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    The Parable of Inter Milan

    Fast money from China led a storied team back to the top of Italian soccer. Now the money has dried up, and its title-winning squad is breaking apart.This is a preview of the On Soccer With Rory Smith newsletter, which is now reserved for Times subscribers. Sign up to get it in your inbox weekly.The first alarm rang in February, a warning from thousands of miles away.Jiangsu Suning was one of the mainstays of that strange period, five or six years ago, when soccer awoke — almost overnight — to discover that China had arrived, its pockets bottomless and its ambitions unchecked, intent on inverting the world.At first, Europe saw this new horizon as it sees everything: as a market. China’s corporate-backed clubs were, as Turkey’s and Russia’s had been years before, a convenience and a curiosity, a place where they could offload unwanted players from bloated squads.And then, when the Chinese teams kept coming back, attempting to coax away not the supporting cast but the headline acts, Europe realized that this was something else: a takeover. China’s clubs were buying not just players, but things that were more valuable, things that made them a threat: interest and prestige and relevance.There was, suddenly, something of a backlash, a degree of pearl-clutching and garment-rending at the very idea that a new league could just come along and drive up prices, an approach that no European league would ever dream of adopting. There were fears that the Chinese Super League would distort the market so much that it would drive European clubs to the brink of financial destruction, a job Europe had long been capable of doing itself, thank you.Jiangsu was in the thick of that, along with all of the other names of that era: Guangzhou Evergrande, Shanghai S.I.P.G. and all the rest. It was Jiangsu that signed Ramires, a Champions League-winning midfielder in the prime of his career, from Chelsea. It was Jiangsu that outbid Liverpool to sign Alex Teixeira, a player Jürgen Klopp had identified as his first-choice reinforcement after taking over at Anfield.It proved a bubble, of course. The world’s best players never did make it to China. But, occasionally, one of the Chinese teams would try. In the summer of 2019, Jiangsu approached Real Madrid to inquire about the possibility of signing Gareth Bale. It intended to pay him, according to reports, more than $1 million a week. Bale prevaricated, and decided against the move. It proved a wise decision. Eighteen months later, in February of this year, not long after winning the Chinese title for the first time in its history, Jiangsu ceased to exist.This was the warning. Jiangsu was not the Suning conglomerate’s only soccer operation: The company had also owned a majority stake in Inter Milan since 2016, installing Steven Zhang — son of the company’s principal — as the youngest president in the club’s history. Suning’s arrival had been greeted as Inter’s salvation: a chance, at last, to restore the team to the ranks of first Italy’s, and then Europe’s, elite, to give it the financial firepower to compete with the superclubs.In February, Suning seemed set to deliver, at last, on its promise. Inter was marching toward a first Serie A title since 2010. It had the best coach in the country, Antonio Conte. It had the finest player in the league, Romelu Lukaku. It had a squad constructed with no expense spared, brimming with bright young talent and seasoned old heads.The collapse of Jiangsu, though, hinted at what was to come. Suning had cited financial difficulties as the cause of the Chinese club’s dissolution, though the suspicion remains that the decision had a political element: The company had vowed to concentrate on its “core” retail business, dispensing with other investments, in line with China’s abiding state policy.Jiangsu Suning won the Chinese Super League title in November 2020. Four months later, the club ceased to exist.Agence France-Presse — Getty ImagesSuning had already sought a bridging loan from Oaktree Capital — an investment management firm specializing in distressed assets, a description which would not have made Inter fans especially confident — to see out the Italian season. “I hope what happened to us does not happen to Inter,” the former Italy striker Éder Martins, who had played for both clubs, said.Inter has been spared that fate, of course, but that is scant solace for its fans. It was only at the start of May that tens of thousands of Inter fans poured onto the streets of Milan, in defiance of the social distancing regulations then still in place, to celebrate confirmation of its Serie A title. Zhang, on the ground in Italy for the first time in months, vowed that his company remained committed to Inter for the “mid-to-long term.”Since then, the championship team has unraveled at lightning speed. First, Conte