Hong Kong is a metropolis with a kick

HONG KONG—Scanning the sports sections of the two leading English newspapers here, South China Morning Post and China Daily, as I did the past week, one will find that Hong Kong’s five most popular sports are: Number one, soccer. No. 2: the sport with 11 players per team on-field. Three, the game whose favorite Sun.Star columnists are Mike Limpag and Noel Villaflor. Four: it’s an activity played on a rectangular-shaped grass field with goalies on each wing. Fifth, it’s also called… surprise… football!

Yes. In this Chinese self-governing territory that is one of the richest locations on earth (HK’s GDP- per capita of $43,800 is the world’s 14th highest while our beloved country, at $3,300, languishes at No. 162), I ask: what is the one game that is followed the most—well, excluding the “gambling sport” of horse-racing? Kicking. Yup, the sport of the feet. Take the China Daily. Last Thursday, a giant photo of Ronaldo, sporting a thumbs up sign, decorates the sports section. The title reads, “Ronaldo opens Real account,” and the seven-paragraph story explains how the man who was paid 94 million euros converted a penalty for Real Madrid’s 4-2 win over Liga de Quito.

Beside that article is “Former great has hope for Chinese soccer,” a 22-paragraph-long piece on Terry Venables, the 66-year-old England soccer manager, who said that “the most populous nation in the world should pay more attention to its youth.” Below that write-up is another soccer story: “Ancelotti plans to breathe new life in Chelsea.” All soccer-talk, all the time.

Last July 28, it’s five major China Daily football stories. Sure, Michael Phelps was featured, tennis star Dinara Safina’s picture was enlarged and Lance Armstrong was glorified, but all these were supporting actors to the main star: Soccer.

“Rooney takes helm as Man U fan favorite,” in full color, speaks of Manchester United’s recent visit to China and how, as Chen Xiangfeng, the newspaper writer who penned the story put it, “Wayne Rooney is one of the biggest reasons why the Red Devils’ fame has continued to soar in China without Ronaldo.” Wayne Rooney’s full-body photo is, of course, found at the article’s center.

There’s “China’s malaise saddens Charlton,” where Man U great Bobby Charlton said, “What really saddens me is that a country the size of China doesn’t have the wherewithal to qualify on a regular basis for the World Cup.” Interesting point. He looks at Japan and the two Koreas (perennial World Cup qualifiers) and says, “I think there has to be a longer look at where Chinese football is going. I have so many friends here and I am desperate to see them smiling and not being miserable.”

That was last Tuesday. The day before, it’s seven more articles—all spelling this word: F-O-O-T-B-A-L-L. There’s “Maradona unhappy to face Russia before big Brazil match,” there’s “Ibrahimovic exit only weakens Inter,” there’s “Big carrot dangled in front of Beijing soccer club for trophy victory” plus four others. Whew.

On to the South China Morning Post… Last Friday, the discussion was on Franck Ribery’s price tag of “at least US$140 million.” Above that piece was a giant, full-color picture of Scott McDonald of the Celtics.

Newspapers only? No, no. Surveying the TV networks, my wife Jasmin and I spotted three local channels devoted to sports—all soccer.

Shopping? The same. On Park Lane, the famous strip in Tsim Sha Tsui, if you enter Royal Sporting Goods or Marathon Sports or Nike, the most prominently-displayed items are of the you-know-what sport.

Same with what you see along the famous district called Causeway Bay: a colossal billboard, one of several by adidas, where a humongous blue soccer shoe of Lionel Messi (the F50i) is on giant display.

My thinking? If only Cebu, I’m sure Mike and Noel and the thousands of fanatics would ask, were like HK.

Published
Categorized as Football
John Pages

By John Pages

I've been a sports columnist since 1994. First, in The Freeman newspaper under "Tennis Is My Game." Then, starting in 2003, with Sun.Star Cebu under the name "Match Point." Happy reading!

3 comments

  1. It sounds like my kind of heaven John. I will be in Hong Kong next February so I will be ready to shop till I drop. It is the only time heaven will host the devils I suppose with the red variety there. How good is that John.

  2. Hey Graeme! Good to hear from you. Hong Kong in February next year? Wow, we might see each other there. We’ll be a big group joining the HK Marathon. You’ll love the soccer atmosphere there!

  3. When is the marathon? ActuallyI just checked the itinerary and we will be leaving SYDNEY Feb ruary 20 on a cruise that will get to Hong Kong on March 11 and stay there for 4 days before flying back to Sydney. It was supposed to be my mum and myself on the cruise but with her untimely passing last July 26 I will stiull go on the cruise and Tessie will join me. It was really the wish of mum to go on the cruise so we will take her ashes
    with us and scatter them as we sail into Hong Kong harbor at the end of HER cruise. It will be bittersweet. Sad that she wont be there to enjoy the cruise sweet because tess and I will call it a belated honeymoon. We have been married twice but never a honeymoon. What could possibly prevent newlyweds from having a honeymoon? You guessed it FOOTBALL.
    After each ceremony (ten years apart) I had football practice the next morning at 6 am so no time for a honeymoon. hahaha. Life goes on with or without a honeymoon but Tessie lets me know from time to time that I owe her TWO honeymoons. So come February my utang will be cut in half.

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