<p>Cristiano Ronaldo's headline-grabbing arrival at Al Nassr on a bumper pay deal captured global attention last month, but in an alternate world the five-time Ballon D'or winner may well have been destined for a move further east.</p>.<p>The Portuguese striker's Saudi Arabia switch following the cancellation of his Manchester United contract has highlighted a shift within Asian football that started before the Covid-19 pandemic and which continues to have a significant impact.</p>.<p>With money pouring into clubs often owned by debt-fuelled property developers, the Chinese Super League (CSL) had been enticing an increasing number of leading players and coaches to the country since early last decade.</p>.<p><strong>Also Read: <a href="https://www.deccanherald.com/sports/football/ronaldo-makes-saudi-league-debut-for-al-nassr-doesnt-score-1183664.html" target="_blank">Ronaldo makes Saudi league debut for Al Nassr, doesn't score</a></strong></p>.<p>Shanghai SIPG's 2016 signing of Brazilian duo Oscar and Hulk for combined transfer fees of 130 million euros ($141.27 million) highlighted the intent of a league that had already attracted World Cup-winning coaches Marcello Lippi and Luiz Felipe Scolari.</p>.<p>Carlos Tevez's arrival at Shanghai Shenhua soon after on a rumoured 600,000 pounds ($743,820.00) per week only confirmed China's status as football's latest El Dorado.</p>.<p>Authorities concerned about overspending tightened regulations but did little to cool speculation that the game's biggest names were China-bound and it came as little surprise when both Ronaldo and Lionel Messi were linked with CSL clubs.</p>.<p>Ronaldo in particular was connected time and again with a move east, with fast-rising, big-spending Tianjin Quanjian touted in 2018 as a possible destination after the forward's agent Jorge Mendes was pictured with the club's owner.</p>.<p>Five years later, however, much has changed.</p>.<p>Tianjin were among the first of a raft of CSL clubs to close due to financial or legal issues, with Wuhan Yangtze the latest to shut this week.</p>.<p>The downturn in Chinese football has spared few.</p>.<p>Jiangsu Suning, owned by one of the country's leading retailers, dissolved in early 2021, months after winning the CSL title for the first time.</p>.<p>Two-time Asian champions Guangzhou FC, once Chinese football's dominant force, went into decline after their owners, developers China Evergrande, were forced to limit funding after the government restricted borrowing.</p>.<p>China's draconian zero-Covid policy only heightened challenges for Chinese clubs.</p>.<p>Talent has drained from the CSL into the Saudi Pro League, with the competition's leading scorers - Al Nassr's Anderson Talisca, Abderrazak Hamdallah at Al Ittihad and Odion Ighalo of Al Hilal - all having previously played in China.</p>.<p>Saudi Arabia harbours significant ambitions with the country due to host the 2027 Asian Cup, while launching a bid to organise the 2026 Women's Asian Cup.</p>.<p>Those moves come after China was forced last year to relinquish the rights to the 2023 Asian Cup as its zero-COVID policy had no end in sight at the time.</p>.<p>While restrictions were finally relaxed last month in a dramatic u-turn, significant damage has been done to football in China.</p>.<p>With attention now squarely focused on the oil-funded riches on offer in a newly assertive Saudi Arabia, Chinese football's lustre has all but disappeared. ($1 = 0.9202 euros) ($1 = 0.8066 pounds) </p>
<p>Cristiano Ronaldo's headline-grabbing arrival at Al Nassr on a bumper pay deal captured global attention last month, but in an alternate world the five-time Ballon D'or winner may well have been destined for a move further east.</p>.<p>The Portuguese striker's Saudi Arabia switch following the cancellation of his Manchester United contract has highlighted a shift within Asian football that started before the Covid-19 pandemic and which continues to have a significant impact.</p>.<p>With money pouring into clubs often owned by debt-fuelled property developers, the Chinese Super League (CSL) had been enticing an increasing number of leading players and coaches to the country since early last decade.</p>.<p><strong>Also Read: <a href="https://www.deccanherald.com/sports/football/ronaldo-makes-saudi-league-debut-for-al-nassr-doesnt-score-1183664.html" target="_blank">Ronaldo makes Saudi league debut for Al Nassr, doesn't score</a></strong></p>.<p>Shanghai SIPG's 2016 signing of Brazilian duo Oscar and Hulk for combined transfer fees of 130 million euros ($141.27 million) highlighted the intent of a league that had already attracted World Cup-winning coaches Marcello Lippi and Luiz Felipe Scolari.</p>.<p>Carlos Tevez's arrival at Shanghai Shenhua soon after on a rumoured 600,000 pounds ($743,820.00) per week only confirmed China's status as football's latest El Dorado.</p>.<p>Authorities concerned about overspending tightened regulations but did little to cool speculation that the game's biggest names were China-bound and it came as little surprise when both Ronaldo and Lionel Messi were linked with CSL clubs.</p>.<p>Ronaldo in particular was connected time and again with a move east, with fast-rising, big-spending Tianjin Quanjian touted in 2018 as a possible destination after the forward's agent Jorge Mendes was pictured with the club's owner.</p>.<p>Five years later, however, much has changed.</p>.<p>Tianjin were among the first of a raft of CSL clubs to close due to financial or legal issues, with Wuhan Yangtze the latest to shut this week.</p>.<p>The downturn in Chinese football has spared few.</p>.<p>Jiangsu Suning, owned by one of the country's leading retailers, dissolved in early 2021, months after winning the CSL title for the first time.</p>.<p>Two-time Asian champions Guangzhou FC, once Chinese football's dominant force, went into decline after their owners, developers China Evergrande, were forced to limit funding after the government restricted borrowing.</p>.<p>China's draconian zero-Covid policy only heightened challenges for Chinese clubs.</p>.<p>Talent has drained from the CSL into the Saudi Pro League, with the competition's leading scorers - Al Nassr's Anderson Talisca, Abderrazak Hamdallah at Al Ittihad and Odion Ighalo of Al Hilal - all having previously played in China.</p>.<p>Saudi Arabia harbours significant ambitions with the country due to host the 2027 Asian Cup, while launching a bid to organise the 2026 Women's Asian Cup.</p>.<p>Those moves come after China was forced last year to relinquish the rights to the 2023 Asian Cup as its zero-COVID policy had no end in sight at the time.</p>.<p>While restrictions were finally relaxed last month in a dramatic u-turn, significant damage has been done to football in China.</p>.<p>With attention now squarely focused on the oil-funded riches on offer in a newly assertive Saudi Arabia, Chinese football's lustre has all but disappeared. ($1 = 0.9202 euros) ($1 = 0.8066 pounds) </p>