Philippine Army F.C.

Philippine Army FC
Full name Philippine Army Football Club
Nickname(s) The Troopers
Founded 1960 (1960)
President Maj. CJ Paolo P. Pérez, (CAV) PA
Head coach Patricio Bumidang
2015 UFL Division 1, 10th (Disqualified, relegated to Division 2)

The Philippine Army Football Club is an association football club based in the Philippines. It was founded in 1960 through the effort of the Philippine Army Special Services Unit. A unit that promotes sports and physical fitness within the Army, under the direction of the Commanding General. As the club name indicates, the team is composed of members of the Philippine Army.

History

In 2003, the club participated in the inaugural edition of ASEAN Club Championship held in Jakarta, Indonesia where they finished the tournament with 2 losses.[1]

Philippine Army participated in the sole season of the Filipino Premier League in 2008 winning over Giligans in the league final.[2]

United Football League

Football crest as Philippine Army GTI (2014 UFL).

Philippine Army F.C. played in the now-defunct United Football League, which was the de facto top tier league in the Philippines. Initially the club is among the top teams in the league finishing third in the 2011 season though they finished 9th in the following two seasons in 2012 and 2013. The club avoided relegation by winning against Union Internacional Manila F.C. in the playoff.[3]

For the 2014 UFL season, Philippine Army F.C. had a temporary merger with General Trias International FC and the military squad was bolstered by Korean players.[4] The move was done due to difficulties in scheduling the training of its players who are also enlisted soldiers who were often called into duty. The team played as Philippine Army GTI for that season.[5]

At the latter part of the 2015 season, Philippine Army was disqualified from the UFL including any other competitions under the league.[6]

Players

As a football club under the Armed Forces of the Philippines like the Philippine Navy F.C. and the Philippine Air Force F.C., Philippine Army F.C. can only sign players who are also enlisted in the Philippine Army.[3] Though for the 2014 season the squad included non-Army enlistees with the temporary merger of the club with General Trias International FC.

The club had players who has played for the Philippines national team such as Roel Gener, Nestorio Margarse, and Eduard Sacapaño.[3]

Continental record

Season Competition Round Club Home Away Aggregate
2003 ASEAN Club Championship Group Stage IndiaKingfisher East Bengal 6–0 3rd
Thailand BEC Tero Sasana 0–3

Honors

Domestic competitions

  • Runners-up (1): 2009

Records

Season Division Tms. Pos. PFF NMCC UFL Cup AFC PC
No league yet Runner-up
2010 1 8 5th Semi-finals
2011 1 7 3rd Round of 16
2012 1 10 9th Quarter-finals
2013 1 10 9th Round of 16 Group Stage DNQ
2014 1 9 7th DNQ
2015 1 10 10th (DQ)
Key
  • Tms. = Number of teams
  • Pos. = Position in league
  • TBD = To be determined
  • DNQ = Did not qualify

Note: Performances of the club indicated here was after the UFL Division 1 created (as a semi-pro league) in 2009.

References

  1. Saaid, Hamdan (2003-11-05). "ASEAN Club Championship 2003 – Match Details". rsssf.com. Rec.Sport.Soccer Statistics Foundation. Retrieved 2012-09-16.
  2. Olivares, Rick (24 January 2012). "Air Force FC, Army FC & Navy FC: The strong, the few, and the proud are under siege". Bleacher's Brew. Retrieved 5 January 2018.
  3. 1 2 3 Miravite, Myke (14 January 2014). "UFL Preview: Philippine Army's Last Stand". Rappler. Retrieved 5 January 2018.
  4. Miravite, Myke (17 January 2014). "UFL: Army topples Team Socceroo; Green Archers – Pasargad ends in draw". Rappler. Retrieved 5 January 2018.
  5. Guerrero, Bob (17 January 2014). "UFL: GAU held by new-look Pasargad, Army merges with GTI and wins". Yahoo! Philippines. Retrieved 5 January 2018.
  6. Murillo, Michael Angelo (13 August 2015). "JP Voltes earns promotion; UFL Cup KO stage begins". BusinessMirror. Retrieved 5 January 2018.
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