
However, there is a problem: Dai Weijun is currently both a member of the national soccer team and a registered player of the Shenzhen team. Therefore, even though the Shenzhen team blatantly owes him nearly a year's salary, Dai Weijun is currently unable to recover his salary arrears, nor can he leave the team, he can only wait for the CFA's final decision. What is most ironic is that our CFA clearly states that if a player does not sign the salary sheet, the team cannot pass the admission.
So here's the question. Who gave him Dai Weijun's word? He can't get his salary. Now he has clearly decided to part ways with the team and not play any more games for them. Even if it's a one minute game, it's clear that he did so without receiving his salary, so it was March/April before he entered. Who signed him to his payroll then? Why didn't the CFA care? It became a big joke, a big irony.
If you can't set the most basic rules of the trade, or even protect your best players, then who do you think the top international players are going to have this kind of controversy right now, not to mention the range of players below them, not to mention the Chinese AB players? What's the difference between Chinese soccer doing all this virtual stuff now and the gold dollar soccer policy of six years ago?










