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Peh Shing Huei
China Bureau Chief
EPL blues in China
December 03, 2008 Wednesday, 12:07 PM
Peh Shing Huei says it's tough being a football fan in China.

In Beijing

TO BE an English Premier League fan in China is to be a very sad man.

While those in Singapore get a regular diet of EPL matches through cable TV almost every weekend, the ones here are starved of their Manchester United and Everton.

Since last year, EPL games have pretty much disappeared from the living rooms of mainland China.

The vanishing act started when a small pay-television station from the southern Guangdong province bought the exclusive rights to broadcast live matches in China.

The station, Tiansheng TV or WinTV, reportedly paid US$50 million for the three-year deal. That took the screening rights from ESPN Star and state-run China Central Television (CCTV), which used to broadcast the games free or at a cheap price.

Singapore EPL viewers would be familiar with something similar, when StarHub outbid ESPN Star for the rights to EPL matches last year.

But the difference is that while StarHub managed to get most EPL fans in Singapore to sign up for its package after some grumbles, WinTV has failed to do the same in China.

That is largely because Chinese viewers have been used to watching it for free and refuse to pay an extraordinary large sum of about 188 yuan (S$40) per month. It costs S$49 for Singapore viewers to watch the game back home, but average income in Singapore is about 15 times that of China's.

It didn't help that WinTV boss was rather smug when he obtained the rights. "The fans will have to endure the pain of the change. Let's say goodbye to free Premier League. No more free lunch in the future," said WinTV president Song Zheng. "Fans can enjoy the games in various convenient ways, and right now - they have to pay."

Also, WinTV does not have the nation-wide reach that StarHub enjoys, making it cumbersome for Chinese fans to sign up.

Viewership of EPL games thus plunged from an estimated 10 million to about 20,000. Chinese football fans turned to the Italian Serie A, the Spanish La Liga and the German Bundesliga, which are all available free-to-air channels.

The hardcore EPL fans, mostly foreigners, are reduced to begging, hunting or even taking on the law.

1) Begging

- The really desperate ones would beg friends or family back home to have video conferencing during matches and turn their webcams onto the TVs in Singapore. The plus is that they can still enjoy games from the comfort of their homes. The tradeoff is hopelessly poor resolution and erratic connection. There is also the option of streaming, but the performance is unstable. Erm, was that a goal?

2) Hunting

- Those who refuse to squint their eyes or simply do not have any friends back home would pound the streets hunting for a pub which screens the games. The pubs do so by installing a satellite dish. Resolution is great, screens are usually huge, but there are pubs which refuse to screen the games with volume. So if you dig silent football, sure. You also have to put up with smoky joints. And if your team loses, the cold ride or walk home late at night in winter Beijing adds to the pain.

3) Knock, knock

- Last, install a satellite dish at your apartment which would allow you to get Sky Sports and you are back in Singapore - EPL games in your living room! But there is a snag. Satellite dishes are illegal in China. So if you get a knock on your door in the middle of the night, it may be time to say goodbye to Cristiano Ronaldo.

So yes, it is a tricky life to be an EPL fan in China. Good luck if you are one.



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Total comments: 14
Andrew
December 11, 2008 Thursday


What a hopelessly inaccurate posting! No wonder Peh Shing Huei works for the Straits Times.

1) In the 10 years I've been in China, CCTV has never had live EPL games. The local cable channels had them, bought from ESPN (the previous rights holder)
2) Win TV costs 588 RMB for a year's subscription.
3) Hundreds of thousands watch games streamed on peer-to-peer networks.
4) "As Live" games are still shown on local cable sports channels, as most did deals with Tiansheng.
5) All the foreigners I know who are truly interested in the EPL subscribe to Win TV.

Bollocks reporting.


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Ryan
December 05, 2008 Friday

Oh please we can both go on and on cos each country has its drawbacks. I am trying to point out that this started from a comment by one of your kind. I don't see why he should mutter nonsense all b'cos of a report. Worst of all its based on his opinions and not facts. Till you come up with facts, then I will consider you remotely intelligent. Btw you guys seemed so familiar with Singapore. You work or school here? If so I wonder why. The only reason you are powdertul(haha) is cos your ancestors can't stop procreating like beasts. Haha

Dont need to bother replying in this Singapore initiated website cos I wont waste my time with you. I think you should read your national papers online website unless of course its not reliable, which is what I am thinking since your here.

Happy holidays :P

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CCP
December 05, 2008 Friday

Btw I think Singapore is just clean but dull, mordern but less vibrant. A gracious society? No way. Don't blame them, cos its the Gene. Talking about their own culture, a piece of blank paper. (and I am not stepping on them)


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CCP
December 05, 2008 Friday

I don't need to brag about China's achievement. The world sees it and just some of you tend to focus on the ugly side. Singapore has no ugly site? Maid abuse?
We Chinese are on the rise, China is gaining a super power status. But you, except having a relatively better life in average(A question mark indeed as U r labelled as cash poor, asset rich (HDB), you are nobody. Learn from your government and highly paid leaders, they know how to behave humblely infront the super powers including China.

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Ryan
December 04, 2008 Thursday

Btw I think China is awesome and beautiful. Just the people lack common courtesy. Don't blame them though cos its the upbringing & culture (and I am not stepping on them)

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