A soccer mystery: Why mighty China fails at the world's biggest sport
In April, Chinese President Xi Jinping visited a company that makes humanoid robots. There he floated an idea to fix the country's woeful men's soccer team.
'Can we have robots join the team?' Xi was quoted as saying on the website of Zhiyuan Robotics.
It might be too late. China will be out of World Cup qualifying if it fails to beat Indonesia on Thursday. Even a victory may only delay the departure.
What's the problem? China has 1.4 billion people, the globe's second largest economy and won 40 Olympic gold medals last year in Paris to tie the United States. Why can't it find 11 elite men's soccer players?
How soccer explains a bit of China
The government touches every aspect of life in China. That top-down control has helped China become the largest manufacturer of everything from electronics to shoes to steel.
It has tried to run soccer, but that rigid governance hasn't worked.
'What soccer reflects is the social and political problems of China,' Zhang Feng, a Chinese journalist and commentator, tells The Associated Press. 'It's not a free society. It doesn't have the team-level trust that allows players to pass the ball to each other without worrying.'
Zhang argues that politics has stalled soccer's growth. And there's added pressure since Xi's a big fan and has promised to resuscitate the game at home. Soccer is a world language with its 'own grammar,' says Zhang, and China doesn't speak it.
'In China, the more emphasis the leader places on soccer, the more nervous the society gets, the more power the bureaucrats get, and the more corrupt they become,' Zhang adds.
Xi Jinping's dream — or nightmare?
After China defeated Thailand 2-1 in 2023, Xi joked with Srettha Thavisin, the Thai prime minister at the time. 'I feel luck was a big part of it,' Xi said.
The consensus is clear. China has too few quality players at the grass roots, too much political interference from the Communist Party, and there's too much corruption in the local game.
Wang Xiaolei, another prominent Chinese commentator, suggests that soccer clashes with China's top-down governance and the emphasis on rote learning.
'What are we best at? Dogma,' Wang wrote in a blog last year. 'But football cannot be dogmatic. What are we worst at? Inspiring ingenuity, and cultivating passion.'
Soccer is bigger than China
The latest chapter in China's abysmal men's soccer history was a 7-0 loss last year to geopolitical rival Japan.
'The fact that this defeat can happen and people aren't that surprised — despite the historical animosity — just illustrates the problems facing football in China,' says Cameron Wilson, a Scot who has worked in China for 20 years and written extensively about the game there.
China has qualified for only one men's World Cup. That was 2002 when it went scoreless and lost all three matches. Soccer's governing body FIFA places China at No. 94 in its rankings — behind war-torn Syria and ahead of No. 95 Benin.
For perspective: Iceland is the smallest country to reach the World Cup. Its latest population estimate is almost 400,000.
The website Soccerway tracks global football and doesn't show a single Chinese player in a top European league. The national team's best player is forward Wu Lei, who played for three seasons in Spain's La Liga for Espanyol. The club's majority owner in Chinese.
The 2026 World Cup will have a field of 48 teams, a big increase on the 32 in 2022, yet China still might not make it.
China will be eliminated from qualification if it loses to Indonesia. Even if it wins, China must also beat Bahrain on June 10 to have any hope of advancing to Asia's next qualifying stage.
An outsider views Chinese soccer
Englishman Rowan Simons has spent almost 40 years in China and gained fame doing television commentary in Chinese on English Premier League matches. He also wrote the 2008 book 'Bamboo Goalposts.'
China is benefiting from reforms over the last decade that placed soccer in schools. But Simons argues that soccer culture grows from volunteers, civil society and club organizations, none of which can flourish in China since they are possible challengers to the rule of the Communist Party.
'In China at the age of 12 or 13, when kids go to middle school, it's known as the cliff,' he says. 'Parents may allow their kids to play sports when they're younger, but as soon as it comes to middle school the academic pressure is on — things like sport go by the wayside.'
To be fair, the Chinese women's team has done better than the men. China finished runner-up in the 1999 Women's World Cup but has faded as European teams have surged with built-in expertise from the men's game. Spain won the 2023 Women's World Cup. China was knocked out early, battered 6-1 by England in group play.
