Current location - Quotes Website - Famous sayings - Former national football player: If you don’t have a mine at home, it’s better not to practice football.
Former national football player: If you don’t have a mine at home, it’s better not to practice football.

" Xu Liang said... There was a time when I didn't enter the youth stage. To be honest, I was still passionate... When I came into contact with something, I walked around, From the national team to local clubs, to teenagers"... Now I, really, I say you should stop watching Chinese football! Parents of children who are playing football, I suggest you. Eat enough. Don’t worry if you don’t have any connections at home, just save some time and do something.”

"Really, I understand, this is really at freezing point now. In our time, it has not reached this point, it really has not reached this point..."

… …

This is not the first time Xu Liang has criticized Chinese football - Xu Liang, as a member of the Chinese football circle, has been selected for the national team, and free kicks are also one of his unique skills. In the years after retirement, Xu Liang really wanted to continue his football career. For example, he wanted to take the coaching certificate before, but his name was not in the Football Association's training class, so Xu Liang strongly criticized the Football Association. Today, Xu Liang is more engaged in football commentary and online live broadcasts.

For example, Dong Lu and Xu Liang are also very close. Xu Liang once coached young players on the East Road. Although Dong Lu once said, "Whoever criticizes Chinese football will be anxious," Xu Liang, as his good friend, has also criticized Chinese football many times.

This time, Xu Liang pointed directly at the problem of Chinese football youth training, saying, "If there is no mine at home, don't let your children play football" and called on fans not to watch the football - imagine that. How chilling is it that as a former national football player, you can say such hopeless words?

Some people may say: Xu Liang once said, "If there are no landmines at home, don't play football." Isn't this a slap in the face to his good friend Dong Lu? ——Because Dong Lu once claimed that "my football player does not charge a penny from his parents"!

However, the origin of Dong Lu's youth was not that he trained his children when they did not know how to play football, but that he used the status of the Tsinghua High School to recruit children who were already famous all over the world, thus forming The so-called "Chinese football teenagers" - and what did these children go through from starting to play football to becoming famous? But this is beyond Dong Lu's control.

So, is Xu Liang aggrieved because the Football Association did not allow him to take the coaching certificate? This factor cannot be said to be absent, but it is not all. Xu Liang has listed many problems in the Chinese football circle in his previous criticisms. He even said that he has no way to serve the country.

Recently, youth football matches at the Guangdong Provincial Games were exposed to suspected match-fixing - even youth football is affected by these problems. Can it not be chilling? This is happening, and seems to support Xu Liang's criticism. Maybe more than just venting personal anger and firing cannons?

People often say, "Love is what you love, hate is what you hate" - in fact, as a football player, is Xu Liang really as disappointed in Chinese football as he seems? Maybe not?

Because there is a famous saying, "Criticism is a person's alternative hymn." Xu Liang's fierce attack on Chinese football actually showed his true concern and deep concern for Chinese football. Is this seemingly excessive criticism an alternative manifestation of his deep love for Chinese football? [Original comment: Yu said it is still closed]