Skip to content

JOBUZO

  • News
  • Indonesia
  • Toggle search form
Amateur football leagues win over cynical Chinese fans

Amateur football leagues win over cynical Chinese fans

Posted on 27 July 2025 By jobuzo

On a summer’s day in the city of Suzhou, about 40,000 people crowded into a stadium while thousands more gathered by public screens to watch China’s hottest sport — amateur football.

A balm for cynical fans drained by years of corruption and ineptitude in the professional game, the amateur leagues springing up around China have drawn millions of viewers online, boosted domestic tourism to lesser-known locales and sparked good-natured rivalry between cities.

At the sold-out match in searing heat in Suzhou, near Shanghai, the home crowd jumped out of their seats and cheered when 17-year-old Kou Cheng scored against Yangzhou city in the second minute.

Many wore bright red jerseys and T-shirts emblazoned with the characters for “Suzhou” and used paper fans to cool themselves.

“Compared to other competitions, the fans here are more passionate, and even if they don’t understand football, the atmosphere is lively,” Qian Chunyan, a 35-year-old Suzhou resident, told AFP.

The tournament first took off in the eastern province of Jiangsu — where Suzhou is located — earlier this year.

News :<div>12 weeks' jail for school IT support technician who took upskirt videos of teachers</div>

The live-streamed matches soon drew millions of spectators on social media, putting smaller provincial cities on the domestic tourism map.

That, in turn, has created a local consumption boom, giving cities that host matches a much-needed reprieve from years of sluggish spending.

The games, initially sponsored by local businesses such as barbecue restaurants, have now attracted backing from big-name companies like e-commerce platforms Alibaba and JD.com.

‘Pure football’

Fans of local amateur leagues told AFP they were drawn to matches by the simplicity of football not weighed down by the vast sums of money the professional game involves.

“With widespread public participation and minimal corporate involvement, it’s a more pure form of football,” Wang Xiangshuo, a Suzhou football fan, told AFP.

“Winning or losing doesn’t matter, purity is most important.”

News :Migrant acquitted in first trial over US border military zones

Professional football clubs in China, even in its top Super League, have been plagued by match-fixing and gambling scandals.

The national team’s abysmal performances at international tournaments often draw scorn and abuse from social media users.

President Xi Jinping has said he wants China to win the World Cup one day.

But the men’s team are ranked 94th in the world by FIFA this year and they have only qualified once for the World Cup, in 2002, when they lost all three of their games without scoring a goal.

Players in provincial leagues range from high school students to civil servants, including village Communist Party secretary Dai Hu, whose on-field appearances saw him featured by state news agency Xinhua.

Local amateur tournaments are “a great model for community football, allowing every citizen to have their own home team”, Jin Shan, a football expert at the Beijing Academy of Social Sciences, told AFP.

“It brings football closer to the general public.”

Tourism boom

Local tourism has seen a boost from the league’s popularity too.

Since it began in May, the Jiangsu amateur tournament — affectionately dubbed the “Su Super League” — has accounted for a growth in tourism spending in six cities across the province of more than 14 percent, according to state-run broadcaster CGTN.

Chen Tianshu, a souvenirs manufacturer in Nantong city, told AFP her colleagues rushed to make enamel badges with team logos and ice cream popsicles in the shape of local symbols after seeing branded tote bags sell out in a neighbouring city.

“The ice cream sold very well, with the first batch of a thousand pieces already almost sold out,” said Chen, whose company comprises just a dozen people.

“Our performance in the Su Super League is giving Nantong a rare moment to shine,” she said.

Other provinces eager for their share of the amateur football boom are following in Jiangsu’s footsteps, with southern Jiangxi province hosting a two-stage tournament this month.

Social media trends in China often lead to unexpected locations receiving sudden surges of visitors.

Travellers flocked to the industrial town of Zibo in northern China in 2023, after videos featuring its regional barbecue style went viral.

“This year’s success (of the Jiangsu league) is an unexpected delight,” souvenir maker Chen told AFP.

“I hope this will be a long-lasting tradition.”

© 2025 AFP

Amateur football leagues win over cynical Chinese fans


News

Post navigation

Previous Post: Three decades and a pile of notebooks: The beat writer who chronicled Ichiro’s career
Next Post: A man accused of stabbing 11 people at a Walmart is in Michigan authorities’ custody

Related Posts

Thailand and Cambodia agree to temporary ceasefire Thailand and Cambodia agree to temporary ceasefire News
Google Ventures doubles down on dev tool startup Blacksmith just 4 months after its seed round Google Ventures doubles down on dev tool startup Blacksmith just 4 months after its seed round News
Walmart-backed PhonePe winds down its Pincode app in yet another e-commerce step back Walmart-backed PhonePe winds down its Pincode app in yet another e-commerce step back News

Latest

  • ‘Top Gun: Maverick’ Actor James Handy Allegedly Stabbed to Death by Girlfriend’s Son
  • Mira Murati steps back into the spotlight, carefully
  • Founders Fund launches game show starring Sam Altman, Palmer Luckey, and other tech elites
  • Thongloun revisits his alma mater in Beijing
  • Tencent’s AI chief dismisses lag concerns, says race a ‘long-term game’
  • Iran’s IRGC says Israel must immediately stop attacks on Lebanon
  • Brunei’s ‘Instagrammer’ prince named foreign minister in cabinet reshuffle
  • Influencer offers ₹1.4 lakh for missing dog, finds out pet was sold for ₹2,400 and eaten
  • House passes bill to aid Ukraine and sanction Russia in sign of impatience with Trump’s approach to the war
  • Crow-Armstrong’s RBI single in the bottom of the 9th lifts Cubs past the Athletics 7-6

Copyright © 2025 JOBUZO. Disclaimers | Privacy Policies

Powered by PressBook Masonry Blogs