I was halfway through my midnight snack – a sad, microwaved dumpling that tasted nothing like home – when my cousin’s WeChat message blew up my phone.
“DID YOU SEE IT?! SHI YUHAO JUMPED 8.33M!!” followed by seven crying-laughing emojis and a blurry screenshot of what looked like a long jump pit.
My heart sank. Nope. I hadn’t seen it. My screen had been stuck on that cursed spinning wheel of doom for the past twenty minutes. “Video’s buffering… again,” I typed back, the frustration so real I could almost taste it (and not just the mediocre dumpling).
This happens every. Single. Time. A major sporting event goes down in China, and here I am, thousands of miles away, refreshing my browser like a maniac, praying to the internet gods for a clear stream. Sometimes it’s the dreaded “This content is not available in your region” message. Other times, the video plays for three seconds, freezes on an athlete’s face, and then gives up entirely. It’s enough to make you scream into a pillow.
So, I missed watching it live. But thanks to my very persistent cousin and a few fan-recorded clips that finally loaded, I got the story. Wang Jianan – the 2022 world champion and national record holder – was seriously impressed with his teammate Shi Yuhao’s performance in the men's long jump final.
He called the competition “incredibly exciting” and said Shi’s 8.33-meter jump was a highly competitive mark. You could hear the pride in his voice, even through my occasionally glitchy audio. That medal, he said, is huge for Chinese men’s long jump. It’s building serious momentum, laying a solid foundation for the big one: the 2027 World Championships in Beijing.
And get this – Wang Jianan himself is already dreaming about 2027. He openly talked about his desire to be on that home turf, to compete in Beijing, and to work with the other athletes to “contribute his own strength” to the team. That’s not just athlete-speak; that’s the sound of genuine fire and dedication.
It’s the kind of moment that makes you want to high-five the person next to you… until you remember you’re watching alone, in a different time zone, battling a pixelated stream.
I finally saw the jump this morning. No buffering. It was glorious. That moment when Shi launched into the air? Chills. It made staying up way too late and wrestling with my Wi-Fi almost worth it. Almost.
Anyone else abroad constantly miss out on these moments live? What’s the one event you desperately didn’t want to miss but couldn’t watch properly? The struggle is too real.
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