The Borneo Post (Sabah)

Oxygen tanks ready as Tibet football team make history

-

SHANGHAI: There may be midgame oxygen breaks, but no team will fancy a trip to sky-high Lhasa Chengtou next season after they made history by becoming the first Tibetan side to reach China's profession­al league.

Lhasa, whose 735-millionyua­n ($110 million) stadium is the highest in China and one of the highest in the world, clinched promotion from China's amateur league to the third tier along with five other sides.

But doubts surround whether Lhasa will be allowed to stage games at their modern Cultural and Sports Center stadium because of its dizzying altitude 3,658 metres (12,000 feet) above sea level.

During home matches, players are allowed to use oxygen every 15 minutes from handheld canisters lined up on the side of the pitch to avoid the nausea and vomiting associated with altitude sickness.

Lhasa, whose players mostly come from areas of China outside Tibet, won promotion to League Two after beating Shenyang Dongjin 2-1 over two legs in a playoff.

The home leg was moved to a neutral venue in Huizhou, in southern China about 4,000 kilometres from Lhasa, supposedly because of problems with the pitch, though there were suspicions that it was more to do with the altitude.

Lhasa won 2-0 in the first leg and lost 1-0 on Sunday in the return match at Shenyang to squeeze into the profession­al leagues.

"Football has deep foundation­s among the people in Tibet and it is absolutely the first sport," Wang Dui, a senior club official, told the state Xinhua news agency.

"Go and have a look in the older part of town in Lhasa, you can see kids playing football everywhere in the alleys after school.

"Lhasa has its own street football culture."

They will, however, not have it easy in the profession­al league, and questions swirl around whether the Chinese Football Associatio­n (CFA) will allow games at the mountainsi­de Lhasa stadium.

The venue, which also has a running track, can seat more than 20,000 people but Lhasa only gained CFA permission in August to play their games there.

Claims circulated online that in a subsequent game against Shenzhen Pengcheng, six of the visiting players were stretchere­d off due to the altitude -- an incident which was denied by Tibetan police.

Although Lhasa Chengtou were only formed in March, football has a long history in Tibet after it arrived in the remote region with the British army at the beginning of the 20th century. - AFP

 ?? — AFP photo ?? This photo taken on September 24, 2017 shows players of Lhasa Chengtou (in blue) and Zibo Sunday (in red) competing for the ball during their 2017 Chinese Football Associatio­n Amateur League football match at the People's Cultural and Sports Center,...
— AFP photo This photo taken on September 24, 2017 shows players of Lhasa Chengtou (in blue) and Zibo Sunday (in red) competing for the ball during their 2017 Chinese Football Associatio­n Amateur League football match at the People's Cultural and Sports Center,...

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Malaysia