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China aiming for 2016 Olympic golf success

BEIJING -- China has already begun to throw the considerable weight of its state-run sports system behind the game of golf after it won a place at the 2016 Olympics last month. With the Soviet-inspired system almost single-mindedly dedicated to Olympic success, the Copenhagen vote was always going to have far more impact in China than other countries.

Development Chinese-style involves selecting children with aptitude for a sport at a young age and training them like professionals at special schools around the country.

They then feed up through the pyramid structure via inter-provincial competition with the best reaching an elite national squad where they will focus on Olympics achievement. “First, we want Chinese to get to the 2016 Games and then we will aim for good results at following Olympics,” Cui told the China Daily.

Cui was also at the launch of the U.S.$7 million WGC-HSBC Champions the previous week, where Tiger Woods said he thought the Olympic vote key to China becoming a power in the game.

The sports ministry is already working on ways to change the perception of golf, starting with an attempt to reduce the tax paid by the country's 500 golf courses, presumably so the often exorbitant green fees can be reduced.

“Golf is widely seen as game for entertainment and thus the business tax rate is 22 percent for golf clubs,” Cui said. “Adding the land-use tax, a golf club has to pay almost a 30 percent tax rate. That will not boost golf's popularity here.”

Even before the Olympic announcement, the CGA was already looking for help in developing golf in China from the established heartlands of the game.

The U.S. PGA and European Tours, with an eye on a huge potential market, have been courting China and both wheeled out their top officials in Shanghai.

They are both also co-sanctioning the U.S.$5.5 million World Cup of Golf at the 12-course Mission Hills complex in Shenzhen next week. But however rich the tournaments the tours co-sanction in China, and however big the foreign names they attract, the ultimate goal for Zhang is to produce his own Tiger Woods.

China's top current men's player is 31-year-old Liang Wenchong, who was Asian Tour champion in 2007 and is now ranked 46th in the world. As was the case in tennis, however, Zhang thinks that China's best chance of finding a talent to take on and beat the best in the world will come in the women's game. There, 20-year-old Beijinger Feng Shanshan has impressed in her first two years on the LPGA Tour, while Zhang Na is a consistent performer on the lucrative Japanese Tour.

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