left, as he had tried to do last year, with ominous mention of the fact that his “project had not changed” as he did so: The club’s, it went unsaid, very much had. Then Achraf Hakimi, the player whose acquisition and performance had lifted Inter above all of its domestic rivals, was sold, the money raised earmarked not for the squad but to balance the books.That was supposed to be it: Simone Inzaghi, the man tapped to replace Conte, insisted when he was introduced as Inter’s new coach that he had been assured that nobody else would be leaving.A few weeks later, though, that reassurance was proved hollow. Chelsea paid Inter $132 million for Lukaku, the club’s great shining star. He had always wanted to play for Inter — his childhood idol had been Ronaldo, the great Brazilian striker — and he was happy in Milan and, for all the problems he had faced, in Italy. He wanted to stay. The club, though, could not afford not to sell him. And perhaps not only him: Lautaro Martínez, his strike partner, had been offered around, too, to Tottenham and Arsenal and Atlético Madrid. The protests against Suning’s continued ownership have been long and loud.Romelu Lukaku, who helped bring a title to Inter Milan, will line up for Chelsea this season.Daniele Mascolo/ReutersThis is not the future as Inter had envisaged it. Its fate, compared to that of Jiangsu, is hardly a miserable one: Inzaghi is a fine coach, and he will retain the core of the squad that won Serie A last year. The club has signed Edin Dzeko to replace Lukaku; Marcus Thuram, from Borussia Mönchengladbach, or Duvan Zapata, of Atalanta, may follow. Nicolò Barella, Marcelo Brozovic and the best defense in Italy are all still in place.But the title, won after such a long wait, no longer looks — as Zhang had promised — like the beginning of something. Rather, it has the air of a definitive end. Juventus, reunited with Massimiliano Allegri this summer, is expected to reclaim primacy as Serie A starts this weekend. Roma, under the aegis of José Mourinho, and Luciano Spalletti’s Napoli may both pose more of a threat than Inter. So, too, may A.C. Milan and Atalanta.There is a sorrow in that, of course, for Inter’s fans: a simple story about risk and reward, about cost and benefit, about the price of a dream made flesh. There is an undeniable cruelty in the proximity of the celebration and the collapse, though perhaps that is — boiled down — what sports are all about: The absence of Lukaku this year makes last season all the more special, the memories of it all the more potent.The Inter president, Steven Zhang, shooting a selfie in the good old days. Last year.Pool photo by Lars BaronFor the rest of us, though, there is a warning, one from far closer to home. What has happened, overnight, to Inter — and what happened, even more dramatically, to Jiangsu — is what happens when clubs are bought and sold not in pursuit of sporting glory or even, as distasteful as it may be to say, eventual profit. It is what happens when soccer allows itself to be used for politics and for posturing and, above all, for power.Inter is not the only club that has been bought for reasons other than love of the game, and it is not the only club whose success depends not on the decisions it makes on the field — or even off it — but on social, political and diplomatic currents that have little or nothing to do with the game itself. Inter is not the only club that should hear the alarm.The Definition of FairP.S.G. got Messi and City got Grealish, but Chelsea got the biggest prize of them all.Pool photo by Carl RecineThey are all, on the surface, sound ideas. A little more than a year since a combination of the coronavirus pandemic and the Court of Arbitration for Sport brought an end to UEFA’s first attempt at introducing the concept of fiscal responsibility into European soccer — yes, that’s right, this bit is about Financial Fair Play, but I promise it’s not boring — the outline of F.F.P. 2.0 is starting to emerge.Quite what form the regulations will take once Europe’s competing clubs and leagues and their many and varied lobbyists have had a run at them is anyone’s guess, of course, but UEFA’s ideas are certainly worth exploring.Real-time enforcement of the rules, so that teams in breach are punished immediately, rather than at some ill-defined point in a distant future. A luxury tax, borrowed from Major League Baseball, for transgressors, which would function as a solidarity mechanism more in theory than in practice. Some form of a cap on how much of a club’s revenue can be spent on its squad. This all makes sense. Some of it could work. But, even now, it is possible to say with some certainty that it won’t.Reading the proposals brought to mind a line in “To Rise Again at a Decent Hour,” the Joshua Ferris novel concerned with identity theft, religion and dentistry. “The history of making money in this country is a history of exploiting