Brazil: Chinese footballers return to country for extra polish
Arriving in Brazil, Chinese footballer Long Yushuo took on the more 
easily pronounced name Thomas, but it's the locals' skills with the ball
 that he's really hoping to adopt.Arriving in Brazil, Chinese footballer Long Yushuo took on the more easily pronounced name Thomas, but it's the locals' skills with the ball that he's really hoping to adopt.
Thomas, 16, is one of a squad of 
youth players from Chinese team Shandong Luneng dispatched to polish 
their game at Desportivo Brasil club in Porto Feliz, near Sao Paulo, 
which Shandong bought in 2014.
The idea 
is that the 22,400-mile (36,000-kilometer) round trip will enable these 
youngsters to bring back something that all the money and desire in 
China's burgeoning football scene cannot otherwise get -- Brazilian 
footballing magic.
When Thomas and 
another 22 players from the under-16 side arrived from Jinan, capital of
 Shandong province, in April, they knew little of Brazil.
Along
 with football practice, they study Portuguese in the quiet town of 
50,000 people. But Thomas, who picked his name in honor of Bayern 
Munich's Thomas Muller, is clear about what his principal lesson has 
been in Porto Feliz.
"Technique," he said, alongside his teammates, who all wore Shandong's orange strip.
Money chasing talent
China
 may not have much footballing pedigree but, encouraged by President Xi 
Jinping and lavish spending, it is working to catch up quickly.
Luneng,
 a subsidiary of the chief national electricity company, is one of the 
big investors in the expansion plan, which has made China the world's 
fifth biggest transfer market in 2016. Of all the foreign imports to the
 Super League, the 21 Brazilian players comprise the biggest contingent.
The
 national team, though, has yet to see much benefit. China lags in 60th 
place in FIFA rankings and did not qualify for next year's World Cup.
So 
China's strategists decided to try to unpick the secrets of Brazilian 
football so that the next generation can get the missing edge.
"This
 exchange was created so that they can achieve a similar quality to that
 of the players here," Desportivo Brasil technical coordinator Rodrigo 
Pignataro told AFP.
"They are very disciplined, but they lack nous, cheekiness and flexibility and autonomy. That's what the Brazilian boys have."
Desportivo Brasil is not an ordinary club, but more like a training academy, so the Chinese are in good hands.
The
 club hosts another five Chinese players from the under-20 team as well 
as 130 Brazilian players ranging in age from 14 to the club's own third 
regional division professional team, all seeking the excellence that 
will let them break through to the top level.
Patience
For the youngsters in Porto Feliz, where Brazilian and Chinese flags fly side by side, the future should be bright.
"This
 is the group the Chinese government wants to serve as the core of a 
team for the Tokyo 2020 Olympics and the World Cup in 2022. We have a 
heavy responsibility," Pignataro said.
After
 swotting over history books and other academic classes in the mornings,
 the main focus is getting out onto the training field.
Vitinho,
 a skillful forward, has done three seasons in Porto Feliz and is now 
part of the under-20 team. Given how integrated the 18-year-old is -- 
even becoming a fan of Brazilian funk music -- few remember that his 
real name is Liu Chaoyang.
"I want to play in Europe, but I need to work a lot to improve," he said in fluent Portuguese.
The
 same might be said for the whole Chinese experiment, but Zhao Shuo, a 
25-year-old assistant coach, says he's ready to take the time.
He's
 spent two months following his Brazilian counterparts around and says 
the only area where he might have the advantage is in the iron 
discipline associated with Asian teams.
"Football
 needs time because it's a kind of education and education is not a 
short-term thing. Maybe we will need 10 or 20 years or more," he said in
 English, pointing to Japan as an example.
"We have to learn from our neighbors and be patient," he said, never taking his eyes off the action on the field.
    
    
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