Adapted
from Operation Yao Ming by Brook
Larmer. ©2005 by Penguin Group (USA). Reprinted with permission of Gotham
Books, a member of Penguin Group (USA), and Brook Larmer.
The faint whispers of a genetic conspiracy coursed through the corridors of
Shanghai No. 6 Hospital on the evening of Sept. 12, 1980. It was shortly
after 7 p.m., and a patient in the maternity ward had just endured an
excruciating labor to give birth to a baby boy. An abnormally large baby boy.
The
doctors and nurses on duty should have anticipated something out of the
ordinary. The boy's parents, after all, were retired basketball stars whose
marriage the year before had made them the tallest couple in China.
The mother, Fang Fengdi, an austere beauty with a pinched smile, measured
6'2" -- more than half a foot taller than the average man in Shanghai. The
father, Yao Zhiyuan, was a deferential 6'10" giant whose body pitched
forward in the stoop that comes from a lifetime of ducking under door frames and
leaning down to listen to people of more normal dimensions. So imposing was
their size that ever since childhood, the two had been known simply as Da Yao
and Da Fang -- Big Yao and Big Fang.
Still, the medical staff at No. 6 Hospital surely had never seen a newborn quite
like this: the enormous legs, the broad, squarish cranium, the hands and feet so
fully formed that they seemed to belong to a three-year-old. At more than 11.2
pounds and 23 inches, the infant was nearly double the size of the average
Chinese newborn. The name his parents gave him, from a Chinese character that
unifies the sun and the moon, was Ming, meaning bright.
News
of Yao Ming's birth was quickly relayed across town to the top leaders of the
Shanghai Sports Commission. They were not surprised. These men and women
had been trying to cultivate a new generation of athletes who would embody the
rising power of China. The boy in the maternity ward represented, in many ways,
the culmination of their plan.
The experiment had no code name, but in Shanghai basketball circles it might as
well have been called Operation Yao Ming. The wheels had been set in motion more
than a quarter century earlier, when Chairman Mao Zedong exhorted his followers
to funnel the nation's most genetically gifted youngsters into the emerging
Communist sports machine. Two generations of Yao Ming's forebears had been
singled out by authorities for their hulking physiques, and his mother and
father had both been drafted into the sports system. "We had been looking
forward to the arrival of Yao Ming for three generations," says Wang
Chongguang, a retired Shanghai coach who played with Yao's father in the 1970s
and would coach Yao himself in the '90s. "That's why I thought his name
should be Yao Panpan." Long-Awaited Yao.
Giddy with the sense of possibility, some officials wanted to start helping the
family immediately with food and finances. Others even began pushing for an
exception to the country's strictly enforced one-child policy. If China truly
wanted to compete internationally, they asked, why shouldn't the nation's
tallest couple be allowed to breed an entire team of champions?
One Communist leader didn't share in the delight. This man, one of the most
powerful sports officials in Shanghai, had bitter memories of the torment
inflicted on him by a group of youthful revolutionaries that included Yao Ming's
mother. It had taken him nearly a decade to battle his way back to the top. He
was in no mood to start bending the rules to help Da Fang.
For
him, revenge sounded far sweeter.
The marble archway at No. 651 Nanjing Road loomed ahead of her -- enormous and
forbidding, even to a girl who was more than six feet tall. It was 1965, and
Fang Fengdi, age 15, had arrived at the elite sports-training center that would
become her home for the next five years -- a place that would witness her
transformation from frivolous girl to basketball star to something even more
pivotal to Chinese history. But the entrance to No. 651 Nanjing Road may have
seemed all the more forbidding for one simple reason: Da Fang didn't want to be
there. "I was just a young girl who loved to sing and dance," she
recalls. "I always thought I'd be an entertainer, but I didn't like
basketball at all."
Da Fang, however, had sprouted like bamboo after the spring rains, attracting
the attention of Shanghai sports officials, who had paid an unexpected visit to
her family's small apartment. They explained to her parents that Da Fang had the
potential to bring glory to the city and perhaps to the nation through her
efforts on the basketball court. The officials' unspoken message was also clear:
Because the sports system would become her "iron rice bowl," taking
care of her food, shelter and employment for the rest of her life, she wouldn't
have to follow her mother into the cramped assembly lines of the local garment
factory.
Life in the sports factories, however, wasn't so different from life on the
assembly lines. Both occupations provided workers with (or condemned them to)
lifetime employment within the same danwei, or work unit. The best
athletes usually lived five or six to a room, but they received a steadier diet
of milk and meat than the rest of the population, a significant perk in a land
where food was still severely rationed. But like a factory job, athletic
training was physically punishing and subject to the danwei's dictatorial
rule. The danwei's minipotentates made, or at least enforced, nearly all
of the key decisions in people's lives: where to live, where to work, what to
eat, whom to marry and -- most insidiously -- what to think.
