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Alysa Liu’s Defense of Eileen Gu Reveals a Generational Divide in Athlete Politics

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At the 2026 Milano Cortina Winter Olympics, two American-born athletes of Chinese heritage became the defining personalities in a geopolitical story playing out under the guise of winter sport. Alysa Liu, representing Team USA, won gold in women’s figure skating singles and the team event. Eileen Gu, who chose to represent China in freestyle skiing since 2019, became the most decorated freestyle skier in Olympic history at these Games — gold in halfpipe and double silver in big air and slopestyle. The story the political press wanted to tell pitted them against each other as symbols of competing national loyalties. Alysa Liu refused to play along — and in doing so, revealed something important about how the next generation of American athletes understands the relationship between sport and geopolitics.

The Real Message Behind the Public Statement

When Alysa Liu publicly called critics of Eileen Gu “hypocritical” and said “sport is sport,” she was not making a naive claim about sporting neutrality. She was making a precise political statement: that the framing which demands American-born athletes of Chinese heritage make demonstrative loyalty choices — and treats those who choose China as traitors — is rooted in anti-Chinese racial politics, not in any coherent principle. Liu’s father, Arthur Liu, is a Tiananmen-era dissident who explicitly maintained the family’s commitment to Team USA. Liu herself grew up in a household defined by precisely the political calculus Gu is being criticized for refusing to make. And she still called the critics hypocritical.

Gu’s position is genuinely complicated. China does not permit dual citizenship. Her funding from the Beijing Municipal Sports Bureau is documented. She has declined to confirm whether she holds a US passport, which would be incompatible with Chinese citizenship law. US Vice President JD Vance made public comments criticizing athletes who, despite growing up in the US, choose to represent other countries — a statement Gu responded to sarcastically, according to GiveMeSport reporting. The political pressure placed on athletes of hyphenated American identity to perform national loyalty is not new. What is new is that Liu, from a position of unambiguous Team USA success, is refusing to participate in it.

The Generational Divide

The older political framework demands that athletes of Chinese heritage choose: American identity, or Chinese identity, with the implicit assumption that only one of these choices is legitimate in the American political context. This framework has always been more about managing American anxieties about China than about protecting athletes. The Liu-Gu dynamic at the 2026 Winter Olympics is an example of a generational framing that treats this as a false binary. Liu competes for America. Gu competes for China. They are friends who grew up in the same Bay Area ecosystem. The political demand that this constitutes a betrayal by one of them is, as Liu said, hypocritical.

What This Actually Means

The Liu statement is politically significant precisely because it came from a position of success — she won gold. An American gold medalist defending a competitor who chose to represent China creates a specific kind of narrative problem for the geopolitical storytellers who want these Olympics to be a clean symbol of US-China rivalry. The athletes at the center of that rivalry are declining to cooperate. That is a generational data point that the political establishment has not yet fully processed.

Background

Eileen Gu was born in San Francisco in 2003 and began competing for China in 2019. Her father is American and her mother is Chinese-American. Alysa Liu was born in 2006, retired from competitive skating at 16, and returned to competition in March 2024. Her father, Arthur Liu, is a Tiananmen-era dissident and a prominent figure in Chinese-American political advocacy.

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