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Meet the man behind the surprise package in the men's volleyball competitions at the recent national games

By Li Yang | China Daily | Updated: 2026-01-03 10:30

Bao (center) giving instructions during a National Games' semifinal match in the men's under-18 volleyball competition on Nov 15, 2025. [Photo/Xinhua]

What Bao values most, however, is cohesion. Volleyball, he insists, is a social contract disguised as a sport. Arguments are allowed; resentment is not. He intervenes early in conflicts, encourages technical debate, and sometimes even stokes competitive friction during scrimmages so that players learn to resolve tension under pressure. Over time, the team has developed a collective resilience that often matters more than talent.

Off the court, Bao's severity dissolves. Players describe him as a father during training and an older brother afterward. They call him "Boss Bao", or sometimes simply "brother". During holidays, those unable to return home eat at his apartment, crowded around grills and hotpots in a ritual that has become as much a part of the program as conditioning drills. Bao spends freely, amused rather than resentful. For more than a decade, the players have pooled money to buy him a birthday cake every year — reminding him of his own birthday when he forgets it.

Among the most emblematic of his students are twin brothers Zhao Zibo and Zhao Zichun, recruited in 2020 from a rural county. Tall, disciplined and stubborn, they trained without weekend breaks and balanced heavy academic loads with late-night practices. Bao demanded excellence on court but insisted on character first. "If you want to be a star," he told them, "learn how to be a person first." Today, one twin is a primary scorer; the other, a tactical organizer. Together, they are seen as potential future assets for China's national program.

Bao's ambitions for his players have never been limited to medals. Most come from modest families; many entered high school with unremarkable academic records. Bao promised their parents something specific: a good university, a better life. The school placed team members in top academic classes and assigned the best teachers. Bao balanced training accordingly. Over the years, his players have gone on to institutions such as Capital University of Physical Education and Sports, Northwestern Polytechnical University and China University of Political Science and Law. Some have become educators themselves. When professional teams from wealthier provinces tried to recruit his athletes with transfer fees, Bao usually refused. Development, he believed, should not be rushed or sold.

The National Games offered the team an unprecedented opportunity. It was the first time youth groups were divided into under-18 and under-20 categories, and Qiqihar's students were the only nonprofessional squad to reach the final eight. They won three straight group matches, then staged a dramatic comeback from two sets down to defeat a team from Henan province and reach the semifinals. Afterward, Bao told his players, with tears in his eyes, that the bonus money would now cover four years of tuition for one of them. It was not rhetoric; it was arithmetic.

They lost the semifinal to a team from Jiangsu province and finished fourth. It hardly mattered. Their grit drew admiration nationwide, including from the Chinese men's national team coach, who twice sought out the players in the tunnel to speak with them and later promised to visit Qiqihar to watch them train.

Bao, who is also a member of the expert committee of Qiqihar Municipal Federation of Returned Overseas Chinese, is nearing retirement from his bank job. When it comes, he says, he will devote himself entirely to the team. He speaks of volleyball not as an escape, but as a method — of education, of patience and of quiet persistence. His story is not one of sudden breakthrough or celebrity. It is about staying, year after year, in the same gym, believing that with enough care and time, ordinary students can become something extraordinary.

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