It is widely acknowledged that China has made tremendous efforts in developing its summer sports ever since the founding of new China in 1949. From their partipation in the past seven Olympic Summer Games since 1984 Chinese athletes collected 163 gold, 117 silver and 106 bronze medals, making their contributions to the worldwide development of sports.
For the first time in history, China struck gold in an Olympic winter sport when Yang Yang (A) won both the women's 500m and 1000m short-track speed skating at Salt Lake City 2002. At the Vancouver Winter Games eight years later, China went further by clinching 11 medals, including five golds, two silvers and four bronzes, for an epoch-making seventh place, the first time into top-eight of the Winter Games medal table.
At the 2010 Asian Games, China, as the host country, clinched a total of 416 medals (199 golds, 119 silvers, 98 bronzes), including 35 golds from such non-Olympic sports as chess, karate, roller sports, dragon boat, xiangqi, billiard sports, wushu, soft tennis and dancesport.
The quadrennial National Minority Nationalities Traditional Sports Games have always played a positive role in helping promote the numerous ethnic sports among people of different minority nationalities in China. The last National Ethnic Games in 2011, the ninth edition of its kind held in Guiyang, capital of southwest China's Guizhou Province, featured 16 competitive sports and 188 demonstration events in three (competitive, acrobatic and general) categories.