Wei Qun

Wei Qun
魏群
Personal information
Date of birth (1972-02-10) 10 February 1972
Place of birth Zigong, Sichuan, China
Height 1.80 m (5 ft 10.9 in)
Playing position Former Defender
Youth career
1984-1990 Sichuan
1991-1992 China Olympic team
Senior career*
Years Team Apps (Gls)
1993-2002 Sichuan Quanxing 177 (28)
2003 Yunnan Hongta F.C. (Loan) 11 (0)
National team
1995-1998 China 17 (1)
Teams managed
2008-2009 Sichuan FC

* Senior club appearances and goals counted for the domestic league only.

† Appearances (goals)
This is a Chinese name; the family name is Wei.

Wei Qun (Chinese: 魏群 born 10 February 1972 in Zigong, Sichuan) is a Chinese football coach and a former player who is predominantly remembered for spending the majority of his career with Sichuan Quanxing where he was a defender while internationally he represented China in the 1996 Asian Cup.

Biography

Wei Qun would start his career playing for the various youth teams for his hometown football team Sichuan before he was called up to the Chinese under-23 football team who happened to call themselves the Chinese Olympic team and were allowed to take part in the 1991 Chinese league campaign where they finished seventh.[1] After an unsuccessful Olympics qualification campaign he returned to Sichuan to start his senior football career however it almost ended before it began when on May 1, 1993, he had an altercation with several men and was stabbed several times.[2] Luckily he was able to make a full recovery and go on to establish himself as a vital member of the team, which soon saw him called up to the Chinese national team where he took part in the 1996 Asian Cup and was part of the team that saw China reach the quarter-finals.[3]

After spending his whole career within Sichuan and nearing the end of his career the club decided to appoint him as their new part-time deputy general manager in 2002, however his perceived brash handling of several senior players negatively affected the club and he was loaned out Yunnan Hongta F.C. for the rest of the season.[4] By the end of the 2003 league season Wei did not return to Sichuan and would instead decide to retire from football. He would eventually move into management and would join second tier football club Sichuan FC in October 2008.

References

  1. China 1991 at rsssf.com 22 Oct 2009 Retrieved 2012-11-21
  2. 被人用火枪顶着脑袋并扣动板机 魏群曾经离死神很近 at people.com.cn 2003-02-27 Retrieved 2012-11-21
  3. Asian Cup 1996 VA Emirate .:. Viertelfinale at weltfussball.de 16. Dezember 1996 Retrieved 2012-11-21
  4. 魏群 at Sodasoccer.com Retrieved 2012-11-21

External links

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