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dreamwaverider London 31 Dec 16 8.35am | |
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Football has become money driven. The majority of premier league players are foreigners. Of the rest, a large proportion are first generation immigrants who have no loyalty to this place and I don't blame them. The issue of Zaha and Ivory Coast is a classic example.
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Midlands Eagle 31 Dec 16 9.01am | |
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Originally posted by dreamwaverider
So what will Zaha do on £35K /week when they offer him £150K? Zaha was homesick in Manchester so what would be like living in China and the comment about having no loyalty to England is rubbish as he waited long enough to be picked and wasn't. It's all well and good for the England managers telling him that he is in their thoughts but talk is cheap and the land of his birth showed him that if England didn't want him - they did
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snytaxx London 31 Dec 16 9.35am | |
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I wouldn't worry too much about this if I were you. While this country (China) definitely has huge footballing potential, it's domestic league is in no fit state to truly attract big football players in it's current format. Go to any Chinese football match and you soon realise the whole thing is just for consumer entertainment, it has nothing to do with good old fashioned 'rule of law' football. We might complain about the ref at Palace but in China, it's an open secret that the ref is paid by the league to create 'entertaining matches'. So yes, while a few footballers might well be tempted out here due to the wages, it will be a temporary fad and only just that. Just like how the American leagues are / were, you wait until you are old and not good enough to make the first team in your premier league outfit anymore, then you take a ten fold pay increase and move to China for a year, play some of the best / worst football of your career then take your money and retire. Good for them I say! These concerns about how money affects the game have always existed (since the game took off commercially), the only thing that has changed are the players involved (the destination leagues). Once it was the USA, today it's China, tomorrow, who knows?
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xomnea 31 Dec 16 9.50am | |
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Sky to show Chinese Super League for the next three seasons.
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chateauferret 31 Dec 16 11.14am | |
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Originally posted by snytaxx
I wouldn't worry too much about this if I were you. While this country (China) definitely has huge footballing potential, it's domestic league is in no fit state to truly attract big football players in it's current format. Go to any Chinese football match and you soon realise the whole thing is just for consumer entertainment, it has nothing to do with good old fashioned 'rule of law' football. We might complain about the ref at Palace but in China, it's an open secret that the ref is paid by the league to create 'entertaining matches'. Which of course is why they want "Mark". Nothing to do with a track record in impartiality, fairness or judgement. Bent as a nine-bob bit and good at politics.
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Booted Eagle Bristol 31 Dec 16 5.16pm | |
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Originally posted by snytaxx
I wouldn't worry too much about this if I were you. While this country (China) definitely has huge footballing potential, it's domestic league is in no fit state to truly attract big football players in it's current format. Go to any Chinese football match and you soon realise the whole thing is just for consumer entertainment, it has nothing to do with good old fashioned 'rule of law' football. We might complain about the ref at Palace but in China, it's an open secret that the ref is paid by the league to create 'entertaining matches'. So yes, while a few footballers might well be tempted out here due to the wages, it will be a temporary fad and only just that. Just like how the American leagues are / were, you wait until you are old and not good enough to make the first team in your premier league outfit anymore, then you take a ten fold pay increase and move to China for a year, play some of the best / worst football of your career then take your money and retire. Good for them I say! These concerns about how money affects the game have always existed (since the game took off commercially), the only thing that has changed are the players involved (the destination leagues). Once it was the USA, today it's China, tomorrow, who knows? Great comments, sums it all up perfectly, particularly the failed attempt/s in US.
“ [T]here are known knowns; there are things we know that we know.There are known unknowns; that is to say there are things that, we now know we don't know.But there are also unknown unknowns – there are things we do not know we don't know. ” |
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HKOwen Hong Kong 02 Jan 17 2.14am | |
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Football is too expensive for the working man in China. Last Palace match I watch in Hong Kong, China a G and T was seven quid.
Responsibility Deficit Disorder is a medical condition. Symptoms include inability to be corrected when wrong, false sense of superiority, desire to share personal info no else cares about, general hubris. It's a medical issue rather than pure arrogance. |
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snytaxx London 02 Jan 17 8.18am | |
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Originally posted by HKOwen
Football is too expensive for the working man in China. Last Palace match I watch in Hong Kong, China a G and T was seven quid. It's a 100 rmb (£12) for me to go and watch my local team (Beijing Guo An), I mean, it's alot cheaper than watching the Palace but then I guess it depends on what you mean by 'the working man'. In the UK a working man could be a plumber earning over 40K a year, here it could be taxi driver earning barely earning 15K a year. It's just income really, nothing to do with the overall price of the ticket. On a random cringe related tangent. The last time I went to a Chinese football match (Beijing Guo An vs Gui Zhou Ren He), the home fans were so disgusted that they were only winning 2-0 (60 minutes played),coupled with the likelihood some have probably watched way to many 'old firm' matches, they decided to start a 'riot'. By 'riot' I mean it was a fat guy who got so angry when the away team were given a corner, he and his identical T-shirt wearing friends ran down to try and storm the pitch, only to be very easily repulsed by literally one guard. One of them then waddled back up the steps to where his popcorn and cinema sized bucket of cola was situated while the others recreated that fight scene from Team America (the one where both the puppets just kinda shuffle up again each other without really fighting). Freshly have returned to his seat, angry fat man then hurled all of his overpriced foot and drinks at the opposition player (lining up to take the corner). Sadly he missed and hit one of his own players warming up on the touchline who I might add, was not expecting a litre of coke to come flying out of the stands. Said fan then disappeared for 10 minutes back into the stadium concourse while he went and bought another bucket of coca cola and possibly a hot dog. Oh China... Edited by snytaxx (02 Jan 2017 8.19am)
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chateauferret 02 Jan 17 9.53am | |
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Originally posted by snytaxx
On a random cringe related tangent. The last time I went to a Chinese football match (Beijing Guo An vs Gui Zhou Ren He), the home fans were so disgusted that they were only winning 2-0 (60 minutes played),coupled with the likelihood some have probably watched way to many 'old firm' matches, they decided to start a 'riot'. By 'riot' I mean it was a fat guy who got so angry when the away team were given a corner, he and his identical T-shirt wearing friends ran down to try and storm the pitch, only to be very easily repulsed by literally one guard. One of them then waddled back up the steps to where his popcorn and cinema sized bucket of cola was situated while the others recreated that fight scene from Team America (the one where both the puppets just kinda shuffle up again each other without really fighting). Freshly have returned to his seat, angry fat man then hurled all of his overpriced foot and drinks at the opposition player (lining up to take the corner). Sadly he missed and hit one of his own players warming up on the touchline who I might add, was not expecting a litre of coke to come flying out of the stands. Said fan then disappeared for 10 minutes back into the stadium concourse while he went and bought another bucket of coca cola and possibly a hot dog. You sure you weren't at The Valley watching Clowntown?
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dreamwaverider London 04 Jan 17 1.33am | |
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After hearing about interst in Benteke made me realise just hoe pertinent China could be this year. I can see a lot of the Mercia Aru footballers jumping ship.
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dreamwaverider London 04 Jan 17 1.37am | |
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Mercia Aru = mercinary.
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Vaibow vancouver/croydon 04 Jan 17 2.05am | |
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Originally posted by dreamwaverider
Football has become money driven. The majority of premier league players are foreigners. Of the rest, a large proportion are first generation immigrants who have no loyalty to this place and I don't blame them. The issue of Zaha and Ivory Coast is a classic example. I wouldn't worry, not many footballers want to relocate to china for a couple of years
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