China Daily

Germany’s game is China’s gain

Eintracht Frankfurt spearheadi­ng drive for national academy program

- By JAMES BOYLAN jamesboyla­n@chinadaily.com.cn

China’s soccer drive is set to rev up a gear with the help of some precision German engineerin­g.

Bundesliga club Eintracht Frankfurt is adding its expertise to the German government commitment announced last fall to assist China in realizing its soccer master plan.

Replicatin­g the production line that rolled out Germany’s 2014 World Cup winner, E intrach tis confident its coaching initiative­s will eventually churn out Chinese stars in the same vein as Thomas Muller, Toni Kroos and Mesut Ozil.

“In Germany, we call this process ‘soccer engineerin­g’,” Eintracht’s China representa­tive, Michael Muller, told China Daily as he took time out from talking to potential Chinese commercial partners to share the cost.

“For almost 20 years in Germany, we’ve been implementi­ng a system which begins with five-year-olds playing in leagues,” said Muller, referring to the seismic grassroots changes made in the wake of the national team’s Euro 2000 embarrassm­ent, when it finished dead last in its group.

“After 10 or 15 years, the system bore fruit. A lot of successful schools were created, including at Eintracht, where we train 1,000 pupils each year. Eight of our current senior squad graduated from here. We want to build a similar system in China.”

Eintracht’s vision is bold: Establishi­ng around 100 “partner schools” in China. The best players will be sent to a Chinese-only academy in Frankfurt to further their developmen­t and possibly play with its first team.

European clubs pitching their tent in China is nothing new, but Eintracht, which in 1998 signed the Bundesliga’s first Chinese player, Yang Chen, reckons its approach is unique.

“Bayern Munich has a school in Qingdao, and Barcelona in Hainan, so they’re confined to one area,” said Muller.

“With the hukou (household registrati­on) system, Chinese people are little bit bound to the area where they live, work or kids go to school.

“Our approach is different. As well as establishi­ng partner schools all over China, we plan to build a Chinese soccer academy in Germany — ‘Frankfurt Soccer World’.

“We’ve already purchased a 10,000 square-meter site near the airport. We will build indoor pitches, a dormitory, a Chinese restaurant and a medical center, and will be able to host 3,000 kids every year.

“We will start with kids around 10 years old, and in the longer term, from age seven.”

In 2015, President Xi Jinping unveiled an ambitious plan to transform China’s national soccer team, currently ranked 86th in the world, into a global power by 2050 and increase participat­ion levels in the sport to 50 million.

“I think these are definitely realistic aims. If China wants something it always gets it somehow,” said Muller.

“Germany will help China not only develop players, but implement youth leagues and train coaches and refs. That infrastruc­ture is lacking now.

“In Germany it’s a different level, but China will grow to come close to it. In seven to 10 years you can start to move up the rankings.”

Eintracht’s emphasis on the homegrown is an antidote to the Chinese Super League’s lavish spending on foreigners.

Muller acknowledg­ed the influx of big names, such as Carlos Tevez and Oscar, has some benefits, but he thinks the CSL should change tack.

“The foreign stars draw a lot of attention, but if it was my money I would invest it in something that delivers hundreds of good players over the next decade, rather than a few who after three or four years are simply gone,” he said.

Much like German engineerin­g, it sounds like a reliable propositio­n.

 ?? ANDREAS RENTZ/GETTY IMAGES ?? Yang Chen in action for Frankfurt in the late 1990s. The German club hopes its soccer program will produce more Chinese players to follow in Yang’s footsteps.
ANDREAS RENTZ/GETTY IMAGES Yang Chen in action for Frankfurt in the late 1990s. The German club hopes its soccer program will produce more Chinese players to follow in Yang’s footsteps.

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