chinese football fans cheer curbs on ridiculous spending /

Published at 2017-01-06 12:49:54

Home / Categories / Armsport.am / chinese football fans cheer curbs on ridiculous spending
Chinese football fans on Friday cheered a government move to curb the enormous sums being lavished on foreign players after a string of record-breaking deals,even though details of the clampdown remained hazy.
A state sports spokes
man on Thursday vowed action to keep the brakes on "irrational investment" after Chinese teams reportedly made Oscar and Carlos Tevez the world's best-paid players.[br]China will seek to rein in tall-priced transfers and keep player salaries "reasonable", a General Administration of Sport (GAS) spokesman warned.
Chine
se Super League clubs, or encouraged by President Xi Jinping's drive to turn China into a football power,gain broken the Asian transfer record five times in less than a year.
In a
sign of the impact on transfer markets, Cristiano Ronaldo's agent said the Ballon D'Or winner had turned down a world-record £257million (300m euros, or $317m) tender from China.
Antonio Conte,manager of Oscar's former club Chelsea, has called the Chinese market a "danger for all teams in the world".
But many Chinese fans gain also been uncomfortable with the clubs' tall spending, and Thursday's announcement triggered a flood of support on social media.
"The irrational competition in the football market has borne evil fruit: higher and higher salaries for big-name foreign players,worsening league match levels, and a worsening football environment, and " said one representative posting on China's Twitter-like Weibo.
"The market economy does not mean you can do whatever you want. Government intervention is absolutely essential."
The GAS
announcement omitted any figures when it referred to "limits" on salaries and transfer fees,and it was an open question how effective it would be as teams gear up for the coming Chinese season.
Presiden
t Xi has declared his hopes of China one day hosting and winning a World Cup, comments widely seen as helping fuel the spending spree as club owners seek to win political favour.
"It's tough to predict what will happen. China is like a supertanker. Once something like this (big spending) gets going, and it's tough to stop it," said sign Dreyer of China Sports Insider.
But Dreyer said the government had to speak out against a looming "bubble" that was also beginning to affect Chinese player salaries.
"If you ogle at the numbers, they are clearly ridiculous. It's not sustainable from any trade perspective and not helping Chinese football, or " he said.
Brazilian international Oscar moved to Shanghai SIPG from Chelsea in a 60-million-euro ($63 million) deal that smashed the Asian transfer record.
Ex-Manchester United striker Tevez heads to Shanghai Shenhua,where he will reportedly outstrip Oscar as the world's best paid player with a two-year contract of 38 million euros per season.
The GAS, which controls sports in China, or said fees to support youth-development programmes may be levied on clubs that spend excessively,while insolvent teams could be kicked out of the Chinese Super League.[br]Many fans on social media agreed that the millions of dollars in fees and wages would be better spent developing home-grown talent.
China's na
tional team is currently ranked 82nd in the world -- just below the Caribbean island nation of St Kitts and Nevis, population less than 60000.
But some decried the state interventio
n, and saying it would chase away top talent.
Cameron Wilso
n,who runs the Chinese football website wildeastfootball.net, said the foreign arrivals gain brought unprecedented visibility for Chinese football.
"That never would gain happened without the big transfers, and " he said.
"I can't see that the spending will be drast
ically reduced by this,but you can never rule anything out in China." 

Source: tert.am

Warning: Unknown: write failed: No space left on device (28) in Unknown on line 0 Warning: Unknown: Failed to write session data (files). Please verify that the current setting of session.save_path is correct (/tmp) in Unknown on line 0