Argentine striker Carlos Tevez arrived Thursday to a rousing welcome from hundreds of fans in Shanghai, where he will join local side Shenhua in a deal that reportedly makes him the world's top-earning footballer.
Tevez,
32, is the highest-profile foreign player lured to China's free-spending
domestic leagues in a recent gold rush that has triggered a backlash
from Chinese authorities amid worries that clubs were recklessly
overspending on foreign stars.
Police at
Shanghai's main international airport bundled the smiling Tevez through a
crowd of blue-clad Shenhua fans gathered in the arrival hall to greet
him.
Shouting Shenhua team slogans as they waited, the fans burst into chants of "Carlos! Carlos!" when he emerged. He was whisked away without making a comment.
Tevez's arrival from Argentine club Boca Juniors comes two weeks after that of Brazilian star Oscar, who joined cross-town Shanghai rivals SIPG under a 60-million-euro ($63 million) deal from Chelsea that smashed the Asian transfer fee record.
Tevez, a goal-scoring dynamo throughout his career for such heavyweights as Manchester United, Manchester City and Juventus, came on a relatively paltry transfer fee of 10.5 million euros, according to the deal-tracking website transfermarkt.com.
But
Argentine media have reported that he will make around 38 million euros
per year in China under his two-year contract, out-earning even
megastars like compatriot Lionel Messi and Portugal's Cristiano Ronaldo.
Foreign invasion
Tevez and Oscar joined a slew of record-breaking transfers to the Chinese Super League over the past year, which also brought in Brazilians Hulk, Alex Teixeira, and Ramires, and Colombia's Jackson Martinez.
Tevez, however, is arguably the top foreign player ever to join a Chinese side, perhaps rivalled only by former Chelsea striker Didier Drogba of the Ivory Coast, who played for Shenhua in 2012.
But Tevez may be the last big-name import for some time.
On January 6, the sports ministry warned it would take action against teams that spend "irrationally," expressing fears that clubs could become insolvent.
The
lavish sums have also spurred calls for money to be instead channelled
towards raising the disappointing level of Chinese football.
The
national team of China, the world's most populous country with 1.3
billion people, is ranked just 81st in the world, one notch below Saint Kitts and Nevis, population 50,000.
This
week, the Chinese Football Association cut the number of foreign
players that top-flight teams could field from four to no more than
three per match once the 2017 season kicks off in March.
Teams also will be required to field at least two under-23 Chinese players to help develop young domestic footballers.
The abrupt change appears to have caught some teams off-guard.
Shu Yuhui, the chairman of Super League side Tianjin Quanjian, told state media this week the clampdown had scuppered his team's plans to buy Chelsea's Spanish striker Diego Costa and a host of other Europe-based stars.
Since the sports ministry's edict, only one major foreign signing has taken place: Tianjin TEDA snagged Chelsea's Nigerian midfielder John Obi Mikel for about 8.5 million euros, according to transfermarktweb.com.
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