The Star Malaysia

Fan Zhiyi, the Chinese cult hero who rejected Liverpool

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Fan Zhiyi says he turned down a Liverpool offer made by Gerard Houllier in a pub and also rejected Newcastle, while a trial at Tottenham Hotspur was torpedoed by injury.

But does the 50-year-old known as “General Fan” in China have any regrets?

Not for a second, because he became a cult hero at Crystal Palace and represente­d his country at their only World Cup in 2002, although injury badly hampered his tournament.

Speaking in Shanghai, Zhiyi remembers how he caught the eye of then-England manager Terry Venables and how his Palace teammates often tried to lure him to the pub, while describing his enduring affection for the “charm” of English football.

It was at a pub that, according to Zhiyi, then-Liverpool manager Houllier met his agent and wanted to sign the Chinese trailblaze­r.

It was January 2001 and a Palace side with Zhiyi at the heart of the defence had beaten a Liverpool team containing Steven Gerrard and Michael Owen 2-1 in the home leg of the League Cup semi-finals.

“After the game, in the pub, he spoke with my agent and said, ‘Can I talk to you about Fan?’” Zhiyi says.

However, he was determined to play for his country and he says Liverpool – like Newcastle, who also made him an offer – wanted to limit his time with the national side.

“It was very difficult. Many people called me silly for giving up a better opportunit­y, better wages and probably more fame,” Zhiyi says.

“But I had to make a choice and the choice has to be for my country because they always backed me, pushed me and gave me the chance.”

Zhiyi, a central defender who could also play in midfield or even attack, was always destined to end up in England.

An England side led by Venables and featuring Paul Gascoigne and Alan Shearer travelled to Beijing in May 1996 for a friendly. England eased to a 3-0 victory but Zhiyi made his mark.

“We tried to keep in touch, he really liked me and Sun Jihai,” Zhiyi says of Venables.

In 1997 he was offered a twoweek trial with Premier League club Tottenham, but he was injured and failed to show his best.

A year later, Venables signed Zhiyi and Jihai for second-tier Palace, raising eyebrows in England.

However, Zhiyi would play more than 100 times for Palace and even captained them, while Jihai later became a fixture for Manchester City in the top flight.

Zhiyi admits that adapting to life in England was a huge challenge at the start.

“Communicat­ion was my main concern. I tried to talk but for the first two months at Palace it was just ‘Good morning Fan’ in the morning and ‘Goodbye Fan’ in the afternoon.”

Then there was the drinking culture, which was prevalent in English football at that time.

“They’d say, ‘Hey Fan, do you have time?’ Time for what? ‘Time to go to the pub?’

“I didn’t drink (alcohol). They’d say, ‘No Fan, you’re joking!’”

After three years at Palace, Zhiyi moved to Dundee in Scotland in 2001 and later Cardiff City.

But both Palace and England remain close to him. He had a daughter born in London and she holds a British passport. He rejected British citizenshi­p.

He is watching with sadness how coronaviru­s, which emerged in China in December, has killed more than 12,000 people in Britain.

“My dream in the future, when I really want to retire, is to return to London and buy a house in the countrysid­e.

“Life there would be really happy.” —AFP

 ??  ?? Fan-tastic: Fan Zhiyi holding the dunhill Cup after China beat Bosnia at the Merdeka Stadium in 1997.
Fan-tastic: Fan Zhiyi holding the dunhill Cup after China beat Bosnia at the Merdeka Stadium in 1997.

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