Da Fang's generation, born in the flush of the revolution, was the first to be
indoctrinated from childhood in the rigid certainties of Mao Zedong Thought. By
the mid-1960s the ideological training at No. 651 Nanjing Road had become
almost as intense and monotonous as the athletic training. Every week there were
obligatory sessions called, without irony, Democratic Life Meetings. Party
leaders extolled the Great Helmsman and exhorted the faithful to show ever more
revolutionary spirit. Then the athletes engaged in a self-flagellating round of
confession and repentance.
In Da Fang's day the high priest presiding over many of the Democratic Life
Meetings at No. 651 was a handsome but imperious party cadre named Zhu Yong. Zhu
(pronounced Joo) was technically the official in charge of women's
basketball, even though he didn't know the rule book nearly as well as he knew
Mao's Little Red Book. His real authority, however, came from his position as
deputy Communist Party secretary, which gave him the power to shape the minds of
the young athletes. Several times a week Zhu summoned the basketball players to
the institute's first-floor lecture hall for "political thought"
meetings, at which he chastised them for sacrificing too little for the
revolution, succumbing to the evils of individualism and even engaging in
romantic relationships, which were not allowed.
Young and impressionable, Da Fang was putty in the hands of such propagandists.
Molding her basketball game proved more difficult. The teenager may have been
the tallest female player in Shanghai, but "she was terrible at
first," says one of her early coaches. "She ran very slowly, she
couldn't catch the ball, and she got so tired she could run up and down the
court only a couple of times before she had to stop."
The young athletes trained eight to 10 hours a day, year-round, on outdoor
courts that were bitterly cold in winter and blisteringly hot in summer. Coaches
routinely beat players and forced them to play while sick or injured, pressing
them to display revolutionary spirit. Some players became too exhausted to eat,
and others cried tears of pain throughout practice. Still others vomited at the
sight of a basketball court. But they kept going. Lin Meizheng, an agile forward
on the Shanghai women's team, suffered for years from a painful kidney infection
but never missed a practice. "We always felt that showing spirit was the
top priority," she says. "You may not be able to improve your
technique, but you can always improve your spirit."
Da Fang developed that spirit, too, and it began to show on court. After more
than a year of training, the 16-year-old was still an awkward player, but she
fought more aggressively for rebounds, and she sometimes hurled her now
6'2" body to the ground in pursuit of loose balls. Her former coaches and
teammates say her stiffening resolve had to do with a growing conviction in the
purity of her "red" roots as the descendant of a long line of poor
workers. For the time being, playing basketball was her only way to carry out
the revolution. But that, like everything else, would soon change.
The
girl with the red armband pushed the prisoner through the frenzied crowd into a
familiar space at No. 651 Nanjing Road, a basketball court that now, in early
1967, was being used as a "people's tribunal" for the dispensation of
mob justice. "Enemy of the people!" screamed the young athletes,
shoving and punching the prisoner as he stumbled past. "Spy! Traitor!
Counterrevolutionary!"
The prisoner's head was crudely shaved. His hands were tied behind his back. And
his dark eyes seemed so filled with fear that several of the young athletes in
attendance had a hard time believing he was Zhu Yong. Could this hunched figure
really be the powerful party secretary who, just months before, had ruled over
the sports institute with an iron fist?
Zhu, who had been locked up in solitary confinement for several months, knew
there was no escape from the ritualistic humiliation of these "struggle
sessions." All the middle-aged party leader could hope for was to survive.
"Enemy of the people, confess your crimes!" The voices came from all
around him, and one of the loudest belonged to the girl in the armband, a voice
he had heard many times -- thin and high, but now chillingly hard. It was the
voice of Fang Fengdi.
Da Fang was barely 17, but she seemed transformed. Her lively banter was gone,
supplanted by fervent recitations from Mao's Little Red Book. Her hair had been
cut very short in a display of revolutionary ardor. Her usual sports garb had
been replaced by a baggy dark Mao suit and black cloth shoes. The only splash of
color on her was the red armband, which bore three characters that struck fear
in millions of Chinese: Hongweibing. Red Guard.
Da Fang had enlisted as one of Mao's "little revolutionary generals,"
the shock troops who would carry out the most extreme acts of the Great
Proletarian Cultural Revolution. The decade-long cataclysm, which Mao had
launched in 1966, produced cruelty and oppression on a horrific scale. Thousands
of intellectuals, former capitalists and people with ties to the West were
beaten to death. Millions more were imprisoned and tortured, while tens of
millions were forcibly displaced to the countryside for "reeducation"
through hard labor.
