China Issues 73 Life Bans, Punishes Top Football Clubs for Match-fixing

Former China national team head coach Li Tie is already serving a 20-year prison sentence for bribery. KARIM JAAFAR / AFP/File
Former China national team head coach Li Tie is already serving a 20-year prison sentence for bribery. KARIM JAAFAR / AFP/File
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China Issues 73 Life Bans, Punishes Top Football Clubs for Match-fixing

Former China national team head coach Li Tie is already serving a 20-year prison sentence for bribery. KARIM JAAFAR / AFP/File
Former China national team head coach Li Tie is already serving a 20-year prison sentence for bribery. KARIM JAAFAR / AFP/File

China's football association issued lifetime bans to 73 people, including former national team head coach Li Tie, and punished 13 top professional clubs for match-fixing and corruption, it said Thursday.

Under President Xi Jinping, an anti-corruption crackdown has swept through Chinese football in recent years, exposing the rotten state of the professional game, AFP said.

Several top officials in the Chinese Football Association (CFA) have been brought down, while dozens of players have been banned for match-fixing and gambling.

Thursday's statement did not specify when the most recently announced match-fixing took place, or how it worked.

The punishments were made after a "systematic review" and were needed "to enforce industry discipline, purify the football environment, and maintain fair competition", the CFA wrote on its official social media account Thursday.

Li, a former Everton player who led the national team from 2019 to 2021, is already serving a 20-year prison sentence for bribery, after being sentenced in December 2024.

He is now banned from all football activities for life, alongside 72 others, the CFA statement said.

Among them is Chen Xuyuan, former chairman of the CFA, who is already serving life in prison for accepting bribes worth $11 million.

Negative start to season

The football clubs that will be punished are similarly high-profile.

Of the 16 clubs that competed in the 2025 season in the country's top Chinese Super League (CSL), 11 will have points docked and be fined.

After relegations, this means that when the 2026 CSL season starts in March, nine teams will start with negative points totals.

Tianjin Jinmen Tiger and last season's runners-up Shanghai Shenhua face the stiffest sanctions, with 10-point reductions and one-million-yuan ($144,000) fines.

Shanghai Port, champions for the last three seasons, will face a five-point reduction and a 400,000-yuan fine, the same punishment given to Beijing Guoan.

The CFA did not detail the club's specific infractions, saying only that they related to "match-fixing, gambling, and bribery", with their punishments "based on the amount, circumstances, nature, and social impact of the improper transactions involved".

"We will always maintain a zero-tolerance deterrent and high-pressure punitive force, and investigate and deal with any violation of discipline or regulations in football as soon as they are discovered, without any leniency or tolerance," the CFA said.

Many of China's professional teams are already in financial trouble.

Guangzhou FC, the most successful club in the CSL's history, folded in 2025 after it failed to settle its debts in time for the new season.

President Xi is a football fan who has said he dreams of China hosting and winning the World Cup one day.

China didn't qualify for the World Cup in Canada, Mexico and the United States this summer.



Jordan Can Hold Heads High Despite Debut Defeat to Austria, Coach Says

 Jordan's head coach Jamal Sellami speaks during a news conference, Monday, June 15, 2026, in Santa Clara, Calif., ahead of the World Cup Group J match between Austria and Jordan. (AP)
Jordan's head coach Jamal Sellami speaks during a news conference, Monday, June 15, 2026, in Santa Clara, Calif., ahead of the World Cup Group J match between Austria and Jordan. (AP)
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Jordan Can Hold Heads High Despite Debut Defeat to Austria, Coach Says

 Jordan's head coach Jamal Sellami speaks during a news conference, Monday, June 15, 2026, in Santa Clara, Calif., ahead of the World Cup Group J match between Austria and Jordan. (AP)
Jordan's head coach Jamal Sellami speaks during a news conference, Monday, June 15, 2026, in Santa Clara, Calif., ahead of the World Cup Group J match between Austria and Jordan. (AP)

Jordan ‌can hold their heads up high after delivering an "honorable performance" on their World Cup debut, coach Jamal Sellami said following his side's 3-1 defeat by Austria in Group J on Tuesday.

