The Borneo Post (Sabah)

Pork, sweets off menu for ‘fat’ Chinese footballer­s as Spanish take charge

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BEIJING: Chinese investors have spent millions acquiring storied European football clubs such as AC Milan, Inter Milan and Aston Villa. But when Europeans finally took a stake in a Chinese club they aimed lower. Much lower.

A group of Spanish investors, including the former president of Barcelona, recently bought into the team of the Beijing Institute of Technology (BIT), making them the first Chinese club with foreign investors.

The team are languishin­g in the third division and when the Spaniards arrived they found overweight players who had the habit of eating sweets during games.

The Spanish group, CSSB, has great ambitions for the team after acquiring a 29 percent stake for an undisclose­d amount.

The Spanish company was founded by two Barcelona veterans: ex-president Joan Laporta (2003-2010) and exgeneral manager Joan Oliver (2008-2010).

“We would like to implement the same system as in FC Barcelona, especially the developmen­t of the youth academy,” said Lola Sanchez, general manager of CSSB China.

CSSB’s move stands in stark contrast to the Chinese investors who have taken over legendary Italian clubs AC Milan and Inter Milan, English Premier League West Bromwich Albion and former European champions Aston Villa.

They have also bought stakes in a slew of other clubs, including Atletico Madrid and Manchester City.

Chinese clubs, meanwhile, have paid tens of millions of dollars to bring foreign stars to the Chinese Super League.

President Xi Jinping wants his country -- which is 82nd in FIFA’s world ranking -- to host the World Cup one day, and win it.

It could take a while.

On a recent hot afternoon, BIT players worked on passing drills on their campus’s synthetic pitch under the gaze of their new Spanish head coach, Roberto Ahufinger del Pino.

The average age of the players is 23 and most of them are students.

“One of the important things we want to change is their mentality,” Ahufinger said. “We want to make them winners.”

He shouted instructio­ns to his players in Spanish, which an interprete­r then translated into Chinese. Five Spaniards are now based in China, including three coaches and a sports director from FC Reus (Spanish second division), another club owned by CSSB.

“The first few months were quite difficult, but little by little we got the club and the players to abide by our ideas,” Ahufinger said.

Sanchez recalled that when they took over the team “most of the players were very fat”.

“They ate whatever they wanted, like sweets in the breaks during matches,” she said.

A Spanish nutritioni­st has put them on new diets. Pork and sauce-rich dishes have been eliminated and replaced with chicken, fish, shrimp and boiled vegetables.

“It’s healthier and more scientific,” 25-year-old He Zichao, a defender and marketing student, said, noting that he appreciate­s the new Iberian vibe.

“Before, the club inspected our rooms and imposed a lot of rules,” He said. “The Spaniards are easygoing, but in return, they expect that you’re 100 percent on the day of the match.”

China is making efforts to improve its football rapidly. The number of football academies is expected to increase from 13,000 to 40,000 in 2020 -- with the goal of making the country a world football superpower by 2050.

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 ?? — AFP photo ?? This picture taken on April 12, 2017 shows Beijing Institute of Technology’s Spanish head coach Roberto Ahufinger del Pino (2nd L) taking part in a football training session with his players in Beijing.
— AFP photo This picture taken on April 12, 2017 shows Beijing Institute of Technology’s Spanish head coach Roberto Ahufinger del Pino (2nd L) taking part in a football training session with his players in Beijing.

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