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Winter Olympics champion Wang Meng’s deeds and introduction

Wang Meng, born on July 9, 1984 in Qitaihe City, Heilongjiang Province, is an athlete of the Chinese women's short track speed skating team. The women's 500-meter short track speed skating champion at the 2006 Turin Winter Olympics, and the women's 500-meter, 1,000-meter, and 3,000-meter relay champion at the 2010 Vancouver Winter Olympics. Graduated from Harbin Institute of Physical Education.

In 1998, Wang Meng entered the Heilongjiang Provincial Sports School and started his career. In 2000, 16-year-old Wang Meng won the bronze medal in the 1,500-meter short track speed skating competition at the Ninth National Games and was later promoted to the national team. In 2002, Wang Meng participated in the World Youth Championship for the first time and won the women's 500m championship, becoming China's first World Youth Championship champion. In 2003, Wang Meng participated in the World Championships for the first time and won the 3000-meter relay championship with his teammates. In 2004, Wang Meng emerged at the World Cup and won several domestic and foreign championships. In February 2006, Wang Meng participated in the 20th Turin Winter Olympics and won the women's 500m short track speed skating gold medal with a time of 44.345 seconds. In 2008, Wang Meng set miracles one after another and became the world's first person in the women's 500-meter short track, creating a "Mongolian Era."

In February 2010, at the Vancouver Winter Olympics, Wang Meng broke the Olympic record twice in the preliminaries and semi-finals of the 500-meter event, and in the final, Wang Meng achieved a breakthrough in women's short track speed skating. He won the 500-meter gold medal for two consecutive years (two consecutive 500-meter championships in the Winter Olympics), and then won the women's 1,000-meter and 3,000-meter relay championships while suffering from a severe cold, becoming the first triple crown in the history of China's short track. On August 4, 2011, Wang Meng was dismissed from her position as captain of the national team due to her involvement in the internal strife of the Chinese short track speed skating team, and her qualifications as a member of the national team were revoked. However, she was officially allowed to return on September 16, 2012. . On January 16, 2014, Wang Meng, who was preparing for the Sochi Winter Olympics in Shanghai, suffered two fibula fractures in his right ankle due to an accidental collision with teammate Chen Dequan during a training session, and was unable to participate in the Sochi Winter Olympics.