China to join pro football wars

Updated: 2014-10-31 07:02

By WILLIAM HENNELLY in New York(China Daily USA)

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China to join pro football wars

Lou Tilley (holding football), media relations director for AFL Global, says he's often asked if the Chinese are big enough to play American football. "Well, I'm 6'3, 215, take a look at the linemen I was coaching at Wuhan U!" AFL Global provided to China Daily USA

Maybe someday they'll talk about a championship game on the frozen tundra of Bird's Nest field. But for now, professional football in China will be played indoors.

On September 18, 2015, the China American Football League (CAFL) will kick off with eight teams on the mainland. The CAFL is affiliated with the Arena Football League (AFL), the purveyor of eight-men-a-side indoor football in the United States.

The new league is owned by business executive Martin Judge, founder, chairman and CEO of AFL Global and part owner of the AFL's Philadelphia Soul. He is also the founder of the Judge Group, a professional services staffing company specializing in IT, based in West Conshohocken, Pennsylvania. The company also has a subsidiary in China.

Judge's partners are Wu Hua, a journalist in China and president of Ganlan Media International (49 percent owned by AFL Global; Ganlan comes from the Chinese phrase ganlan qiu, or American football); and Ron Jaworski, former NFL quarterback and current ESPN football analyst. Jaworski is a majority owner of the Philadelphia Soul. Dick Vermeil, a Super Bowl-winning coach and a longtime friend of Judge's, is also helping promote the new league.

Judge is ebullient when talking about his role as the father of American football in China. His bravado on the telephone and his appearances in videos are reminiscent of the late Oakland Raiders owner Al Davis.

"I even have my own stamp in China," Judge said in a telephone interview with China Daily. "I'm not happy with that. I want a statue."

A franchise in the CAFL will go for $10 million the first year, $20 million in the second, said Judge, who is confident the franchises will rise in value annually.

"We have 12 people who want them now," he said. "Soccer franchises sell for $200 million to $400 million in China. There is no [American] football in China. Only us."

Judge wouldn't reveal who the potential owners are, but he said four will probably come from the US and four from China.

"San Francisco is like Asia," he said, hinting as to where the American owners could come from. "I'm talking to all the owners in the NBA."

Judge not only has brought pro football to China, he sponsored the first Chinese college football playoffs earlier this month. Six teams vied for the title.

Shandong Sport University defeated Hebei Institute of Physical Education, 46-42, on Oct 18 at theChaoyang Sports Center in Beijing. The collegiate event gave players a chance to showcase their skills ahead of the CAFL draft next spring. Athletes will be eligible for the AFL upon graduation.

"We just had the first ever, ever, ever intercollegiate football games that six universities played against each other," Judge said. "They never played against each other in any sports. The last game had an "all-out brawl, a bench-clearing brawl. It's just like the United States."

Judge, who has worked the past few years to developing sport in China, also helped create the nation's version of the National Collegiate Athletic Association (NCAA): the China Collegiate Athletic Association (CCAA).

The college games ironically were played outside, but under arena football rules. So why the switch to indoors for the pro league?

"The air pollution in China is bad," Judge said. "They really don't want to be outdoors. They love indoor sports: tennis, ping pong, badminton. There are 17 cities bigger than New York City in China, and every one of them has an arena!"

The 20-man teams are expected to be split evenly between Chinese and American players. The American players will come from the Arena Football League in the US. The Chinese players will likely come from the six college teams.

The average AFL player makes $832 a game in the US, but in China, players will be paid as much as $5,000 a game, "which is more money than they would ever make as a college graduate in China," Judge said.

"I got the coaches; I got the general managers; the assistants; I got the doctors," Judge said in reference to all the other AFL personnel who will participate in Chinese pro football. The AFL season in the US runs from March to August, so the schedules won't conflict.

Foreigners working with the AFL are learning that Chinese men have the right football attributes.

"They're big and strong," Judge said. "They have big people and they can play football. They are competitive; they're determined." In the college championship, "the score changed 11 times. The boys on the losing team were all crying," he said.

Sometimes, the players react as if they're playing a different sport.

"They're from a rugby world," Judge said. "When that ball is dropped (on an incomplete pass), they still dive for it."

David Niu, the president of AFL Global and a former Australian rugby player, also is optimistic about Chinese football players.

"They're quick. They are bigger than I thought they would be in terms of size and bulk. Fairly sizable college players crossed over from basketball, rugby, wrestling, track and field."

They have to work on blocking and tackling (as do all football players), "but athletically you see some tremendous similarities between China's athletes and any other athletes around the world," Niu said.

The CAFL also has hired former NFL player Ed Wang to work on player development in China.

Wang (6-5, 315) was a four-year starter at offensive tackle for Virginia Tech and the first Chinese-American player drafted by the NFL. Wang's parents were track-and-field athletes on China's 1984 Olympic team.

He is "the face of our efforts over there", Niu said.

"Ed Wang is my Yao Ming," Judge said.

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