the policymakers,” one of his characters, a Wall Street billionaire who made his money shorting the market in 2008, says at one point. “Let the policymakers act, and then study the places ripe for exploiting.”This is the fundamental problem with F.F.P., whatever form it takes. No matter what the rules are, no matter how much sense they make, no matter how pure the intent or dire the punishment, none of it will have any effect if those meant to be governed by the new system set out to circumvent it.The previous iteration of F.F.P. was flawed, of course. There were considerable and meaningful problems with the “financial” part of it. But that was not what scuttled it, in the end. What brought about its demise, ultimately, was that quite a lot of clubs were much happier if things were not especially fair.All Brazil, All the TimePalmeiras breezed past São Paulo to move a step closer to returning to the Copa Libertadores final.Pool photo by Nelson AlmeidaIt is not just in Europe that competitive balance is a pressing issue. The semifinals of this year’s Copa Libertadores contain three Brazilian teams: the reigning champion, Palmeiras, as well as Atlético Mineiro and Flamengo. It could have been a clean sweep, too, if Fluminense had not lost to the Ecuadorean side Barcelona S.C. on away goals on Thursday night.That kind of one-nation dominance had never happened, but it feels as if it has been coming. Brazilian teams have won the last two editions of the tournament — Flamengo’s last-gasp defeat of River Plate in 2019 and Palmeiras’s victory in a stultifying, pandemic-delayed all-Brazilian final against Santos in July — and three of the last four.Still, the nature of the domination is troubling. Brazilian teams topped five of the eight groups this time around; Brazil had six teams in the last 16 (admittedly the same as Argentina). In the quarterfinals, Flamengo swept past the Paraguayan team Olimpia, and on home soil Atlético Mineiro made short work of River Plate. Palmeiras qualified in style, too, in a game that was a win-win, from a Brazilian perspective: Its opponent was its city rival, São Paulo.The explanation, though, is simple. Brazilian teams have access to far greater resources than the vast majority of their opponents. Only a couple of Argentina’s giants have anything like the revenues of the powerhouses from Rio de Janeiro, São Paulo, Pôrto Alegre and Belo Horizonte.In one sense, of course, the rude economic health of the Brazilian game is welcome. In the long term, the hope has to be that it can provide some sort of counterweight to 30 years of European domination of what is meant to be a global sport. The risk is, in the short term, that yet another of soccer’s crown jewels becomes the plaything of a small coterie of clubs.CorrespondenceKudos to all of those Liverpool fans (I presume) who noticed that Jürgen Klopp’s team did not make an appearance in last week’s swift Premier League preview. “Are you not writing them off rather early?” asked Ron Bartolini. “You didn’t mention Liverpool!” pointed out Ronak Shah, though he put it all in capitals, to let me know he was shouting at me. “You’ve already written off Liverpool as a contender?” said David Nolan.There were, needless to say, others, and they deserve an explanation. The truth is that I prevaricated, just a little, on where to put Liverpool. My instinct is that the Premier League season will play out with a cigarette-paper top four until March or so, at which point Manchester City and Chelsea will pull away, leaving Manchester United and Liverpool to the comfort and consolation of a return to the Champions League.Welcome back to the newsletter, Mohamed Salah and Liverpool.Rui Vieira/Associated PressBut at the same time, I’m aware that there is a tendency — particularly prevalent during the summer months — to assume that every transfer will prove to be a resounding success; we presume that there is a direct correlation between how much a team spends and how well it will fare over the coming season. Manchester City, Chelsea and Manchester United have spent a lot, and therefore their prospects are brighter than the (comparatively parsimonious) Liverpool.That is, of course, basically true in the round; in individual cases, though, it is far less accurate. Which, all in all, is a long-winded way of saying that yes, I have written off Liverpool (to emerge as champion, anyway) but that I know I am wrong to do so. With all that in mind, then, it felt safer just not to say anything.And a note from Brian T. Love, who has the sort of name that demands a middle initial. “There were no reminders of the fan protests at soccer grounds that brought down the breakaway Super League. Maybe I noticed a green scarf at Old Trafford during the Manchester United match. Four months removed, are fans placated?”There is no brief answer to that, Brian, but it is a subject worth returning to, I think, in time. More

