Background
Following in the footsteps of his father Xu Yang would begin his football career when he joined the Bayi youth team at the age of twelve and showed a ruthless elegance within midfield.
徐阳, 徐陽
Following in the footsteps of his father Xu Yang would begin his football career when he joined the Bayi youth team at the age of twelve and showed a ruthless elegance within midfield.
She graduated from Beijing Film Academy in 1997.
After his retirement as a player, he worked as a football coach for Beijing Baxy before he became a football pundit for CCTV sports channel. Club career
As a strong and increasingly confident young player he'll break into the senior team in 1994 and start out as a right-midfielder. While he stayed with the club for several further seasons and even helped the team finish third during the 1996 league season he felt that his playing time was limited and that it was better for him to develop somewhere else.
On December 20, 1996 he asked for a transfer request and would transfer to Beijing Guoan at the beginning of the 1997 league season, however injury in his debut season saw his time limited. When Shen Xiangfu became Head coach of Beijing Xu Yang finally showed his potential as a creative midfielder and was quickly called up to the Chinese national team. At the beginning of the 2001 league season Xu Yang was at the peak of his career and he was expected to move to Chongqing Lifan before Shandong Luneng hijacked him for 3,500,000 Yuan.
His move turned out to be a disappointment and Xu Yang tried to get a move away from the team with a return to Bayi Football Team being his preferred destination. Due to his attempts at a move away, Shandong held him to his contract and Xu Yang decided to retire from football before he turned thirty. International career
Xu Yang made his international senior debut in a friendly against Yugoslavia on March 25, 2000 where he came on as a substitute for Li Weifeng in a 2-0 defeat.
Despite this defeat the Chinese Head coach Bora Milutinović kept on playing him in several further friendlies in preparation for the 2000 AFC Asian Cup and would even include him in the squad that went to the tournament.
2003 – Best Actress (for Spring Subway) at the 26th annual Hundred Flowers Film 2003 – Best Actress (for Far From Home and I Love You) at the 9th annual Huabiao Film 2003 – Best Supporting Actress (for Far From Home) and Best New Female Director (for My Father and I) at the 23rd annual Chinese Golden Rooster 2004 – Best New Director and Best Actress (both for My Father and I) at the 4th annual Chinese Film Media 2004 – Silver Shell for Best Director for A Letter from an Unknown Woman at the 52nd annual Donostia-San Sebastián International Film Festival.
During the competition Milutinović preferred Li Tie in midfield because of his better strength and defending and Xu only got a chance to play in one game throughout the competition against Korea Republic in the Third place play-off game where China lost 1-0.