Fabio Capello is the latest high-profile import to China following rocketing player deals which reportedly put Ezequiel Lavezzi and Carlos Tevez among the world's best-paid footballers |
Former England, Real
Madrid and Russia manager Fabio Capello was named on Sunday to lead China's
Jiangsu Suning, one of the biggest coaching signings yet in a spending binge by
the Chinese domestic league.
AFP
report continues:
Jiangsu
Suning said the disciplinarian Italian would "bring some of the world's
most advanced ideas and methods to drive the elevation of Jiangsu football, and
Chinese football overall".
Capello
is the latest high-profile import to China following rocketing player deals
which reportedly put Ezequiel Lavezzi and Carlos Tevez among the world's
best-paid footballers and saw Chinese clubs smash the Asian transfer record
five times within 12 months.
Jiangsu
Suning have been particularly free-spending, splashing out on high-priced
imports like Brazilians Ramires and Alex Teixeira.
But
a disappointing season was compounded by elimination from the AFC Champions
League two weeks ago, and they are now flirting with relegation from China's
top tier.
Jiangsu
announced the departure of South Korean coach Choi Yong-Soo shortly after their
Champions League exit.
- Glittering career -
Capello,
now 70, brings a glittering resume.
He
won five Serie A titles -- four with AC Milan and one with Roma -- plus two La
Liga crowns with Real Madrid. He also won the Champions League during his time
with Milan.
Capello
was appointed England manager in December 2007, signing a lucrative contract
with a brief to halt years of English footballing under-achievement.
His
hard-line disciplinarian approach reaped impressive results during a honeymoon
period, when a revitalized England qualified for the 2010 World Cup with ease.
But
Capello's first taste of management at a major international tournament ended
in humiliation as England crashed out with a 4-1 defeat against old rivals
Germany in the last 16.
He
survived the storm of criticism following that failure and guided England to
qualification for Euro 2012.
But
the Italian resigned before the tournament after disagreeing with the Football
Association over the decision to take the captaincy from John Terry, who was
facing racism allegations.
Appointed
to the Russia job after Euro 2012, Capello oversaw an impressive qualifying
campaign for Brazil, reaching the World Cup finals for the first time in 12
years.
The
Russians were knocked out in the group stages, however, and Capello was let go
the following year amid a rocky qualifying campaign for Euro 2016.
Jiangsu
said that besides coaching the first team, Capello would be involved in the
club's overall management and oversee training of coaches and youth players.
Jiangsu
are one of China's richest clubs and they are controlled by retailing giant
Suning Commerce Group.
Last
year, the company bought a majority stake in Inter Milan.
Jiangsu
were runners-up to Guangzhou Evergrande in last year's Chinese Super League,
earning a berth in the Champions League, but are now second to last in the
16-team domestic competition.
Capello
joins the club just as the Chinese Football Association has stepped up its
fight against spiralling big-money deals for foreign players, which have raised
concerns over the solvency of clubs.
Last
month it announced prohibitive new curbs just ahead of the summer transfer
window, which opens June 19.
The
CFA said loss-making clubs which pay a transfer fee for a new player must
invest an equivalent amount in a government-run fund set up to cultivate
Chinese youth players.
The association also said that starting in the 2018 season, clubs will be required to field an equivalent number of foreign players and under-23 Chinese players in each game.
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