Never too old to be an Olympic hero
As an Olympic fan from a very young age, I have already got over my crush over any sporting "hero", because a "hero" maybe fickle and forgotten as time passes by. But this time in Paris I think I have come across one.
At the age of 61, Ni Xialian, the oldest table tennis player, never felt out of place in Paris.
With neat movements when taking advantage, and agile leaps to relieve her emotions when losing a point, the former Chinese world champion paddler, now representing Luxembourg, gave out her full strength against her much younger opponent from her home country—23-year-old Sun Yingsha, who, like Ni, did not conceal her skills to make it into the final 16 on Wednesday.
After wrapping up her sixth Olympic appearance with a lopsided defeat of 0-4 to the current world No 1, Ni emotionally acknowledged to the respectful crowd and said at the after-match interview that her dream had come true to play again at the Olympics and compete with the world's top player.
Before facing Sun at the opposite side of the table, "Aunt Ni" gave no destination when she was invited to serve as a training partner to China's eventual mixed doubles champions Sun Yingsha and Wang Chuqin before their face-off with a DPRK pair in the final game, due to the similarity of her technique to that of the DPRK's female player.
Most Popular
- Nation's Winter Paralympics squad is its biggest ever
- China to send 70 athletes to Milan-Cortina Paralympic Winter Games
- China announces largest-ever delegation for 2026 Winter Paralympics in Italy
- Chinese men's basketball team beats Japan
- Grassroots soccer hits fever pitch in 'wild stadium'
- Team China excels on and off the field at 2026 Games





























