Su Bingtian A Disrupter and a Game Changer

Jerry Grey
8 min readSep 6, 2021

Ask any Chinese person: Who won the 100m Men’s Final in the Tokyo Olympic Games? The answer you get will probably be something like: I don’t know but Su Bingtian was the first Chinese runner to be in the finals (for the record, it was Italy’s Marcell Jacobs). Su Bingtian finished 6th and this achievement is what his hometown, Guangdong’s Zhongshan, as well as the rest of China is buzzing about, for some very important reasons.

While his record on the track speaks for itself and stands as a great model for future Chinese athletes, many people outside China who are not so familiar with him or those who pay little attention to the sport, may think this great sprinter just arrived on the scene: he didn’t just arrive. Some, quite spitefully, believe he was lucky, in a world so affected by Covid that the Games were postponed a year and athletes from Covid affected countries may not have been at their peak: he wasn’t lucky.

Known throughout China as Zhongshan fei ren (Zhongshan’s flying man) Su Bingtian is part of a growing disruption in the sprinting and athletics world which started to be noticed less than 20 years ago.

China’s first ever Olympic Track and Field Gold Medal was in the 110m hurdles in 2004. The world was astounded by the speed and ability of China’s Liu Xiang. Like Su Bingtian, Liu Xiang was no fluke, nor was he the lucky winner of a one-off athletic meet. Liu won the Olympic Gold Medal at the same time as he held the World Record and the World Championship. He’s now an icon in China having dominated most of the world’s 60 and 110 metre hurdling events over a 12-year career until he retired from competing in 2012. It’s no secret, nor should it be a surprise, that Su Bingtian looks to Liu Xiang as a role model and inspiration.

Liu Bingtian is fast, very fast. Indoor sprinting is hugely popular amongst athletes. The fastest sprinters in the world compete in a dash across 60 metres, not only does Su, with a speed of 6.42 seconds, hold the record for being the fastest Asian, it makes him fifth fastest runner in history[1]. Su is also one of only four Asian athletes (plus one African Asian) ever to have run 100 metres under 10 seconds. This barrier has only been reached by 163 people in athletic history[2]. In the 50 years since this barrier was broken, only 7 have been faster than Su’s best time of 9.83 but 5 of those have the taint of negative drug results in their history.

Tokyo 2021 has been a reminder for Chinese people of another historic Olympic moment. In 1932, at the Los Angeles Olympics, Liu Changchun, a Chinese sprinter lined up for the heats of the men’s 100m. Controversy surrounded him, coming from Dongbei (Northeast China), he had brazenly decided to race under the Chinese flag rather than that of the Japanese occupied state of “Manchuko”. So, although there were two Chinese competitors, only Liu represented the Republic of China in those long-ago Games. Exhausted from over a month on a ship, without any ability to train while he travelled, anxious and concerned by the controversies surrounding his decision to represent the country he loved, rather than the oppressors he lived under, he failed to qualify for the finals. According to his own diary, he was beaten by a runner who was 0.1 second faster than him. Needing to be in the first three to go through to the final, he was fourth. One can only imagine the Frustration at the time. Not just to him, but to millions of people at home in China who applauded his courage for standing up to the occupiers.

By comparison with those turbulent inter-war years, when Liu, a privately funded, self-trained athlete was the only man representing his troubled country: in 2021, China sent 406 professionally trained, well-disciplined and peak performing athletes to Tokyo to continue the Asian disruption. Only Germany (452) Australia (478), the hosts, Japan (552) and the USA with a whopping 613[3] athletes had more.

Challenging the Gene Theory Myth

Xie Zhenye of China is another Chinese runner who, in 2012, reached the 100m Olympic semi-final. Xie holds the current Asian 200m record of 19.88 and beat the 10 second barrier in 2018. Japanese runners, Abdul Hakim Sani Brown, Yuki Koike and Yoshihide Kiryu are the only other Asians among this list of 163 champions, although none of them are faster than Su Bingtian. In a sport dominated by West Indians, Africans and African Americans, Asia is getting noticed as the new kid on the block through the successes of these athletes.

Only one Asian in the past 90 years and now, only two in Olympic history have run in an Olympic men’s 100m final, Su Bingtian in 2021 and, coincidently, in 1932, as Liu Changchun was swallowing his disappointment on not making the finals for his beloved China it was, ironically, Takayoshi Yoshioka of Japan, who made history. His team mate, Kichizo Sasaki also qualified, but did not race due to injury. This historical absence of Asian athletes appears about to change.

It’s generally believed that Asian’s have an inherent, genetic inability to beat the Africans, West Indians and African Americans. What Su, Liu Xiang and a handful of other Asians have done, with their astonishing achievements up to and including Tokyo, is shattered what is known as the “gene theory”.

