While China football is still licking their wounds from the women's Algarve
Cup fiasco early March, the world's most popular game is trying to gain ground
in China following some inspiring performances of their foreign-based players.
China captain Zheng Zhi made headlines across the British media on Monday
after a match-winning display that gives Charlton Athletic hope of avoiding
Premier League relegation.
China's national team captain Zheng
Zhi jumps for the ball and set up a 2-0 win over Newcastle,
England, March 18, 2007. [sina.com]
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Zheng, who signed a loan from
Shandong Luneng on December 29 until the end of the season, headed Charlton in
front against Newcastle United in his first full start on Sunday.
He followed up by winning a late penalty converted by Jerome Thomas to give
the southeast London club a precious 2-0 victory in their struggle to beat the
drop.
Another Chinese sensation Sun Xiang played both legs of the European
Championships match between Eindhoven PSV and English giant Arsenal, making him
the first Chinese soccer player who has played at the European elite soccer
competition.
Besides, China's Ma Xiaoxu, the AFC's Women's Player of the Year, secured a
contract with the Swedish women's soccer champions Umea IK.
Umea, who have reportedly agreed a six-month deal with Ma starting from the
new season in April, are one of the top women's clubs in Europe with five
domestic championships and two European crowns in the past seven years. Their
side includes FIFA Women's World Player of the Year Marta and Swedish talisman
Hanna Ljungberg.
However, Chinese footballers also disappointed the fans in equal measure
recently following the women team's nightmarish run in the Algarve Cup football
tournament, where they lost four straight matches.
Since finishing second to the United States in the 1999 World Cup, the
Chinese women, known as the "Steel Roses", have failed to return to such heights
in international competitions.
The team was left high and dry into 2007 when the Chinese Football
Association (CFA) failed to appoint the new head coach since former manager Ma
Liangxing left the squad ahead of the Four Nations tournament, citing a heart
problem late January.
The former top team has slipped to the 11th spot on the FIFA rankings on
March 16 after the Algarve Cup.
In men's part, a mass brawl in London between the Chinese Olympic squad and
English first division team Queens Park Rangers on February 7 cast a shadow over
the China Football Association (CFA)'s efforts to improve the league's image.
Embattled by black whistle and gambling, the CFA has vowed to keep a clean
image of the top football league ahead of the new season which started early
March.
"We must improve the competing level and make efforts to bring spectators
back to the stands," said Ma Chengquan, one of the officials in charge of
organising soccer leagues at the governing body on February 26 at Xianghe, Hebei
province.
The CFA held a two-day meeting at Xianghe, the first of its kind to bring
together referees, club managers and team coaches, to address the possible
problems in the upcoming season.
"Then, there must be a crackdown on gambling and the stadium security has to
be maintained," he added.
A further strive was also made by the association, promising to donate six
million yuan (0.78 million US dollars) to the Chinese Red Cross Foundation for
their Warming China project, which aims to help out those poverty-stricken
cancer patients for free.
"I hope this could help create a positive image for China soccer, which drew
too much criticism in the past few years," said Li Jinyu, an international from
top-flight club Shandong Luneng, who acts as image ambassador for the project.