Arab Times

Oscar leads big names behaving badly in China

Hulk hauled before CFA

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SHANGHAI, June 28, (AFP): Oscar is suspended for eight games after a brawl. Carlos Tevez riles fans with a trip to Disneyland while his club are playing. Ezequiel Lavezzi and Hulk deny being anti-Chinese.

As the Chinese Super League (CSL) hits the halfway point of the season this weekend, the megabucks lavished on imported players has triggered unpreceden­ted interest, but the headlines have been dominated by foreigners behaving badly. While nobody is chasing them out of the country just yet, Brazilian internatio­nal Oscar — who received the mammoth ban for sparking a mass brawl last week — is not even the latest acquisitio­n to run into trouble.

Beijing Guoan’s Turkish striker Burak Yilmaz was sent off on Monday night after appearing to slap an opponent during a melee at the end of a badtempere­d scoreless home draw with Fabio Capello’s Jiangsu Suning.

Prior to the rush of blood in which he lashed the ball directly at two Guangzhou R&F opponents, attacking midfielder Oscar, who cost an Asian-record 60 million euros from Chelsea in the January window, appeared to have settled well into life at Shanghai SIPG with a string of highly-rated performanc­es.

Far better than Argentine forward

Gyasi Zardes juggles the ball during US Men’s National Team soccer training at Lipscomb University in Nashville, Tennessee, on June 26. The team is preparing for a friendly against Ghana on July 1 and the opening of the Gold Cup tournament against Panama on July 8.

(AP)

Tevez who has so far failed to ingratiate himself with fans at neighbouri­ng Shanghai Shenhua and is rumoured to be eyeing a move away from China despite signing a contract reported to be worth a staggering 38 million euros ($40 million) a year in January.

Lavezzi, another Argentine forward on big money following his move last year from Paris Saint-Germain to Hebei China Fortune, was told by the Chinese Football Associatio­n (CFA) last month to “regulate his words and actions more” after promotiona­l photos emerged of him in a slant-eyed pose, causing outrage on social media.

Forward Hulk, while flourishin­g with nine CSL goals on the pitch alongside fellow Brazilian Oscar at SIPG, was also hauled before the CFA last month over allegation­s that he punched the Guizhou Zhicheng’s assistant coach and made anti-Chinese comments in the players’ tunnel at half-time.

The burly striker and the club both denied the claims and the CFA said there was “no evidence” against Hulk after an investigat­ion.

Yang Qinnong, 25, a diehard SIPG fan, said the money his club shelled out on Hulk and Oscar — at a combined cost of 116 million euros ($132 million) — had been worth it.

Yang said it would benefit Chinese players to come up against the likes of Oscar, but felt some big-name imports have the wrong attitude and were motivated by money.

“They think they are hot shots and think they don’t need to train and have self-discipline like others because they make more money than others and have more experience,” he said, supporting a ruling that caps the number of foreign players to three a match in China.

“I think certain limitation­s on foreign players is a good thing but it could make the CSL less attractive to watch,” he added. Across Shanghai all is not well. The 33-year-old former Manchester United and Manchester City striker Tevez scored just his second goal for Shenhua last weekend as they beat bottom club Yanbian Funde 2-0.

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