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Skiing champ Eileen Gu paid off by Chinese Gov

  • snitzoid
  • 4 hours ago
  • 3 min read

What an unpatriotic miserable beach. Kim Kardashian on skies.


Would I accept $16 million to ski for China. Absolutely not! I already receive three times that to produce propaganda for Xi.


The Hidden Government Funding of China’s American-Born Olympic Star

After details of payments from Beijing’s sports bureau to freestyle skiing champion Eileen Gu were accidentally revealed last year, her name was quickly scrubbed from the budget.

By Rachel Bachman, WSJ

Feb. 13, 2026 12:00 pm ET



Eileen Gu celebrates after taking silver in the women's freestyle skiing slopestyle finals.


From the start of her freestyle skiing career, Eileen Gu has been a runaway financial success. When the U.S.-born star opted in 2019 to compete for her mother’s home country of China, sponsors flocked to her camera-ready charisma—and for her access to one of the world’s largest markets.


But Gu, who grew up in the Bay Area and studies at Stanford, might be even more valuable to the Chinese government than she is to backers such as Porsche and Red Bull. And in the leadup to this Olympics, it became clear just how much China was willing to pay to support her.


In 2025, the Beijing Municipal Sports Bureau was set to pay Gu and another athlete a combined $6.6 million.


That figure emerged in a public budget that was released in early 2025. It accidentally included the names of Gu and figure skater Zhu Yi or Beverly Zhu, another U.S.-born Olympic athlete who competes for China. The document didn’t break down their individual payments, though it’s likely that Gu, a three-time Olympic medalist, received a larger share of the funding.


Gu grew up in the Bay Area and studies at Stanford.


In total, Beijing’s sports bureau was set to pay Gu and Zhu nearly 100 million yuan, or $14 million over the past three years. The most recent allocation was for “striving for excellent results in qualifying for the 2026 Milan Winter Olympics,” according to the budget.


Gu’s name, along with Zhu’s, was deleted from the budgets soon after they emerged, but not before they spurred surprise and criticism from the Chinese public at a time when budgets were tight for essential services. Those comments were also scrubbed from social media.


Representatives for Gu didn’t respond to requests for comment.


Gu is already one of the highest paid female athletes in the world. She earned $23 million last year, almost entirely from endorsements, according to the sports-business publication Sportico. That ranked behind only three other female athletes in the world, tennis players Coco Gauff, Aryna Sabalenka, and Iga Swiatek.


Gu arrived at the Milan Cortina Winter Games as a heavy favorite to add to the titles she won in Beijing. Gu has already won another silver here in ski slopestyle. She will try to repeat her gold-medal performances from the 2022 Beijing Olympics in big air on Monday and in the halfpipe next Saturday.


“Sometimes it feels like I’m carrying the weight of two countries on my shoulders,” said Gu, 22, in Livigno after the slopestyle event.



Eileen Gu is already one of the highest paid female athletes in the world.


It isn’t uncommon for athletes in China’s state-run sports system to be paid. But these tend to be closely guarded secrets. The payments to Gu offer a rare glimpse at what an international national star commands.


Although Gu had to become a Chinese citizen to compete for China, her full citizenship picture remains a mystery. Gu was raised in America and originally represented the U.S. when she first began competing internationally as a teenager. China doesn’t allow dual citizenship.


Red Bull, one of Gu’s sponsors, said on its website in 2022 that she had given up her U.S. passport and naturalized as a Chinese citizen to compete for China. But when The Wall Street Journal asked about Gu’s status, that detail disappeared from Red Bull’s site and the brand didn’t answer questions about it.


Gu, meanwhile, has always declined to address the specifics of her citizenship.


“When I’m in the U.S., I’m American,” she said in 2020. “But when I’m in China, I’m Chinese.”

 
 
 

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