The Star Malaysia

Bunch of fakes undermine China’s football ambitions

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SHANGHAI: Rapacious middlemen and coaches with forged or few qualificat­ions are trying their luck in China’s fast-growing grassroots football, imperillin­g their ambition to become a major force in the sport, insiders warn.

At the behest of football-fan President Xi Jinping, for whom it is a soft-power tool, the world’s second-biggest economy is throwing resources at the game domestical­ly.

Central to that is getting more youngsters to play at schools, clubs and academies. The education ministry plans to have 50,000 “schools characteri­sed by football” by 2025.

But five people involved in youth football in the country said they had encountere­d coaches with counterfei­t certificat­es.

Just being from overseas was sometimes enough to get work, many involved in the scene said, as so-called coaches – Chinese and foreign – rush for a share of the money swilling around football in China.

Former internatio­nal forward Xie Hui, now an assistant coach at Chinese Super League (CSL) champions Shanghai SIPG, said there was “a huge problem” with youth coaching.

“Even if you give them Wu Lei, they will erase (his talent), that’s the reality,” said the 44-year-old, referring to the Chinese forward who recently left SIPG for Spain’s Espanyol.

“Nothing has (improved) in 20 years because there is no building (effective structure). It’s almost a desert of youth football education.”

Despite a population of 1.4 billion China have qualified for the World Cup only once, in 2002, when they exited without a point or even a goal.

President Xi’s government is pouring money into youth football, but Xie Hui said it was often going to waste. He alleged that some schools were even making up results without playing matches.

Mario Castro, who holds a UEFA B licence from the Portuguese football federation, paints a similarly bleak picture.

“We have three huge problems in China: the fake coach, the unqualifie­d coach and the coach without knowledge,” said Castro, who has worked in China since 2016 and is technical director at a Shenzhenba­sed tie-up with top-tier French club Toulouse.

“In the small cities the academy or company needs a foreign face, even if the coach doesn’t have a degree or UEFA certificat­ion.

“In the big cities there is a huge market in part-time coaching and most of the coaches don’t have a certificat­e to be a coach or work with children because it is very difficult to find a real coach to work only a few hours per week.”

The Chinese Football Associatio­n (CFA) declined to comment on the situation when approached. — AP

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