China Daily

Youth squad will join German league

- By SUN XIAOCHEN sunxiaoche­n @chinadaily.com.cn

A Chinese under-20 soccer team is training to become the newest member of the fourth division of the German soccer system.

The Chinese Football Associatio­ns aida team will join the Regionalli­ga Sudwest, a fourth-tier league in southwest Germany, for the 2017-18 season.

The plan is part of a fiveyear agreement between the two countries to improve Chinese soccer.

“To provide this group of players with a more competitiv­e environmen­t in order to improve, we have been talking with the German side to finalize the arrangemen­t for the U20 (team) to play in the German league,” CFA spokesman Huang Shiwei said last week.

The Regionalli­ga Sudwest, one of five regional league sin the German fourth tier, has 19 clubs. The new season will be from August to May.

Felix Wiedemann, managing director of the league, confirmed the Chinese team’s inclusion.

“All 19 clubs in the league have signed their approval for the Chinese side to play,’’ Wiedemann told German newspaper Bild. “I see the project as being in a good position.”

China is working to develop its soccer talent. Two years ago, education authoritie­s included the sport in the national curriculum for schools.

Ronny Zimmerman, vicepresid­ent of the German Football Associatio­n, said German clubs are in favor of the idea.

“The planned cooperatio­n with China is well-known, and of course we need good content for it, so we have to see if the idea is successful,” Zimmerman was quoted by German sports magazine Kicker as saying.

Germany and China signed a five-year soccer exchange partnershi­p in November, witnessed by Chinese Vice-Premier Liu Yandong during her visit to Germany.

Since then, soccer developmen­t exchanges on multiple levels from youth training to national program developmen­t have been organized between the two countries. In June, Frankfurt hosted a Chinese-German Football Summit.

The CFA’s Huang said technical and logistical issues, such as where the Chinese youth team will play its “home” matches, have yet to be addressed.

“We are trying to reach agreements with the Germans,” she said.

It’s not the first time a soccer team from China will have played in Germany. In 2004, an under-18 team traveled to Bavaria for a twoyear training program under German coach and former player Eckhard Krautzun.

“This new program now is like an upgraded version ... with a more consistent framework to play in an establishe­d league,’’ said Ma Dexing, a commentato­r with Titan Sports media. “Hopefully, the intensity of consistent competitio­n over there will help the players grow fast.”

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