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China
Daniel Ren

Yangtze BriefingShanghai soccer clubs splash the cash in battle for supremacy

City's teams bank on a fresh injection of money to buy some better on-field results

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SIPG lured former England manager Sven-Goran Eriksson. Photo: AFP
Daniel Renin Shanghai

The battle for supremacy on the soccer pitch is escalating in Shanghai as two local clubs, both backed by powerful state-owned enterprises, splash out millions of dollars to sign big overseas coaches and high-calibre players to bolster their squads.

Top-flight outfits Shanghai Greenland Shenhua and Shanghai SIPG FC have earmarked at least 500 million yuan (HK$631 million) each to improve their competiveness in the Chinese Super League.

Talk of the free-spending teams' ambitions to earn a top-three league spot next season is just what thousands of local soccer fans wanted to hear after the lacklustre performances by the three main Shanghai-based squads in the last four years.

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Shenhua, bought in January by the city's largest developer, Shanghai Greenland Group, from online tycoon Zhu Jun, is the best-loved of the three.

The municipal government directed Greenland to buy Shenhua when Zhu threatened to relocate the troubled club to the southwestern province of Yunnan .

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But Shenhua finished ninth in the 16-team league, eclipsed by rivals in Guangzhou and Beijing.

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