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Iowa hosts Shanghai youth for softball and cultural exchange

By MINGMEI LI in Oskaloosa, Iowa | chinadaily.com.cn | Updated: 2026-07-14 11:19

Chinese Consul General in Chicago Wang Baodong throws the first pitch on Monday during the opening ceremony of the Musco Youth Sports Exchange in Oskaloosa, Iowa, where a youth softball team from Shanghai participated in athletic and cultural exchanges with local students. Mingmei Li / China Daily

Yellow soybean seeds may have first connected Iowa and China, but today, yellow softballs and student exchanges are carrying that relationship forward.

Students from Shanghai's Beisibao U13 softball team, along with representatives from the Shanghai Baseball and Softball Association, the Shanghai Friendship Association and the Shanghai Sports Federation, are now visiting Oskaloosa, Iowa. During the nine-day Musco Youth Sports Exchange program, they are competing with local players while experiencing life in the Midwestern community.

The program began in 2025, when more than 100 young athletes from China and the United States first gathered in Shanghai. Beyond the competition, they shared meals, explored the city and spent time together, forging friendships that lasted long after the games ended. Building on last year's inaugural exchange, organizers hope the program will become a long-term platform for youth friendship.

Jeff Rogers, CEO of Musco Lighting, the sponsor of the exchange program, said sports provide a natural way to connect young people. While Chinese and American athletes compete against one another, they also play on mixed teams, giving them the chance to build friendships on and off the field.

"We like all sports, and we'll continue to do youth exchange through sports," Rogers told China Daily. "It's not just softball. We'll look at expanding into football, pickleball, tennis — wherever we can find the opportunity."

Wang Baodong, consul general of China in Chicago, welcomed the students from Shanghai and encouraged them to compete with American fellows with respect and to learn from one another. He hoped the young athletes would build lasting friendships through competition and carry forward the friendship between China and the US.

David Krutzfeldt, mayor of Oskaloosa, said the long-standing relationship between Iowa and China should continue to grow through closer cooperation and people-to-people exchanges. While hosting the games in the city, he also hopes students will explore the city.

"You're going to truly immerse yourselves in American culture and experience what life is like in the Midwest United States. I expect you will experience firsthand the genuine warmth of our community," he said. "Our relationship with China is one that needs to be enhanced, needs to be warmer. We have much to offer one another."

He told China Daily that he has long been optimistic about the exchanges, recalling Iowa's early efforts to build ties with China. Krutzfeldt expressed hope that the relationship will continue to deepen in the years ahead.

Two-time Olympic medal-winning softball player Michele Smith said softball and sports have the potential to bring young people together across cultures while continuing to grow worldwide.

Smith noted that softball has long been popular in both the US and China, recalling that the US team faced China at the 1996 Olympic Games, and she said the students today can find more similarities between each other.

"It's a great sport for girls around the world," Smith told China Daily. She added that sport helps people connect despite differences in language and culture, allowing athletes to build lasting friendships. Smith encouraged young women to focus on their shared interests rather than their differences.

"Sport brings everybody together, and it reminds us we're similar. We might grow up in different cultures and speak different languages, but we play the same sport. We meet each other, we stay in touch, and especially nowadays, the young athletes can continue to communicate even after the trip is over," she added.

Sarah Lande, one of Iowa's "old friends" of China, said the future of the relationship depends on the next generation carrying the friendship forward.

"I wish the whole world could get together this way," Lande told China Daily. "Once we get young people playing together and understanding other countries, that's what's going to keep the future world together."

She hopes more young people will have the opportunity to participate in exchanges like this.

"It's so wonderful," she said. "As it spreads, we can have these young people share it."

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