Like many Chinese, Da Fang is loath to talk about her role during that
tumultuous period. "The Cultural Revolution really didn't affect me very
much," she says while sitting in her son's house in Houston, looking out at
the fountains bubbling in the man-made lake outside. "We had to stop our
basketball training and focus on other things for a while. But I came from a
workers' family, so it didn't have much impact on us." In a narrow sense,
she's right. Her family belonged to one of the "five red categories"
(workers, soldiers, poor peasants, martyrs and Communist cadres), so Da Fang was
spared the persecution visited upon the "five black categories"
(landlords, rightists, capitalist roaders, counterrevolutionaries and rich
peasants). But according to her friends and former teammates, the Cultural
Revolution would shape her life and personality -- and the future of her only
son.
During the early days of the Cultural Revolution, Red Guards rampaged through
the streets of Shanghai, shutting down schools and universities, demolishing
ancient temples and monuments, and ransacking the homes of capitalists and
intellectuals. The young zealots eliminated anything with a trace of decadent
foreign influence, from women's cosmetics to French bakeries to classical music.
Competitive sports, another insidious legacy of Western domination, were
similarly consigned to the trash heap. Training stopped; competitions were
canceled. The best coaches and athletes were attacked for their supposed
obsession with medals, a counterrevolutionary crime that even had a name: jinmao
zhuyi, or trophyism.
The Red Guards laid waste to the sports system. They plowed under athletic
fields, shut down the national sports commission and imprisoned its chairman,
Marshal He Long, who had formed the first Red Army basketball team in the 1930s
and would die on the floor of his prison cell in 1969. The Red Guards also
hounded and harassed some of the country's most beloved champions. Table-tennis
star Rong Guotuan, whose 1959 world championship victory had set off
celebrations across China, escaped continual beatings and humiliation by hanging
himself in his jail cell.
Nearly all of Da Fang's older teammates were trundled off to factories, most of
them never to play basketball again. In some ways, however, being banished to
the labor camps was better than staying behind at No. 651 Nanjing Road. The Red
Guards imprisoned Zhu and some three dozen other top coaches and administrators
in makeshift jails on the second floor. At night the young captors harangued
their former bosses to keep them from sleeping. During the day, Red Guards
forced them to read Mao's Little Red Book, write self-criticisms and -- worst of
all -- face the terrifying specter of "struggle sessions."
Da Fang was one of the Red Guards the old leaders feared most. As an acolyte of
the so-called Strong Wind Rebels, who took over the institute, the 17-year-old
became a leader of the basketball section. Her group of Red Guards had one
primary task: to investigate, punish and reeducate the "bad elements"
among their former coaches and leaders. "Da Fang seemed especially eager to
improve herself as a revolutionary," says one of her former teammates.
"Some of us wanted to join the Red Guards to avoid trouble, because anybody
who wasn't with them was considered an enemy. But Da Fang was a true believer.
And true believers, you know, were capable of anything."
According to former players and coaches who lived in the compound during these
years, Da Fang became one of the most zealous disciplinarians. "She treated
people badly," says one former coach, who remembers watching her cut off
another woman's braided hair in one of the gentler forms of punishment.
"The Cultural Revolution gave her a sense of pride, arrogance," says
another coach. Thirty years later, he still searches for an explanation.
"She was just a child. What did she know, right?"
Hunched before his captors at center court, Zhu Yong listened as Da Fang and the
other Red Guards recited his list of supposed crimes: working at a
department-store candy counter before the revolution, maintaining contacts with
the enemy Nationalist Party, deviating from the true path of Maoist thought. The
deposed commissar had been active in Shanghai's Communist underground long
before Da Fang was born, but now the revolution was eating its own, and among
local sports leaders Zhu suffered the most. The Red Guards deprived him of food.
They beat him with fists and clubs, and they pulled his arms up behind his back
in the excruciating "airplane" position. There's no evidence that Da
Fang participated in Zhu's physical abuse, but several witnesses say she often
led the public denunciations against him. During one such session, in an
apparent attempt to turn the onetime leaders against each other, Da Fang
commanded Zhu to engage in hand-to-hand combat with his former second in
command. The two men refused, and Da Fang erupted in anger.
For months Zhu had denied the charges against him, but now, weak and exhausted,
he was starting to break. Da Fang and his other captors once again shouted out
their list of accusations, and the mob of athletes repeated each denunciation in
full-throated unison. Somebody pulled Zhu's arms into the airplane, and the
former party leader finally cracked. "Yes, yes," he said. "I
confess."
Zhu was shipped to a reeducation camp in the countryside outside Shanghai. He
would spend the next five years doing hard labor. One of the other deposed
leaders remembers seeing Zhu once during that time, standing knee-deep in an icy
stream, pulling rotten grass out of the water. The former commissar's hands were
cracked and bleeding from frostbite, and his eyes had gone dead.
Chairman
Mao didn't need his "little revolutionary generals" for long. By late
1968, having used the turmoil to consolidate power, he called in the army to
establish order. The Red Guards were demobilized. Within weeks, millions of them
were shipped off to the countryside to temper their revolutionary zeal with
years of hard labor. Some would never make it home again.
