Lee Lai Shan

Medal record
Women's windsurfing
Competitor for  Hong Kong
Olympic Games
Gold 1996 Atlanta Board (Mistral)

Lee Lai-Shan MBE BBS (Chinese: 李麗珊) (born in Cheung Chau, Hong Kong, September 5, 1970) is a former world champion and Olympic gold medal-winning professional windsurfer from Hong Kong. She is the first and last ever athlete to win an Olympic medal representing Hong Kong, not as part of China. Since 1997, Hong Kong has been stipulated to append the word "China" after its name in all Olympic events.

Contents

Major achievements

Lee Lai-Shan, popularly known as "San San", was born in Cheung Chau and started windsurfing aged 12. She began to take part in windsurfing competitions at the age of 17 and joined the Hong Kong team at 19. Over the years, Lee won many international competitions, including the first-ever Olympic gold medal for Hong Kong, in the women's mistral boardsailing class, at the 1996 Olympics and the first champion in the Asian Games representing Hong Kong, China.

Between 1952-1995, Hong Kong had never been able to win any medals at the Olympic Games. Lee Lai-Shan's victory at the 1996 Atlanta Centennial Olympics changed all this and added a glorious chapter to the region's 44-year Olympic history. Notably, the 1996 Summer Olympics was the last international sporting event that Hong Kong participated in as a British colony, making Lee's medal the first and last medal that the Hong Kong team (not Hong Kong, China) won.[1] It was at that time Lee famously declared to the media:[2]

Hong Kong athletes are not rubbish!

After the Games she became a student of sports management at Australia's University of Canberra in 1996. She was the first Hong Kong athlete to receive an Honorary Doctorate in social sciences from The Chinese University of Hong Kong.

Lee became a recipient of the “Ten Outstanding Young Persons Award” and the Bronze Bauhinia Star Award in recognition of her outstanding achievements in the international sports scene. She was also awarded an Honorary Doctoral Degree in Social Sciences by The Chinese University of Hong Kong. There is a monument resembling a windsurf board and mast erected in her honour near the beachfront at Cheung Chau.

In 2008, she was the first person to carry the Olympic torch in the torch relay leg in Hong Kong.[1] She also was the final torchbearer in 2008 Summer Olympics sailing opening ceremony at Qingdao International Marina.

Major achievements

Honors

Personal information

She married longtime partner Wong Tak-Sum (黃德森) (known in English as Sam Wong), who has also represented Hong Kong internationally in windsurfing, and gave birth to a daughter, Haylie Wong (黃希皚), in August 2005, and to a second daughter in August 2007. This was one of the reasons for her to take a break from competition, though she has not ruled out competing altogether.[3] In 2008, she was involved in the Summer Olympics again when she was one of the presenting team for ATV, in addition to commentating at its sailing event.[3]

In 2006, she was featured in a Hang Seng Bank advertisement, in which she said the cost of raising a child in Hong Kong will be HK$4 million (US$510,000). It has caused a slight controversy in Hong Kong as most people do not think it will actually cost that much, and most think that Hang Seng Bank exaggerated the figures.

See also

References

  1. ^ a b SCMP. "SCMP." Athletes, politicians and tycoons head torch list. Retrieved on 2008-04-30.
  2. ^ Info.gov.hk. "Info.gov.hk." SHA's "Letter to Hong Kong". Retrieved on 2008-04-30.
  3. ^ a b http://olympics.scmp.com/Article.aspx?id=18&section=athletes

External links