Daily Dispatch

Chinese president splurges on developmen­t of the beautiful game

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China is throwing money at President Xi Jinping’s ambitions to boast a top-class national football team and one day host a World Cup.

But while the latter can be achieved by splashing the cash, the former appears further away than ever after a desperate four days.

China’s national team have long been an embarrassm­ent to the country and on Friday, Marcello Lippi’s side lost 1-0 to Qatar in Doha, triggering an- other bout of soul-searching and finger-pointing by Chinese media and fans.

Titan Sports, citing “informed sources”, said that an apoplectic “high-ranking official” got on the phone to a team supervisor at the Khalifa Stadium before half-time to demand what was going on.

Lippi, said to be the best-paid internatio­nal coach in the world on reported wages of between $23-million (R347millio­n) and $27-million (R408m) a year, admitted he was shocked by the team’s performanc­e in Qatar.

That was followed on Monday by a moribund 0-0 draw with Bahrain, who are ranked 113th in the Fifa rankings to China’s 75th, prompting Lippi to say that he was “mentally prepared for criticism”.

Some incandesce­nt fans on Weibo, China’s equivalent of Twitter, called for the national team to be disbanded.

The 70-year-old Lippi, who is expected to step down after the Asian Cup in the UAE in January, said he had been “surprised and worried about the condition of our players” before the Qatar game.

“If the Asian Cup opened next week, I’d be worried, but we still have time to become better,” added Lippi, who led his native Italy to win the World Cup in 2006. China improved when Lippi took over nearly two years ago, but that initial bounce is gone. In his 21 games in charge they have won eight, lost eight and drawn five.

They failed to reach the World Cup in Russia – in Lippi’s defence, most of the damage to China’s qualifying hopes was done before he arrived – and he is under pressure for the first time.

Lippi’s side had plenty of the ball against World Cup 2022 hosts Qatar but lacked a cutting edge upfront, where Chinese Super League (CSL) top-scorer Wu Lei had little support.

Lippi has previously bemoaned his lack of strikers, saying it was because CSL teams tended to favour expensive foreign forwards, limiting chances for Chinese players.

On Monday, the Chinese Football Associatio­n announced that another wellknown coach, the 71-year-old Guus Hiddink, will take over the U21 side – another statement of intent.

The Dutchman will earn just under à4-million (R70-million) a year after tax, local media said, which is more than England manager Gareth Southgate.

With Lippi and now Hiddink, China boast two top coaches, albeit ones that are nearing the ends of their careers.

But there is widespread acknowledg­ement that China do not have the players to compete even with Asia’s best.

The average age of Lippi’s starting lineup against Qatar was 30, underlinin­g the dearth of young talent. —

loss to Qatar in Doha triggered another bout of finger-pointing

Fans on social media called for the national team to be disbanded

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