#primary school student composition# Introduction Under the night, Tokyo’s New National Arena became a shining star.
The feast that had been waited for for five years kicked off. When the fireworks were set off, the Olympic Games returned to Tokyo after 57 years.
The following is the compiled "Elementary School Students Tokyo Olympics Composition Materials 2021", I hope it will be helpful to you.
1. Tokyo Olympics composition materials for primary school students 2021 1. "We will overcome" Late at night on July 8, a cargo plane loaded with frozen seafood products flew from Nadi International Airport in Fiji to Tokyo.
Traveling with them are the players of the Fiji Sevens Rugby Team. Their destination happens to be Tokyo. They are going to participate in the 3xx Summer Olympics.
Fiji is a country of islands floating in the South Pacific. It is a country that is passionate about rugby. It has a population of less than 900,000 and 80,000 registered rugby players.
The Olympic team includes soldiers, prison guards, waiters, fishermen, farmers and the unemployed.
In June, as the opening ceremony of the Olympic Games was approaching, a nationwide epidemic broke out in Fiji, and commercial flights in and out of Fiji were grounded.
In the end, this resourceful team chose to take advantage of the opportunity.
Five years ago at the Rio Olympics, Fiji won the gold medal in rugby sevens, which was Fiji's first Olympic medal.
This time, the Fiji team defeated the New Zealand team 27:12 and successfully defended the championship in this event.
At the awards ceremony, Fijian athletes sang a traditional song, telling the Fijian people - "We will overcome".
3. Oppose "Gendered" Gymnasts In this Olympic Games, the female members of the German gymnastics team wore long rose-red jumpsuits. Their uniforms are no longer the traditional tight-fitting sleeveless or half-sleeved ones.
One-piece high-cut trousers.
The new uniforms were first unveiled at the European Championships in April, with the German Gymnastics Federation saying at the time that the uniforms were aimed at combating the "sexualization" of gymnasts.
In sports competitions, it is the international sports federations of each event that decide what athletes should wear. They have double standards for the dress requirements of male and female athletes. For the "purpose of being watched," women's dress is often subject to more stringent requirements.
The German women's gymnastics team hopes to allow athletes to show their beauty in a way they are comfortable with.
"We want to show that every woman, every person, has the right to decide what they want to wear." Of course, this does not mean that they will no longer wear ordinary high-cut tights.
They plan to decide what kind of uniform to wear based on how they feel every day. Athlete Elizabeth Seitz said, "It all depends on the mood." 3. Protecting his son, Brazilian men's volleyball deputy attacker Lucas Satterkamp wears jersey No. 16
Wearing a black mask throughout the game.
When the game was paused, he would step away a little, lower his mask, and breathe easier for a moment.
For this reason, Lucas was called "the number one person in Olympic epidemic prevention" by netizens.
He did this because he was worried about the safety of his son Theo.
Four-year-old Theo has respiratory problems and has fever every 15 to 20 days. He also suffers from bronchitis. Any infection is a great danger to him.
Lucas, who frequently trains and competes outside, chose to protect his son in this way.
4. "Unreliable Retirement Narrator" On July 25, 2021, 46-year-old Chusovitina appeared on the vaulting stage of the Tokyo Olympics.
She is nearly three times the age of her opponents.
When her first jump landed, her right foot stepped out of bounds, and her second jump still landed incorrectly. She ultimately ranked 11th and was eliminated from the qualifying round.
There were no spectators in the gymnasium, but the referees, volunteers, and media reporters present all stood up and applauded.
If Chusovitina's story this time is reliable, this will be the "last jump" of the legendary gymnast.
Chusovitina's Olympic career spanned nearly three decades and played for three national teams: the 1992 United team after the collapse of the Soviet Union, Uzbekistan and Germany.
This is her eighth Olympic Games, and this time she represents her motherland, Uzbekistan.
Chusovitina was once jokingly called the "unreliable retirement narrator" by the media. She had announced her retirement many times before, but she always returned to the game.
The first time he announced his retirement was after the 1996 Atlanta Olympics.
At that time, she tore her Achilles tendon and was unable to compete for a season and a half. She decided to use the "window period" to give birth.
After the birth of her son Alisher, she decided to retire.
But she was used to a tight, slim self, and what she saw in the mirror made her ashamed.
She "unknowingly" returned to the field.
In 2002, she won two gold medals for the Uzbek team.
This year, her son was diagnosed with leukemia. From then on, the identity of "mother" began to accompany her career.
In order to earn money for treatment, she continued to train and participate in various competitions.
"If I retire, I will sit under the infusion bottle hanging on the mop head and watch my son die..." For better medical conditions and higher competition fees, Chusovitina transferred to Germany in 2003
, representing Germany.
At the 2008 Beijing Olympics, 33-year-old Chusovitina won the silver medal in the women's vault. This was the first time Germany had won a silver medal in gymnastics in 62 years.