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    Chelsea cult hero Oscar wants transfer return to club aged 29 – four years after quitting for Shanghai Port

    BRAZILIAN ace Oscar would consider a sensational return to Chelsea once his contract at Shanghai Port expires in 2024.The 29-year-old joined Chelsea shortly after their Champions League triumph against Bayern Munich against all odds back in 2012.
    Oscar was one of the Premier League’s brightest stars, but traded it all in for an adventure in ChinaCredit: Alamy
    And he spent the best part of four-and-a-half years in West London, winning two Premier League titles, a Europa League and a League Cup.
    The Brazilian was one of the Premier League’s best attacking talents, scoring 21 goals and providing 24 assists in 131 league appearances.
    Oscar left the Blues in the January winter window back in 2017, trading Premier League football for a very lucrative deal in China.
    But four years on, the prospect of returning to one of Europe’s top leagues is one that appeals to the midfield maestro.
    Speaking to Goal ahead of Chelsea’s Champions League final against Manchester City on Saturday, Oscar said: “For sure, but first I have to think on returning to a top side in Europe.
    “I think I will have some opportunities. 
    “I hope I can continue to play like I’m playing here, so I know I’ll have open doors for me as well. 
    “I have a good relationship with Chelsea, I have huge fondness for the club and it’s supporters.

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    “So, after my contract is over it’s one of the clubs that I will consider with all of my heart.”
    Oscar also heaped praise on Man City captain Fernandinho – set to captain Man City in their first Champions League final – and believes he is one of the best Brazilian stars to grace English football.
    He continued: “It’s difficult to make a list. There were very great players, Juninho Paulista in the past, but sure, Fernandinho.
    “He’s at Manchester City for a very long time and playing in Manchester City’s best years.
    “He always played beautifully and deserves to be in this list.”
    ⚽ Read our Football live blog for the very latest news from around the grounds

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    Seven best players Premier League clubs could steal from skint Chinese Super League including Oscar and Paulinho

    A NUMBER of former Premier League stars could be back plying their trade in England due to the salary cap in China.
    Under the new rules, Chinese Super League sides cannot pay players no more than £52,000-a-week, with clubs facing points deductions should squad members be paid more.

    Brazilian midfielder Oscar could be on his way out of China in the near futureCredit: AFP – Getty

    Under contract players will still be paid what they are earning currently, but they will have to agree to have their salary cut within the next three seasons.
    One player who has already decided to depart the Far East in Napoli legend Marek Hamsik, who is close to joining Swedish side IFK Goteborg from Dalian Yifang.
    Here SunSport looks at seven players that could jump ship from China.
    OSCAR
    On around £400,000-a-week at Shanghai Port, the 29-year-old could be tempted to leave instead of having to take an 86 per cent cut.

    And the ex-Chelsea playmaker recently declared he wishes to return to West London in his dream to retire at Stamford Bridge.
    He told talkSPORT: “I think about finishing at Chelsea because I had good times before at Chelsea.
    “Chelsea helped me a lot to improve and to do what I always dreamed [of], which was to play in the Champions League and they helped me to play in the World Cup and to win the Premier League.
    “I have a lot of friends at Chelsea. If I have a chance to finish my career at Chelsea, it’s a dream for me.”

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    PAULINHO
    Tottenham flop Paulinho returned to Guangzhou in 2018 after one season at Barcelona.
    He has won the Super League three times and the AFC Champions League once during his stint in China, but he also could be lured back to Europe.
    Earning over £230k-a-week, the Brazilian may not want to earn over four times less that amount.

