ask homer: )
This is great and should not be attacked. China is a huge country with more news than you can ever read in a day and the tale of this article isn't about poisoned food by Chinese industries or how basket ball is more interesting, it's about the kids who find strength in their lives though baseball and Wang's passion to make his country better . Kids who grow up with the right influence in China will do the right things later in life, unlike the children of the Cultral Revolution who are now taking short cuts and are prone to corruption, causing things like the food problems we have now and the mining slavery news we've heard recently.
One day, the "Series" will be.                          GATA Tifton, Ga
Any type of sport is important to China.  After the Cultural Revolution, many essential courtesies were lost--sports are definitely an effective way of re-instilling many significant values.  It isn't a matter of which sports are the most lucrative--the collective efforts of wushu (martial arts), basketball, baseball, football (soccer), etc are all desparately needed to restore what was lost in the 60s and 70s.
Who do I live with in this country?  This article should be about basketball in China; it should be about tainted food; etc.  People this article is about a man and his efforts to do what he thinks will make the future of his country better.  It's not about what is the most popular american sport in china or our current trade atmosphere with china.  It's called a human interest story that involves america's past-time.  If you want to read about other topics then go read about them.  Get an education then come back an post something with substance.
GO! Bill Robie, I totally agree. This is a story of a man who has passion about a game and if he is helping kids with it great. It is good to see stories like this. It makes a change from all the other stories of destruction and chaos in the world. Leave politics and money out of it. I feel very sorry for people like LesleyH Thomaston, GET A LIFE!!
Just consider how many chinese could afford a hokey outfit, here jus one glove or in their national-sport just one ping-pong paddle and they are in busoness. :-))
These are even cheaper than buying a running shoe of quality. :-)
After teaching here in china for almost two years I have come to realize, China needs Baseball! I‘ve thoughts of getting a bamboo stick, a tennis ball and 5 gallon pail covers (for bases) together and see if I could get a game going… See Chinese youth needs to get united, to work together as a team, to be part of something. Well this guy has it figured out! Baseball, in a few years China will dominate the game!
Oh yea... This will resolve the long time political differences and deficit issues...
Was the author even present at the site?
If so, she would have known that Jinan is not a "small coastal city."
Jinan has almost SIX MILLION PEOPLE, which is huge even by Chinese standards, and is NOT on the coast.
jUSTABOUT ANY TEAMSPORT IS GOOD FOR YOUNG MALES AND FEMALES, HELPING THEM TO MAKE CLOSE RELATIONSHIPS THEY WOULD HAVE MADE WITHOUT THIS TYPE OF OPPURTUNITY.
bASEBALL IS AS GOOD AN OUTLET AS BASKETBALL (EVEN BOWLING OR GOLF). AS LONG AS IT BRINGS PEOPLE TOGETHER WHO ENJOY THE SAME THINGS AND INCLUDES A LITTLE PHYSICAL ACTIVITY.

PLAY ON
I personally think baseball is a total bore, but I find it interesting that baseball took hold in America just when it was hitting its stride on the road to national greatness.  Now, as we increasingly abandon the ethos and habits which created that rise, baseball is falling out of favor here at home, in favor of flashier sports.  In the meantime, the Japanese, post-WWII, also adopted baseball with a passion, again coincident with their rise to economic power and influence.  That embracing of baseball is seemingly also about to start in China, again, just as it begins to rediscover and reacquire its latent greatness.  Indeed, if one is willing to accept the similarities between baseball and cricket, then one might extend the argument back a few hundred years more, since that was the game which defined Britain during her rise to global preeminence.  

