When Brazilian star Alexandre
Pato jetted out of China for his holidays he played for Tianjin
Quanjian. Two months and a dozen arrests later, the club as he knew it
is gone.
In its place is a new incarnation, although
whether Pato is still there when the Chinese Super League (CSL) season
opens in the spring remains to be seen.
A discredited subsidiary of the Quanjian Group
remain the owners, according to corporate records, but the club was
this week renamed Tianjin Tianhai and placed under the control of the
local sports authorities, state media say.
Pato's side is facing a deeply uncertain future, hunting investment and reportedly needing to sell players to survive.
The affair is a microcosm of the worst of
football: excessive spending, unpredictability and an overreliance on
questionable corporate owners.Tianjin Quanjian's troubles came to light late
last month when its owners, self-styled experts in traditional Chinese
medicine, came under scrutiny for their treatment of a young cancer
patient.
The girl was reportedly taken off chemotherapy
and instead received alternative healthcare based on Quanjian-produced
remedies. She died in December 2015 aged seven.
Quanjian faced a public outcry over the girl's
death after an article published on an online health platform in
December was shared extensively -- leading to a rapid questioning of
other claims it had made for its products.
The company was placed under
investigation for alleged pyramid selling and false advertising on
January 1, according to Xinhua news agency.
Quanjian's founder Shu Yuhui was among more than a dozen arrested, according to the China Daily.
The company has denied wrongdoing in relation to the girl.
Largesse
Football history is littered with once-proud
clubs that crashed and burned for whatever reason -- but the rapid pace
and murky nature of the Tianjin meltdown has stunned observers.
Shen Chen has been an avid follower of football in Tianjin, a port city in China's northeast, since he was six.
Now 33, Shen said: "If Tianjin doesn't find a better company to take over, the team is very likely to get relegated.
"And if by the end of the year no company comes in, the team may be disbanded and the players released."
Tianjin Quanjian's maroon, blue and gold crest
has been unceremoniously removed from club buildings in recent days and
replaced by the blue of the new Tianjin Tianhai.
The old name is also being erased online with
its posts on Weibo, China's equivalent of Twitter, deleted and the club
badge scrubbed out.
It's a far cry from just over a year ago.
Tianjin Quanjian finished third in the 2016-17
CSL season under the leadership of Italian World Cup winner Fabio
Cannavaro, the highest in their short history.
Former AC Milan starlet Pato, now 29, was part of an expensive attack along with Frenchman Anthony Modeste.
The club -- thanks to Quanjian's cash -- also boasted 20-million-euro Belgian international midfielder Axel Witsel.
Only Pato now remains and he and his
teammates, who are in pre-season training in the United Arab Emirates,
have reportedly been muzzled.
'Strange feeling'
Chinese fans are used to their clubs changing names or even pulling up stakes for different cities.
The Tianjin club -- not to be mistaken with
rivals Tianjin Teda -- was founded in 2006 and initially played in
Hohhot, Inner Mongolia, about 600 kilometres (370 miles) from Tianjin.
It moved to Tianjin the next year and became
Tianjin Quanjian in 2015 when the ambitious company took control as part
of its rise to prominence.
The club's subsequent unravelling has received
scant coverage in the state Tianjin Daily, suggesting that authorities
are eager to keep a lid on the affair.
So what happens now to its fans?
"It is a strange feeling for them because they
did not think that Quanjian would be investigated so quickly by the
state," said Shen, adding that some supporters will switch to Tianjin
Teda, strugglers in the CSL in recent years.
"I've seen screenshots of their group chats and they're really fed up, but what can they do?"
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