Argentine
striker Carlos Tevez (L) poses with his No. 32 shirt of his new club Shanghai
Shenhua during a press conference in Shanghai on January 21, 2017
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Argentine forward Carlos
Tevez said Saturday he will have to earn every yuan of his reportedly
world-leading salary as he officially joined Chinese Super League side Shanghai
Shenhua, declaring it his "new home."
Tevez,
who arrived to a rapturous fan welcome Thursday, is arguably the
highest-profile foreign player to ever play in China, one of a slew of overseas
stars lured by increasingly lavish sums that have triggered a backlash from
Chinese authorities.
The
32-year-old was introduced to local media Saturday and held his first workout
with the club, sealing a deal that Argentine media said earns him around €38
million (US$41 million) a year.
That
would make him the world's top-grossing footballer, out-pacing even megastars
like compatriot Lionel Messi and Portugal's Cristiano Ronaldo.
Tevez
declined to comment on his contract, but acknowledged the circumstances brought
dauntingly high expectations.
"There
will probably be pressure, but because I love football very much I will use my
passion for the sport. Even if there will be pressure I will forget about it on
the field," he told reporters.
"I
know the CSL is getting tougher and tougher year after year, and this year will
be extremely intense," he said, speaking in Spanish through a Chinese interpreter.
He
called the coming season "a very big challenge".
A
goal-scoring dynamo throughout his career for such heavyweights as Manchester
United, Manchester City, Juventus, and most recently Argentina's Boca Juniors,
Tevez arrived amid fierce debate in China over foreign player imports.
- Breaking the bank -
The
deep-pocketed big corporations behind Super League clubs have broken the Asian
transfer fee record five times over the past year, a spree that also has
brought in Brazilians Oscar, Hulk, Alex Teixeira, and Ramires, and Colombia's
Jackson Martinez.
Oscar
arrived from Chelsea earlier in January for a reported €60-million (US$63
million) fee, a new record for an Asian team.
Argentine
striker Carlos Tevez takes part in his first training session with his new club
Shanghai Shenhua in Shanghai on January 21, 2017
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But
China has moved to break up the party, with the sports ministry earlier this
month voicing fears that teams were spending "irrationally" and
threatening to take action.
Calls
also have grown for money to be instead channelled towards raising the
disappointing level of Chinese football.
Despite
its mammoth population of 1.3 billion people, China's national team is ranked
just 81st globally, one notch below Saint Kitts and Nevis, population 50,000.
This
past week, the Chinese Football Association cut the number of foreign players
that teams could field from four to no more than three per match, and said it
was planning to impose salary caps.
Shenhua
chairman Wu Xiaohui deflected financial questions, but said Tevez's pay was
"not as high as the rumours".
He
denied the team had spent recklessly and said the sudden crackdown had affected
clubs' preparations for the season, which opens in March.
"But
what's done is done and we can only obey and deal with it according to our
situation," he said.
With
his nearly every utterance cheered by blue-clad Shenhua fans, Tevez likewise
declined comment on the money controversy, saying he was focused on winning.
The
warm welcome in Shanghai so far "made me realise that I have a new
home," said Tevez, who later took to a nearby pitch for a training session
with the side.
Shenhua finished fourth in the Super League last year, qualifying for a berth in this year's Asian Champions League. It will be skippered by coach Gustavo Poyet, a former Uruguay international who was hired in November.
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