    Paulinho flopped during his spell at Tottenham, but he has shown his class out in ChinaCredit: AFP or licensors
    MOUSA DEMBELE
    Paulinho’s former Spurs team-mate Dembele may be 33 now, but he is still more than capable of turning out for a Premier League side.
    He may have left in 2019, but with his contract expiring at the end of the year, Dembele could find himself back in Blighty in the near future.
    MARKO ARNAUTOVIC
    A team-mate of Oscar at Shanghai, the ex-West Ham and Stoke star was linked with a return to England in January.
    It was claimed that the Hammers turned down the chance to re-sign him with the London outfit deeming him as too expensive.
    Since moving to Asia, the Austria international has scored 17 goals in 35 games.

    Marko Arnautovic was linked with a return to West Ham in the winter transfer windowCredit: Getty Images – Getty
    AARON MOOY
    Another former Premier League star in Shanghai’s ranks, the ex-Brighton and Huddersfield man made the move to China in August.
    Only 30, a number of clubs would snap up the chance to bring the Australian midfielder to England if he decides to leave.
    MAROUANE FELLAINI
    Now 33, the former Manchester United and Everton ace is approaching the end of his contract with Shandong Taishan.
    Fellaini has found the back of the net on 21 occasions in 57 outings – helping his side win the Chinese FA Cup in 2020.

    CEDRIC BAKAMBU
    Pocketing a whopping £16million-a-year at Beijing Guoan, the 29-year-old is one of the top players in China.
    Bakambu, 29, left Villarreal in 2018 having banged in 48 goals in 105 games, and he has continued to showcase his lethal finishing in the Far East.
    Chipping in with 53 goals in 74 matches, the DR Congo international could prove to be an astute signing for a Premier League side.

    Oscar reveals dream is to retire at Chelsea but 29-year-old fears age may stop return as he compares himself to Mount More

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    Inter Milan owners shut down Chinese Super League champions Jiangsu FC leaving country’s top-flight in crisis

    CHINESE football has been thrown into crisis after Super League champions Jiangsu FC ‘ceased operations’.
    The club won its first title in November thanks to goals from former European football stars Eder and Alex Teixeira.

    Jiangsu FC were crowned Chinese Super League champions in NovemberCredit: AFP or licensors

    The winner in the play-offs was scored by £43million man Alex TeixeiraCredit: AFP or licensors

    A buyer has unsuccessfully been sought by owners Suning, leading to the team being shut down.
    A statement read: “Even though we are reluctant to part with the players who have won us the highest honours, and fans who have shared solidarity with the club, we have to regretfully make an announcement.
    “From today, Jiangsu Football Club ceases the operation of its teams.
    “In the past six months the club has been looking around to seek a takeover.”

    Jiangsu’s squad includes ex-Atletico Madrid title winner Miranda and former Italy forward Eder, while one-time Liverpool target Teixeira is reportedly bound for Arabian football.
    Welsh winger Gareth Bale was the subject of an audacious bid from the club in 2019, with a contract worth £1million-a-week on the table.
    Only weeks earlier, Chinese FA Cup winners Shandong Luneng were thrown out of the AFC Champions League for ‘overdue payables’.
    Retail giant Suning are said to be suffering from mounting debt problems in China and are turning their focus to core business assets.

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    Football is thought to be of decreasing interest to the government and a crackdown is underway on money leaving the country for overseas interests, such as the company’s Inter team.
    The Serie A leaders were bought for £235m in 2016 and club president Steven Zhang, son of Suning founder Zhang Jindong, has pledged millions to the transfer market.
    But talk of selling the club has continued for months with a cash injection by the summer seen as vital.
    ⚽ Read our Football live blog for the very latest news from around the grounds

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    West Ham considering Graziano Pelle free transfer after 35-year-old striker leaves Chinese side Shandong Luneng

    WEST HAM are considering signing Graziano Pelle on a free transfer, according to reports.
    The former Southampton striker is up for grabs after leaving Chinese side Shandong Luneng.

    West Ham are considering a move for Graziano PelleCredit: Alamy Live News

    The former Southampton man has left Shandong LunengCredit: Alamy Live News

    And the Hammers may move for the 35-year-old if they fail to land No 1 target Josh King from Bournemouth, according to the Star.
    The Irons had a £13m King bid rejected by the Cherries in October and instead opted to sign Said Benrahma on loan from Brentford.
    West Ham boss David Moyes is understood to have wanted King ahead of Benrahma with his side short of options up front.
    And despite King being desperate to make the London Stadium switch, only Algerian Benrahma arrived.