Austria took the lead with their only real moment of quality in the first half when Romano Schmid curled into the top corner, but Jordan hit back after the break when Ali Olwan pulled them level.

Yazan Al-Arab's own goal ‌restored Austria's advantage and though ‌Jordan ⁠poured forward in search ⁠of a second, substitute Marko Arnautovic's penalty deep into added time finally ended their resistance.

The result leaves Jordan third in their group on goal difference above Algeria, who lost 3-0 to Argentina on Tuesday.

Sellami said the final score flattered Austria and ⁠did not do justice to his side's ‌endeavour.

"I think that the ‌result doesn't reflect the effort made by the Jordanian ‌team, but personally I'm very happy and proud ‌of their performance," Sellami told reporters.

Jordan are renowned for their ability on the counter, but were particularly impressive with the way they attacked Austria, even when the score ‌was 1-1.

"No one was expecting us to be that bold, that proactive and ⁠to ⁠be that capable of benefiting from the available opportunities," Sellami said.

Ultimately, the difference between the two sides was the quality at Austria's disposal, including from the bench in the form of record scorer Arnautovic.

"We've not been able to win against Austria because it has players at Real Madrid (David Alaba) and Bayern Munich (Konrad Laimer)," Sellami added.

He also bemoaned the loss of forward Yazan Al-Naimat to a knee injury in December.

"If Naimat was with us today, the result would've been different," Sellami said.


Ronaldo as Excited for Sixth World Cup as His First, Says Martinez

 Portugal's Spanish head coach Roberto Martinez smiles as he gives an MD-1 press conference at the Houston Stadium in Houston on June 16, 2026, on the eve of the 2026 World Cup Group K football match between Portugal and Congo DR. (AFP)
Portugal's Spanish head coach Roberto Martinez smiles as he gives an MD-1 press conference at the Houston Stadium in Houston on June 16, 2026, on the eve of the 2026 World Cup Group K football match between Portugal and Congo DR. (AFP)
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Ronaldo as Excited for Sixth World Cup as His First, Says Martinez

 Portugal's Spanish head coach Roberto Martinez smiles as he gives an MD-1 press conference at the Houston Stadium in Houston on June 16, 2026, on the eve of the 2026 World Cup Group K football match between Portugal and Congo DR. (AFP)
Portugal's Spanish head coach Roberto Martinez smiles as he gives an MD-1 press conference at the Houston Stadium in Houston on June 16, 2026, on the eve of the 2026 World Cup Group K football match between Portugal and Congo DR. (AFP)

Cristiano Ronaldo is preparing for his sixth World Cup as if it was his first, said Portugal coach Roberto Martinez as he hailed the 41-year-old as "an example and a reference for football."

Armed with a richly talented generation, Portugal are among the favorites to win the World Cup for the first time.

Ronaldo's continued presence in Martinez's team has sparked debate over whether he is still a positive influence.

No one can match the five-time Ballon d'Or winner's 143 international goals. But he has failed to net in his last nine matches at major tournaments and offers little in a defensive role when the opposition are in possession.

Martinez, though, has no doubt he remains Portugal's best option up front.

"He is an example and a reference for football. For all those children on the street who begin to feel the love for sport, following the example of Cristiano Ronaldo is wonderful," Martinez told a press conference ahead of Portugal's World Cup opener against DR Congo.

"It is his sixth World Cup, but I can say that internally it seems to be his first World Cup in terms of intensity, in terms of emotional output, of how important it is for him to be prepared to lead the group.

"Within the team he is a vital player because he is the finisher, he is the player in the penalty area, he is the player who has those movements that can open spaces for other players. Within our attacking game, his numbers reflect the importance he has."

Bruno Fernandes said his first experience of a major tournament as a child came on home soil, when a 19-year-old Ronaldo helped Portugal reach the final of Euro 2004.

"All of us in this national team we have grown up watching Cristiano Ronaldo play and for us it's such an honor to play next to him now in the same team," said the Manchester United captain.

"We're all here to support him and to support Portugal to go as far as possible."

- 'Dreaming not forbidden' -

Fresh from winning Premier League player of the year accolades, Fernandes is part of one of the strongest midfields in the World Cup.