Da Fang, however, would have a different fate. The revival of basketball -- a
sport she had been taught to vilify as a bourgeois Western import -- saved her
from going to a labor camp. Trophyism was still considered a crime, but the
nation's Communist leaders now saw sports as a way to restore the lost sense of
communal feeling inside China and to rebuild diplomatic relations outside.
Training sessions resumed tentatively in Shanghai at the end of 1969. Many of
the nation's best athletes, however, were still toiling away at factories and
collective farms. The dearth of veterans benefited the 19-year-old Da Fang and
hastened the rise of Yao Zhiyuan, the 6'10" center who joined the Shanghai
men's team after escaping the brunt of the Cultural Revolution as a worker at
the Shanghai No. 8 Machinery Factory.
Da Fang would soon become the standout Chinese center of her generation, one of
the best in Asia. Tall and solidly built, she developed a steady shot to go with
her tenacity under the basket -- skills that would later help her power the
women's national team to an unforgettable upset win over South Korea in the 1976
Asian Championships.
Da Fang was a loyal Maoist, too, and the leadership in Beijing sensed that she
would be a perfect role model for the nation. She was selected year after year
as the national team captain -- and, in 1974, as a representative at the
celebration of the 25th anniversary of the Communist Revolution in Beijing's
Great Hall of the People. As captain, Da Fang often was assigned to greet
foreign delegations at the airport, meet presidents and dignitaries and mingle
with members of the politburo. She moved easily between the basketball court and
the highest echelons of political power. But around her teammates she rarely cut
loose. "Da Fang was very closed," says Luo Xuelian, the national
team's effervescent point guard. "After practice she would just sit in her
room knitting sweaters." The aloofness only added to her aura of authority.
Nagging health problems, however, hindered Da Fang's career. The grueling
practices exacerbated the pain in her lower back, and she constantly teetered on
the edge of exhaustion, playing hard one day and barely having the energy to
move the next couple of days. She traveled with the national team to Iran,
France and Cuba, but health problems forced her to miss several other trips,
including a 1975 tour of the U.S. Three years later, at age 28, Da Fang was
ready to hang up her sneakers.
When Chinese athletes reach the end of their playing days, they are never truly
released from their obligation to the state. Until recently the sports system
automatically absorbed most retired athletes as coaches or administrators, who
passed on their knowledge to the next generation. If they happened to be
extraordinarily tall or talented, they were expected to pass along something
even more fundamental: their genes. Indeed, when Shanghai sports officials
finally let Da Fang retire, they suggested that she produce a champion.
But whom could Da Fang marry? She had never kissed a boy, much less dated one.
Her entire adolescence and adult life had been focused on just two things:
sports and revolution. Even if Da Fang had had the time or inclination, dating
was strictly prohibited in the sports system -- and marriage was forbidden until
athletes either retired or turned 28. If a player got pregnant, she would have
to get an abortion or be kicked off the team and reassigned to a less desirable
work unit.
The responsibility for arranging marriages among the most gifted retired
athletes often fell to the coaches. "We had to do a lot of work as
matchmakers," says Wang Yongfang, the former sports-institute leader who
coached Da Fang early in her career and, after a long stint of hard labor in the
countryside, was rehabilitated as the leader of the Shanghai women's team.
"These girls spent far more time with the coaches and team leaders than
with their own parents. Who else was there to make sure everything was
O.K.?"
Before Da Fang even started to look for a husband, Shanghai officials had
identified a suitable partner for her: Yao Zhiyuan. Yao, an active player who
was two years her junior, was an agreeable man whose ready smile and love of a
good quip contrasted sharply with Da Fang's grim demeanor. For several years the
two players had eaten in the same cafeteria, lived in the same dormitory and
practiced on adjoining courts, but, Da Fang says, "we didn't know each
other very well."
Shanghai coaches teased the two towering centers that they were made for each
other. But it was up to a portly team leader named Liu Shiyu to make the match a
reality. He spoke with the players separately and convinced them that they could
"make do" with each other -- adding that they had the Communist
Party's stamp of approval to do so. Given such high-level interest, how could Da
Fang and Da Yao refuse?
The sports community didn't have to wait long for the first offspring of what
the press was calling "the first couple of Asia." In the small
apartment where Da Fang and Da Yao lived, surrounded by other athletes and
coaches, everyone gathered to see the miracle child -- long-awaited Yao.
The joy that normally attends the birth of a son in China was muted, in Yao's
case, by his family's sense of uncertainty. The end of the Cultural Revolution,
which followed Mao's death in 1976, had ushered China into a new era of hope and
economic opportunity under the leadership of Deng Xiaoping, the former Communist
Party secretary who had returned to power after three stints in political exile.
But Deng was not the only one who had risen from the ashes. Zhu Yong had also
been rehabilitated, and Da Fang would suffer as a consequence.
