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More Gold for Eileen Gu? Skiing Phenom Has 2 More Events at Winter Olympics

More Gold for Eileen Gu? Skiing Phenom Has 2 More Events at Winter Olympics

One of the biggest athletes to emerge from these Winter Games has two more changes to add to her medal count before the Olympics come to a close.

After earning a gold medal for China in women’s freeski big air, Eileen Gu will compete in the slopestyle and halfpipe competitions.

The San Francisco native is coming off two gold medals at the 2021 FIS Freestyle World Ski Championships in Aspen — one in the halfpipe and one in the slopestyle.

The women’s slopestyle qualification runs begin Sunday, Feb. 13 with the finals taking place the next night. The halfpipe begins on Thursday, Feb. 17 and will conclude the following night.

Freeskiier Eileen Gu was born in San Francisco but represents China when competing internationally. Here’s five things to know about the freeskiing star.

Here’s a breakdown of the skier’s schedule for her final two events:

  • Women’s freeski slopestyle qualification: Saturday, Feb. 12, 9 p.m. ET
  • Women’s freeski slopestyle final: Sunday, Feb. 13, 8:30 p.m. ET
  • Women’s freeski halfpipe qualification: Wednesday, Feb. 16, 8:30 p.m. ET
  • Women’s freeski halfpipe final: Thursday, Feb. 17, 8:30 p.m. ET

Gu earned the first of what she and her many fans in Beijing hope could be three gold medals for China by cranking out the first 1620 of her career in the Olympic debut of women’s freestyle skiing big air.

Her trick in her final turn stunned Tess Ledeux of France, the only other woman to ever land a 1620 in competition. Ledeux finished second.

Nicknamed the “Snow Princess,” Gu has already reached hero status in China. Even star tennis player Peng Shuai, who has rarely appeared publicly since accusing a Chinese official of sexual assault, was in the stands.

What are Gu’s plans for after the 2022 Winter Olympics?

The Olympian graduated high school in two years, so her next step is college.

She has been accepted to her mother’s alma mater, Stanford University, and plans on attending classes in the fall of 2022.

But she is also a fashion model, already appearing on the cover of Elle and Vogue China. She is currently signed to the IMG Models agency.

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Live Olympics Updates: Eileen Gu Aims for First Medal in Beijing

Live Olympics Updates: Eileen Gu Aims for First Medal in Beijing
Credit…Gabriela Bhaskar/The New York Times

[Follow our live coverage of Nathan Chen and Yuzuru Hanyu at the Winter Olympics.]

For two days, social media users in China have been heaping scorn onto Beverly Zhu, a 19-year-old figure skater who was born and raised in the United States but competes for China under the name Zhu Yi.

The criticism began on Sunday, when the naturalized athlete fell during the women’s singles short program in the team event.

By that afternoon, the hashtag #ZhuYiFellDown had been viewed more than 200 million times on Weibo, a popular Chinese social media platform. Commenters called her “shameless,” “rotten” and an “embarrassment.”

In an unusual move, Weibo stepped in by Sunday evening to ban the hashtag. It did not provide a reason, citing only “relevant guidelines and policies.”

“I’m upset and a little embarrassed,” a tearful Zhu said after the competition, according to Reuters. “I guess I felt a lot of pressure because I know everybody in China was pretty surprised with the selection for ladies’ singles, and I just really wanted to show them what I was able to do, but unfortunately I didn’t.”

Searches for Zhu’s name remained visible. Furor erupted again on Monday, after she stumbled twice during her free skate event. Zhu, who broke out in tears during the program, finished last.

“Don’t cry, I’m the one who wants to cry,” one commenter wrote online.

Chinese athletes face enormous pressure to win medals and bring glory to the country. The criticism of Zhu showed how naturalized athletes were sometimes subject to even harsher scrutiny.

Before the 2022 Games, Zhu had come under attack for her apparent inability to speak fluent Chinese. The uproar is in contrast to the international attention on Eileen Gu, the star skier who was born and raised in California but is also competing for China, and is widely favored to be a gold medal contender.

Some social media users suggested, without evidence, that Zhu had gained a spot on the Chinese Olympics team because of the prominence of her father, Song-Chun Zhu, a computer scientist who relocated to Peking University from the United States.

Her unsteady performances also elicited sympathy from some users. Even Hu Xijin, a recently retired editor of Global Times, a brashly nationalist Chinese newspaper, criticized the mockery of Zhu.

“To vent emotions on this young athlete, using social media to throw rocks down a well when she makes mistakes — that’s cyberbullying, and no matter what it’s going too far,” Hu wrote in a commentary that was widely shared online.

Chen Lu, a Chinese former figure skater who won bronze medals at two Olympics in the 1990s, said Zhu’s mistakes reflected the pressures of performing at a global event before a Chinese audience.

“For Zhu Yi, the biggest challenge is lack of experience in big competitions,” Chen said, according to Sohu, a Chinese news website. “She has never had this experience of competing on her home doorstep, and the pressure is enormous.”

Zhu is scheduled to compete again in the women’s singles skating program next week.