Li Weifeng

Chinese footballer (born 1978) From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Li Weifeng (simplified Chinese: 李玮峰; traditional Chinese: 李瑋峰; pinyin: Lǐ Wěifēng; born 1 December 1978) is a Chinese football manager and former footballer. He made 112 appearances for the China national team, scoring 14 goals.

Full name Li Weifeng
Date of birth (1978-12-01) 1 December 1978 (age 47)
Place of birth Changchun, Jilin, China
Height 1.82 m (5 ft 11+12 in)
Quick facts Personal information, Full name ...
Li Weifeng
李玮锋
Weifeng with Suwon Bluewings in 2009
Personal information
Full name Li Weifeng
Date of birth (1978-12-01) 1 December 1978 (age 47)
Place of birth Changchun, Jilin, China
Height 1.82 m (5 ft 11+12 in)
Position Centre-back
Team information
Current team
Ningbo FC (head coach)
Youth career
1990–1995 Tianjin Locomotive
1996–1998 Shenzhen Youth
1998 Tianjin Locomotive
Senior career*
Years Team Apps (Gls)
1998–2005 Shenzhen Ping'an 151 (8)
2002–2003Everton (loan) 1 (0)
2006–2008 Shanghai Shenhua 49 (8)
2008 Wuhan Guanggu 2 (0)
2009–2010 Suwon Bluewings 48 (2)
2011–2015 Tianjin Teda 105 (3)
International career
2008 China Olympic (O.P.) 3 (0)
1998–2011 China 112 (14)
Managerial career
2015–2016 Tianjin Quanjian (deputy general manager)
2016–2019 Tianjin Quanjian (deputy general manager and team manager)
2019–2020 Tianjin Tianhai
2022–2023 Guangzhou City
2023–2024 Henan FC (managing director)
2026– Ningbo FC
Medal record
Men's football
Representing  China
AFC Asian Cup
Silver medal – second place2004 ChinaTeam
Asian Games
Bronze medal – third place1998 BangkokFootball
East Asian Football Championship
Bronze medal – third place2003 JapanTeam
Gold medal – first place2005 South KoreaTeam
Bronze medal – third place2008 ChinaTeam
* Club domestic league appearances and goals as of 3 November 2014
‡ National team caps and goals as of 15 November 2011
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Club career

Tianjin Locomotive

Li Weifeng started his football career with Tianjin Locomotive's youth academy before he was spotted by the Chinese national youth program to study football abroad in a training program sponsored by Jianlibao.[1] This then saw him called up to the Chinese under-20 national team and given a chance to play in the 1997 FIFA World Youth Championship.

Loan to Everton

Upon his return from the tournament, Li was returned to his initial youth team of Tianjin Locomotive until top tier club Shenzhen Ping'an showed an interest in him, not wanting to lose a promising young player a contract dispute would arise until a fee of 800,000 yuan was reportedly agree upon.[2] In the 1998 league season he made his debut for the club and quickly established himself at the heart of the team's defense, guiding them to a 12th-place finish and doing enough to avoid relegation.[3] In the following seasons with Shenzhen, Li establish himself as an integral member of the team and would go on to represent his country in the 2002 FIFA World Cup. With the exposure of the tournament, a short trial at Premier League side Everton immediately followed as part of an Everton deal with Chinese sponsor Kejian. His time at Everton he only made two appearances, playing once in the league against Southampton and once in the League Cup against Wrexham.[4][5] He was unable to make an impact at the club and returned to Shenzhen after the 2002-03 season.[6]

In the 2003 league season, Li returned from his loan spell at Everton and was immediately incorporated back into the team. He was soon made club captain by then manager Zhu Guanghu and within his second spell at the club he would lead them to the 2004 Chinese Super League title for the first time in the club's history.[7] After that success, Zhu Guanghu was offered the Chinese Head coach position and Chi Shangbin came in as his replacement. Unfortunately for Chi, results significantly deteriorated under his reign and Li along with several other members of the team in Li Yi and Yang Chen publicly criticized his management which resulted in his resignation.[8]

Shanghai Shenghua

In the beginning of the 2006 season, Li left Shenzhen due to the club's financial difficulties and followed many of his teammates out of the club. Shanghai Shenhua bought him for 6 million yuan despite reported interest from Serie A side Fiorentina.[9]

Wuhan Guanggu

In 2008, Li transferred from Shanghai to Wuhan Guanggu due to a lack of playing time for the league runners-up, reuniting him with his former manager Zhu Guanghu who also coached him in the Chinese national team as well as in Shenzhen. Soon after the transfer, Li was involved in an on-the-field scuffle with Lu Jiang which resulted in him being suspended for eight games by the Chinese Football Association.[10] Already on the verge of relegation, Wuhan amounted protests against this ruling which the club deemed to be unjust and extremely damaging to its chance to survive in the top flight. After its efforts were proven to be futile, Wuhan withdrew from the league and was disbanded and Li did not appear in any games for the rest of the season.[11]

