Zhang Changning

Zhang Changning
Personal information
Nationality Chinese
Born (1995-11-06) 6 November 1995
Height 1.93 m (6 ft 4 in)
Weight 79 kg (174 lb)
Spike 315 cm (124 in)
Block 303 cm (119 in)
Volleyball information
Position Outside hitter, Opposite Hitter
Current club Jiangsu
Career
YearsTeams
2014–Jiangsu
National team
2014–China
This is a Chinese name; the family name is Zhang.

Zhang Changning (simplified Chinese: 张常宁; traditional Chinese: 張常寧; pinyin: zhāng cháng níng; born 6 November 1995) is a female Chinese indoor volleyball and beach volleyball player.[1]

Personal life

She was born in Changzhou and raised in Nanjing. She is the daughter of Zhang Yousheng, a former player of China men's national volleyball team, and Jiang Hanqiu, a college P.E. teacher. Her elder brother Zhang Chen is a current player of China men's national volleyball team. Along with her Jiangsu teammates Hui Ruoqi and Gong Xiangyu she attends Nanjing Normal University.

Beach volleyball

Although she started as an indoor player, she was offered to join the national beach volleyball team in 2009. As a beach volleyball player she teamed with Ji Linjun in 2009, and with Ma Yuanyuan in 2010 and 2011 winning the silver medal at the 2011 Asian Beach Volleyball Championship. Later in 2011 she competed with Ding Jingjing at the Visa FIVB Beach Volleyball International.

2013 ban

In 2013 she expressed the intent to switch from beach volleyball to indoor volleyball and join the Jiangsu women's volleyball team. She was consequently banned from competition by Jiangsu Sports Bureau. Refusing to return to beach volleyball or leave Jiangsu, she faced a possible early termination of her athletic career.[2] Due to massive backlash from provincial and national media, the bureau lifted the ban on December 29, 2013 and she has since been playing for Jiangsu in the CVL.[3]

Indoor volleyball

In 2014 she was promoted by Coach Lang Ping to the national team. She represented China at the 2014 Asian Games.[4] She was part of the China women's national volleyball team that won gold at the 2015 FIVB Volleyball Women's World Cup and 2016 Summer Olympics. She was voted CVL's MVP and the most popular player in the 2015-2016 season.[5]

References


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