Mikel joins Chinese gold rush with move to Tianjin
NIGERIA’S John Obi Mikel has become the latest big-name player to join the Chinese Super League gold rush after leaving Chelsea for Tianjin Teda.
Mikel, who failed to make a single appearance for Antonio Conte’s side this season, had a medical in the north China port city some 130 kilometers from Beijing on Thursday and the Asian Football Confederation confirmed the deal yesterday.
“As you will know, I haven’t featured as much this season as I would have liked and at 29 I still have many years in the game ahead of me,” the midfielder said in the statement.
“I’m delighted to be joining Tianjin TEDA FC, at a time that (the Chinese) league is really taking off, and I look forward to helping them continue to grow on and off the pitch in the next few years.”
The 29-year-old, who spent more than a decade at Stamford Bridge, was given a free transfer by the London club and would earn 140,000 pounds (US$173,432) a week in China, according to local media reports.
After joining Chelsea in 2006 from Norway’s Lyn Oslo as a 19-year-old, Mikel was part of a squad that won a UEFA Champions League crown, the Europa League, two English Premier League titles and four FA Cups.
Mikel joins Serbia midfielder Nemanja Gudelj, who moved to Tianjin from Dutch club Ajax Amsterdam on Thursday.
Chinese clubs have made several high-profile signings over the last month with Argentina striker Carlos Tevez moving to Shanghai Greenland Shenhua for a reported 84 million euros (US$87.65 million).
Less than a week later, Brazil midfielder Oscar joined crosstown rival Shanghai SIPG from Chelsea in a deal believed to be worth 60 million euros.
At the end of December, Cristiano Ronaldo’s agent said the World Player of the Year had turned down the chance to leave Real Madrid for an unnamed Chinese club for a transfer fee of 300 million euros.
Amid the spending spree, the country’s General Administration of Sport described the excess of some Chinese clubs as “a grave phenomenon” on Thursday, ordering a clampdown on the mega sums being shelled out on foreign stars after the signings of Oscar and Tevez, reportedly now the highest paid player in the world commanding 38 million euros a season.
There has to be action against “irrational investment” and the government will “regulate and restrain high-priced signings and make reasonable restrictions on players’ high incomes”, a General Administration of Sport spokesman warned.
Insolvent clubs could be kicked out of the CSL, which has been spending more than the EPL in recent transfer windows to draw top names.
Many fans on social media agreed that the millions of dollars in fees and wages would be better spent developing home-grown talent.
China’s national team is currently ranked 82nd in the world — just below the Caribbean island nation of St Kitts and Nevis, population less than 60,000.
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