Olympic swimming hero Sun Yang lost some of the luster of his big win by being too impulsive and outspoken. Today, he's a more balanced athlete, and firmly back on the winner's podium, Tang Zhe reports.
His history-breaking win at the London Olympic Games established Sun Yang as one of China's most promising sports figures after Yao Ming, Liu Xiang and Li Na.
Beyond being a sports hero, the young man - who broke the country's Olympic gold-medal drought in men's swimming - made himself a controversial topic out of the pool.
While most of the Chinese athletes who are nurtured through the State-run system modestly obey the team rules, Sun felt shackled by that system.
He criticized the sports officials for taking him to sign a commercial deal without acknowledging him. He also publicized his romantic relationship on his micro blog account on Jan 31. One day later, Sun was reported to have neglected systematic training for more than 40 days. Then he asked to change his coach, Zhu Zhigen, who had trained him for almost
a decade, due to conflict during training.
The two sides broke the ice in a reconciliation mediated by the Zhejiang College of Sports in early March. But shortly after, another fight that got physical ended the relationship, and Sun was left in Hangzhou when Zhu led other swimmers to train in Kunming, Yunnan province.
His disagreements with the coach placed Sun under harsh public scrutiny, with many people questioning his future prospects as an athlete.
Fortunately, the talented swimmer saved himself from criticism and rebuilt his heroic image by sweeping three gold medals in men's freestyle 400m, 800m and 1,500m, and a 4x200m medley bronze at the 13th FINA World Championship, which also made him the first Chinese swimmer to be named as the tournament's best male swimmer.
Day|Week|Month