    King, 28, is out of contract at the end of the season but Bournemouth are determined not to let him go on the cheap in January.
    As a result, the Hammers are drawing up a contingency list – which includes Pelle – in case the Cherries’ demands are too high.
    Italian Pelle left Chinese Super League side Luneng earlier this week when his contract expired.
    He joined them in 2016 from Southampton and has scored 30 goals in 81 appearances since.

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    However, the Hammers face competition from teams in Italy as Pelle is said to prefer a move back to his homeland.
    West Ham are desperate for a striker this window with star forward Michail Antonio’s hamstrings hard to rely on.
    And club record £45m signing Sebastien Haller failed to deliver in Antonio’s absence.
    Antonio has missed nine of the Hammers’ last 12 games with a hamstring injury after bagging three goals in their first five Premier League games this season.

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    Chinese Super League set for mass exodus with new salary cap introduced forcing ex-Chelsea star to take 86 per cent cut

    THE CHINESE Super League faces a player exodus after announcing massive salary cuts.
    Ex-Prem stars including former Chelsea midfielder Oscar, ex-Manchester United midfielder Marouane Fellaini, Marko Arnautovic and striker Salomon Rondon joined the cash spice trail to the Far East after being tempted by huge salaries and bonuses.

    Oscar made a lucrative move to China but massive salary cuts could lead to his exitCredit: Getty – Contributor

    But in a massive U-turn that will have far-reaching consequences, the Chinese Football Association has now introduced stringent regulations to take immediate effect.
    Under the new rules, foreign player salaries will be capped at £2.7million per year – around £52,000 per week.
    Domestic players – which would include former Arsenal midfielder and now naturalised Chinese Nico Yennaris – will be restricted to earnings of £573,000 per year, or £11,000 per week.
    In addition, CSL clubs will be banned from spending more than £69m per year in total, with a maximum £9m on foreign salaries and an average of £344,000 per player.

    And clubs that fail to meet the new rules face points deductions – of between six and 24 points – while overpaid players will be BANNED from putting on their boots in games.

    Top five stars that could leave the CSL

    Marouane Fellaini

    The former Manchester United midfielder is one of the top earners at Shandong Luneng
    Marko Arnautovic
    The striker left West Ham to join Shanghai SIPG last year
    Oscar
    Former Chelsea midfielder Oscar currently earns around £19million each season at Shanghai SIPG
    Salomon Rondon
    The former West Brom and Newcastle striker works under Rafa Benitez at Dalian Pro
    Paulinho
    Former Tottenham and Barcelona midfielder Paulinho is one of the league’s top earners at Guangzhou Evergrande

    Although the measures come into effect from the start of the new season next month, there is dispensation for players currently under contract, although the limits must be phased in for them over three seasons.
    That could mean the departures of under-contract players is not instant, although it is almost certain that the foreign stars will be seeking a way out in the coming months.
    Even so, it is hard to believe the likes of Oscar – currently on around £19m per season – will not be eyeing the exit door as soon as January.

    But any attempts to circumvent the rules by fraud or hiding contract payments will lead to relegation and TWO YEAR bans for the players involved, which would be applicable worldwide.
    Other former Prem players currently in China include Brazilian ex-Spurs and Barcelona midfielder Paulinho and one-time Tottenham club-mate Mousa Dembele, Australian midfielder Aaron Mooy and Nigerian striker Obafemi Martins.
    Chinese FA President Chen Xuyuan warned: “No matter how big the club is or how famous the player is, we will strictly follow the regulations with no considerations.
    “Do not test our determination.”
    The clubs will also be forced to drop corporate sponsors from their names, despite pushback from supporters.

