Seeking to close a glaring gap in its international sporting prowess, China has announced an ambitious soccer development plan that envisions 50 million players joining in the game by the end of the decade and the transformation of the nation into a “first-rate major footballing power” by the middle of the century.
To achieve those goals, China will put into service 70,000 soccer pitches, including those newly built and others refurbished, according to a lengthy document released late on Monday by the Chinese Football Association.
The initiative especially targets long-neglected youth programs, with more than 30 million elementary and high schools to play regularly, and the training of 10,000 coaches. It would also more than double the number of specialized academies to 20,000.
The plan is to be rolled out in three stages, with the short-term goals set for 2020, mid-term for 2030 and long-term for 2050. No figures were given on how much the government plans to spend on the project.
The aim, the document says, is to “strive to realize the goal of becoming a first-rate major footballing power, realize the all-around development of Chinese football, fulfill the football dream of the sons and daughters of China, and fulfill our obligations to world football.”
Despite its success in other sports at the Olympic Games and other global competitions, China have been perennial underperformers in international soccer. They have qualified for only one FIFA World Cup finals, in 2002, and are given poor odds of making it to Russia in 2018.
A recent US$300 million splurge to bring big-name foreign talent to the Chinese Premier League has raised the level of play among top-flight domestic clubs.
However, it is far from clear whether their skills will rub off on local talent.
Of the 16 goals scored in the league’s opening round, not one could be attributed to a homegrown player and the influx of overseas goal-scoring talent could further reduce local players’ chances to shine.
Despite that, Chinese President Xi Jinping has made boosting the nation’s soccer fortunes a top sporting priority, ordering the Cabinet to help guide the plan announced on Monday and demanding results.
As befits a document produced by a Chinese Communist Party-led government accustomed to dictating top-down solutions, the plan comes laden with political jargon and patriotic exhortations.
“[Football] is an important vessel of the national spirit. Football has an important education function that benefits the propagation of socialist core values,” the document says.
Despite the government’s encouragement, analysts questioned whether parents would be willing to allow what is often their only child to spend more time on sports programs that take time away from their studies. While soccer is hugely popular in China, participation in the sports is not as deeply embedded in the culture as in European nations, they said.
“It is very hard to buy such success in a team sport, not only football, because such sports are deeply anchored in popular culture and have everything to do with little kids playing them from when they start to walk,” wrote Andrei Markovits, a professor of comparative politics at the University of Michigan and author of Gaming the World: How Sports Are Reshaping Global Politics and Culture.
“In other words, one cannot ‘plan’ these things from above like one can individual sports,” Markovits added.
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