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CHINA: New Work, New Life

Fighting for his passion
Updated: May 30, 2025 By ZHANG YU Source: CHINA DAILY
Baoding Fast Wrestling coach Bai Hejiang oversees his grandson Bai Enrui practicing with weights on March 26. LIU ZONGZE/FOR CHINA DAILY

Businessman to mentor

However, 12 years ago, Bai faced a disheartening truth — Baoding, once a cradle of Chinese wrestling, had no active gyms teaching its iconic type of wrestling.

Upon discovering this, Bai, after evaluating his own circumstances — already retired, his children settled in their own lives, and the burden on his family reduced — opted to open a wrestling gym.

At 57 in 2013, he took a gamble. "My family thought I was crazy. But wrestling is in my bones. I walked past the empty workshops and thought, this can't be the end," he recalls.

Bai, affectionately called "Wrestling Grandpa", transformed his neglected factory into a training gym — a 4,000-square-meter earth sports field as an outdoor training ground, and a 300-square-meter tin house serving as an indoor training facility. Youngsters can train on the sports ground, running, leapfrogging, overturning tires and swinging barbell discs.

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