China has been successful targeting Olympic sports, some of which are relatively obscure and rely on repetitive training more than creativity. Olympic team sports like soccer offer only one medal. So, like many countries, China focuses on sports with multiple medals. In China's case it's diving, table tennis and weightlifting.
'For young people, there's a single value — testing well,' says Zhang, the commentator and journalist. 'China would be OK if playing soccer were only about bouncing the ball 1,000 times.'
The face of corruption
Li Tie, the national team coach for about two years beginning in January 2020, was last year sentenced to 20 years in prison for bribery and match fixing. Other top administrators have also been accused of corruption.
The graft also extended to the domestic Super League. Clubs spent millions — maybe billions — on foreign talents backed by many state-owned businesses and, before the collapse of the housing boom, real-estate developers.
The poster child was Guangzhou Evergrande. The eight-time Super League champions, once coached by Italian Marcello Lippi, was expelled from the league and disbanded earlier this year, unable to pay off its debts.
Zhang says businessmen invested in professional soccer teams as a 'political tribute' and cited Hui Ka-yan. The embattled real estate developer financed the Guangzhou Evergrande Football Club and used soccer to win favor from politicians.
Property giant Evergrande has amassed debts reported at $300 billion, reflective of China's battered property segment and the general health of the economy.
'China's failure at the international level and corruption throughout the game, these are all factors that lead parents away from letting their kids get involved,' says Simons, who founded a youth soccer club called China Club Football FC.
'Parents look at what's going on and question if they want their kids to be involved. It's sad and frustrating.'
___
Wade reported from Tokyo and Tang from Washington.
___
AP soccer: https://apnews.com/hub/soccer
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles
Yahoo
30 minutes ago
- Yahoo
Beijing official overseeing Hong Kong warns of persisting national security threats
HONG KONG (AP) — A top Beijing official overseeing Hong Kong affairs on Saturday warned of persisting threats in the city as a China-imposed national security law approaches its fifth anniversary, while seeking to allay concerns about the law's impact on the financial hub's openness. Speaking at a forum about the law, attended also by the city leader John Lee and other officials, Xia Baolong, the director of China's Hong Kong and Macao Work Office, said various forms of soft resistance continue to emerge in new forms and external forces have never ceased their intervention in Hong Kong. 'Hong Kong has transformed from chaos to order. But just as a tree desires stillness, the wind continues to blow," Xia said. The Beijing and Hong Kong governments deemed the law necessary to maintain the city's stability following anti-government protests in 2019. Under the law, many leading pro-democracy activists, including Jimmy Lai, founder of the now-defunct Apple Daily newspaper, were prosecuted. Dozens of civil society groups disbanded. This month, authorities have stepped up their crackdown, including charging young activist Joshua Wong, who was already sentenced last year over a subversion case, under the law for the second time and targeting a mobile game app. Last week, China's national security authorities in Hong Kong and the city's police launched their first publicly known joint operation, raiding the homes of six people on suspicion of colluding with foreign forces to endanger national security. Critics say the political changes indicate that the Western-style civil liberties Beijing promised to keep intact when the former British colony returned to Chinese rule in 1997 are shrinking. But Xia said the law only targeted an extremely small number of people who severely endanger national security. He also sought to allay concerns about Hong Kong's openness and international position. He insisted that normal international exchanges do not violate Hong Kong's national security law but rather are protected by it.


Bloomberg
44 minutes ago
- Bloomberg
Stock Market's Path Depends on Fed's View of What We Don't Know
For investors and traders trying to game out where the US economy, the stock market or interest rates are headed in the second half of 2025, good luck. There's simply too much uncertainty to be sure of anything right now. Take it from Federal Reserve Chair Jerome Powell, who used variations of the word 'uncertain' nearly 20 times in his post-meeting press conference on Wednesday. Wall Street pros were looking to Powell and the Fed for clues about what's next in a world beset by risks — from escalating war in the Middle East to rising trade tensions between the US and China. But the answer they got was a resounding ' we don't know,' with the central bank remaining in wait-and-see mode before deciding whether it can safely start to lower interest rates.

