
Analysis of soccer referee and player mentality
In the match between Henan and Wuhan Changjiang, I watched the clip of Dorado provoking the referee over and over again, and my personal opinion is that Manning's penalty was not improper, and Dorado's collapse that time, which boils down to his technical shortcomings as a guest center forward, was exposed. When a center has the ball on his back, stepping on the ball with his feet is a big no-no, and it's easy for the opponent to steal the ball without committing a foul.
Dorado's anger was unfounded, and this time Manning's enforcement was very different from that of Zhang Lei and Zhan Wei.
Dorado was purely asking for trouble.
However, we must admit that the low level of Chinese soccer referees is indeed a major reason for the frequency of referee attacks in the top leagues.
Many people believe that the low standard of Chinese soccer inevitably leads to the low standard of the refereeing industry.
This view is wrong because referees are individuals and soccer is a collective, and it is purely far-fetched to suggest that the high standard of the Chinese in individual sports cannot account for the low level of individual referees.
From Lu Jun to Zhou Weixin to Gong Jianping, too many Chinese soccer referees have fallen into captivity, vividly illustrating the problem.
Secondly, the roughness of Chinese soccer in terms of selection to playing style has led to an influx of unqualified players into the soccer industry.
On January 8 this year, in the first round of last season's Chinese Super League Central League promotion playoffs, Dalian people surrounded the refereeing team after the game and even assaulted referee Li Haixin.
The CFA issued heavy fines: Zheng Long was suspended for six games, Yang Hoyu was suspended for 12 months, Dalian People's Club was criticized and fined 200,000 yuan, and a number of club officials were punished, with the whole team being fined a total of 830,000 yuan.
The Darenians were heavily penalized and deservedly so, even if the referees were at fault, it was the hot-headedness, loss of reasoning and unbalanced mentality of the Darenians up and down the lineup that was the main cause of the post-game ugliness.
Personally, I've always thought that Li Haixin and Xing Qi were the biggest discovery of last season's Premier League referees, and they deserve their black coats.
From the self-defense rights of Dalian people and Shenzhen team, we see on the one hand the low quality of Chinese soccer practitioners, and on the other hand, we also see the reason why this industry is full of garbage.
First of all, there is a lack of culture among soccer practitioners, which is actually a common problem in the Chinese sports academy model.
Secondly, the lack of good youth coaches and youth training systems has resulted in good players not being able to utilize their talents either due to selection criteria, human factors or an unfriendly youth training system.
Thirdly, the wages and prices of players are at a serious premium, resulting in the industry becoming a staging ground and a microcosm of social problems, and soccer practitioners living in their comfort zones are thus all reduced to being the sons of the eight banners who carry cages and birds.
The roughness of Chinese soccer from selection to management has led to an influx of unqualified players into the soccer industry.
They lack a basic respect for the rules of society and industry.
Thirdly, the recklessness of foreign aid in the Chinese Super League is, in the final analysis, the pampered indulgence of the club.
Before and after the bursting of the gold dollar soccer bubble, the Chinese Super League foreign aid is not moving to stay and not return, in the final analysis, it is the Chinese Super League team's contract is not binding enough.
The beautiful spectacle of Chinese soccer has made Chinese soccer a man's fool in the eyes of foreign aid.
There are a lot of unprofessionalism and deformities in Chinese soccer, and the biggest problem in the issue of foreign aid is that it has become a pure seller's market for foreign aid because it is taken too seriously.
From a certain extent, we do have to thank Chen Xuyuan reform for the Premier League gold bubble burst in advance, although this caused the face of Chinese soccer on the ground of a hard landing, but for the current situation of Chinese soccer, the face really does not matter whether there is.
In the case of the Dorado incident, the recklessness of foreign aid in the Chinese Super League is, in the final analysis, the pampered indulgence of the clubs.
In the big five leagues, one of the things a club looks for when bringing in a player, in addition to the player's technical and tactical integration into the team, is whether or not the player's temperament is controllable.
For Henan Songshan Longmen, one of the most important points they actually need to reflect on is why the team sent a three-year contract extension when Dorado's donkey temperament is already notorious.
And now, when Dorado is facing a one-year suspension, Henan is sure to be stuck in constant trouble when it comes to terminating Dorado, who has more than a year left on his contract.
Even if they succeeded in terminating Dorado's contract, there is only one week left before the summer window, Henan needs to find Dorado's replacement quickly on the one hand, and on the other hand, Henan, which has already become a big red-card holder and a thorn in the referee's side, can't afford to find another foreign donkey who is not suited to the soil and even bites the referee.
Dorado's impulsiveness speaks to his savage nature on the one hand, and on the other hand it speaks to his ignorance of living in the stone age, the age of VAR, where everything is recorded and amplified.
What a painful realization for both Dorado and the Dragon Gate Club of Mt. Henan.










