Oman Daily Observer

HOW ANELKA, DROGBA BLAZED TRAIL WITH CHAOTIC SEASON IN CHINA

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SHANGHAI: A pay dispute, an eccentric owner and smashed-up furniture — and arguing with fans for refusing to bow.

When Premier League stars Didier Drogba and Nicolas Anelka made surprising moves to China in 2012, they put Chinese football on the map.

Carlos Tevez, Marouane Fellaini and others would ultimately follow as money poured into the Chinese Super League, but the former Chelsea duo’s chaotic spell served as a cautionary tale.

Anelka lasted only one, turbulent year at Shanghai Shenhua while his fellow forward Drogba did barely six months at the club.

Drogba signed in June 2012 at 34, just weeks after he scored the winning penalty for Chelsea in the Champions League final against Bayern Munich.

“For me it would have been easy to go to another team in Europe but I chose China because of the challenge,” he said at the time, after becoming one of the world’s best-paid players on a reported $300,000 a week.

Hundreds of Shanghai Shenhua supporters mobbed the Ivorian as he touched down in Shanghai. “Shenhua’s nuclear bomb has arrived,” Shenhua goalkeeper Wang Dalei said.

Drogba lived up to expectatio­ns, obliterati­ng opposition defences and scoring eight goals in 11 matches.

Shenhua affectiona­tely “Devil Beast”.

Anelka was already at Shenhua when Drogba pitched up having also signed from Chelsea, in January 2012, on similarly vast wages.

But while Drogba was a success on the pitch, the Frenchman found himself sometimes playing out of position in defensive midfield or on the wing. Anelka managed only three goals in 23 matches before both departed China in January 2013.

For me it would have been easy to go to another team in Europe but I chose China because of the challenge.

called fans him ‘I DON’T CARE’ So what went wrong? Shenhua, one of the traditiona­l heavyweigh­ts of Chinese football, were owned at the time by video gaming mogul Zhu Jun, who fancied himself as a player on occasion.

Zhu made Anelka China’s first direct import from the Premier League and he also lured another famous Frenchman, Jean Tigana, as coach.

But the ex-fulham manager was hit by a player revolt against his training methods and was sacked after just five games in charge. Upon learning his services were no longer required, Tigana departed the stadium before kick-off for a home game, leaving Shenhua without a coach for the match and empty seats in the dugout.

DIDIER DROGBA, Former Shanghai Shenhua player

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