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Football has Chinese fans cheer during a Group C qualifier match of the AFC Cup between China and Saudi Arabia held in Xi'an in northwest China's Shaanxi province on November 19, 2013. Photo: AP
Opinion
The View
by David Dodwell
The View
by David Dodwell

How China’s quest to become a football powerhouse is revamping the beautiful game

China has emerged as deep-pocketed investor in what amounts to a global power grab for influence in football

If you want to understand how China is changing the world economy with international acquisitions mushrooming wherever you look, you might choose to look at chemicals, or engineering, or smart phones and e-commerce, or wind and solar power, but to be different, let’s look at football.

After all, in the lull between Portugal spluttering to victory in the Euro football championship, and Brazil’s scramble to organise the Rio Olympics on time for teams to arrive on August 5, sport is naturally on the mind. And apart from determination to win as many Olympic medals as possible (China will be sending the largest team to the Rio Olympics, no doubt determined to better the 100-medal tally they won in the 2008 Olympics at home in Beijing), it seems as if China’s business barons can’t take their mind off football.

It is under the counter rather than over the counter that China’s soccer fortunes are likely to be made in coming years

Since Chinese President Xi Jinping smiled into the selfie with Manchester City footballer Sergio Aguero in October last year, a national plan for sports promotion has been unleashed. With the aim of building China as a “great sports nation” by the time of the 2026 soccer World Cup, billions are being spent on lifting the country’s soccer. With a government strategy comparable with steel or high speed rail construction, the aim is to build a sports industry worth 5 trillion yuan by the time of the 2026 World Cup. The schools offering specialised football training are to be hoisted from 5,000 to 50,000.

To be frank, as far as soccer is concerned, China has a long way to climb. At present, the country’s national team ranks 96th worldwide, behind even North Korea. It has not qualified to compete in the World Cup since 2002. But the frenzy of local and international investment in soccer is breathtaking – and driven as strongly by private sector business leaders as much as the national plan. It will be fascinating to watch how this global grab for influence in football will impact China in the coming decade as a soccer power.

Former Italian soccer player Fabio Cannavaro took up his duties as head coach of Guangzhou Evergrande in February 2015. Photo: Power Sport Images

Over half of the 16 teams in the China Super League (CSL) are currently spending around 1 billion yuan a year in deals ranging from acquiring foreign players to snapping up foreign managers with the single-minded aim of lifting soccer standards nationwide. Nine of the 16 CSL teams are now managed by foreign managers.

Rather than acquiring fading international football starts, China’s leading teams are among the most aggressive competitors worldwide for top international talent. These include the Ivorian player Gervinho (also known as Gervais Lombe Yao Kouass) bought from Arsenal for US$21 million and Alex Texiera from Brazil bought by Jiangsu Suning for US$55 million, to “the Hulk” – Givanildo Vieira de Souza by Shanghai SIPG. Rivalry between the 16 teams is intense, with Shanghai SIPG, who have never won the League, clearly gunning for top slot, which has been occupied for the past five years by Alibaba-funded Guangzhou Evergrande Taobao. The hope is obviously that “the Hulk” will make the difference.

Gervinho (right) joined Chinese Super League side Hebei China Fortune in January. Photo: Reuters

To build local expertise, a clutch of Chinese billionaire business barons have gone aggressively overseas to acquire control of top clubs which will build knowledge of the way the global football business works, and at the same time earn them a handsome profit. Suning Holdings has paid US$270 million for 18-time Italian champion Inter Milan, while Wanda Sports Holdings, controlled by Wang Jianlin, reputed to be China’s richest man, has bought a 20 per cent stake in AC Milan. Which means the next “local-derby” between the two top Milan sides will be as much a Chinese contest as an Italian one.

Wanda has also acquired a 20 per cent stake in Atletico Madrid for US$52m. Media magnate Li Ruigang has bought a 13 per cent stake in Manchester United for US$400 million, while entrepreneur Chan Yunsheng has paid €$65 million for 54 per cent of Espanol. Toy manufacturer Tony Xia has paid £76 million for Aston Villa, and the Hong Kong-listed Chinese conglomerate Fosun is mooted to be buying the UK’s Wolves for £45 million.

Jack Ma’s Alibaba is thought to have joined Dalian Wanda in sponsoring FIFA probably to the sum of US$40 million apiece. With FIFA in such disarray over the past year, and now deeply in debt, such sponsorship will greatly enhance China’s impact on FIFA, and could clearly influence China’s aspirations to host the 2026 World Cup.

Simon Chadwick, Professor of Sports Business at the UK’s Salford University, captured well this blitzkrieg of investment: “In a matter of weeks we have seen the global power balance in football shift east by quite a big margin.” And as Ben Bland and Charles Clover in the Financial Times noted, “this is bringing the world’s biggest game to the world’s biggest audience”.

The most ambitious plan so far to bring this vision to reality has been the pitch from Wanda’s Mr Wang to create a new European super-league tournament. Price tags are still under wraps, but the arithmetic of this plan is clear, and built off one of football’s biggest official income streams – television transmission rights. Note that in the UK, Sky TV and BT have paid £5.1 billion for exclusive coverage of Britain’s Premier League – generating fees to each Premier League club of £100 million a year. In Germany, Sky and Eurosport have forked out 4.6 billion for coverage rights for the Bundesliga. In Italy, Mediaset has reportedly paid 700 million for the rights to screen Italian games. A key attraction of Mr Wang’s plan for a new league is to augment these huge sums, and generate more income for Europe’s most successful clubs.

Of course, while television sponsorship may be one of the largest official revenue streams, by far the biggest sums linked with football travel underground through the gambling industry. This was well illustrated by minnow Leicester City’s shock victory in the UK’s Premier League last year. Losses on 5000-1 Leicester cost the gambling industry so much that Britain’s gambling rules have been rewritten. Odds of 5000-1 are no longer allowed.

Of course, gambling is supposed to be illegal in mainland China, but it will be fascinating to watch how punters wriggle around the rules as passions for China’s Super League teams intensify in coming years. It is under the counter rather than over the counter that China’s soccer fortunes are likely to be made in coming years.

David Dodwell is Executive Director of the Hong Kong-APEC Trade Policy Group

This article was amended to correct Sergio Aguero’s team to Manchester City

This article appeared in the South China Morning Post print edition as: Grand football ambitions
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