Thursday, October 16, 2025

Breaking Through the Bamboo Curtain

On This Day in 1977, Nanchoff and Villa Sparked a Historic Victory as Soccer Became the Latest Bridge Between Two Nations

The arrival of 18 Chinese footballers at Dulles Airport on an October Monday evening represented something far larger than sport. Six years after ping-pong diplomacy cracked open relations between Washington and Beijing, the People's Republic of China sent its national soccer team to American soil for the first time. Like the table tennis players, gymnasts, and basketball teams before them, they carried dual responsibilities: compete on the field while serving as cultural ambassadors in a delicate geopolitical dance.

Their ambitious 14-day, five-game American tour arrived at a pivotal moment for U.S. soccer. For the first time in the federation's history, a full-time national coach oversaw player development. Walt Chyzowych, who had left collegiate powerhouse Philadelphia Textile in August 1976, now commanded the World Cup, Olympic, Pan American and Youth programs with unprecedented resources and continuity. "We've never had continuity before," Chyzowych explained. After watching every NASL team and inviting the 30 best American citizens to camp, he had selected a remarkably young squad—average age just 22—that had already played 30 matches together. They had shocked observers by winning the Festival of the Americas in New Jersey the previous month, defeating clubs from Colombia, Ecuador and Peru before a mixed Central American tour produced a victory over El Salvador alongside defeats to Mexico and Guatemala (twice).

The Chinese arrived equally young and inexperienced, having formed their current squad just two months earlier for a tour to Korea. After matches against Thailand, they faced the reigning NASL champion Cosmos twice at home in September, earning a stunning 1-1 draw before 85,000 in Beijing and a 2-1 win in Shanghai. The whirlwind American introduction left little time for jet lag. The morning after landing, the Chinese delegation toured the U.S. Naval Academy, lunched with midshipmen and Chinese language students, then practiced for the first time on artificial turf in preparation for their opening match. They visited Capitol Hill, where four Congressmen explained the American government before they observed congressional debates. When the term "filibuster" was later explained, one visitor, through an interpreter, noted, "We have no word for that." 

The opening match at RFK Stadium on October 6 unfolded before a crowd eager to witness history as much as soccer. The Americans, featuring Gary Etherington of Annandale, who had starred at Mount Vernon High before joining the Cosmos, fielded a team ready to challenge for a place in the 1980 World Cup. The Chinese struck first when midfielder Ho Chia scored in the 16th minute. The Americans trailed into the second half until Greg Villa, the Minnesota Kicks midfielder, headed home a Dave D'Errico cross in the 65th minute to secure a 1-1 draw. The result felt appropriate for a diplomatic occasion—competitive but inconclusive, with neither side suffering the embarrassment of defeat.

Four days later in Atlanta, before 15,003 spectators, the series shifted decisively. The Chinese mounted just three scoring chances, but Arnold Mausser denied two shots while the third sailed wide. Late in the second half, Fred Pereira broke through to give the United States a 1-0 victory, putting the Americans ahead in the series with one match remaining.

The final match on October 16 carried weight beyond the scoreline. San Francisco had outmaneuvered Seattle, Honolulu, Los Angeles and Oakland to host the only scheduled Western contest. Bob Braghetta of World Soccer Enterprises emphasized the occasion's significance: "This match is not designed to increase competition with China. It is so we may open our arms and extend the hand of friendship." The match would be broadcast live to Hong Kong for an estimated 400 million viewers, picked up by the BBC in England and televised in Japan, Colombia, Puerto Rico, Mexico and Costa Rica. American public broadcasting planned a delayed broadcast later in the year. Douglas Murray, vice president of the National Committee on U.S.-China Relations, called it part of a growing diplomatic effort between "these two nations, which must look at each other seriously and responsibly in the years ahead."

