The Phnom Penh Post

Hulk incident probed, Lavezzi off the hook

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CHINA’S football authoritie­s yesterday said that they are investigat­ing Brazilian star Hulk’s alleged altercatio­n with an assistant coach of a rival club, but that they saw “no malicious intent” in a separate racially charged row involving Argentina’s Ezequiel Lavezzi.

Both South American players, who are among the growing crop of highly paid foreign stars in China’s cash-rich Super League, have been embroiled in race-related incidents in recent weeks.

The Chinese Football Associatio­n said its disciplina­ry committee held a hearing last Friday with Hulk, who plays for Shanghai SIPG, and the assistant coach of Guizhou Zhicheng.

The hearing came after Guizhou Zhicheng’s then-head coach Li Bing accused the muscular Brazilian of punching his assistant, Yu Ming, at half-time during SIPG’s 3-0 victory earlier this month.

Li had suggested Hulk had a racial motive for the alleged attack, saying that the Brazilian star “cannot be here and despise Chinese people”, though he later appeared to back off those comments.

Hulk and the Shanghai club have rejected the accusation­s.

CFA spokeswoma­n Huang Shiwei said the associatio­n “has zero tolerance towards any behaviour that is not [in line with] sport ethics in the pitch, no matter who that person is. There is no exception.”

News of the investigat­ion comes a week after a CFA official, Li Peng, said there was “no evidence” that Hulk had violated any regulation­s.

But Li Bing, who remains Guizhou’s general manager, said on his official Weibo microblog account that he would keep pursuing the charges even though his club said both sides “have reached agreement” in how to handle the incident.

Days after the Hulk incident, the Super League faced another controvers­y when promotiona­l photos emerged of Lavezzi smiling and pulling the corners of his eyes back.

Lavezzi’s club, Hebei China Fortune, issued a statement on Sunday saying that the 32-yearold had apologised and insisted he meant no racial offence.

“We believe the footballer and the photograph­er did not have any malicious intent when they were shooting. [ We] hope media don’t read too much into this,” the CFA said yesterday.

“Due to the difference­s of national conditions and cultures, different hand gestures or expression­s have different meanings.”

But the CFA urged Lavezzi “to regulate his words and actions more” as a public figure.

Lavezzi’s “slant-eyed” pose has caused outrage on Chinese social media.

Hebei China Fortune said some photos in the Lavezzi promotiona­l shoot were meant to be in a “light-hearted” and “wacky” vein.

But the team nonetheles­s conceded it had not been vigilant enough in the matter and would “draw lessons” from it, vowing to prevent anything similar occurring again.

The episode illustrate­s the potential culture clashes that can arise as Chinese clubs buy foreign players.

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