Scientists have isolated a gene they call ACTN3. Since the isolation of the gene, almost all elite sprinters who have been tested, have been found to have this. Without getting too deep into the science (because this is an article about a great runner), there are some proteins encoded in the gene (alpha-actinin-3[4]) that pertain mostly to elite athletes and particularly to elite sprinters, they create the power to “fast-twitch” muscles. Asians don’t have this gene and, because of this, until recently have been considered by scientists to be totally unsuitable to meet the requirements needed to beat the people who do hold this natural advantage. Liu Xiang was the first to challenge this theory. This quietly spoken, low-profile athlete was faster out of the blocks and faster across both the 60 metres and 110 metre hurdles than all other athletes during his 12-year career.

Watch any of Su Bingtian’s races and you’ll see, he proves the science wrong too, he’s usually the first out of the blocks, he’s the fastest for the first 40–60 metres and then the length of stride of the Jamaicans, African Americans and African athletes, who are all giants compared to Su’s 5’8”/173cm frame take over. However, in the 60 metres sprint, there are only 4 runners in the history of athletics (one of whom is tainted with a negative drug finding) who are faster than Su’s time.

The genetics are as much about size and strength as well as the fast-twitch muscles but it’s our hero Su, who is proving this theory, and the genetic advantages some athletes are believed to have, can be overcome. Not just with his amazing performances on the track but with his own groundbreaking scientific research.

Science Developing China’s Future Athletes

A little-known fact outside of China, is that Su Bingtian is an Associate Professor in Guangzhou’s Jinan University. He’s published several papers in which, rather unusually, he studies himself. In his case studies he scientifically analyses his own training methods and results. Based on his findings, the improvements he’s experienced and the future developments he proposes, there is a very strong possibility that the path he, and his compatriots, recently blazed onto the Olympic and World Championship tracks, is just the start of a new era of sporting prowess.

At a team level, societal changes bought about by economic development in China over the last 50 years, has created an environment where sports can flourish. Further proof of this, if needed, is the number of athletes representing China in even more track finals since Liu in 2004. As well as Su’s appearance in Tokyo’s 100m final, we’ve seen ladies and men in Sprint Relays, athletes reaching finals they’ve never reached before, Tokyo also saw China’s best ever record in an Olympic Marathon and swimmers surging through the pool to pick up medals. Those medals added to an overall tally which so seriously threatened US dominance in these Games that the New York Times even changed the way they count the medals to show their team on top while China, in reality, headed the table. These results aren’t due to lucky timing, China isn’t winning because their competitors are weakened, they’re winning in their own right making new, and breaking old records because of individual achievements supported by a national approach in a country that has seen positive increases in every measurement of life and lifestyle improvement. It looks like we are going to see a lot more “Fei Ren” flying on the track and Asian disruption in Track and Field proving that China really has, in the sporting arena, come of age.

Recognition of Heroes

Dalian University of Technology has a stadium named after their 1932 hero, Liu Changchun, and pride of place in the city’s Olympic Square belongs to a large statue of Liu. He remains, even now, almost 90 years after competing in the Olympics, a household name in China. Like Dalian, the city of Zhongshan celebrates their hero, Su Bingtian. If the talk in the streets, restaurants, bars, teahouses and clubs of Zhongshan is anything to go by, it won’t be long before sporting arenas and public squares in Zhongshan are also adorned with his name.

National athletics in China will never be the same again. The next generation of athletes, inspired by these heroes, and the sports fans who follow them, will look back to this era accrediting many of the positive changes to the inspirational successes on the track as well as the innovative training methods, seminal research and the developmental strategies of “Zhongshan’s flying man” coupled with the “lucky coincidence” of living in a country of consistently improving economic, societal and sporting environments.

Whilst Liu Changchun, Liu Xiang and others are inspirational heroes, Su Bingtian is likely to become something more. To the people of China, he is becoming what Zhong Nanshan is to healthcare and Yuan Longpin was to agriculture: they are all national heroes but more importantly, these three men are disrupters and game changers. Thanks to their contributions, the world, and particularly China, is a better place.

[1] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/60_metres#Top_25_performers

[2] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/10-second_barrier

[3] https://olympicsvenue.com/which-country-has-the-most-athletes-in-the-tokyo-olympics-2021.html

[4] https://www.didyouknowdna.com/lifestyle/genes-fitness/dna-sprinter-gene/

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Jerry Grey

I’m British born Australian living in Guangdong and have an MA in Cross Cultural Change Management. I write mostly positively about my China experiences