At Kezar Stadium, 17,500 enthusiasts settled in for what organizers had billed as "Great International Soccer." A preliminary match between the University of San Francisco and UCLA served as a 2-1 warm-up, showcasing the American collegiate game. When the national teams took the field, both squads bowed to the stands—the Chinese delegation in burgundy and white, the Americans in their national colors. The first half disappointed those expecting immediate fireworks. Both teams used their midfield effectively but created little danger in attack. The Chinese mounted a strong push near halftime, but Alan Mayer, the Las Vegas Quicksilvers goalkeeper, collected eight brilliant saves to preserve a scoreless stalemate.

The second half exploded into life almost immediately. Less than two minutes in, George Nanchoff received a pass from Ricky Davis, the 18-year-old Santa Clara freshman who was the only non-NASL player on the American roster. Nanchoff, usually a forward for the Fort Lauderdale Strikers but deployed on the left wing, drove down the sideline and stopped 18 yards out. His shot from the left side of the penalty area flew high into the top right corner, bringing the crowd to its feet.

90 seconds later, the Americans struck again with devastating efficiency. Steve Ralbovsky of the Chicago Sting headed a corner kick toward the penalty spot. The ball fell perfectly to Villa, positioned 15 yards straight in front of the goal. His shot never deviated, beating Chinese goalkeeper Li Fusheng cleanly for a 2-0 American lead before the match had barely resumed.

The sudden two-goal deficit sparked a determined Chinese response. They pressed forward in waves, forcing Mayer into extraordinary action. The American goalkeeper abandoned his usual conservative positioning, ranging far beyond the goal mouth. At one point, he charged into the left corner to stop an attacking opponent, continually sweeping through the penalty area to collect shots from the air or smother them on the ground. "I don't usually play that way," Mayer later admitted. "But the Chinese were quick, and I had to take pressure off our fullbacks. I was taking intelligent chances."

Midway through the second half, one American mistake nearly shifted momentum. Defender Dave D'Errico, attempting to clear the ball from in front of the goal, inadvertently kicked it past the startled Mayer for an own goal credited to Chinese forward Yung Chin-hang, who happened to be nearest the ball.  The Chinese nearly equalized moments later when Yung rifled a high, straight shot that seemed destined for the net. Mayer's outstretched fingertips deflected it over the crossbar—the save of the match. Otherwise, Mayer swept his area clean, finishing with fifteen saves against twenty-one Chinese shots. When the final whistle sounded, the Americans had completed a sweep of the three-match series with two victories and a draw.

Both teams again bowed to the stands as the crowd, later reported as 19,000, acknowledged the historic occasion with sustained applause. The victory cemented the most successful period yet for American soccer development under its first full-time national coach. In less than two months, Chyzowych's young squad had won the Festival of the Americas and swept a series against China. The continuity he had demanded was bearing fruit—this team had been together four weeks, more than any previous American national squad.

Yet the diplomatic restrictions that had made the occasion possible also limited deeper understanding. Post-match interviews were restricted to five minutes, conducted by a single journalist not selected by the press corps, and answered not by Chinese players or coaches but by the deputy secretary general of the China Soccer Association, Yang Hsiu-wu, who spoke through an interpreter wearing a grey pinstriped suit and a burgundy tie. Five minutes of questioning revealed only that China had no national championship playoff, that the squad had been together for just two months, and that Chinese teams had played roughly 80 foreign opponents in the past decade.

Mayer, who had faced more Chinese shots than anyone, disagreed emphatically with the casual observers taking in the match. "They sure didn't look old-fashioned to me. They took lots of shots on goal and created many scoring chances. They run very well, very quickly, and they have good ball skills. It was good to play against them. They played very well; we just played better. They were gentlemen."

The Chinese would continue to Jamaica and Mexico before returning home. Their American impressions of Muir Woods, Disney World, the Golden Gate Bridge, congressional debates, and the enthusiastic crowds that had cheered them remained largely unknown. These matches were proof that soccer could serve as another bridge between nations still learning to look at each other seriously and responsibly in the years ahead.

The series represented more than diplomatic theater. For American soccer, it demonstrated that Chyzowych's investment in continuity and youth development was producing tangible results against legitimate international competition. For the broader relationship between the United States and the People's Republic of China, it added another layer to the patient work of cultural exchange, one match at a time, building understanding through the universal language of sport.

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