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Wang suspended for outburst as Chinese game goes to the 'dogs'

Anita Chang
Thursday 11 November 2010 01:00 GMT
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The tattooed bad boy of Chinese football had a message for his critics after the team's opening defeat to Japan at the Asian Games, but his candour has earned him a suspension.

"It would be flattery to call you fans. You're just a bunch of dogs," the 21-year-old goalkeeper Wang Dalei posted on his Twitter-like microblog after Monday's 3-0 defeat. "You bunch of morons are the main reason why Chinese football can't make progress. You throw in stones after a man has fallen into a well."

By yesterday, Wang's comments had been deleted from the blog, which has 80,000 followers, but bloggers had been busy re-posting screen shots of the offensive messages.

Chinese officials did not respond quickly to his outburst, announcing the suspension after the brash keeper, whose name means "big thunder", was left on the bench for China's 2-1 win over Kyrgyzstan yesterday.

Wang was "ordered to meditate on his action," the official Xinhua News Agency quoted Cai Jiadong, secretary general of the Chinese Asian Games delegation, as saying. The length of the ban was not announced.

Cai said Wang, one of the country's most promising players, who trained with Internazionale in 2006, was repentant and admitted that his online outbursts "hurt the feelings of Chinese soccer fans and tarnished the image as a national soccer team player".

Wang's barrage shocked football fans, the latest episode to highlight the sorry state of football in China. Dismal play is the norm and fans have been turned off by the game that is still struggling to recover from scandals that revealed deeply ingrained corruption.

An error by Wang led directly to a goal in the defeat to Japan. He jumped at a cross and parried the ball with both hands straight to a Japanese attacker, who slotted in the goal with ease. A commentator on state broadcaster China Central Television joked, "Wang Dalei made a poor decision, he looks like a setter in volleyball".

Wang's first online post challenged fans explicitly to make their criticisms to his face. Another was written in a rap-style rhyme, saying "Now you guys come out and try to make peace, but your IQ is way below the range".

After telling reporters on Tuesday that he "really didn't care about this thing" and suggesting he "didn't really say any dirty words", Wang issued a third blast: "I heard there's more than 7,000 football journalists in China, and I estimate at least 4,000 of them hate football. I'm not Spiderman. When opponents score, I'm a moron, when I make a save, I'm still a moron. I wonder if you guys are stressed out at work and taking it out on me."

Football in China, where players have been accused of throwing games, taking bribes and picking fights with opponents, has hit a new low. "We're used to the downward spiral," Xinhua News Agency reporters Li Zheng and Yue Dongxing wrote. "But when we saw Wang Dalei's rude curse on his microblog and his I-don't-care attitude, we're still shocked. A man with such a low moral standard should be despised by the public, how does he deserve to wear the national flag on his chest?"

One of the few positives from Monday's defeat was the lack of any clashes between Chinese and Japanese fans. Political tensions between the countries have been high after a collision in September between a Chinese fishing boat and Japanese government patrol vessels near a chain of disputed islands.

Security was high at the game on Monday but Chinese deputy chef de mission Xiao Tian said: "I don't think there will be any problem in other matches between China and Japan. There won't be any tensions, just fair play. I'm sure if Japanese athletes perform well our spectators will applaud."

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