Guangzhou Matsunichi F.C.

Guangzhou Matsunichi
Guǎngzhōu Sōngrì
广州松日
Full name Matsunichi Electric Group FC Co, Ltd.
松日电器集团足球俱乐部有限公司
Founded 1990 (1990) as Guangzhou B
28 February 1995 (28 February 1995) as Guangzhou Matsunichi
Dissolved 26 November 2000 (26 November 2000)
Ground Xihe Sports Centre
Capacity 21,570

Guangzhou Matsunichi Football Club (simplified Chinese: 广州松日; traditional Chinese: 廣州松日; pinyin: Guǎngzhōu Sōngrì) was a professional football club based in Shaoguan, Guangdong, PR China who last played in the 21,570 capacity Xihe Sports Centre. The club was originally established as the youth team for Guangzhou F.C. whom were allowed to participate within the Chinese football league pyramid until the team was sold-off to Pan Sutong and his company Matsunichi Digital Holdings Limited to form Guangzhou Matsunichi F.C. on 28 February 1995. The club would soon gain promotion to the top tier of Chinese football where in total they spent three seasons before suffering relegation at the 1999 league season. When the club experienced another relegation campaign in 2000, Pan Sutong decided to pull his funding for the club, which officially became defunct on 26 November 2000.

History

The club was originally established in 1990 to be the youth team for Guangzhou F.C. who were allowed to participate within the Chinese football league pyramid. They were often referred to as Guangzhou B and in their first appearance within the Chinese leagues they entered the third tier in the 1992 season where they came third, which was enough to gain promotion for the 1994 campaign.[1] After the 1993 league season was restructured the club were allowed to make their second appearance in the 1994 campaign, this time within the second tier where they went on to come third.[2] With these impressive positions and with the dawn of professionalism, which allowed private investors to own football clubs the club decided to take advantage of this and separate from their parent club and sell the team to Pan Sutong and his company Matsunichi Digital Holdings Limited to form Guangzhou Matsunichi F.C. on 28 February 1995.[3]

In the clubs debut season under new ownership the team continued their upswing in results and came runners-up within the division at the end of the 1995 campaign and gained promotion to the top tier for the first time. A reunion with Guangzhou F.C. would also occur on 25 June and 1 July 1995 within the Chinese FA Cup that saw Guangzhou Matsunichi win 4–3 on aggregate.[4] The teams constantly rising trajectory, however would come to an end in the 1996 league season after the club were unable to handle the top tier and experienced relegation at the end of the campaign.[5] After that disappointment the club hired former Chinese national team coach Xu Genbao in the hopes that his experience could revive the clubs fortunes and one of his first acts was to persuade the then current Chinese international footballer Gao Hongbo to take a step down in leagues and join the club. This move would be a huge success and the club gained promotion back into the top tier in their first attempt.[6]

In the 1998 league season Xu Genbao left the club to manage the reigning league champions Dalian Wanda F.C., which saw the club bring in Brazilian coach Edson Tavares. The new coach would make sure that the club would remain within the league and actually guided the team to fourth, however after only one season with the club Tavares left the team. Gao Hongbo was promoted to coach, but his inexperience saw him leave during the season, which saw the club bring Liu Kang into the team but he was unable to stop the team slide down the table and experience relegation at the end of the 1999 campaign. On 22 December 2011 it would be discovered that the clubs General manager knew that the referee for the clubs vital final game of the season was bribed to help keep fellow struggling team Shenyang Haishi in the division and he took a bribe to keep silent.[7] After the disappointing season the team were unable to recover and faced relegation again in the 2000 campaign, which saw Pan Sutong decide to pull his funding for the club. This saw the club financially unsustainable and it became officially defunct on 26 November 2000.[8]

Managerial history

Managers who have coached the club and team since Guangzhou Matsunichi became a professional club back in 1995.[9]

Results

All-time League Rankings[10][11]

Year Div Pld W D L GF GA GD Pts Pos. FA Cup Super Cup AFC Att./G Stadium
19923631293+6313DNE DNE
199422010553116+15253NH DNE
199522210843127+4382QFDNQDNQYuexiushan Stadium, Guangzhou
199612229111026−161512QFDNQDNQ11,727Tianhe Stadium, Guangzhou
19972229763322+11344QFDNQDNQXihe Sports Centre, Shaoguan
1998126106102333+10364R1DNQDNQ7,308Guangdong Provincial People's Stadium, Guangzhou
199912676132436−122713R1DNQDNQ12,308Guizhou Provincial Stadium, Guiyang
2000222210101535−201612R1DNQDNQXihe Sports Centre, Shaoguan

Did not participate in 1993 league season, due to league restructuring;

  • ^1 In final group stage. ^2 In second group stage. ^3 In group stage.

Key

References

  1. "广州松日". china.com.cn. Retrieved 2015-11-15.
  2. "China League 1994". rsssf.com. 2003-06-19. Archived from the original on 2014-07-27. Retrieved 2015-11-15.
  3. "[联赛原创]中超琐碎谈(回忆录三):广州松日队[九六零俱乐部]". bbs.tiexue.net. Retrieved 2015-11-15.
  4. "China 1995 – FA Cup". rsssf.com. 1999-12-06. Retrieved 2015-11-15.
  5. "甲A时代广东德比回顾 巅峰96四队十二场德比". gpcfootball.163.com. 2008-04-03. Retrieved 2015-11-15.
  6. "China League 1997". rsssf.com. 2003-06-21. Archived from the original on 2012-09-29. Retrieved 2015-11-15.
  7. "Court told 5.5m yuan paid to win the league". china.org.cn. 2011-12-22. Retrieved 2015-11-15.
  8. "甲A广州松日老板建中国第一高楼 身价曾达千亿". sports.sohu.com. 2015-09-14. Retrieved 2015-11-15.
  9. "Guangzhou Songri » Manager history". worldfootball.net. Retrieved 2015-11-09.
  10. "China League History". rsssf.com. 2009-10-22. Archived from the original on 2014-06-07. Retrieved 2015-11-09.
  11. "China List of Cup Winners". rsssf.com. 2015-09-02. Retrieved 2015-11-16.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.