Lee Chih-kai

Taiwanese artistic gymnast (1996-)
(Redirected from Lee Chih-Kai)

Lee Chih-Kai (born April 3, 1996) is a Taiwanese male artistic gymnast and a star in the documentary movies Jump! Boys and Jump! Men. Lee's signature movement is “Thomas Flairs” in the pommel horse routines. Lee won gold medals in the pommel horse event in the 2017 Taipei Universiade and the 2018 Indonesia Asian Games.

Gymnastic career change

Childhood and Adolescence change

Lee Chih-Kai was born in Yilan County, Taiwan. He started training as an artistic gymnast at six years old when he met his coach, Lin Yu-Shin. Lee joined the gymnastic team when he studied in Gong Jheng Elementary School in Luo-Dong Township. Lee was nicknamed “Market boy Kai” because he liked to perform his gymnastic skills in the traditional market where his parents worked.1[1] At the beginning of his career, Lee started practicing a difficult element named “Thomas Flairs”, which was commonly performed on the floor in gymnastics. Because of his coach's suggestion, Lee moved the Thomas Flairs into his pommel horse routine when he studied in the middle school.[2]

When Lee Chih-Kai was 15, he left his hometown and moved to Taoyuan city, where Lin Yu-Shin coached a university gymnastic team. Lee practiced with the team in the early morning before going to school and returned to the gym after school. During high school he practiced at least 8 hours per day. His coach said that Lee was not the most talented gymnast, but was the most hard-working.[3][4]

In 2013, Lee Chih-Kai joined the adult national team training program. He trained at the National Sports Training Center.[5] Before Lee went to National Taiwan Sport University, he had several competition experiences and was regarded as an upcoming star of Taiwanese gymnastics.

Young Adulthood change

He first performed as a member of the national team in the 2014 Incheon Asian Games. He was ranked 6th in the individual all-round event, 8th in the floor exercise event, and 5th in the vault event.[6] In 2015, Lee represented National Taiwan Sport University (NTSU) at the National Intercollegiate Athletic Games. He won the silver medal in the individual all-round event and three gold medals in the floor exercise, pommel horse, and parallel bars events. In this game, he hurt his shoulder and wrists, which were injured before.6[7]

In April 2016, Lee passed the Olympic Test Events and qualified for the 2016 Rio Olympic games. He was the first gymnast to qualify for the Olympics since the 2000 Sydney Olympic games. Lee was diagnosed with a broken right shinbone and a sprained right ankle one month before the Olympics. Lee lost the chance to move to the finals because these injuries affected his performance. After the failure in the Olympic game, Lee started training overseas. In addition, his coach helped him adapt to stressful environments by imitating the crowds and noisy environment when he was practicing.

In August 2017, Lee Chih-Kai won the gold medal in the pommel horse event in the Taipei Universiade by performing his signature “Thomas Flairs” movement in the routine. Lee was the first Taiwanese male gymnast to win the gold medal in the pommel horse event. With this win, he broke his best personal record in international competitions.7[8] Lee's Thomas Flairs movement has been included in the teaching template of the International Federation of Gymnastics. His dismounting movement is regarded as the standard movement in the international gymnastic referee training conference.[9][10]

In the 2018 Indonesia Asian Games, Lee Chih-Kai won the gold medal in the pommel horse, which is the first gold medal in Asian Games in Taiwanese gymnastic history.9[11] In November of the same year, Lee won the bronze medal in the 2018 Doha World Challenge Cup.10[12]

Documentary films change

Jump! Boys change

Lee Chih-Kai was one of seven young players on the gymnastic team in Gong Jheng Elementary School of Luo-Dong Township, Yilan County, Taiwan. Jump! Boys is the documentary movie about the training processes and the life stories of the gymnastic team.11[13] The movie was directed by Taiwanese director, Lin Yu-Hsien and premiered in 2005. Because of Jump! Boys, Taiwanese people started to show the interest in Lee Chih-Kai and Taiwanese Gymnastics.

Jump! Men change

Because Lee Chih-Kai announced that his career goal was entering the Olympics at the end of Jump! Boys,12[14] the director, Lin Yu-Hsien, decided to make a follow-up movie Jump! Men with Lee Chih-Kai's casting in the main role. The movie started shooting in 2015 and recorded Lee's training process and several competitions. Lee's frustration in the 2016 Rio Olympic games was also included in the movie. Jump! Men ended with Lee winning the gold medal in the pommel horse event in the 2017 Taipei Summer Universiade.13 The movie was published in October 2017.

