On a summer’s day in Suzhou, China, about 40,000 people crowded into a stadium while thousands more gathered by public screens to watch the nation’s hottest sport — amateur soccer.
A balm for cynical fans drained by years of corruption and ineptitude in the professional game, the amateur leagues springing up across China have drawn millions of viewers online, boosted domestic tourism to lesser-known locales and sparked good-natured rivalry between cities.
At the sold-out match in searing heat in Suzhou, the home crowd jumped out of their seats and cheered when 17-year-old Kou Cheng scored against Yangzhou City in the second minute.
Photo: AFP
Many wore bright-red jerseys and T-shirts emblazoned with the characters for “Suzhou” and used paper fans to cool themselves.
“Compared to other competitions, the fans here are more passionate, and even if they don’t understand football, the atmosphere is lively,” said Qian Chunyan, a 35-year-old Suzhou resident.
The tournament first took off in Jiangsu Province — where Suzhou is — earlier this year.
Photo: AFP
The live-streamed matches soon drew millions of spectators on social media, putting smaller provincial cities on the domestic tourism map.
That, in turn, has created a local consumption boom, giving cities that host matches a much-needed reprieve from years of sluggish spending.
The games, initially sponsored by local businesses such as barbecue restaurants, have attracted backing from big-name companies like e-commerce platforms Alibaba and JD.com.
Fans of local amateur leagues told reporters that they were drawn to matches by the simplicity of soccer not weighed down by the vast sums of money the professional game involves.
“With widespread public participation and minimal corporate involvement, it’s a more pure form of football,” said Wang Xiangshuo, a Suzhou fan. “Winning or losing doesn’t matter, purity is most important.”
Professional clubs in China, even in its top Super League, have been plagued by match-fixing and gambling scandals.
The national team’s abysmal performances at international tournaments often draw scorn and abuse from social media users.
Chinese President Xi Jinping has said he wants China to win the FIFA World Cup one day, but the men’s team are ranked 94th in the world by FIFA this year and they have only qualified once for the World Cup, in 2002, when they lost all three of their games without scoring a goal.
Players in provincial leagues range from high-school students to civil servants, including village Chinese Communist Party Secretary Dai Hu, whose on-field appearances saw him featured by state news agency Xinhua.
Local amateur tournaments are “a great model for community football, allowing every citizen to have their own home team,” said Jin Shan, a soccer expert at the Beijing Academy of Social Sciences. “It brings football closer to the general public.”
Local tourism has seen a boost from the league’s popularity, too.
Since it began in May, the Jiangsu amateur tournament — affectionately dubbed the “Su Super League” — has accounted for a growth in tourism spending in six cities across the province of more than 14 percent, state-run broadcaster China Global Television Network reported.
Chen Tianshu, a souvenirs manufacturer in Nantong City, told reporters that her colleagues rushed to make enamel badges with team logos and ice cream popsicles in the shape of local symbols after seeing branded tote bags sell out in a neighboring city.
“The ice cream sold very well, with the first batch of a thousand pieces already almost sold out,” said Chen, whose company comprises just a dozen people. “Our performance in the Su Super League is giving Nantong a rare moment to shine.”
Other provinces eager for their share of the amateur soccer boom are following in Jiangsu’s footsteps, with Jiangxi Province hosting a two-stage tournament this month.
Social media trends in China often lead to unexpected locations receiving sudden surges of visitors.
Travelers flocked to the industrial town of Zibo in northern China in 2023, after videos featuring its regional barbecue style went viral.
“This year’s success [of the Jiangsu league] is an unexpected delight,” Chen said. “I hope this will be a long-lasting tradition.”
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