SportAccord Convention 2026: Event Schedule taking shape in Baku
05 Feb 2026 10:03

The Chinese Football Association (CFA) recently nominated a Chinese-Canadian to be director of the referee office.
Liu Hu, also known as Tiger Liu, will be in charge of managing and trainin referees for the professional soccer leagues in China. Liu is a retired FIF referee and former referee director of the Canadian Soccer Association. His nomination was announced by CFA on Dec 30.
It was reported that the CFA hoped that Liu could help China's professional soccer leagues establish an international-level referee training system.
Liu, 53, was born in western China's Qinghai province and became a national soccer referee in early 1992. Later he immigrated to Canada with his wife.
After he became a national referee for the Canadian Soccer League in 1997, Liu started to referee in Major League Soccer and important soccer games of the US Open Cup and Canadian Championship.
He also became a registered FIFA referee in 2001 and was nominated as the director of the referee office of the Canadian Soccer Association in 2011.
It was also reported that the CFA, which has been launching a series of reforms, expected under Liu's leadership, the referee system of Chinese professional soccer, which was haunted by the corruption, could be cleaner and more professional.
A nationwide anti-corruption campaign in 2009, found corruption at all levels, including soccer officials, clubs, referees, and players. Several were exposed for cheating, convicted and jailed.
In the upcoming Asian Cup to be hosted by Australia, none of referees from the Chinese mainland were selected to officiate.
Soccer analysts in Chinese media believe Liu could bring positive change to China and also pointed out that he faces a very challenging job and a complicated soccer environment.
In a previous interview with Xinhua News Agency, Liu said the Chinese soccer referee system should be more professional.
"In Canada and the USA, soccer referees are employed and under management by a third-party company which can safeguard influence from the professional soccer leagues, but in China it is totally different," said Liu.
Liu stressed then that Chinese referees should respect their job, the players and their colleagues and suggested Chinese soccer officials enhance cooperation with the judicial system.
Original title by Xinhua:CFA nominate a Canadian to manage referees
Related coverage
08 Nov 2015
Guizhou Hengfeng names designated hotel
05 Feb 2018
Weekly report: Basketball games wrapped up TOP 3 positions in list
31 Oct 2017
Rumours: CMC-backed Whaley to acquire CSL media rights
18 Feb 2016
Weekly Reports: 5 games of 2017 ITTF-ATTU Asian Cup reaches the top 10 list
20 Sep 2017
More from Yutang Sports
“Connect & Cultivate”: a 24-hour Networking Ecosystem at SportAccord 2026
03 Mar 2026
A Diverse Iine-up of Exhibitors Joins the SportAccord Convention
28 Jan 2026
SportAccord Convention in Baku postponed
03 Apr 2026
When New tournaments Meets New Tech, the Old Friend of Football Has New Stories
14 Jul 2025
Who you meet at SportAccord And Why it Matters
22 Jan 2026
Yutang Sports
Chinese website
loading...