Vitinha and Joao Neves have recently won a second consecutive Champions League with Paris Saint-Germain, while Bernardo Silva is set to join Real Madrid after a trophy-laden nine years at Manchester City.

"We have a very strong team, great individual quality, and beyond the individual quality and the strengths that we have as individual players, I think we are a very cohesive team, a very united team," added Fernandes.

"Obviously our dream is to be there (winning the World Cup) and I think that dreaming is not forbidden."

Portugal will also face tournament debutants Uzbekistan and Colombia in Group K.

Martinez, though, warned against looking beyond DR Congo after the shock Spain suffered in being held 0-0 by Cape Verde in their opening match.

"We've got very little to win tomorrow from the outside. If you win against Congo, it's expected. If you win by one, it's a big problem. If you draw, it's a catastrophe. If you lose, this is the end of the world," said the Spaniard.

"They come with no expectations, they are enjoying being here. We've seen incredible performances from teams like Qatar, Cape Verde, exemplary performances, that shows you that there are no easy games in a World Cup."

Martinez also confirmed reports he is set to leave his role after the World Cup when his contract expires.

"My contract ends after the World Cup. This is not news, this is just a fact," he added.

"We're now focused on finishing the work that we've begun three-and-a-half years ago.

"When I came to Portugal the focus was to try to win everything, but most importantly to prepare for the World Cup."


‘Rejuvenated’ Modric Determined to Enjoy World Cup Swan Song

 Croatia's Luka Modric reacts during a news conference ahead of his team's World Cup Group L soccer match against England, Tuesday, June 16, 2026, in Arlington, Texas. (AP)
Croatia's Luka Modric reacts during a news conference ahead of his team's World Cup Group L soccer match against England, Tuesday, June 16, 2026, in Arlington, Texas. (AP)
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‘Rejuvenated’ Modric Determined to Enjoy World Cup Swan Song

 Croatia's Luka Modric reacts during a news conference ahead of his team's World Cup Group L soccer match against England, Tuesday, June 16, 2026, in Arlington, Texas. (AP)
Croatia's Luka Modric reacts during a news conference ahead of his team's World Cup Group L soccer match against England, Tuesday, June 16, 2026, in Arlington, Texas. (AP)

Midfield great Luka Modric said Tuesday he was determined to enjoy every second of his last World Cup and had been "rejuvenated" by being with Croatia for a fifth time on football's biggest stage.

Croatia face England on Wednesday in Texas in one of the most attractive fixtures of the group stage in North America.

The 40-year-old Modric will lead out Croatia, who beat England in the World Cup semi-finals in 2018, and will pull the strings once more in midfield.

Along with Lionel Messi and Cristiano Ronaldo, this will be the last dance for one of the most acclaimed players in the world over the past 20 years.

Modric, now with AC Milan after more than a decade at the heart of Real Madrid's midfield, is set to win his 200th cap for his country in North America.

"Every game, every tournament is special at 40 with the national team," Modric said on the eve of the England clash.

"My aim in this tournament is to enjoy it, to do my best, but enjoy it," he added.

"I want to enjoy each match, every training with these guys."

Croatia strolled through qualifying but come into the World Cup with little fanfare -- much like at other recent major tournaments.

But England will underestimate them at their peril, even if the Croatia squad is one of the older ones at the tournament.

Another veteran of past campaigns, 37-year-old winger Ivan Perisic, is also in the squad alongside Manchester City pair Josko Gvardiol and Mateo Kovacic.

There is excitement about defender Luka Vuskovic, 19, who is expected to start against England, and Modric said: "There are a lot of young players, so I feel rejuvenated with them."

Long-serving coach Zlatko Dalic is looking forward to facing England once more, and seeing how his men stand up to an attack led by the prolific skipper Harry Kane.

"The opponent is high quality," he said.

"We know their quality, we analyzed them, and they know us too... they're very dangerous.

"They have the best strikers in the world. They have Kane -- Kane can do a lot, a hell of a lot," he added, saying he was also wary of the threat posed by Thomas Tuchel's side from set-pieces.

"We are quite prepared for that," he said.

Also in Group L are Ghana and Panama.