Sports
Former Chinese National Football Coach Jailed for Bribery in Major Anti-Corruption Push
Li Tie, the former coach of China’s national men’s football team and a former Premier League player for Everton, has been sentenced to 20 years in prison for bribery. Chinese state media reports that Li admitted to accepting and offering bribes, as well as match-fixing, during his career.
Li’s sentencing marks a significant moment in President Xi Jinping’s ongoing anti-corruption campaign, which has targeted sectors including sports, banking, and the military. Earlier this week, three former Chinese Football Association (CFA) officials were also convicted of bribery, bringing the total to over a dozen coaches and players investigated.
From 2015 to 2021, Li reportedly accepted over $16 million in bribes, starting as an assistant coach for Hebei China Fortune Club and continuing through his tenure as national coach. In return, he favored certain players for the national team and helped clubs secure victories in competitions.
In a state-televised anti-corruption documentary aired earlier this year, Li publicly apologized for his actions, saying, “I should have kept my head to the ground and followed the right path. There were certain things that at the time were common practices in football.”
Li, who led China’s national team from January 2020 to December 2021, had been a celebrated figure in Chinese football, making 92 appearances for the national team and playing at the country’s only World Cup finals in 2002.
This scandal follows the earlier conviction of former CFA president Chen Xuyuan, who was sentenced to life imprisonment for accepting $11 million in bribes.
President Xi Jinping’s vision to make China a global football powerhouse, including aspirations to host and win a World Cup, has faced repeated setbacks. The detentions and convictions of football leaders, some of whom were responsible for driving reforms, mirror a similar anti-graft campaign in 2010 when several players, referees, and officials were jailed for corruption.
Author and grassroots football advocate Rowan Simons described the current crackdown as reminiscent of the 2010 efforts, remarking, “It looks exactly the same as it was 10 years ago with a different set of characters.”