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From an Expatriate-Only Sport to an Asian Games Sport: The Development of Cricket in China

a Xi'an Jiaotong University, China
b Loughborough University, UK
c Tongji University, China

The Mediating Power of Sport

ISBN: 978-1-83753-079-3, eISBN: 978-1-83753-078-6

Publication date: 7 October 2024

Abstract

This chapter provides an exhaustive analysis on the development of cricket in China in order to advance existing theories of cricket's development and consider future implications for the international game. Adapted from two journal articles of He and Malcolm (2021) and He et al. (2023), it structures the development of cricket in China according to two key historical era: cricket as an ‘expatriate-only’ game and cricket as an ‘Asian Games sport’. The first era, cricket as an ‘expatriate-only’ game, is constructed according to three key phases: early development; post-war and the ‘opening-up’ era. The second era, cricket as an ‘Asian Games sport’, is constructed according to five periods: budding period (2003–2005), peak period (2006–2010), stable period (2011–2014), trough period (2015–2018) and revival period (2019–present). This paper offers a broadened examination of cricket's development in China, contending that cricket in the country (specifically the mainland) manifests itself in two distinct forms, that is, first, it survives as a grassroots sport, sustained by a resilient expatriate diaspora community. Second, it exists as a sport primarily directed by the state and bolstered by the Asian Games and deeply integrated into the Chinese educational system. It concludes that the degree to which the co-existed motives of multiple stakeholders aligned and misaligned, and the interdependence with the unstable ‘Asian Games sport status’ will serve as the cornerstone for cricket's future in China and contribute significantly to the international sport's global development.

Keywords

Citation

He, B., Malcolm, D. and Xu, C. (2024), "From an Expatriate-Only Sport to an Asian Games Sport: The Development of Cricket in China", Tian, E. and Wise, N. (Ed.) The Mediating Power of Sport (Research in the Sociology of Sport, Vol. 21), Emerald Publishing Limited, Leeds, pp. 129-141. https://doi.org/10.1108/S1476-285420240000021008

Publisher

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Emerald Publishing Limited

Copyright © 2024 Boyang He, Dominic Malcolm and Chunyang Xu. Published under exclusive licence by Emerald Publishing Limited