Career
His personal best is 8.47 metres, set in 2014. This gives him the Chinese record long jump. Born in Beijing, Li began competing in 2007 and was runner-up behind Su Xiongfeng at that year"s Chinese City Games – the country"s foremost junior competition.
He gained his first international medal (a bronze) at the 2008 Asian Junior Athletics Championships.
He cleared eight metres for the first time at the 2009 Chinese Championships in May, where his jump of 8.08 m brought him his first national title. Li was selected to represent China in the long jump at the 2009 World Championships in Athletics and narrowly missed out on qualification into the final.
At the 11th Chinese National Games in October he set a personal best of 8.18 m and came second behind Zhang Xiaoyi. He continued competing into mid-December and built upon his Asian title with a gold medal at the 2009 East Asian Games.
He attended the 2010 IAAF World Indoor Championships in Doha, but failed to make it past the qualifying round.
In the outdoor season he placed top three at the Prefontaine Classic and the Rieti Meeting on the athletics circuit. He ended the year with a fourth-place finish at the 2010 IAAF Continental Cup, representing the Asia-Pacific team Li took another victory at the Sparkassen Cup in January 2011, defeating Sdiri and Dwight Phillips.
His best jump that year (802 m) came early in the season in Fuzhou that June.
He performed better the year after, taking the gold at the 2012 Asian Indoor Athletics Championships and winning all but one of his outings on the Chinese and Asian Grand Prix circuits. He cleared 8.25 m in Wuhan.
He was chosen for the Chinese team for the 2012 London Olympics and competed in the qualifying rounds only. An indoor best of 8.11 m came at the start of 2013, when he took third at the Extra Large Galan meet in Stockholm.
Li jumped a new personal best of 8.34 m at the 2013 Shanghai Golden Grand Prix, defeating a quality field including the last three Olympic champions (Phillips, Irving Saladino and Greg Rutherford) as well as Mitchell Watt and Aleksandr Menkov.