The Asian Age

China’s soccer dreams don’t agree with fans

All footballin­g nations have struggled to balance the interests of commercial sponsors with those of hardcore fans, but in China, encouraged by President Xi to become a soccer superpower, investors hold all the cards. China spent more in the winter trans

- David Stanway

Shanghai: Big money signings and investment­s in storied European clubs, and the backing of a president who is an avid soccer fan, things should be looking up for millions of Chinese supporting the “beautiful game”.

Not so, say some longtime football enthusiast­s like Bian Minming, who fear the game is being taken away from them.

Chinese soccer’s newfound cash also means a deluge of heavy- handed corporate sponsorshi­ps, and Bian and others say that hampers Beijing’s aim of nurturing a grassroots base for the sport and homegrown talent.

All footballin­g nations have struggled to balance the interests of commercial sponsors with those of hardcore fans, but in China, encouraged by President Xi Jinping to become a soccer superpower, investors hold all the cards.

All 16 clubs in China’s top league have been forced to incorporat­e the names of new owners or sponsors in their team names — constant changes that irritate fans. Others clubs been forced to move home, sometimes more than once.

“The football associatio­n needs to learn,” said Bian, who protested moves to rebrand Shanghai Shenhua, the club he follows.

“The league shouldn’t allow clubs to keep changing names, because only then will they be able to attract more fans.”

The Chinese football associatio­n did not respond to a request for comment.

China is currently hosting some of Europe’s biggest clubs, who flock to China to tap a millions strong pool of fans and some deep- pocketed investors.

Manchester United had been due to take on Manchester city, now part

Chinese owned, in a preseason match later on Monday at Beijing’s Bird’s Nest stadium — their first derby outside England, though the game has been cancelled due to weather concerns and the state of the pitch. The build- up to that match, in the middle of a busy Chinese league season, had overshadow­ed the clash between Shanghai Shenhua and city rivals Shanghai SIPG.

Buying foreign talent may increase interest, China spent more in the winter transfer window than the entire English Premier League, but as with the Gulf states, sports industry veterans warn it will do little to boost the home- grown talent that China needs if it is to achieve Xi’s ambition of one day winning the World Cup.

China currently ranks 81st in the world, behind St Kitts and Nevis, whose population of 55,000 would fit into Shanghai SIPG’s stadium.

“China’s top- down approach to everything does not fit football at all,” said Cameron Wilson, who runs Wild East Football, a news website devoted to Chinese soccer.

“You need a solid and long- standing football culture to generate a supply of people who have grown up watching, playing and most importantl­y, loving football.”

Last year, China drew up a far- reaching reform plan aimed at reinvigora­ting the domestic game, which it said was “lagging in all respects”.

High on its agenda was creating “hundred- year clubs” rooted in local communitie­s and nurturing a genuine grass- roots sporting culture. To achieve this, it said it would curtail the power of rich investors to relocate or rebrand teams on a whim.

But for now, money speaks loudest.

Even as it called for a bottom- up sporting culture, China also demanded the establishm­ent of “competitiv­e brands” and set a target of swelling the sports industry to 3 trillion yuan ($ 450 billion), six times the estimated value of the existing global sports market — by 2020.

Of course, without sponsorshi­p, China’s clubs would have no chance of importing internatio­nal stars such as former Arsenal and Roma striker Gervinho or Senegal’s Demba Ba. Such banner signings have fuelled lucrative TV deals — but not yet homegrown success.

“There are difference­s in culture, in the national personalit­y and tradition,” said Waley Ho, founder of Reds in Shanghai, a Manchester United supporters group. “It will still need time.”

Fans say the removal of sponsors’ names from club crests would go a long way.

Shanghai SIPG, formed in 2005 and explicitly modelled on Manchester United, founded in 1878, has already undergone two relocation­s and two name changes. It is now named after the Shanghai Internatio­nal Port group, a state backer with the resources to pay a Chinese record of more than 50 million euros ($ 55.15 million) to sign Brazilian internatio­nal Hulk from Zenit St Petersburg.

Bian and other Shanghai Shenhua fans protested in 2014 after their new owners, the Greenland Group, announced plans to change the club’s name and put the group’s logo on the club crest. The club did not respond to requests for comment.

Despite a compromise, which saw the club rebranded as Shanghai Greenland Shenhua, fans speaking after last Sunday’s derby against Shanghai SIPG said they still hope the owners’ name can be removed even if they can see an upside.

“Without them, we wouldn’t have Demba Ba,” shrugged Bian.

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 ??  ?? Manchester United’s Henrikh Mkhitaryan ( left) is challenged by Borussia Dortmund’s Felix Passlack during the 2016 Internatio­nal Champions Cup soccer match between Manchester United and Borussia Dortmund in Shanghai, China, on July 22 —
Manchester United’s Henrikh Mkhitaryan ( left) is challenged by Borussia Dortmund’s Felix Passlack during the 2016 Internatio­nal Champions Cup soccer match between Manchester United and Borussia Dortmund in Shanghai, China, on July 22 —

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