When she retired from playing in '78, Da Fang moved naturally into the position
of assistant coach for the Shanghai junior women's team, a job that many assumed
would soon lead the former star to more prestigious assignments. But according
to several former teammates and coaches, her fate changed when Zhu assumed a top
position in the Shanghai sports commission, at which he would eventually become
deputy director. After barely six months as a coach, Da Fang was shunted off to
what one former teammate described as "the worst job in the sports
system": doing menial work at a compound for retired athletes.
For a time the former national hero stocked bathrooms with soap for the
equivalent of a few dollars a week. Later she would be transferred to a clerical
job at the Shanghai Sports Science Research Institute. She would never work as a
coach again, and she lacked the basic education to find other employment. Her
husband, too, failed to land a job as a coach and would work his entire career
in the Shanghai port. Together the couple made less than 80 yuan per month --
about $50 at the time -- barely more than half the average salary of an urban
Chinese household and hardly enough to raise a rapidly growing child.
The vendors at the outdoor food market on Shanghai's Wukang Road got to know Da
Fang well. Nearly every evening at dusk she would appear before them -- a tall,
elegant figure in worn clothes, quietly bargaining for day-old cuts of pork or
surplus rations of rice. Da Fang and Da Yao spent nearly their entire income on
food, and yet they often sat at the table watching their son eat while they
themselves went hungry. By the time Yao Ming turned four, he measured well over
four feet and weighed a whopping 60 pounds.
Four years later Yao was already 5'7", and his potential as a basketball
player was literally too big for anyone to ignore. By then Zhu Yong had retired
from the sports commission, and one of Da Fang's old friends from No. 651
Nanjing Road, Xu Weili, wanted Yao Ming for the Xuhui District Sports School for
children, where she was the top party official.
It would not be easy to pry the boy away from his parents, who were keen to give
him the education they themselves had been deprived of. But Xu gently reminded
Da Fang and Da Yao that their son's special talents belonged to the nation --
and that the Xuhui school could provide him not just with training but also with
more milk and other nutritious foods. Yao's parents eventually acquiesced,
grudgingly accepting that their only child might have to follow in their
footsteps. "We didn't choose this career for him," Da Fang says,
"but we were basketball players. All of our old colleagues and coaches had
their eyes on Yao Ming since he was young."
Born on the cusp of China's economic resurgence, Yao Ming was part of the first
Chinese generation in 40 years that could entertain personal ambition and
visions of success. As a child he fantasized about being an explorer traveling
into new worlds rather than his parents' old one. "I've always wanted to be
an archaeologist, to go looking for adventure everywhere," Yao said, adding
that "it would be hard for me, of course, to crawl in and out of those
small caves."
Nevertheless, when his parents told him he would have to start basketball
training, Yao -- not yet nine -- didn't utter a word in protest. Ever the
obedient child, he agreed to stand outside his primary school, waiting for his
coach to come and guide him by bicycle through the maze of Shanghai streets to
the Xuhui Sports School, where the boy would initially train five afternoons a
week and on Saturdays. Yao hated basketball with a passion, but he resigned
himself to attending practice "purely for my parents, because I respect
them so much."
Yao's size and clumsiness made him the object of ridicule at first. The teasing
embarrassed him, but it wasn't nearly as painful as the training itself. Every
day, the boys ran until they almost collapsed, jumped until their legs burned
and shot baskets until they couldn't lift their arms. What often seemed even
harder to take was the numbing boredom of repetitive training, a process the
sportswriter Zhao Yu likened to "trying to create a tiger by copying the
drawing of a cat." It would take nearly a decade before Yao took a genuine
interest in basketball.
When Yao came home from practice demoralized and wanting to quit, his father
would take him behind their building to shoot at the hoop hanging above the
bicycle garage. For every basket Yao made, his father promised to buy him a
little gift. "My father bribed me into playing!" Yao recalled with
mock incredulity.
His mother tried a different tack. One day when Yao was nine, Da Fang snared a
pair of tickets to see the Harlem Globetrotters. Never before had they seen
basketball played with such joy. These visitors made the sport seem not so much
a duty as a source of pleasure, even exhilaration. "I think that experience
had a strong influence on Yao Ming," Da Fang said. "They turned
basketball into a great show, a form of entertainment."
Nonetheless, Da Fang feared for her son's future. A life in basketball seemed to
offer little reward. If China were truly opening up to the world, then Yao
needed to prepare to seize the opportunities that would come outside the old
socialist sports system. Da Fang's true redemption would be to give her son
an education and a chance to lead what she wistfully called "a normal
life."
In the name of normality Da Fang did something quite extraordinary: She tried to
pull her son out of the sports system. In 1992, when Yao finished sixth grade,
Xu Weili put pressure on the family to send him full time to Xuhui, where
academics took a backseat to athletic training. Da Fang not only rejected Xu's
plea. She removed him from Xuhui altogether and enrolled him full time in a
middle school known for its academic rigor. "Da Fang only wanted Yao
Ming to study," Xu recalls. "She didn't care if he played basketball
again."
