As China’s most notorious soccer manager, Wang Po seemingly would stop at little to fix matches — drugging players, threatening coaches and withholding pay from uncooperative players.
Those were amid allegations that prompted his recent arrest.
The claims, spread widely in the Chinese media and Internet, are the latest to cloud the game in China, where soccer is widely popular but the national team punches far below its weight internationally.
Now that lowly international record — Olympic powerhouse China is ranked No. 97 in the world, sandwiched between Albania and Cuba — has spurred an overdue cleanup of the professional domestic league, exposing Wang’s alleged schemes. Detained amid a crackdown, the details of which remain murky, he now faces likely criminal charges for gambling, bribery and other crimes.
Reformers say getting rid of Wang and others is key to making the professional league competitive again, progress they hope will in turn boost China’s national team.
“People threw matches while others made bets because they thought no one would come after them,” Beijing sports commentator Liang Yan said on a recent televised panel discussion. “Grabbing Wang Po and others like him has to be a warning that if you rig matches, you won’t get away with it.”
Gambling allegations are as old as Chinese professional soccer, but intensified after the establishment of the top-tier Chinese Super League in 2004. With China’s rigid media restrictions being relatively looser when it comes to sports, newspapers soon filled their pages with accounts of bribed referees in what became known as the “black whistle” scandal.
Around the same time, China’s national team fell into a slump following their inaugural World Cup appearance in 2002. China failed to qualify for both the 2006 competition in Germany and next year’s World Cup in South Africa, as its ranking slid to an all-time low of 108 from its historic high of 37 in 1998.
Soccer’s slump was made all the more galling because it came as China’s athletes were dominating other international events, capped by topping the gold medal tally at last year’s Beijing Olympics.
Vice President Xi Jinping (習近平) mused on a recent trip to Germany that China was capable of winning gold in any sport but soccer.
“We’ve got to resolve to do something to raise it up, but this is going to take a long time,” Xi said.
Typically of China, where a single word from high up can overcome years of inertia and opposition, Xi’s statement seems to have triggered fresh reform efforts.
Right on cue, the national police went public last month with the first revelations about a major crackdown, turning Wang Po overnight into the face of the problems in the domestic league. Wang was one of just four suspects named in the reports, out of 16 former players and officials detained.
The media reports portray Wang as a consummate conman, an ex-soldier who called himself “the colonel” and wore a bogus army uniform while selling his schemes under the protection of powerful friends. They said he was forced to flee his native northeast in 1996 after embezzling funds from an industrial zone he started and operated, leaving behind massive debts.
Soon after, Wang reportedly found a new graft in soccer, serving as general manager of the Shaanxi Guoli team in northern China while fixing matches and raking in profits by betting against his own team.
In one of the most damning allegations against Wang, Shaanxi’s former goalkeeper, Jiang Hong, said in a recent interview with national broadcaster CCTV that Wang spiked his beer with the amphetamine ecstasy ahead of a 2002 match in Wuhan.
The following year, Wang engineered a 5-1 loss to a team from Sichuan, allegedly reaping a 70 million yuan (US$10 million) payday, the newspaper Southern Weekend reported.
To make his schemes work, Wang had to exclude uncooperative players and lock the team’s foreign coach in his hotel, the newspaper said. Other players were induced to take part by withholding their salaries or cutting them in on a share, it said.
Unsurprisingly, Shaanxi fell in the tables and eventually went bankrupt. Wang is also blamed with destroying the prospects of another four teams with which he was involved.
However, some commentators have questioned whether, given estimates of up to 100 billion yuan gambled each year on the Chinese league, Wang and the others arrested in the last crackdown can only be considered minor players, sports blogger Li Chengpeng said.
“These 16 are nothing but little bugs. What then do we do about the big scary tigers?” Li wrote in a recent blog entry on his blog.
SIBLING RIVALRY: Marc Marquez was locked in a duel with his little brother, falling behind at one point before recovering for his first season-opening victory since 2014 Six-time world champion Marc Marquez yesterday won the MotoGP season-opening Thailand Grand Prix to complete a dominant debut weekend at his new Ducati Lenovo Team, having also romped to Saturday’s sprint. The Spanish great took the 26-lap grand prix by 1.732 seconds for his 63rd MotoGP victory from younger brother Alex Marquez, who is still seeking a first checkered flag, with Francesco Bagnaia third to complete an all-Ducati podium. It completed a perfect weekend for Marc Marquez, who took pole position, the sprint victory and the grand prix win for a maximum 37 points to open the 22-leg 2025 campaign. He led from
Team Taiwan avoided missing the World Baseball Classic (WBC) for the first time by defeating Spain 6-3 in a do-or-die game in Taipei last night. After narrowly escaping a mercy-rule loss to Spain in the WBC Qualifiers opener on Friday last week, the home team — winner of last year's WBSC Premier12 title three months ago — got their revenge against the 2023 European champions at Taipei Dome. "It felt quite different from when we won the Premier12," Taiwan captain Chen Chieh-hsien (陳傑憲) said after the game, recalling the ups and downs the team has experienced over the past few days. Unlike in
LONG TIME COMING: With the addition of Marcus Smart, the Washington Wizards finally held a team to under 100 points, the last team this season to do so The Detroit Pistons on Monday won their seventh straight game in the NBA with in-form Cade Cunningham making 32 points and grabbing nine rebounds in a 106-97 win over the Los Angeles Clippers. The Pistons, who are in the playoff position, moved to 32-26, their best record at this stage of a season for 17 years. It was an all-round effort from Detroit with Tobias Harris adding 20 points and Jalen Duren making 19 rebounds along with his 12 points. It was a tight contest until Detroit pulled away late in the third quarter to tie their longest winning streak since the 2014-2015
AC Milan’s slender hopes of reaching next season’s UEFA Champions League took another hit on Thursday with a 2-1 defeat at Bologna which left them eight points from Serie A’s top four. Sergio Conceicao’s team sit eighth, some way behind fourth-placed Juventus after losing an entertaining contest at the Stadio Renato Dall’Ara, a match which was rescheduled from October last year due to torrential rain and flooding. Swathes of the Emilia-Romagna region in northern Italy, much of which is fertile agricultural land, had been left under water following a massive autumn downpour. Dan Ndoye prodded home the decisive goal in the 82nd minute