Shanghai school's girls' football team hit the highs | Forum

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xysoom Oct 7 '19

The Shanghai Meilong Middle School’s girls football team have become an overnight sensation after they won the Norway Cup 2017 by scoring 61 goals in seven matches and losing one.Children football in Shanghai

An online video clip showing coach Qian Hui yelling from the pitch side and asking the girls to show respect to their opponents, Blindheim IL, after they had pumped in seven goals against them in the final has became internet sensation.

Norway Cup 2017 is the world’s largest football tournament for children and young people between 10 to 19 years old.

Sun Yajie, a seventh grader, told Shanghai Daily that it was the first time they were participating in the tournament and were glad to return as champions.

“We were a little bit nervous and not familiar with the sloping pitch,” she said. “But after we played for sometime and got one goal, we found our feet and were more relaxed. Then things moved smoothly.”

“We should not play the peacock,” said coach Qian, who is also known as the godmother of women’s football in China. “The girls from other countries were at uneven levels, while our students receive training every day and will possibly turn professional players in the future.”Qian, who has been training girls to play football for 24 years, pointed out that in most soccer-playing countries, children play football by themselves but girls in China only play under schools’ organization.

“When we were in Norway, we could see football fields everywhere and almost everybody could play football,” she said. “But in China, the number of girls playing football is relatively small, leading to difficulty in selecting players.”

Qian recalled the tough days when she began her career as a campus football coach in Shanghai. She used to be a professional player in Henan Province but studied at Shanghai University of Sport after ending her playing days.

Her first job after graduation was as football teacher at Jinshajiang Road Primary School in Putuo District. Before her, there was no coach for girls at the school. Some of them would play with the boys.

Qian had only eight girls in her team at first. So she checked out local kindergartens to select potential players. It was not easy to persuade the kindergarten runners and parents to send their children to work with her. Some kindergartens even shut the door on them.

“Sometimes when we saw kids with great potential, their parents were unwilling to let their children take part in sport,” she said. “Some were pretty straightforward, saying that our work was nonsense as Chinese football was horrible.”

Qian admitted that most of the team members were children of migrant workers who wanted their children to attend local public schools and looked for ways to stay back in Shanghai.

Most of these families lived in the suburban areas and the children had to stay at the school. It was not a boarding school and so Qian needed beds — she got the ones abandoned by universities or hotels.

They lived in the gymnasium and on the playground in summer. They bathed in public bathhouses nearby. After they pulled through these difficulties, new problems cropped up. Middle schools refused to accept them. Qian had cooperated with several schools, but most of her work had ended abruptly.

Only Meilong Middle School welcomed them, but it came with costs. Being a private school, the tuition fees were high — over 3,000 yuan (US$451) for each semester and it was hard for the migrant families.

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