Published: 09:49, July 14, 2020 | Updated: 22:29, June 5, 2023
Lang preaches patience in Olympic waiting game
By Sun Xiaochen

In this Sept 28, 2019 photo, head coach of China Lang Ping (center) gives instructions during the Round Robin match between China and Serbia at the 2019 FIVB Women's World Cup in Osaka, Japan. (DU XIAOYI / XINHUA)

In a world without the coronavirus, Lang Ping and her Team China players would've this week set out for Tokyo to begin their quest for back-to-back Olympic golds.

Lang Ping, who will turn 60 in Dec, is planning to travel around the world with her family during her retirement and is not keen to delay her itinerary much longer

Now, with the Games postponed for a year due to the pandemic and her retirement plans on hold, the legendary head coach is attempting to navigate a new route to a potentially perfect career finale.

The road ahead, however, is filled with uncertainties as questions grow over the feasibility of the rescheduled Games amid the ongoing crisis.

Lang is doing her best to take these challenges in her stride, urging her team to focus always on the moment, and to remain adaptable and flexible.

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"For a coach, you have to find the right rhythm straightaway. We have to make changes as soon as possible, especially mentally," Lang said in a recent interview aired on CGTN.

"Without competitions, training is really hard when it's going on and on for months. Right now it seems the training camp is really long and the motivation is going down."

With volleyball competitions still suspended domestically and internationally, Team China's Olympic preparations just keep getting longer. Last month the squad wrapped up an epic training program that began back in February, and after a short break Lang last week called up a 20-woman roster to settle in for another two months of training in isolation.

Featuring customized sessions for both injury-plagued veterans and more sprightly young guns, Lang's program puts particular emphasis on strength conditioning and fundamental skills as the champion team vows to become stronger.

"This is the world we are living in and it's the same for everybody," said Lang, who led China to Olympic gold at the 2016 Rio Games as well as back-to-back World Cup titles (2015, 2019).

Spiker Li Yingying, pictured during a June 5 training session in Beijing, is one of the rising stars of Lang Ping’s squad and is expected to form a key part of China’s bid for gold at next year’s Tokyo Olympics. (HE ZONGWEN / CHINA DAILY)

"So we just calm down and slow down and try to do a lot of fundamentals and try to improve and still love volleyball."

As the star of the all-conquering China team of the 1980s, Lang knows a thing or two about achieving consistency-mainly thanks to good old-fashioned hard work.

"When I was young, we trained this way. Of course, it was like 30 years ago," said Lang, who was known as the "Iron Hammer" for her fierce spiking.

Back then, Team China stunned the world by winning five major trophies in a row from 1981-86-including a gold medal at the 1984 Los Angeles Olympics. That was a very different era when living standards back home were basic and training facilities poor.

Now, with her team sitting atop the world rankings and supported by a robust State-run sports system, Lang urges her players to keep their feet on the ground and ignore the hype.

"The ranking is not that important," said Lang. "We don't want to focus too much on what happened, or the history. We will concentrate on our own way going forward.

"It is very important how you arrive for every tournament. We are looking forward, hopefully, to still having a chance to go to the medal round at the Olympics."

Lang, who will turn 60 in December, is planning to travel around the world with her family during her retirement and is not keen to delay her itinerary much longer.

READ MORE: President Xi congratulates China's World Cup-winning volleyballers

"My travel plans needs to be pushed back 300 days later or more. That's OK," said Lang.

"I hope I will be healthy enough by then and still have more years to travel, to have a better life with my daughter and her family."

Pressed on whether she might be persuaded to change her mind and continue coaching past next summer, Lang laughed and replied: "I don't think so. It is going to be a very hard decision to continue. But, OK, I will keep a little door open."