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Chinese football should live up to expectations of nation

By Li Yang | China Daily | Updated: 2026-07-09 20:44

A foreign spectator watches a match alongside Chinese fans during a "Suchao" game in Jiangyin, Jiangsu province, on May 30. WAN CHENGPENG/FOR CHINA DAILY

Notwithstanding the Chinese Football Association's denial on Tuesday of the rumor that it had declined a friendly match invitation from Cape Verde, the unfounded allegation continues to be widely disseminated.

Soccer has always generated rumors. Some rumors gain traction because they sound believable long before anyone asks whether they are true or not. The Cape Verde story belonged in that category. It imagined a Chinese team unwilling to face one of the World Cup's surprise packages.

In an age when fiction can complete several laps of the internet before the truth gets its boots on, millions accepted it almost instinctively because it reflected something Chinese supporters have come to expect of the national team: not necessarily failure, but lack of confidence.

That should bother the CFA more than the rumor itself. The 2026 World Cup has once again demonstrated that football has little regard for population or GDP. Cape Verde, representing little more than half a million people, has become one of the tournament's compelling teams. The World Cup has always had room for such successes — one of the reasons why it is so popular. These dark horses remind everyone that football's hierarchy is earned rather than inherited.

Chinese fans, watching this year's tournament unfold without the presence of the national team, cannot help but notice the contrast.

However, had such a match actually been arranged, Chinese supporters would almost certainly have embraced it because they still crave success and every match presents the opportunity for, if not a win, at least a good performance.

The sarcasm surrounding the national team is often mistaken for indifference. But indifference is silence. Chinese football rarely experiences silence. It provokes arguments, mockery and endless online debate precisely because hundreds of millions still invest emotionally in what they hope it might one day become.

The harder question lies elsewhere.

This World Cup has shown how quickly elite football continues to evolve. Faster restart regulations have accelerated the game's rhythm. Referees have adopted more consistent standards while punishing cynical behavior with increasing severity. Semi-automated offside technology and sensor-equipped match balls have transformed decision-making into a matter of precision measured in milliseconds. Coaches now prepare not simply for opponents but for an environment where tactical flexibility, data analysis and technical accuracy decide increasingly fine margins.

The gap separating Chinese soccer from the world's best cannot be bridged by another expensive signing or another short-term project. If there is an Asian blueprint worth studying, it is Japan's. Its progress has never depended on one generation or one wealthy benefactor. It has been built patiently through youth coaching, coherent player development and an acceptance that the best footballers must leave home to train.

Chinese football once convinced itself that prosperity could be purchased. The era of lavish spending, imported stars and naturalized internationals created a sport that some foreign players joked looks like football but is not, briefly disguising the deeper structural problems without solving them.

The next generation will have to be developed differently. Investment should go into community pitches rather than transfer fees, to qualified youth coaches rather than fleeting celebrity signings. Young Chinese players should be encouraged to test themselves in stronger leagues while they are still learning their football education. The same applies to coaches.

Grassroots soccer too deserves protection from becoming another form of online entertainment. Viral clips and exhibition events may generate attention, but they cannot replace thousands of ordinary training sessions where habits, technique and judgment are formed. Nor can reform stop with the football administrative system. Chinese football's anti-corruption campaign has restored some confidence to a sport that had spent too long undermining itself.

Chinese soccer's task is not to simply rebut stories that damage its reputation. It is to build a national team whose progress makes those rumors impossible to believe in the first place.

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