# Qu Shengqing

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Chinese footballer and coach

In this [Chinese name](/source/Chinese_name), the [family name](/source/Chinese_surname) is *Qu*.

Qu Shengqing 曲圣卿 Personal information Date of birth (1975-06-05) June 5, 1975 (age 51) Place of birth Shenyang, Liaoning, China Position Striker Senior career* Years Team Apps (Gls) 1994–2000 Liaoning FC 82 (24) 2001–2006 Shanghai Shenhua 76 (38) 2004–2006 → Adelaide United (loan) 21 (7) 2006 → Nanjing Yoyo (loan) 10 (1) 2006–2007 Adelaide United 7 (1) 2009 Shenyang Dongjin 0 (0) Total 196 (71) International career‡ 1999–2003 China 13 (5) Managerial career 2011–2012 Guangzhou Evergrande Reserve Medal record Representing China Men's football AFC U-16 Championship 1992 Saudi Arabia Team * Club domestic league appearances and goals as of July 4, 2011 ‡ National team caps and goals as of July 4, 2011

**Qu Shengqing** ([Chinese](/source/Simplified_Chinese_characters): 曲圣卿; [pinyin](/source/Pinyin): *Qū Shèngqīng* born June 5, 1975) is a [Chinese](/source/People's_Republic_of_China) football coach and former international player. As a player he represented [Liaoning FC](/source/Liaoning_FC) where he won the Golden Boot in the 1999 league season before joining [Shanghai Shenhua](/source/Shanghai_Shenhua). He would also move abroad to [A-League](/source/A-League) side [Adelaide United](/source/Adelaide_United) before returning to China to end his career with lower sides [Nanjing Yoyo](/source/Nanjing_Yoyo) and [Shenyang Dongjin](/source/Shenyang_Dongjin). Since retiring he has moved into coaching and mainly works for [Tongji University](/source/Tongji_University).

## Biography

Born in [Shenyang](/source/Shenyang), China, Qu's first team football club was [Liaoning FC](/source/Liaoning_F.C.). He soon excelled at the club and became one of the top strikers in China. Qu was the top goal scorer in the Chinese league in 1999 with 17 goals. Along with being top scorer Qu was also voted "Mr Soccer of China" for 1999, the award for the top player of the year. Qu joined [Shanghai Shenhua](/source/Shanghai_Shenhua_F.C.) in 2000 and scored a total of 38 goals for the club during his fours years there, which included him winning the [2003 league title](/source/Chinese_Jia-A_League_2003). Unfortunately in 2013 the [Chinese Football Association](/source/Chinese_Football_Association) would revoke the league title after it was discovered the Shenhua General manager Lou Shifang had bribed officials to be bias to Shenhua in games that season.[1][2]

After a successful trial with Adelaide United in February 2005, Qu was quickly signed by the club in April of the same year.[3] He scored his first goal in the A-League on September 18, 2005, in a 2–1 victory over [Perth Glory](/source/Perth_Glory_FC). Qu soon established himself as a top striker in the A-League. He finished the season with seven goals in 17 appearances for the club.

Qu went back to China after the season was over citing he and his family were homesick. He signed with Nanjing Yoyo of the Chinese [Jia League](/source/Chinese_Football_Association_Jia_League) in March 2006. After just 4 months in China and a string of poor performances, Qu signed with Adelaide United once again.

In December 2006, Qu's status as Adelaide United's [marquee player](/source/A-League#Marquee_player) came into doubt as his ankle injury ruled him out for the rest of the 2006–2007 season, plus the [Asian Champions League](/source/Asian_Champions_League) (which United qualified for on the back of its [2005-06 A-League season](/source/A-League_2005-06) [minor premiership](/source/Minor_premiership)). With clubs unable to sign players on guest signings for the Champions League, United faced a front-line strike problem as highlighted in the *[Adelaide Advertiser](/source/Adelaide_Advertiser)* on 18 December 2006.[4] In April 2007, Qu returned to Shanghai after Adelaide United declined to renew his contract for the 2007-08 A-League season,[5] although he indicated he hoped to stay in contact with the club, and apply for [permanent residency](/source/Permanent_residency) in Australia.[6]

## Honours

### Club

**[Shanghai Shenhua](/source/Shanghai_Shenhua)**

- [Chinese Jia-A League](/source/Chinese_Jia-A_League): [2003](/source/Chinese_Jia-A_League_2003) (revoked due to match-fixing scandal)

**[Adelaide United](/source/Adelaide_United)**

- [A-League](/source/A-League): [2006](https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=A-League_Premiership_2005&action=edit&redlink=1)

### Individual

- Chinese Jia League Golden Boot Winner: 1999

## See also

- [List of football records in China](/source/List_of_football_records_in_China)

## References

1. **[^](#cite_ref-1)** ["Details of soccer referee investigation released to public"](http://www.chinadaily.com.cn/2011-03/31/content_12300071.htm). chinadaily.com.cn. 2011-03-31. Retrieved 2014-05-20.