Suwon Samsung Bluewings

Because of Wuhan's withdrawal, most of its non-local and highly paid players were put on the transfer list at the end of the season, with Li among them. Because of his reputation, high wage demands, gigantic transfer fee, and the unserved eight-game suspension, Li was a hard commodity to move despite being perceived as heads and shoulders above the rest of the Chinese defenders. But the new AFC Champions League rule came to his rescue as it allowed all tournament participants to have one foreign Asian player. Attracting heavy interest from both the Japanese and Korean leagues, Li moved to K-League side Suwon Samsung Bluewings in January 2009, signing a two-year contract for a reported $400,000 and reuniting him with another one of his former managers. Some pundits suggested that Li moved on a free transfer because Wuhan's withdrawal made all of its players free agents under FIFA's rules. However, Wuhan immediately released statements announcing its intention to obstruct the move if it was not at least partly remunerated and media reports stated that Li would pay his former club himself in order to play for the Korean outfit.[12] In his debut appearance, he was sent off against Sparta Prague in a friendly match in Hong Kong; however, Li redeemed himself in his first official match for Suwon in an AFC Champions League match in a 4-1 win against Kashima Antlers by scoring the opening goal.[13]

Tianjin Teda

On 18 January 2011, Li signed with Chinese Super League side Tianjin Teda and was named as the club captain.[14] On 20 July 2015, Li was released by the club midway through the 2015 season.[15]

Tongji University

In 2015, Li joined Tongji University in Shanghai before retiring at the end of the year.

International career

Li made his first appearance for the Chinese national team on 22 November 1998 in a friendly match against South Korea, which ended in a 0-0 draw.[16] His performances for the national team would see him called up to China's squads for the 2000 AFC Asian Cup and 2002 FIFA World Cup.[17] In 2003, he was promoted to team captain by then manager Arie Haan and would lead China to a runners-up position at the 2004 AFC Asian Cup.[18] In September 2006, he was banned from the national team for attacking an opposing player and hence earning his sixth red card in fourteen months during an AFC Champions League game with Shanghai Shenhua. His position as captain of the national team was stripped and later assigned to Zheng Zhi.[19] The ban was removed after a year, but since then he never had any significant role in the national team anymore. He returned as Captain during the 2014 World Cup qualifying, but his return could not help China pass through the Third Round, after two shocking losses to Iraq.[20]

Managerial career

Li was appointed as the vice managing director of Tianjin Quanjian in September 2015.[21]

On 10 April 2026, Li was named as the head coach of China League One club Ningbo FC.[22]

Career statistics

Club

More information Club, Season ...
Appearances and goals by club, season and competition
Club Season League National cup[a] League cup[b] Continental Total
DivisionAppsGoalsAppsGoalsAppsGoalsAppsGoalsAppsGoals
Shenzhen Ping'an 1998 Chinese Jia-A League 11200112
1999 23100231
2000 240240
2001 24100241
2002 10000100
Total 924000000924
Everton 2002-03 Premier League 10001020
Shenzhen Jianlibao 2003 Chinese Jia-A League 24330273
2004 Chinese Super League 1313010171
2005 220206050350
Total 594807050794
Shanghai Shenhua 2006 Chinese Super League 2742130325
2007 22420244
2008 0000
Total 498210050569
Wuhan Guanggu 2008 Chinese Super League 2020
Suwon Bluewings 2009 K-League 241512052364
2010 241505090431
Total 48210170142795
Tianjin Teda 2011 Chinese Super League 2413070341
2012 2801050340
2013 27110281
2014 19110201
2015 700070
Total 105360001201233
Career total 3562126215036243325
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International

Scores and results list China's goal tally first, score column indicates score after each Li goal.
More information No., Date ...
List of international goals scored by Li Weifeng
No. Date Venue Opponent Score Result Competition
112 December 1998Bangkok, Thailand Oman5–06–11998 Asian Games
226 January 2000Ho Chi Minh City, Vietnam Guam4–019–02000 AFC Asian Cup qualification
33 September 2000Shanghai, China Iraq1–04–12000 Four Nations Tournament
43–1
522 April 2001Xi'an, China Maldives10–110–12002 FIFA World Cup qualification
613 May 2001Kunming, China Indonesia1–15–12002 FIFA World Cup qualification
77 September 2001Doha, Qatar Qatar1–11–12002 FIFA World Cup qualification
815 September 2001Shenyang, China Uzbekistan1–02–02002 FIFA World Cup qualification
916 February 2003Wuhan, China Estonia1–01–0Friendly
1017 November 2004Guangzhou, China Hong Kong7–07–02006 FIFA World Cup qualification
1122 February 2006Guangzhou, China Palestine2–02–02007 AFC Asian Cup qualification
1221 October 2007Foshan, China Myanmar7–07–02010 FIFA World Cup qualification
1325 May 2008Kunshan, China Jordan2–02–0Friendly
1415 November 2011Singapore Singapore2–04–02014 FIFA World Cup qualification
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Honours

Shenzhen Ping'an

Shanghai Shenhua

Suwon Bluewings

Tianjin Teda

China

Individual

See also

References

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