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Ning Zetao of China poses with his gold medal after winning the men's 100m freestyle final at the Aquatics World Championships in Kazan, Russia in August 2015. Photo: Reuters

Strength in numbers: China to send 416 athletes to Rio de Janeiro in largest overseas Olympic Games group

The country will send 256 women and 160 men to compete in 26 sports after fielding 396 athletes in London 2012

China will send 416 athletes to Rio de Janeiro next month, their largest overseas delegation in Olympic Games history, continuing their pursuit of medals that saw them take second spot in the table behind the United States four years ago.

The country will send 256 women and 160 men to compete in 26 sports, the government said during a ceremony unveiling the team in Beijing on Monday, state news agency Xinhua reported. They fielded 396 athletes in the London 2012 games.

“This is the largest ever Olympic delegation China has sent overseas,” Cai Zhenhua, deputy director of China’s General Administration of Sport, was reported by Xinhua as saying.

He added that the delegation has 711 members including 29 foreign coaches.

China's Ning Zetao celebrates after winning the final of the men's 100m freestyle swimming event at the 2015 FINA World Championships in Kazan in August 2015. Photo: AFP

Local fans were assured by the inclusion of popular Chinese swimmer Ning Zetao, the recent subject of rumours that he had been cut from the squad for taking on too many commercial engagements. He is first Asian swimmer to win the 100 metres freestyle at the World Championships.

The youngest member of the delegation is 14-year-old Ai Yanhan, who will compete in the women’s 200m freestyle and 4x200m freestyle relay, while the oldest is 39-year-old Beijing Olympics shooting champion Chen Ying.

China's Zou Kai celebrates winning gold with the national flag in the Men's Floor Exercise Final during the London 2012 Olympic Games Artistic Gymnastics competition. Photo: EPA

Notable omissions include five-time Olympic gold medallist and gymnast Zou Kai and teenage gymnast Liu Tingting, who was due to compete in her first international competition but pulled out due to an injury suffered during training last week.

Weightlifting Olympic champion Liao Hui, who missed the 2012 Olympics after failing a drugs test, also announced his retirement on the Twitter-like Weibo platform on Monday.

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