It really does make one wonder if there is not something in baseball which appeals to the best in a people and maybe Mr. Wang has seen it.  If so, then I can only wish him the best of luck.
I'm a 36yr old who loves the game. Althought i haven't played much in recent years. I still love the game, the smell of the food and roars of the crowds either live or on t.v.  I hope China soaks up the fun and the love of the game.  There's always a new up and coming star somewhere in the world and to see kids in China love the sport and bring in new athletes and keeping them off the loser streets would be most impressive.. M.L. Wisconsin (Playball)
Why not. If we can play Chinese checkers why can't they play baseball?
Thanks for the article! In 1989-90 I taught English at Shandong Institute of Economics in Jinan, China.  I also taught them how to play baseball.  We used bricks for bases and equipment I picked up in Hong Kong.  When the P.E. instructor saw I was serious about coaching them she got excited.  One day she joyful brought over a large old dusty box filled with baseball mitts. They looked like they were from the 40's - and they probably were.  She said that China use to play baseball in schools before 1949. Evidently it was a popular sport.  It was probably introduced by missionaries or businessmen over 100 years ago.  It is exciting today to see the Chinese pickup the sport on there own. In another decade or so you'll see more Chinese playing a beloved team sport.
Chun Wang...Baseball could be like Basketball in China in a few years as the sport grows. I personally think sports breaks down barriers. More the better.
As a life-long baseball fan, I welcome anyone into the family.  I hardly consider this a political issue and encourage those who look at it as such to reconsider.  Baseball is a fine game.  This article points out many of it's benefits.  I hope to see a world league before my time is up.  
The subject is sports, not stupid politics, so focus on it and keep your bitter crap to yourselves.
What a beautiful story. Baseball is what makes the world go round man. Baseball is life. I truly believe in 10 to 20 years MLB will be global and we will be having a true world series.
I think baseball is already popular in parts of China. We were in China in 1995 during August and the National League finals were on television nearly every day. It was the only thing we could watch that we understood because there were no English subtitles. Even in Mandarin we could understand the scores that were printed on the screen. Baseball is better as a whole family sport because women, girls, men and boys can all play together and have fun. In our hometown in Oregon there are softball teams that play most of the spring and summer in which husbands, wives and older children often play on the same teams. You don't need a court or hugh playing field (football or soccer). I've seen kids playing with newspaper bases, a stick and a crumpled up tin can for a ball. It would be nice if some of our major league teams offered to sponser teams in China with their used bats, gloves and balls for a while. The more the Chinese people learn about how we really live and what we are like, the better. We adoped two little girls in China and people on the streets acually asked us if it was true we adopted them to take them back to use as a source for organ donations to our biological children back home. Since we had no biologic children it was easy to assure them that no one would think of such a horrible idea. Our oldest daughter was eight by the time we went back to adopt the youngest girl, and she was living proof to them that we loved and cared for our children and she was happy in America.
BASEBALL,FOOTBALL HOCKEY WHATEVER !! I say good all these sports have nothing to do with the government they are all about the people. Why should they not have as much fun as we do, they are no better or worse than we are. let them go for it and enjoy. the west is creeping in and sports is better than politics. i hope they get good enough to chalange our own teems. that would be a great way to expose them to us and us to them.the only politics here would be if the leaders tried to put a stop to it , and how would you feel then. HEY CHINA GO FOT IT AND ENJOY IT AS MUCH AS US.
As someone who was always involved in sports; football,baseball,basketball. I can't imagine growing up without team sports. Being part of a team and accomplishing things you could have never done on your own is truly one of life's great experiences.

Have fun boys, baseball gives you memories for a lifetime
Great to see baseball, along with other sports, flourishing...I'd rather see countries playing baseball and competing at a sports level than making bombs and creating war...I don't want to sound like a tree hugger, but good competition reduces the risk of the alternative...
I think it is positive to have team sports, but once again, the girls are left out of the process.  As a former teacher in China, girls were literally shoved aside by the "Little Emperors"... wish there was similar attitude for the young girls other than submission.
I'm a huge baseball fan myself and I support that it is being played world wide but I don't think that it is going to be some sort of savior to get the Chinese youth to straiten up. That's like saying that a card game will save the world. It just doesn't happen.


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