SHANGHAI, China (AP) _ China's official sports association has
issued an unprecedented public criticism of Yao Ming for reporting
late to national team training.
The Houston Rockets star was faulted for taking too much time off
to recover from his last NBA season, as well spending too much time
planning his wedding and making appearances for the Special Olympics
and 2008 Beijing Olympic Games.
``No matter how lofty public welfare activities are, they can't
be allowed to take first place in a player's life,'' the China
Sports Daily, a newspaper owned by the government's All-China Sports
Federation, said in an article Tuesday.
``No matter how sweet personal life is, it can't be compared to
the exultation of capturing glory for one's nation,'' the article
said.
Chinese websites later said Yao reported for national team
training on Wednesday.
The article quoted the national basketball centre director Li
Yuanwei saying the team's Olympic preparations were built around
their major star. Li said he hoped Yao would join the team later
this month in the Stankovic Cup.
``Without Yao Ming, a warmup competition is far less valuable,''
the article said.
Throughout his three seasons in the NBA, Yao has largely escaped
criticism from China's official media and the government by
honouring his national team commitments.
Yet Tuesday's article carried echoes of the bitter accusations
hurled at former Dallas Mavericks player Wang Zhizhi, the first
Chinese player in the NBA, who refused to return to play with the
national team. Wang was labelled an immature ingrate and suffered an
five-year estrangement from Chinese basketball that ended only last
year after he made a humiliating apology.
China's other players were ``flinging sweat like snow'' while Yao
recovered from the season, said the article, which also criticized
Yao's handlers for not realizing his market value drew largely from
his uniqueness as a Chinese player.
China will face an all-star team from the NBA Development League
in the Stankovic Cup at home, where the host team will include
recent draft pick Yi Jianlian.
The Milwaukee Bucks picked Yi with the No. 6 pick in the NBA
draft, but he hasn't committed to playing for them because his agent
hoped he would be drafted by a team in a market with a larger
Chinese population.
Chinese fans and the former national coach have urged Yi to sign
with the Bucks, but the owner of his former team in China, the
Guangdong Tigers, recently suggested the seven-foot power forward's
NBA career could be over before it even begins.
``If the Bucks insist, Yi will go back'' to the Chinese league,
Chen Haitao was quoted as saying in Tuesday's Chinese-language
Beijing News.