The scheme unraveled in just a few months. Halfway through his first semester,
Yao was floundering in the classroom. His teachers didn't fault his effort or
intelligence. The 11-year-old loved reading books about foreign lands and
China's imperial history. But Yao had started the semester too far behind, and
he couldn't keep up with the academic grind. Within a few months Xu Weili was
back, and Da Fang felt compelled to enroll Yao full time at Xuhui, his
experiment with education in the real world a disappointing failure.
"Leaving school to play basketball," says one of Yao's close friends
in Shanghai, "was his biggest regret."
Two years later Yao, just 13 but already 6'7", moved out of his parents'
apartment to live at the Shanghai Sports Technology Institute. The city sports
authorities, marveling at both Yao's size and his continuing awkwardness on the
court, felt that he would succeed only with more professional training. Over the
next eight years Shanghai's top coaches and scientists would work around the
clock to turn the galumphing giant into a basketball star -- and his parents
would barely see him.
Letting go wasn't easy for Da Fang. During those years she did her best to look
after Yao's welfare, cooking big meals on his days off and, after home games,
waiting outside the locker room to hand him food and clothing. At one point,
frustrated by her inability to find basketball shoes big enough for her son in
China, Da Fang made a desperate plea to a friend of the family who lived in the
U.S. The girl's boyfriend found a pair of size-18 Nike Airs for $92 and shuttled
them back to Shanghai.
Like so many of her compatriots, even former Red Guards, Da Fang would gradually
turn to the capitalist West not just for shoes but for a vision of life beyond
the confines of the Chinese system. Her main source of ideas, initially, was
Nike, which was angling for an advantage in China's burgeoning consumer market.
From the moment in late 1996 when a group of Nike executives first glimpsed Yao
swaying like a giraffe into a Shanghai gym, they hoped that the then 7'2"
teenager would become the kind of hero who would help them sell the swoosh to
the Chinese masses. Nike reps quickly cozied up to his mother, offering, in
addition to cool shoes and clothing, endless advice about how to turn Yao into a
world-class basketball player. To reach his potential, they said, Yao would have
to find a way out of the deadening world of Chinese basketball and expose
himself to foreign competition.
At Nike's urging, Da Fang pushed Shanghai's sports leaders to let Yao attend a
1997 Nike junior basketball camp in Paris. After seeing the effects of that
first foreign trip -- "He started to have more faith in himself," she
said later -- she embraced Nike's plan to escort Yao on a two-month basketball
tour of the U.S. in the summer of '98. It was the first time Chinese authorities
had given a player so much freedom. By the time a newly confident Yao returned
at the end of the summer, he and his mother had begun to believe he might one
day be good enough to play in the NBA. And the crowd that showed up at the
family's apartment in September for Yao's 18th birthday party offered strong
supporting evidence: It included an NBA coach, an NBA scout and Nike's full
retinue of marketing reps in China.
Two vastly different worlds -- China and the U.S. -- were colliding over Yao,
and nobody could predict the consequences, least of all Da Fang. China itself
was in the throes of a frenzied transformation. Rigid nationalists still ran the
sports system, but many in the chain of command were acting more like
businessmen on the make. One evening in April 1999, Li Yaomin, the deputy
general manager of Yao's Shanghai team, summoned Da Fang and her family to the
sumptuous Grand Hyatt hotel for an urgent meeting with a U.S. lawyer named
Michael Coyne. "Your son has been taken care of for life," Li
reportedly assured them. Late into the night, the club manager and his American
friend tried to persuade the family to sign a contract that would give a third
of Yao's future earnings to Coyne's company, Evergreen Sports Management. As the
clock ticked past 2 a.m., Li reportedly warned the family that this would be
Yao's only chance to go to the NBA. Reluctantly, Da Fang gave in.
Just before dawn that same morning, a tearful Da Fang called her contacts at
Nike to bemoan the choice she had felt forced to make for her son. The company
reps, shocked that another American had swooped in on the giant they had been
grooming, moved quickly to quash the deal, enlisting an NBA agent who denounced
it as a form of extortion. The NBA, he pointed out, allowed a maximum agent
commission of 4%, not 33%. Da Fang reneged on the deal a few days later, but the
Evergreen contract would hang over her son's negotiations for three years -- and
her bitter feelings about the episode would harden into something that bordered
on paranoia. Less than a month later Nike persuaded the family to sign a
four-year endorsement contract initially worth about $20,000 a year. It was a
princely sum for a poor family, but Da Fang would tell a friend later that she
felt the Nike deal, too, "was shoved down our throats."
