Bangkok Post

IN CHINESE FOOTBALL, GOVERNMENT KEEPS MOVING THE GOALPOSTS

- By Tariq Panja in London and Jing Yang de Morel in Shanghai

Imagine if, along with everything else, the US presidency gave Donald Trump the power to change the rules of his favourite sport. That wouldn’t be so different from the scenario facing profession­al football in China, where the highest officials in the land have made the game a national project.

China threw the vast power of the state behind football in 2015, when President Xi Jinping, the game’s most powerful fan, announced a plan to transform the country into a world beater at the sport he played as a student.

China’s top teams responded by spending hundreds of millions of dollars to hire foreign stars such as the Brazilian striker Hulk and the ageing Argentinia­n forward Carlos Tevez in hopes a higher level of play would trickle down to the national team and help build world-class leagues overnight.

But now a sudden spate of policy reversals, mandating that young Chinese players fill starting lineups, has undermined the value of those investment­s and put club owners in a quandary over what kind of teams they’ll be able to field. It’s also forced many close to the sport to question openly whether bureaucrat­s really know what’s best for the beautiful game.

“The government should respect the rules of the market, instead of over-regulating,” said Tony Xia, the Chinese businessma­n who made headlines last year when he purchased the English football club Aston Villa. Xia spoke in an interview at a football conference earlier this month in Beijing, where top executives from several teams railed against the rules changes handed down in January, and then again last month.

Football’s earliest incarnatio­n was invented in China more than 2,000 years ago as a military training exercise — players kicked a leather ball at a goal while fending off attackers without using their hands — but ancient history hasn’t translated into a winning tradition in the modern game.

The country has been to the World Cup only once in the 84 years of the tournament, in 2002, when the team went winless — and goalless — in all three of its matches. The national men’s team recently placed 82rd in the Fifa rankings, just ahead of the Faroe Islands, a remote archipelag­o with fewer than 50,000 inhabitant­s.

Hopes for a berth in next year’s World Cup were all but dashed on June 13, when China gave up a goal in the final minute of a qualifying match to finish with a 2-2 draw against a team fielded by war-torn Syria.

Since 2015, though, when President Xi announced his grand plan to win respectabi­lity for China in internatio­nal football, the country has poured the kind of energy into the sport once reserved for winning Olympic medals in individual competitio­ns such as gymnastics, swimming and diving.

Football has become part of compulsory education in elementary and secondary schools. Tens of thousands of football fields are being built. China Evergrande Group, the real estate giant, spent a reported US$185 million to build the world’s biggest football school, a sprawling campus that looks like a concrete replica of Harry Potter’s Hogwarts School surrounded by 50 practice pitches. (A four-storey tall replica of the World Cup trophy at the school’s entrance had to be torn down because of trademark issues.)

Meanwhile, the country’s biggest teams answered the president’s call with an investment binge, offering outsized salaries to South American and European players in order to jumpstart their programmes.

In January, the Brazilian-born midfielder known as Oscar, a reserve on Premier League champions Chelsea, became one of the sport’s highest paid players, signing with Shanghai SIPG for $25.5 million a year.

All told, teams in the Chinese Super League, the country’s top division, paid more than $450 million to foreign players in 2016, passing France to become the world’s fifth-biggest spender.

That’s when the government started telling team officials how to run their clubs.

In January, China’s General Administra­tion of Sport issued a statement telling teams to stop “irresponsi­ble spending”. The Chinese Football Associatio­n followed up with a requiremen­t that teams include at least one Chinese player under the age of 23 in their starting lineups. And coaches would only be able to start three imported stars — not four, as the old rules stipulated.

Then, just as teams were adjusting to the new regime, the rules changed again. Last month, the football associatio­n said coaches would now have to field at least one homegrown player under 23 for every foreigner in their lineups — another tweak designed to make sure the pro leagues feature Chinese players.

As if that weren’t enough, teams were told they’d be slapped with a new luxury tax. For every dollar spent on an imported star, clubs may now have to pay equally into a government fund designed to promote China’s football programme — effectivel­y doubling the price of overseas talent, and casting a long shadow over football’s trading season, which officially opens today.

Mads Davidsen, head of training developmen­t at Shanghai SIPG, the club that this year brought Oscar to China, was among the executives at last week’s conference who objected to what he described as government meddling. It “will no doubt lower the level of the game”, he said.

The new rules, Davidsen said, could end up subverting the government’s own goals because China’s up-and-coming stars can’t develop without competing against the best possible players.

Representa­tive from both the General Administra­tion of Sport and the China Football Associatio­n declined to comment.

Xia, the Aston Villa club owner who this year also agreed to buy a Hollywood film production studio, said state interventi­on was likely to backfire, as it did in the stock market where officials took heavy-handed steps to stop routs in 2015 and 2016, and only made matters worse.

“It’s like the government is playing whack-a-mole,” he said. “What we need are guidelines, not new rules every time the situation changes.”

One unintended consequenc­e of the government’s moves will be higher prices for younger players, who are suddenly in much greater demand, according to Gong Lei, the president of Chongqing Dangdai Lifan Football Club, a team less flush with cash than some. “Small and medium-sized clubs will find it especially difficult in dealing with this,” said Gong, who played for China at the 1985 Youth World Cup.

Gong said his club was negotiatin­g to buy several minor-league teams in France and Belgium in order to develop a training programme for its own athletes.

Li Yidong, chairman of China Sports Media Ltd, which paid the equivalent of $1.2 billion for five years of the broadcast rights to the league’s games, says he wants to renegotiat­e his contract with the football associatio­n because the quality of the product he bought is now likely to be diminished.

“It is not what we paid for,” he said.

“The government should respect the rules of the market, instead of over-regulating” TONY XIA Aston Villa owner

 ??  ?? China’s Feng Xiaoting vies for the ball with Mardek Mardkian of Syria in a June 13 World Cup qualifier that resulted in a 2-2 draw and all but sank China’s chances of advancing to the 2018 tournament.
China’s Feng Xiaoting vies for the ball with Mardek Mardkian of Syria in a June 13 World Cup qualifier that resulted in a 2-2 draw and all but sank China’s chances of advancing to the 2018 tournament.

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