Business Insider
an hour ago
- Business Insider
Photos show how the FIFA Club World Cup is playing to half-empty stadiums
The 2025 FIFA Club World Cup kicked off on June 14. If you didn't know it was happening, you're not alone. Photos show the tournament, which is being held in US stadiums, has been poorly attended thus far. From June 14 to July 13, some of the best soccer teams in the world will be playing each other across the US in the 21st FIFA Club World Cup. If you're thinking, "Wait, isn't the World Cup in 2026? What's the Club World Cup?" you're right to be confused. The FIFA Men's World Cup is in 2026 and will be played in stadiums across the US, Mexico, and Canada by teams representing entire nations, similar to the Olympics. The Club World Cup, revamped this year to compete with other popular tournaments like the typical World Cup, the Champions League, and the Euros, features clubs from across the world instead of countries. It'd be like if the Dodgers played the Tokyo Yakult Swallows. Unfortunately for these world-class players, some of the stadiums for the first round of the tournament have been less than packed. The BBC reported that during the opening round of the tournament, there were 979,373 available seats across the first 16 games. Of those, 556,369 were filled, leaving 423,004 seats empty. The Guardian puts average attendance at 43% capacity. One first-round game was filled to just 13.6% capacity. The Ringer said there's been "no tangible momentum or excitement" for the tournament, held just a year before the better-known World Cup. Some of the teams don't have huge fan bases outside of their local markets, since they don't typically play on a world stage. Other potential reasons for low attendance could include the time of the games — many have been held in the middle of the workday — and soaring temperatures. Ticket prices don't appear to be the problem. Late Friday, June 20, tickets were available in almost every section for the June 21 game at MetLife Stadium. Prices start at $31.79, with tickets in the seventh row from $66. The Athletic reported before the 2025 competition kicked off that students were being offered a five-for-$20 deal for games — essentially $4 a ticket. That's not to say all the games have been poorly attended. The most-attended game of the first round, per Inside FIFA, was the June 15 match between Paris Saint-Germain FC and Atlético Madrid at the Rose Bowl, with 80,619 people in attendance. (That left almost 10,000 empty seats.) FIFA has not responded to a request for comment from Business Insider regarding the low attendance thus far. Here are 16 photos showing how the stands have looked during the first stage of the Club World Cup. At the first match, held at Miami's Hard Rock Stadium on June 14 between Egypt's Al-Ahly and Inter Miami FC, there were plenty of empty seats. The next day, Brazil's SE Palmeiras played Portugal's FC Porto at MetLife Stadium in New Jersey. The lower stands were full, but the seats up top were almost empty. Across the country in Seattle, things were not faring much better at the Seattle Sounders match against Botafogo of Brazil. This photo of Chelsea fans at the June 16 match against Los Angeles FC in Atlanta looks like the "Ted Lasso" intro. Here's a wider view of the game, showing some filled seats but lots of empty ones. The stadium holds 70,000 people. Attendance was 22,137. On June 17, Fluminense FC (Brazil) and Borussia Dortmund (Germany) faced off at a half-empty MetLife Stadium. West Coast games weren't faring any better. We feel for this lone fan at the Monterrey/Inter Milan game at the Rose Bowl on June 17. Per the BBC, the lowest-attended match, though, was on June 17 in Orlando's Inter & Co. Stadium. In the stands were 3,412 fans, who were there to watch South Africa's Mamelodi Sundowns FC play South Korea's Ulsan HD. That's 13.6% of the stands' capacity. On June 18, sections were empty at the match between Manchester City FC and Wydad AC, a Moroccan team, at Philadelphia's Lincoln Financial Field. Down the coast, many seats were available at a match between Real Madrid CF and Al-Hilal Saudi FC at Hard Rock Stadium. There were 5,282 fans at this game between CF Pachuca (Mexico) and FC Salzburg (Austria) in Cincinnati. That's 20% capacity. Source: BBC Not even Lionel Messi was a big enough draw to pack the stands at Inter Miami's match against FC Porto in Atlanta.