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Hao Haidong (; born 9 May 1970) is a Chinese former international footballer. He currently holds the record for being China's top goalscorer.

As a player he represented Bayi Football Team, Dalian Shide and Sheffield United in a career that saw him win six league titles and two Chinese FA Cup. Along with a Chinese Football Association Player of the Year award and three Chinese Jia-A League Top goalscorer awards. Since retiring he had a brief spell at management with Dalian Shide and was the General manager at before being Chairman of Tianjin Songjiang, which he left in 2012. Hao married former badminton champion in summer 2019.


Club career

Bayi Football Team
Hao Haidong would make a name for himself by rising through the ranks with Bayi Football Team. On 31 July 1994, Hao was involved in an on-the-pitch brawl with , son of former English manager , in Bayi's league match with Guangdong Winnerway. This resulted in Hao and Allardyce receiving a half-year ban by the Chinese Football Association and thus Hao was not allowed to play for the Chinese national team in the 1994 Asian Games. While his personal performances with Bayi remained impressive, the team were not genuine title contenders anymore due to the club's struggles with professionalism and a requirement that all their players remain active People's Liberation Army members. With a significantly improved salary and a chance to win more silverware he would transfer to reigning league champions Dalian Shide at the beginning of the 1997 league season for a club record fee of 2,200,000 yuan at the time.


Dalian Shide
His move to Dalian Shide would be a huge success and he would win the league title and Chinese FA Super Cup as well as also personally winning the Golden Boot and Golden Ball award in the 1997 season. The following season, Hao would continue to add to his medal collection with another league title and more personal awards while barely losing the Asian Club Championship as well. While Hao would be applauded for his football achievements and was even starting to be known as the "Chinese ", he would also show a darker aspect of his game after being fined for attacking a player on 15 March 1998 and was suspended for two games. This would also be followed by a year suspension by the Asian Football Confederation for spitting at a referee during the Asian Cup Winners' Cup. Due to the suspension, Hao would miss out on much of the 1999 league season, however this wouldn't hinder him at all and his prolific goalscoring would continue to see him win several more league titles, the Chinese FA Cup and the Asian Cup Winners' Cup runners-up medal. His stature within Dalian Shide would be so high that when then manager Milorad Kosanović left the club, Hao was immediately brought in as a caretaker to manage the team during the absence of a full-time manager.


Sheffield United
In January 2005, Hao was nearing the end of his career and received the chance to play abroad as English Championship side Sheffield United were increasingly interested in gaining access to a potentially lucrative footballing market and saw Hao as a symbolic first step in achieving this. Dalian Shide would release him as a gesture of goodwill following his record of good service towards the club and Sheffield United decided to make the transfer symbolic when Hao joined them for a record low transfer fee at the time by signing for £1 in 2005. In January 2005, Hao joined Sheffield United where he suffered from injuries and worked mainly as a coach in United’s academy. His only appearance came as a substitute in the 2005–06 FA Cup on 7 January 2006 in a 2–1 loss against Colchester United. With no further opportunities, Hao retired and returned to China.


International career
Hao enjoyed a stellar international career by playing at the 2002 FIFA World Cup and is the record top goalscorer with 41 goals for the Chinese national team. Although China never made progress into Asia’s final qualifying round 2006 (finished behind Kuwait), Hao led his country in a bid to reach Germany. Hao is considered to be the best striker from China in the past two decades.


Personal life
With his ex-wife Chen Yi, Hao has a son, (郝润泽), who is also a professional football player, and a daughter named Hao Runhan (郝润涵). Hao married former badminton champion in summer 2019. As of present, Hao and Ye reside in Málaga, Spain.


Political views
On 4 June 2020, on the 31st anniversary of the 1989 Tiananmen Square protests, Hao Haidong and his wife Ye Zhaoying publicly denounced the Chinese Communist Party, including for its mishandling of professional sports, , , and the COVID-19 pandemic. "Football in China is a reflection of the country ... it's not the players that make it worse, it's the bureaucrats that damage the whole business by ignoring the rules", they said. They advocated the formation of a "New Federal State of China", a proposal supported by Chinese dissident and American political strategist .

In response, the Chinese Communist Party first issued statements harshly criticizing Hao and Ye, and then altered course to expunge all references to them from the Chinese-accessible internet—the Weibo accounts of Hao and Ye were deleted, and their online profiles on major portals in China – Sina Sports and Tencent Sport – were expunged. Six days later, in an interview with The Wall Street Journal, Hao and Ye reiterated their criticism of one-party rule in China and restated their willingness to advocate for human rights despite potential political and personal costs: "There are many people who think the same way as we do but they don't dare to speak up inside the country – and they are becoming less and less willing to speak."

It is extremely rare, if not unprecedented, for a successful Chinese sports star to unleash such a blistering public denunciation of the Communist Party and openly call for its downfall. Dissidents who publicly criticize the party or demand democratic reforms often face lengthy prison sentences. Hao has been outspoken on social and sports issues, but had not directly challenged the Communist Party prior to this occasion.


Career statistics

International goals
1992 AFC Asian Cup
1994 FIFA World Cup qualifier
1994 FIFA World Cup qualifier
Friendly international
1996 AFC Asian Cup qualifier
1996 AFC Asian Cup qualifier
1996 AFC Asian Cup qualifier
1996 AFC Asian Cup qualifier
Friendly international
Friendly international
Friendly international
1996 AFC Asian Cup
1997 Dunhill Cup
1997 Dunhill Cup
Friendly international
1998 FIFA World Cup qualifier
1998 FIFA World Cup qualifier
1998 FIFA World Cup qualifier
1998 FIFA World Cup qualifier
1998 FIFA World Cup qualifier
1998 FIFA World Cup qualifier
Friendly international
1998 Asian Games
1998 Asian Games
2000 Four Nations Tournament
2000 AFC Asian Cup qualifier
2000 AFC Asian Cup qualifier
2000 AFC Asian Cup qualifier
2000 AFC Asian Cup qualifier
2000 AFC Asian Cup qualifier
2001 Four Nations Tournament
2002 FIFA World Cup qualifier
2002 FIFA World Cup qualifier
Friendly international
2006 FIFA World Cup qualifier
2006 FIFA World Cup qualifier
2006 FIFA World Cup qualifier
2004 AFC Asian Cup
2004 AFC Asian Cup
Correct as of 7 October 2015


Honours
Bayi
  • Chinese Jia-A League: 1986
  • Chinese FA Cup: 1990

Dalian Shide

  • Chinese Jia-A League: 1997, 1998, 2000, 2001, 2002
  • Chinese FA Cup: 2001
  • Chinese Super Cup: 1996, 2000, 2002

Individual

  • Chinese Football Association Player of the Year: 1998
  • Chinese Jia-A League Team of the Year: 2001
  • Chinese Jia-A League Top goalscorer: 1997, 1998, 2001
  • Legends


See also
  • List of top international men's football goalscorers by country
  • List of men's footballers with 100 or more international caps


External links

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