Tevez 'feels alive again' on Boca return

0 Comment(s)Print E-mail SHINE, January 30, 2018
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Boca Juniors' Carlos Tevez holds up the team standard after their Argentina First Division Superliga match against Colon de Santa Fe at La Bombonera stadium in Buenos Aires on January 27, 2018.

Carlos Tevez said he felt "alive again" after marking the start of his third spell with Boca Juniors by setting up a goal in his team's 2-0 win over Colon de Santa Fe.


The former Manchester United and Juventus striker — who turns 34 next week — is back at his childhood club after a miserable and controversial brief spell with Chinese Super League club Shanghai Greenland Shenhua.


Cristian Pavon gave Boca a second-minute lead with Charrua Nandez adding the second just after the hour mark in Saturday's game.


"It's exciting to feel being alive again," Tevez, who was named captain for the match, told Argentine television channel TyC Sports.


Despite lacking match fitness, Tevez did have a helping hand in Nandez's goal while falling victim to a foul by Gustavo Toledo who was sent off for his troubles in the 71st minute.


"It's an extra motivation for me that people continue to show the same affection. I enjoyed every moment. I don't see myself suffering, I am very happy to be here."


The win allowed Boca to move to 33 points and increase its lead at the top of the table to six points from San Lorenzo.


Tevez, who earlier played for Boca between 2001-2004 and 2015-2016, arrived back in Argentina after describing his time at Shenhua as a "holiday".


He was widely criticized in China as he struggled for form after Shenhua reportedly made him the world's highest-paid player on a weekly salary of 730,000 euros (US$899,000).


"It's fine because I was on holiday for seven months," he joked in an interview with TyC Sports earlier this month.


After Saturday's match, he added: "My family suffered a lot but I'm trying to get ahead and give people joy."


Tevez's remarks on his time in China prompted an outpouring of anger on Chinese social media, with fans of a number of CSL clubs rounding on the man often disparagingly labelled "very homesick boy" in the Asian country.


"After looking at Tevez's interview my heart as a Chinese football fan is again deeply hurt," wrote one on Weibo, China's equivalent of Twitter..


"While we are chasing Tevez like a rat crossing the street, China's (football) managers should also do some good self-reflection."


Tevez scored only four goals in the CSL and missed his team's successful Cup final win, while coach Wu Jingui called him "overweight" when he took over in September.


Tevez is hoping to help Boca end its 11-year wait for a seventh Copa Libertadores title when the South American tournament kicks off later this week.


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