El Mallorca va a incorporar jugadores naturales de China a sus equipos inferiores. En concreto, con edades comprendidas entre los 15 y los 18 años. Se trata de un convenio que ha puesto en práctica el Govern Balear, y en el que también intervendrán el resto de equipos de fútbol de las islas. La Federación China de Fútbol enviará aquí a sus mejores elementos, y durante tres años tendrán la oportunidad de integrarse en el fútbol regional balear.
La pregunta, por supuesto, cae por su propio peso. Y si al cabo de ese tiempo alguno sale bueno, ¿de quién son los derechos, de la Federación China o del equipo que lo ha tutelado?
Es curioso el caso de China. A pesar de que parece probado que el origen del fútbol procede de ahí, hasta ahora nunca han destacado en este deporte. Su gran estrella, Lil Tie, ha llegado a jugar en varios equipos europeos, y de hecho actualmente pertenece al Sheffield, pero está lejos de poder ser considerado un futbolista de elite. Veremos sin ahora, con este experimento, cambia la tendencia.
5 comentarios:
Bueno, Serra no es tonto. Supongo que todo tendrá un proposito. Si el Mallorca acepta este convenio del Govern, será con algun beneficio, no solo entrenar a jugadores que no son tuyos.
Tienes la respuesta a la pregunta Tomeu? O de verdad no se sabe?
Si un jugador chino nos saliera estrella, se podría montar una de grande con el tema de marketing... nos podríamos hacer de oro xD
mmmhhh q cosa esa d los chinos
El Sheffield? Que equipo es ese?
Yo conozco el UNITED y el WEDNESDAY, pero Sheffield no...
Sorry for intruding with English. I am a Chinese follower of this blog. I speak neither Castilian nor Catalan, nevertherless I have been a Mallorca fan for years. And google translate help me understand what's going on here.
It is rather funny to see a China-related post here. And I am glad to see Chinese players coming to la Liga and gain some experience that they can never have within China. And I would like to provide you guys some more info if you would tolerate English a little bit.
First of all, though I am 100% Chinese, the legend that the modern game "football" origins from China is 99.99% just a... legend. It is true that there existed a football-like sport in China around 1000 years ago, which is called 蹴鞠(cu ju), but it gradually declined afterwards and when the modern football game propagated into China, it has been a dead game for a long time.
China now, as pointed out by Tomeu, is rather bad in this game. Basically we put all the blame on our football federation, which is not too unfair. The most recent scandal of this organization is that its whole previous "cabinet" was put into jail because of corruption. The current one is thus trying to do something to give a boost to their image. This move in Spain is part of it. Why Spain? Well, you have won the last Eurocup and World Cup and our bureaucrats conclude that Spanish football is thus the "right" football.
This is not the first time China sending youngsters en masse abroad. And you can imagine where we send them to before: the country that playED the "right" football: Brazil, Germany, etc.
The team "Sheffield" mentioned here probably is a Chinese team based on the city of Chengdu. Amusingly it has a English name. And this is because their collaboration with the Sheffield United. Li Tie has once played in Sheffield United and then returned to China to the "Sheffield".
Now the only Chinese player in Major European leagues that I can remember is Junmin Hao in Schalke 04. He weared number 7 last season and this season surrendered it to the VIP: Raúl González...
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