Adam Minter, Columnist

China Shows How to Crack Down on Soccer

The sport's culture needs to change, beyond a few arrests.

Time to celebrate.

Photographer: Matt Roberts
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The surprise arrests of 14 FIFA officials last week in Switzerland captivated soccer fans around the world, but the Chinese public would be forgiven for not feeling particularly impressed. For the past six years, the Chinese government has been conducting an anti-corruption campaign of its own to clean up its soccer federation, with dozens of leading Chinese soccer figures convicted and jailed on bribery and match-fixing charges so far. With the FIFA investigation and cleanup effort still in their early stages, prosecutors and FIFA officials would be wise to take note of China's successes.

Corruption and soccer have long been linked in the minds of China’s soccer fans, and with good reason. In 2001, Chinese car company Geely pulled out of a 30-year deal to sponsor Guangzhou’s professional team after only eight months, because the company president said he didn't want to be involved in the team's widespread match-fixing. But Guangzhou wasn't an isolated case. Many Chinese pro teams at the time were suspected of similar activity. League officials disciplined at least three teams for fixing matches, but that hardly seemed a sufficient deterrent.