China
still forced to settle for replica World Cup dreams
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[May 04, 2018]
By Xihao Jiang and Martin Quin Pollard
BEIJING (Reuters) - President Xi
Jinping's dream of China hosting and ultimately winning the World
Cup may be as far away as ever but that does not mean the country
will have no involvement when soccer's elite meets in Russia later
this year.
China's enthusiasm for the global game, undimmed by years of
underperformance and corruption scandals, has always reached fever
pitch during World Cup finals and that might be even more the case
this year with the domestic game finally on the rise.
And at a factory in Dongguan in the heart of the country's
southeastern workshop, workers are busy transforming pieces of zinc
alloy into thousands of replica World Cup trophies, badges and
key-rings for football fans in China and around the world.
It takes at least three days of filing, polishing, electroplating,
heating and decorating to produce the replicas with football's world
governing body FIFA insisting on exacting standards for licensed
products.
"All Replica World Cups are limited to 15cm in height ... all Cup
replicas higher than 15cm in markets are definitely fake products
that haven't been certified by FIFA," said Perry Chou,
vice-president of the Wagon Group that owns the factory.
"Secondly, they must be a certain weight. Thirdly, gold must be
involved when electroplating. So within these rules, we are very
careful to meet FIFA’s demands on Cup design each time we send our
cup designs for to FIFA for review."
Taiwan-based Wagon had FIFA certification for their products for the
last two World Cups in 2010 and 2014 but were restricted to East
Asia and North America.
This year the company can sell to all markets outside Europe but
still expects a quarter of the replicas to find a home in China,
where they will range in price from little more than a dollar to
5,680 yuan ($895) for the biggest models.
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Although many of the replicas will be sold online, they will also be
available at retail stores like the "Fans Shop" of Chinese Super
League (CSL) club Beijing Guoan in the heart of the capital.
Shop manager Su Meng said he expected sales of official FIFA World
Cup merchandise, including mascots and the Wagon-made replicas, to
be up around 20 percent on 2014, thanks in part to the growing
popularity of the CSL.
One 37-year-old Guoan fan, however, was skeptical about the value of
replicas and said he would not consider purchasing such a souvenir
of the tournament.
"Only the real World Cup trophy has genuine value," banker Sun Wei
told Reuters.
"This kind of imitation product, I think, isn’t worth spending money
on."
Wang Boqian, though, was far more enthusiastic about the copies of
the 36.8-centimetre tall, 18-carat gold trophy which has represented
the highest ambition for professional footballers since it replaced
the Jules Rimet Trophy in 1974.
"I think it's the most beautiful trophy in the world," Wang said.
"I’ve always really liked this gold trophy. Every World Cup year,
ever since 1998, for each one I’ve bought a (replica) gold trophy."
(Writing by Nick Mulvenney, editing by Amlan Chakraborty)
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