Respect for the game way to save Chinese soccer

In a surprising turn of events on Nov 17, Jingchuan Wenhui FC, a soccer team founded last year in Jingchuan county of China's northwestern Gansu province, knocked out Chinese Super League Beijing Guoan FC in the Chinese Football Association Cup, raising questions about Chinese professional soccer teams' capabilities, including the age-old question of how Chinese soccer teams can bring themselves together and present Chinese people with a decent game.
According to a popular saying among Chinese soccer practitioners there are two kinds of soccer in the world: soccer and Chinese professional soccer. Evidently, professional soccer in China has deviated from development norms and the sport's original track.
From the management down to those training the youth, measures taken in many cases run against the laws of soccer development.
Managers are eager to see quick results, namely success, during their tenure, which is understandable. But the soccer industry is one in which the predecessors plant trees and the successors enjoy the shade. We must refrain from helping the shoots grow by pulling them upwards.
It would be embarrassing for China if it thinks it can go beyond Asia by introducing a few star players from foreign clubs at a time when Vietnam and Thailand have solidly consolidated their position and achieved initial results by training their youth.
Unfortunately, the top managers of Chinese soccer are betting on their careers with the results of the national team, while a large number of coaches who train the youth are blindly carrying out strength training while paying zero attention to basic skills or cultivating on-field decision-making abilities, running against the physical and mental development path of young soccer players of different ages.
In this context, players under the age of 10 might realize some so-called achievements by engaging in enthusiastic kick-and-run on the field to please the principal, teachers, parents and themselves, but they will surely end up harming their soccer career in the long run.
Investors in professional clubs are also gambling. All they want to do is to use soccer to make a fortune and then call it quits.
So what about Guangzhou Evergrande, which won the champions of the AFC Champions League twice? The distorted management ideas and team building philosophy of soccer clubs have emerged after the money bubble burst. Not only did it fail to improve the quality of Chinese soccer, but instead it has encouraged the trend of only spending money on getting foreign help, instead of paying attention to training youth, which has weakened the professional soccer environment in China.
No surprise, therefore, that while the Japanese national team has already been able to form two to three batches of national team members with actual match-winning capabilities, the Chinese national team is still troubled about whom to choose.
When the top domestic professional league team got knocked out by a non-professional team in China's fourth-level league in the CFA, we did not see the losing players worrying much. These "professional" players showed their concern by just questioning the referee's run-up procedure, which has further exposed their ignorance of the rules of the game.
While other countries are promoting a soccer culture and displaying a human touch through games, hostility has become the major element in China's professional leagues and youth stadiums.
Soccer is a sport that can reflect the public's respect and civility toward others, or the lack of it. A series of policies that are deviating from the laws of soccer development is putting at risk the development space for young players, as well as the development path of Chinese soccer.
Only if Chinese soccer practitioners pay due respect to the law of soccer development and stop speculating to reap gains, can Chinese professional soccer return to the right track and be saved.
The author is a lecturer at the Chinese Football College, Beijing Sport University.
The views don't necessarily represent those of China Daily.
Today's Top News
- Xi urges all-out rescue efforts after floods hit Gansu
- Xi says China will continue to promote peace talks in Ukraine crisis
- Leaders of over 20 countries to attend SCO Tianjin Summit
- Xi urges all-out rescue efforts following mountain torrents in Gansu
- A Quixotic quest to reindustrialize US
- Grassroots sports events promoting nation's fitness goals