Yang Chen (footballer, born 1974)

Yang Chen (simplified Chinese: 杨晨; traditional Chinese: 楊晨; pinyin: Yáng Chén; born 17 January 1974) is a Chinese football coach and a former player.

Yang Chen
杨晨
Personal information
Date of birth (1974-01-17) 17 January 1974 (age 50)
Place of birthBeijing, China
Height1.85 m (6 ft 1 in)
Position(s)Striker, midfielder
Team information
Current team
China U16 (manager)
Senior career*
YearsTeamApps(Gls)
1993–1997Beijing Guoan55(7)
1998Waldhof Mannheim (loan)0(0)
1998–2002Eintracht Frankfurt94(21)
2002–2003FC St. Pauli20(2)
2003–2005Shenzhen Jianlibao49(4)
2006–2007Xiamen Blue Lions51(4)
International career
1995–2004China35(11)
Managerial career
2009–2010Jiangsu Sainty (Assistant Coach)
2011–2013Jiangsu Sainty (Assistant Coach)
2014Guizhou Renhe (Assistant Coach)
2015–2018Beijing Enterprises Group (Assistant Coach)
2020–2021China U-23 (Assistant Coach)
2021–China U-16
Medal record
Men's football
Representing  China
Asian Games
Bronze medal – third place1998 BangkokFootball
*Club domestic league appearances and goals

As a player he represented Beijing Guoan, Waldhof Mannheim, Eintracht Frankfurt, FC St. Pauli, Shenzhen Jianlibao and Xiamen Blue Lions. He is the first Chinese player to play and score in the Bundesliga while internationally he played for the China football team in the 2002 FIFA World Cup.

Club career

Born in Beijing, Yang began his professional football career with Beijing Guoan. He gradually established himself within their team during his time with them, however it was only once he had a short loan period with lower league German Waldhof Mannheim in 1998 did he show his potential as a forward. This saw Bundesliga side Eintracht Frankfurt interested in him and were willing to make a transfer of DEM1 million for his services.[1] Being the first Chinese footballer to play in the Bundesliga he would personally thrive within the league and score eight goals to help the team avoid relegation to 2. Bundesliga.[2] Yang Chen would go on to be viewed as a trailblazer for Chinese footballers for his ability to score in one of the five major European football leagues and would personally go on to win the Chinese Footballer of the Year in 2000. While his time with Frankfurt was viewed as a success when new manager Felix Magath came in during the 2000–01 season Yang Chen did lose favour within the team and would have to fight back for his position before deciding to move to 2. Bundesliga team FC St. Pauli to ensure his place within the Chinese football team in preparation for the FIFA World Cup.

Yang Chen went back to his home country to play for Shenzhen Jianlibao where under the manager Zhu Guanghu his career would thrive once more and he would go on to win the 2004 Chinese Super League title. Once Zhu Guanghu left to take over the Chinese national team and Chi Shangbin came in to replace him Yang Chen and several other players immediately took a disliking to him. Throughout the 2005 league season there were numerous accusations between the management and the players. The club would decide to let the management go and several players including Yang Chen were sold off. He would go on to join Xiamen Blue Lions until they disbanded in 2007 and he decided to retire.

International career

Yang Chen also played for China at the 2002 FIFA World Cup. He is the Chinese player to have come closest to scoring in the World Cup when his volley ricocheted off the post in the 3–0 loss to Turkey in group stage.

Managerial career

In 2009, Yang obtained his coaching certificate and joined top-tier club Jiangsu Sainty as an assistant coach.[3][4] In 2010 he would leave the club to go back to Germany to study and complete his international A-level coaching badges before returning to Jiangsu Sainty as an assistant coach and team leader under Dragan Okuka.[5]

In December 2013, Yang joined Guizhou Renhe as an assistant coach and team leader, however he decided to leave them in January 2015 when he accepted the invitation of returning to his hometown of Beijing to join Beijing Enterprises Group to become their guidetrainer and an assistant coach.[6]

In April 2021, Yang was named as head coach of China U-16.[7]

Career statistics

Scores and results list China's goal tally first, score column indicates score after each Chen goal.
List of international goals scored by Yang Chen
No.DateVenueOpponentScoreResultCompetition
12 December 1998Bangkok, Thailand  Cambodia1–04–11998 Asian Games
23–0
34–0
410 December 1998Bangkok, Thailand  Oman6–16–11998 Asian Games
57 October 2000Amman, Jordan  Jordan1–01–1Friendly
616 October 2000Tripoli, Lebanon  Indonesia3–04–02000 AFC Asian Cup
723 October 2000Beirut, Lebanon  Qatar3–03–12000 AFC Asian Cup
826 October 2000Beirut, Lebanon  Japan2–12–32000 AFC Asian Cup
922 April 2001Xi'an, China  Maldives7–010–12002 FIFA World Cup qualifier
1013 May 2001Kunming, China  Indonesia2–15–12002 FIFA World Cup qualifier
1110 December 2003Kanagawa, Japan  Hong Kong3–03–12003 EAFF East Asian Cup

Honours

Shenzhen Jianlibao

Filmography

Variety shows

YearNameNotes
2016Running Manepisode – 283

References

External links