    Chen added: “In the past, the club owners changed quickly in our leagues and therefore the club names also had to change. 
    “It was not helpful to cultivate a football culture in China.
    “The clubs should consider the culture of local fans and the characteristics of cities when choosing new names.”
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    Rafa Benitez bemused as three players sent off in 94th minute after mass brawl as Dalian KO’d in CSL play-off

    RAFA BENITEZ watched on as a mass brawl in Dalian Pro’s defeat to Tianjin Teda saw three players sent off in the 94th minute.
    The former Liverpool, Chelsea and Newcastle manager experienced one of the more eventful matches of his long career.

    Rafa Benitez’s Dalian Pro won the game 2-1, but lost 3-2 on aggregateCredit: Getty Images

    Benitez’s side were winning the game 2-1, but trailed Tianjin Teda 3-2 on aggregate in the Super League play-offs.
    Knowing some good old gamesmanship would see them through, Tianjin decided to run down the clock holding the ball by the corner flag.
    The corner was taken short to Frank Acheampong and Dalian immediately put him under pressure, a series of shoves and kicks sparked a full-blown royal rumble.
    The referee was quick to go over and start dishing out the cards, but it didn’t stop Dilian keeper Jiamin Xu from flying into the thick of things, pushing Acheampong back to the floor resulting in him being shown red.

    Guowen Sun received a second yellow card for his role in the melee after the referee went to the VAR screen to re-examine the situation and bring the culprits to justice.

    Despite the original foul being committed on a Tianjin player, the hosts didn’t escape punishment, Kaimu Zheng was shown a straight red card for his reaction.
    Dalian clearly didn’t take too kindly to the time-wasting with the whole team getting involved, bringing the game to a disappointing end.
    Benitez could hardly believe what was unfolding in front of him, his side completely lost their heads at such a crucial moment in the game.

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    Brazil star Hulk listening to Premier League offers ahead of free transfer in January after finishing deal in China

    BRAZIL star Hulk is listening to offers from the Premier League ahead of a free transfer in January when his contract in China comes to an end.
    The former Porto star, 34, moved to the Chinese Super League in 2016 to link up with Shanghai SIPG in a shock career move.

    4

    Hulk has offers from five European nations, including EnglandCredit: Getty Images

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    Hulk has scored 70 goals in 125 matches for Shanghai SIPGCredit: Alamy Live News
    But Hulk has revealed he still dreams of playing in Europe again.
    The muscular Brazilian – who looks even more ripped post-lockdown – even admitted he “has offers from England, Spain, Italy, Germany and Portugal”.
    Hulk has already revealed he will NOT renew his contract in the Chinese capital.
    His current deal expires on December 31.

    And he will have no shortage of suitors ahead of a free move in January.
    Hulk told Brazilian outlet Lance: “I am listening to many proposals from Brazil and many places including in Europe.
    “[I have offers from] Turkey, Portugal, England, Spain, Italy, Germany – and I also have an offer from China.
    “Every day more new proposals arrive.

    “I thank God I have a name that’s very strong in the market.
    “The clubs have been following me and I keep up to date physically, it helps a lot.”

    4

    Hulk is now set to return to European football after four years in China

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    Hulk is said to now be married to his ex-wife’s nieceCredit: Instagram
    Hulk – who is now married to his ex-wife’s niece – revealed money will NOT play a role, while confirming a big pay-day was not his reason for moving to China.
    The £320k-a-week forward has scored 70 goals in 125 matches for Shanghai SIPG.
    He continued: “I will not put money ahead of football.
    “I am talking to God to make the best decision, be very happy and continue my career.
    “Where I went, I made history. I ask him God bless me and I keep writing this beautiful story in football.”
    Hulk only referred to one team by name, Brazilian giants Palmeiras.
    The former Zenit St Petersburg star has only ever played TWO matches for a Brazilian side – Vitoria in 2004.
    But Hulk admitted he would not “fool” Palmeiras fans by committing to them just yet.

    The Brazilian claimed: “I have a special affection for this team, but I cannot say that, in January, I will be in Palmeiras or not.
    “I don’t want to fool anyone. I’m very professional, I would play in any club.
    “If I go to Brazil, being Palmeiras or any other team, I will make sure I give my best.
    “On the field, I will leave everything there and give my life to help the team, whatever it is.
    “I do it out of passion.”  More