Competition Record change

International Competition change

Year Game name Floor Horse Vault Bars All-round Team
2018 World Championships 2018 Doha (QAT)14 - 3 - - - -
2018 World Challenge Cup 2018 Osijek (CRO)15 4 1 4 - - -
2018 World Cup 2018 Doha (QAT)15 5 2 6 - - -
2018 World Cup 2018 Baku (AZE)15 - 2 - 8 - -
2018 World Cup 2018 Melbourne (AUS)15 - 2 2 4 - -
2017 Summer Universiade 2017 Taipei (TPE)15 - 1 - - 7 5
2016 World Challenge Cup 2016 Anadia (POR)15 - - 5 - - -

Regional Competition change

Year Game Name Floor Horse Vault Bars All-round Team
2018 Asian Games 2018 Jakarta (INA)15 4 1 - 6 5 4
2018 2018 Pacific Rim Championships Medellin (COL)15 3 2 1 - - -
2017 Senior Asian Championships 2017 Bangkok (THA)15 - - - - 7 -
2017 2017 Singapore Open Gymnastics Championships16 - 1 - - - -
2014 2014 Pacific Rim Championships Richmond (CAN)17 - - 4 - - -
2014 Asian Game 2014 Incheon (KOR)18 8 - 5 - 6 6

References change

  1. Xiao-Heng Shi, “Dream to participate in the international competition, the teacher in the elementary school says: Lee Chih-Kai has been approaching his dream” [in Chinese], The Storm Media, August 23, 2017, accessed November 11, 2018, http://www.businesstoday.com.tw/article-content-80417-156298[permanent dead link]  
  2. Shelly Shan, “Taipei Universiade: Lee Chih-kai Spins to Victory,” Taipei Times, August 25, 2017, accessed November 11, 2018, http://www.taipeitimes.com/News/taiwan/archives/2017/08/25/2003677144[permanent dead link]  
  3. Chun-Yi Hsieh, “co-living with injuries for 15 years Lee Chih-Kai won the golden medal with hard working” [in Chinese], Next Magazine, August 30, 2017, accessed November 11, 2018, https://www.nextmag.com.tw/realtimenews/news/342456 Archived 2018-06-09 at the Wayback Machine   
  4. Yu-Hsieh Lin, ”’Jump Series’: Director write about the 15 years with Lee Chih-Kai and the coach”[in Chinese], Business Weekly, August 31, 2017, accessed November 11, 2018, https://www.businessweekly.com.tw/Archive/Article/Index?StrId=65341#_=_.   
  5. The Central News Agency (CNA), “Thrive from a traditional market to the international, Lee Chih-Kai sets his goal as Tokyo Olympics,” CAN, October 02, 2017, accessed November 11, 2018, https://www.cna.com.tw/news/aspt/201710020097.aspx   
  6. Amanda Turner, “Japan Shines as Asian Games Begin,” International Gymnast Magazine, September 21, 2014, accessed November 12, 2018, http://www.intlgymnast.com/index.php?option=com_content&view=article&id=4135:japan-shines-as-asian-games-begin&catid=5:competition-reports&Itemid=221   
  7. ETtoday Net, “With several injuries, the freshman of NTSU won four golden medals and one silver medal in the National Intercollegiate Athletic Games” [in Chinese], ETtoday Sports, May 05, 2015, accessed November 11, 2018, https://sports.ettoday.net/news/502444?t=%E5%85%A8%E5%A4%A7%E9%81%8B%EF%BC%8F%E5%9C%8B%E9%AB%94%E5%A4%A7%E6%9D%8E%E6%99%BA%E5%87%B1%E5%A4%A7%E9%81%8B%E8%8F%9C%E9%B3%A5%E3%80%80%E6%8A%B1%E5%82%B7%E8%A5%B2%E6%8D%B2%E9%AB%94%E6%93%8D4%E9%87%911%E9%8A%80.   
  8. the Taipei 2017 Summer Universiade Organizing Committee (TUOC), “Results - Men’s Pommel Horse Final”, Taipei 2017 29th Summer Universiade, August 23, 2017, accessed November 12, 2018, https://data.2017.gov.taipei/atos/prod/chn/ga/chnga_gymnastics-artistic-results-men-s-pommel-horse-1-00.htm [permanent dead link]  
  9. Shelly Shan, “Taipei Universiade: Lee Chih-kai Spins to Victory,” Taipei Times, August 25, 2017, accessed November 11, 2018, http://www.taipeitimes.com/News/taiwan/archives/2017/08/25/2003677144   
  10. The China Post, “With a Perfect Landing, Lee Chih-Kai Wins Chinese Taipei’s First Gold in Pommel Horse,” The China Post, August 25, 2017, accessed November 11, 2018, https://chinapost.nownews.com/20170825-146[permanent dead link]   
  11. International Federation of Gymnastics, “Lee Chih-Kai (TPE) Identity”, International Federation of Gymnastics, accessed November 11, 2018, http://www.fig-gymnastics.com/site/athletes/bio_detail.php?id=36432.
  12. Qatar Olympic Committee, “Men’s Pommel Horse Final Results,” 48th Artistic Gymnastics World Championships Doha 2018, November 02, 2018, accessed November 12, 2018, https://app.box.com/s/6ig51fc2l8m0dmyypqv8qjtjnneifcng/file/343279796930.   
  13. Yu-Hsien Lin, “Words from the Director,” Taiwan Docs, accessed November 11, 2018, https://docs.tfi.org.tw/zh-hant/film/4379 
  14. Jump! Boys, Yu-Hsien Lin, (Jumpboys Film, 2005)