PARIS OLYMPICS: FENCER VIVIAN KONG AND HER SINGULAR PURSUIT OF A SPOT ON THE GAMES PODIUM

  • An only child and obsessive student, the world No 1 epeeist has won medals everywhere except the Olympics - a gap in her CV she aims to fill

Hong Kong epeeist Vivian Kong Man-wai has been on the podium for every major tournament in which she has competed - but not at the Olympics.

And after previous medal-free appearances in 2016 and 2021, the left-hander is ready to make things right in Paris this summer.

A flag bearer for the city's delegation at the Jakarta Asian Games in 2018, Kong is embracing her identity as one of the world's top fencers. She is not hiding her ambition either, and said her current ranking of No 1 could only mean she was not just "participating" in the French capital.

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Born on February 8, 1994, Kong moved to Vancouver with her family at the age of two. She returned to Hong Kong for good four years later, but that did not stop the Canadian government from much later inviting her to naturalise and represent the country. Kong declined, saying she wished to represent her birthplace. .

As she was an only child, Kong's parents arranged a wide range of extracurricular activities for her when she was young. From ballet to ice skating, and from drawing to playing guzheng, Kong did it all, but it was taekwondo that Kong she in love with - until she found fencing at the age of 11.

It took her only two years to become the Under-17 National Championships winner in China, at the age of 13.

Obsessed with studying since she was a child, Kong, who studied at ESF's Beacon Hill School before graduating from Sha Tin College, was persistent in striking a balance between revision and daily training.

Finishing her homework on the plane while travelling overseas to compete became a norm for the young fencer, and Kong's efforts paid off as she scored 41 out of 45 in her International Baccalaureate (IB) Diploma.

She was admitted to Stanford in the United States in 2012, majoring in International Relations, and then went on to pursue her Masters of Law at the Renmin University of China in Hong Kong before completing a Juris Doctor law degree at the Chinese University of Hong Kong.

Growing up without siblings, Kong would play chess with herself when she was bored. Over the years, whenever Kong was on the road, she would grab a biography at the airport bookshop to read on the plane.

She was reading Michelle Obama's book before she won her first World Cup gold in Havana in January 2019. Two weeks later, Kong read Maria Sharapova's biography before losing in the first round at the Grand Prix in Doha - she said she did not want to see that book ever again.

When she made her Olympic debut in Rio de Janeiro, Kong had only two World Cup bronze medals to her name, but by the time she made history for the city by reaching the quarter-finals at the Tokyo Games five years later, Kong needed a much bigger trophy cabinet: having won a couple of World Cup and Asian Championships gold medals, as well as a World Championships bronze in the interim.

However, the road to excellence on the piste for Kong was far from smooth sailing. She tore her left anterior cruciate ligament (ACL) in the July before the 2017 World Championships. To speed up her recovery, Kong became a vegetarian and resumed training just three months after surgery, before returning to action in November.

It never rains but it pours. After hitting the top of the world rankings for the first time in her career in March 2019, Kong tore her right ACL while becoming the first Hongkonger to ever stand on the podium at the World Championships in Budapest in July.

But even the grade two-injury would not deter the veteran fencer. In the years that followed, Kong became the world No 1 fencer for the third time in May 2023, before defending her Asian Championships crown - her third title - in Wuxi a month later.

In 2024, Kong has been in sizzling form leading up to the Paris Games, picking up three Grand Prix and World Cup titles in Doha, Barcelona and Fujairah.

"I've won a title every time I made it to the semi-finals this season - I've never had that determination before," she said. "I hope I will be able to play well even if I am not in my best condition. I must pay attention to all details and study myself like my opponents would me."

Octavian Zidaru, the city's epee head coach, believes his pupil now has enough experience and maturity and is ready to make an impact in Paris. To make it past the quarter-finals, Kong will need to win three matches. If she does that, starting in the round of 32 at 4.50pm Hong Kong Time, she will make history yet again for her city.

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This article originally appeared on the South China Morning Post (www.scmp.com), the leading news media reporting on China and Asia.

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2024-07-27T06:13:28Z dg43tfdfdgfd