SPORTS> China
Women's soccer captain retires from national duty
(Xinhua)
Updated: 2008-12-09 09:12

BEIJING - The former captain of the Chinese women's soccer national team  Li Jie has retired from the international duty to secure a more promising future.


Li Jie 

The 29-year-old defender reckoned that she could not carry on after China lost to Japan in the quarterfinals of the Beijing Olympics women's soccer tournament.

"I love the game which had brought me so much, but I have no idea where I will end up if I hold on with the national outfit," she said.

The Chinese women's soccer offers a bleak prospect for its players, as  most of them can hardly live a decent life with a meagre monthly salary of less than two thousand yuan. Even for the players like Li, it has been always a problem for them to seek a proper job following retirement.

"I began to play soccer at a tender age, and I had spent nearly all my life on this game," said Li, who is now studying at Beijing Normal University.

"And when I was pondering retirement, I suddenly realized that I was almost capable of nothing, except for playing soccer," she said.

On every afternoon of the weekdays, Li goes to Beijing women's soccer club by bus to train with her club teammates.

"I will play for my club at next year's National Games in defence of our title. After that I will retire from the club soccer and put all myself into study. I hope I will graduate in 2010 and become a primary school teacher," she said.

Li now lives alone in an apartment awarded to her by the Beijing club as prize following the team's success at the National Games three years ago.

After school, she often dines out to treat herself with some simple food, such as meat pies or gravied rice. In the restaurant near her apartment, she has never been worried that she will be mobbed by autograph seekers, as there are very few women's soccer fans in Beijing as well as the rest of China.