LIVIGNO, Italy — The two best bets to win the gold medal in women's halfpipe skiing at the Winter Olympics were born in the United States.
Zoe Atkin competes for Britain and hardly anyone raises a fuss about it.
Eileen Gu competes for China and never hears the end of it.
Stories of athletes who lived in one country then decided to compete for another are nothing new to international sports. Throw some Olympic rings on it, then add a high-profile athlete enjoying tremendous success the way Gu has, and it turns into someting messy, even political.
''So many athletes compete for a different country," Gu said after Thursday night's qualifying put her in the mix for her third medal of these Games. ''People only have a problem with me doing it because they kind of lump China into this monolithic entity, and they just hate China. So it's not really about what they think it's about.''
She was responding to a question stemming from the latest comments that drew her into the headlines: U.S. Vice President J.D. Vance told Fox News earlier in the week he would hope someone who benefitted from growing up in the United States, the way Gu has, would want to compete under its flag.
None of this is new to the 22-year-old Bay Area native, who recognizes she absorbs her share of vitriol not just because she competes for her mother's homeland, but also because of her success both on and off the snow.
Not long after the Olympics are over, Gu will be back in Milan attending a fashion show.