By 2002 the maelstrom around Yao was dizzying. Now nearing his full height of
7'6", the 21-year-old utterly dominated the Chinese league, piling up more
than 40 points and 20 rebounds per game in the finals to lead Shanghai to
its first national title in half a century. The performance convinced his
Shanghai bosses that it was time to let Yao enter that summer's NBA draft. But
new obstacles emerged, and Da Fang -- now the center of an amorphous group of
advisers, Team Yao, that pointedly did not include Nike -- struggled to find a
way around them. Shanghai officials insisted that the onerous Evergreen contract
was still valid. Beijing also announced that Yao would have to hand over 50% of
his future earnings to the central government. The biggest blow, however, came
in early June, when Yao's rival Wang Zhizhi, a 7'1" army soldier who had
been allowed to play in the NBA the year before, refused to come home to train
with the national team.
Wang's defiance terrified Chinese authorities. What would happen if Yao decided
to defect? With the help of Team Yao, Da Fang had been able to force the hand of
Shanghai authorities, playing on their fears of being portrayed as greedy
obstructionists. But now, faced with Beijing's refusal to release her son, Da
Fang erupted. "If we don't reach an agreement," she threatened, "Yao
Ming will never play basketball again." It wasn't until hours before the
draft, after Yao himself offered a pledge of loyalty to the Chinese national
team, that the authorities finally relented, sending the Houston Rockets the
reassuring fax they needed to choose Yao as the No. 1 pick in the 2002 draft.
When Da Fang and her husband flew to Beijing to watch the draft with their son,
the family seemed remarkably subdued. "They had felt tortured by this whole
process," said one friend, "so they didn't have much emotion
left." After NBA commissioner David Stern announced Yao's name as the top
pick, Da Fang clapped lightly and gave only the faintest of smiles. NBA
personnel had to prompt the family to show some excitement for the cameras, and
the trio proceeded to make one of the most ungainly group high fives in TV
history.
Mothers occupy a special niche in the macho world of the NBA. Even the most
tattoo-laden, testosterone-driven ballers find no shame in heaping praise on
their mothers, often strong single women who struggled to raise their families
in the inner city. But until Yao arrived in the NBA, few if any players actually
lived with their mothers -- and seemed to obey their every command.
After Yao was drafted, Fang Fengdi decided to accompany her son to America. The
Chinese government officials who granted her a leave of absence (and,
eventually, early retirement) from her work unit seemed relieved to know that a
strict disciplinarian and loyal Communist Party member would be watching over
their national treasure. (Yao's father, still employed at the Shanghai port,
would be allowed to join the family for part of the season and then retire.) The
arrangement would strike many Chinese and Chinese-Americans as an endearing
affirmation of Asian values. But to many U.S. sports fans it would seem more
confusing than Confucian: How could they begin to understand a 7'6",
296-pound mama's boy?
The arrangement, in truth, was also unusual for Yao. He had not lived with his
parents in more than eight years, ever since he left home at 13 to begin
training full time. "It was like, 'The mountain is high and the emperor is
far away,'" Yao recalled, quoting a famous Chinese proverb. "My
parents had no control over me. I got used to it." Now, at 22, he was
living with his parents again, and the reunion -- for all the comfort it might
provide -- would create new challenges for all of them.
If Yao had traveled a long distance to play in the NBA, it couldn't compare to
the staggering journey his 52-year-old mother had made -- from Team Mao to Team
Yao. The former Red Guard was now, in effect, the CEO of a capitalist
enterprise, guiding every decision that would affect her son's
multimillion-dollar career. With little formal education, Da Fang didn't pretend
to understand the minutiae of endorsement contracts, the NBA's
collective-bargaining agreement or the Houston property market. But she was a
practical woman, and the experience of being misled and manipulated back in
China had only deepened her desire to protect her son.
Da Fang landed in Houston more than a week before her son to clear the way for
his arrival. On this, her first trip to America, she searched for a new family
home. The real-estate agent eventually led her to Windsor Park Lakes, a gated
community carved out of old cattle pastures some 20 miles west of Houston.
Inside the front gate, past the uniformed guards with their uniform smiles, the
pristine neighborhood of faux-Mediterranean mansions exudes a sense of
theme-park perfection that could have been lifted from The Truman Show.
Da Fang settled on a $500,000, four-bedroom house that seemed perfect for a
family of giants -- and then spent half the night before Yao's arrival
frantically cleaning the cavernous home.
Worrying about her son was Da Fang's full-time job now. She straightened his
room, did his laundry, gave pep talks, offered basketball advice and prepared
his meals. When Yao returned to the house late from road trips -- often arriving
at 2 a.m. or 3 a.m. -- Da Fang would wait up with a pot of his
favorite chicken soup or a wok full of stir-fried vegetables. "My son plays
so hard," she said. "If he doesn't eat well, how could he have enough
energy?"
The
most coveted feature of Yao's new home was its vast open-design kitchen, which
stood like a chrome-covered altar a few steps up from the living and dining
rooms. Da Fang, however, had no use for it. To cook her Shanghainese
specialties, she converted the small laundry room on the side of the house into
an enclosed Chinese-style kitchen -- the better to keep in the billowing smoke
created by furious stir-frying.