1. **[^](#cite_ref-2)** ["China Strips Shenhua of 2003 League Title, Bans 33 People for Life"](https://web.archive.org/web/20130220235512/http://english.cri.cn/8046/2013/02/18/189s748945.htm). english.cri.cn. 18 February 2013. Archived from [the original](http://english.cri.cn/8046/2013/02/18/189s748945.htm) on February 20, 2013. Retrieved 2014-05-20.

1. **[^](#cite_ref-3)** [Eastern promise arrives right on Qu](http://www.smh.com.au/news/football/eastern-promise-arrives-right-on-qu/2005/07/14/1120934363497.html), *[The Sydney Morning Herald](/source/The_Sydney_Morning_Herald)*, July 15, 2005.

1. **[^](#cite_ref-4)** Lato, Daniel (2006-12-18). ["No Done Deal for Romario"](http://www.news.com.au/adelaidenow/story/0,22606,20942448-12428,00.html). Adelaide Advertiser. Retrieved 2006-12-18.

1. **[^](#cite_ref-5)** [Adelaide United releases Chinese striker](http://www.smh.com.au/news/Sport/Adelaide-United-releases-Chinese-striker/2007/04/13/1175971321894.html), *[The Sydney Morning Herald](/source/The_Sydney_Morning_Herald)*, 13 April 2007.

1. **[^](#cite_ref-6)** [Qu departs Adelaide](http://mastertwg.sbs.com.au/a-league/index.php?pid=st&cid=86383)[*[permanent dead link](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wikipedia:Link_rot)*], *The World Game* ([SBS](/source/Special_Broadcasting_Service)), 13 April 2007.

## External links

- [Qu Shengqing](https://www.espn.com/soccer/player/_/id/68857) at [ESPN FC](/source/ESPN_FC)

Awards v t e Chinese Football Association Player of the Year 1994: Li Bing 1995: Fan Zhiyi 1996: Su Maozhen 1997: Campos 1998: Hao Haidong 1999: Qu Shengqing 2000: Yang Chen 2001: Li Tie 2002: Zheng Zhi 2003: Albertz 2004: Zhao Junzhe 2005: Jelić 2006: Zheng Zhi 2007: Du Zhenyu 2008: E. Martínez 2009: Caballero 2010: Riascos 2011: Guilherme 2012: Dănălache 2013: Conca 2014: Elkeson 2015: Goulart 2016: Goulart 2017: Zahavi 2018: Wu Lei 2019: Paulinho 2021: Wu Lei v t e Chinese Football Association Golden Boot awardee 1994: Hu Zhijun 1995: Fan Zhiyi 1996: Su Maozhen 1997: Hao Haidong 1998: Hao Haidong 1999: Qu Shengqing 2000: Casiano 2001: Hao Haidong 2002: Li Jinyu 2003: S. Martínez & Ayew & Li Yi 2004: Ayew 2005: Jelić 2006: Li Jinyu 2007: Li Jinyu 2008: Éber 2009: Ramírez & Barcos 2010: Riascos 2011: Guilherme 2012: Dănălache 2013: Elkeson 2014: Elkeson 2015: Aloísio 2016: Goulart 2017: Zahavi 2018: Wu Lei 2019: Zahavi 2020: Bakambu 2021: Negrão 2022: Marcão 2023: Leonardo 2024: Wu Lei 2025: Abreu v t e Chinese Golden Ball 1984: Jia Xiuquan 1985: Wang Zhenjie 1986: Jia Xiuquan 1987: Tang Yaodong 1988: Zhang Huikang 1989: Mai Chao 1990: Wu Qunli 1991: Gao Hongbo 1992: Fu Yubin 1993: Wu Qunli 1994: Peng Weiguo 1995: Fan Zhiyi 1996: Fan Zhiyi 1997: Hao Haidong 1998: Hao Haidong 1999: Qu Shengqing Merged with the Chinese Football Association Footballer of the Year award in 2000.

v t e China squad – 2000 AFC Asian Cup fourth place 1 Ou Chuliang 2 Zhang Enhua 4 Wu Chengying 5 Fan Zhiyi (c) 6 Li Ming 8 Li Tie 9 Ma Mingyu 10 Su Maozhen 11 Xie Hui 12 Qu Shengqing 13 Chen Gang 14 Li Weifeng 15 Shen Si 16 Xu Yang 18 Li Xiaopeng 19 Qi Hong 20 Yang Chen 21 Xu Yunlong 22 Jiang Jin 23 Fu Bin 27 Shao Jiayi 29 Huang Yong Coach: Milutinović

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Adapted from the Wikipedia article [Qu Shengqing](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Qu_Shengqing) by Wikipedia contributors ([contributor history](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Qu_Shengqing?action=history)). Available under [Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 International](https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/4.0/). Changes may have been made.
