Vegetarian diet blamed for Chinese volleyball team woes
Athletes avoid meat due to risk of contamination with doping substance
CBC News
Posted: Jul 3, 2012 2:15 PM ET
Last Updated: Jul 3, 2012 2:09 PM ET
China's Chen Liyi spikes the ball in a match against Thailand at the 2010 volleyball World Grand Prix. China's performance at this year's tournament was lacklustre, and the team's coach is blaming his players' diet. (Bobby Yip/Reuters)
Related
Related Stories
External Links
(Note:CBC does not endorse and is not responsible for the content of external links.)
Fearing tainted meat, China's women's volleyball team has stuck to a strict vegetarian diet for the last three weeks — which the team's coach is now blaming for his athletes' abysmal performance.
The Chinese team lost four of five matches at a world tournament that ended Sunday in Ningbo, China, falling to the United States, Brazil, Turkey and Thailand.
While Brazil and the U.S. are powerhouses in women's volleyball, Turkey and Thailand didn't even qualify for the 2008 Olympics, where China won bronze.
"They have showed significant decline in their strength and fitness," coach Yu Juemin said of his squad after Sunday's defeat to the Americans.
"We are wary of meat tainted by lean-meat powder, and we didn't eat any during the game period," Yu told the Shanghai Daily newspaper.
Athletes warned
All Chinese athletes have been warned by the country's Sports Ministry to avoid meat contaminated with the powder, also known as clenbuterol, because it's banned by the International Olympic Committee as a performance-enhancing substance.
China bans the use of clenbuterol in livestock because of the chemical's noxious long-term effects on human health, but many pork farmers still administer it because it produces leaner meat. The World Anti-Doping Agency issued a warning last year about clenbuterol-tainted meat in China as well as Mexico, where it is also rampant.
As a result, the Chinese volleyball team only eats meat at its training camp, where the food can be tested for contamination. When players go elsewhere in the country, they have to forego pork, beef and lamb — as they did in the lead-up to the volleyball World Grand Prix finals tournament.
Some other Chinese athletes are coping by eating more fish and chicken and supplementing their diets with protein powder. Earlier this year, a Chinese pig farmer donated three tonnes of clenbuterol-free pork to his country's athletes.
Coach Yu said his volleyball players would have access to ample supplies of untainted meat in the run-up to the Summer Olympics, which begin July 27 in London.
Clenbuterol is approved as an asthma drug in some countries because it helps dilate the bronchial tubes.
It is also the substance that cyclist and two-time Tour de France winner Alberto Contador tested positive for in 2010, leading to his being stripped of his victory in that year's race and banned from competition until August. In ruling against the Spaniard, the Court of Arbitration for Sport said it was possible, but not likely, that he consumed the clenbuterol accidentally via contaminated veal.
Some other athletes who have tested positive for clenbuterol have successfully argued they ate it unwittingly in tainted meat.
Share Tools
Top News Headlines
- Quebec premier says Montreal mayor should resign
- Quebec Premier Pauline Marois says Montreal Mayor Michael Applebaum should step down following his arrest this morning. more »
- Canadians jailed after Dominican post-wedding fight released
- Two Canadian men imprisoned in the Dominican Republic following a post-wedding brawl last month have been released and will be returning to Canada, a family member says. more »
- Northern Gateway in Canadians' interest, Enbridge tells review board

- Canada will be vulnerable to economic disaster should the Northern Gateway pipeline be rejected, the proponent told a federal review panel Monday as the final phase of public hearings got underway. more »
- MPs weigh in on Justin Trudeau charging speaking fees
- The New Brunswick charity that asked Liberal leader Justin Trudeau to return a speaking fee eight months after he appeared at a fundraiser has sparked a debate among MPs about the propriety of accepting money for what some say MPs should do for free. more »
Must Watch
Latest World News Headlines
- Brazilian cities see another round of protests
- Protesters massed in at least seven Brazilian cities Monday for another round of demonstrations voicing disgruntlement about life in the country, raising questions about security during big events like the current Confederations Cup and a papal visit next month. more »
- Iran's newly elected president Rowhani urges 'moderation'
- Iran's newly elected president has pledged to follow a "path of moderation" and to have greater openness over the country's nuclear program, but he is opposed to halting the country's uranium enrichment. more »
- U.S.-European Union free trade talks unveiled at G8 summit
- Trade, taxes and transparency are on the agenda at the G8 summit in Northern Ireland, but a major development came Monday when the U.S. and the European Union announced they plan on launching free trade talks. more »
- Susan Ormiston: Dying for cheap clothes, lessons of the Bangladesh disaster
- Eight weeks after the horrendous collapse of Rana Plaza and Bangladesh's once-thriving garment trade is still reeling, Susan Ormiston reports. Orders are drying up, and survivors and their families are still waiting for reform and promised compensation. more »
The National
The Current
- The Apostrophe Catastrophe Jun. 17, 2013 2:41 PM A grammar war is brewing between people who want to ban it , and others who feel possessive of -- the apostrophe.
- Parents of son 'brutally beaten' playing hockey want charges
- Canadians jailed after Dominican post-wedding fight released
- Toronto Mayor Rob Ford needs security, brother says
- Quebec premier says Montreal mayor should resign
- Teen killed at mill near Vernon identified
- The class photo that made a father cry
- Student with bullied past, 'The Doorman,' graduates
- Sick Regina boy who made waves around the world dies
- Northern Gateway in Canadians' interest, Enbridge tells review board