Adjusting to life in the U.S. would be far more difficult for Da Fang and Da Yao
than it would be for Yao Ming. Neither parent spoke English or had any interest
in loping across the lawn to join their Texas neighbors in a backyard barbecue
party. In Shanghai, Da Fang and Da Yao lived in the pulsating heart of the
city, never more than a short bicycle ride away from their favorite markets,
shops and friends. In Texas they were stuck in an isolated community far outside
the Houston city limits -- with no means of escape.
Though Yao's new house boasted an enormous two-car garage, the family of three
didn't have a driver's license among them. Colin Pine, the obliging translator
they invited to live in the guest room across the hall from Yao, ferried the
family around in his rental car. But when Pine and Yao headed off to practice or
on road trips, the parents were stranded in their perfectly manicured American
island. Many months later all three family members would learn how to drive, and
Yao would buy two luxury cars. His parents would never feel completely
comfortable behind the wheel -- Da Yao would get a ticket for driving too
slowly on the highway -- but at least they would have more freedom than they had
in those early days in Houston.
On the night of Yao's highly anticipated home debut, a preseason game against
the Philadelphia 76ers, his parents were nowhere to be found in the stands.
Instead, they were at Windsor Park Lakes, waiting for the cable company to come
install their TV service. When somebody suggested they reschedule the cable guy
so they could see their son's game, Da Fang demurred, "No, the serviceman
told us to wait for him." It was a perfectly Chinese response, rooted in a
culture of pliancy and long suffering.
Still, Da Fang kept close watch over her son. After one of Yao's early
practices, she arrived at the Rockets' facility with his lunch -- a few bags of
McDonald's hamburgers and french fries. As Yao gobbled down the food, his
teammate Cuttino Mobley emerged from the locker room in a tailored lavender
suit. "That s---'s gonna kill ya," he said to Yao, before turning to
Da Fang. "Hi, Mrs. Yao." Flashing a seductive smile, Mobley
leaned in and kissed her on the cheek. Da Fang recoiled.
Yao appreciated his mother's devotion, but sometimes even a giant can feel
suffocated. Back in China, Yao had sometimes avoided going home on his day off
simply to escape Da Fang's nagging. "My mother is like a mosquito
constantly buzzing around my ears," he once complained to a friend.
Now
the buzzing became louder. Yao may have been an adult with an $18 million
contract, but he lived under his mother's thumb; early on he even had to ask her
for an allowance. After one preseason practice he brought home one of his only
Chinese friends in America, Yang Yi, a Shanghainese journalist on assignment in
Houston. Da Fang threw a fit when she saw Yang walk through the door. "How
did you get here?" she demanded.
Yao tried to calm his mother down. But later, when the journalist mentioned the
name of Yao's gated community in an article, Da Fang forbade Yao to speak to him
again. That evening, during a pregame warmup, Yao went up to Yang and told him
gravely, "You're finished. Listen, it's my mother's fault. She's way too
sensitive. But meiyou banfa -- nothing can be done." Yang later
patched things up with Da Fang, but at the time he felt so discomfited that he
left Houston two weeks earlier than planned.
In public Yao never failed to sing his mother's praises: Her chicken soup was
his favorite food in the world. Her knowledge of basketball was so great that
she should be made a Rockets assistant. Her judgment was so sound that he left
all major decisions up to her. In private, however, Yao told a friend that he
had finally mustered the courage to give her a warning. "You just put up
walls around me," Yao told her, "but one day you may notice that you
put yourself outside the wall. What will you say then?"
Over the last few years the walls around Yao have gradually come down, giving
him more room to breathe. Now 25, he still lives most of the NBA season with his
parents in Windsor Park Lakes, where, despite his suggestion that his mother
hire a housekeeper, she insists on doing the laundry and cooking all the meals.
But Yao has also rented an apartment in downtown Houston for game days and
nights, enabling him to avoid the nightmarish Texas traffic -- and his mother's
cloying affection.
By all accounts, Da Fang is learning to rein in her natural protectiveness.
According to her close friends, the unbending matriarch now more readily accepts
her son's decision to occasionally live on his own, to take unchaperoned trips
with his first and only girlfriend, 6'3" Chinese national team player Ye
Li, and to spend as he pleases his growing pile of cash. Da Fang and her husband
have also busied themselves with projects of their own, including the opening of
a sports café -- Yao Restaurant & Bar -- in a Houston strip mall. How
fitting that a restaurant, that cliché of the Chinese immigrant community,
should also be Da Fang's version of the American Dream.
Born to a poor laborer's family, the former Red Guard came of age in the
Cultural Revolution and then, like the rest of China, gradually traded her
Communist ideals for capitalist goals, all the while keeping one constant -- her
love for her only son. Yao Ming has come a long way, but it is Da Fang, surely,
who has made the greatest leap of all.
Issue
date: September 26, 2005