Shanghai SIPG F.C.

Shanghai SIPG
Shànghǎi Shànggǎng
上海上港
Full name Shanghai SIPG Football Club
上海上港集团足球俱乐部
Founded 25 December 2005
Ground Shanghai Stadium
Capacity 56,842
Chairman Jiang Haitao (姜海涛)
Head Coach Sven-Göran Eriksson
League Chinese Super League
2014 Super League, 5th
Website Club home page

Shanghai SIPG F.C. (Chinese: 上海上港; pinyin: Shànghǎi Shànggǎng) is a Chinese professional football club, that currently participates in the Chinese Super League. "SIPG" is the abbreviation of a Chinese group, "Shanghai International Port (Group)". They play their home matches at Shanghai Stadium in Xuhui, Shanghai.

Founded in 2005 as Shanghai Dongya F.C. by former Chinese international football coach Xu Genbao, the club mostly consists of graduates from Genbao Football Base, a football academy founded by Xu in 2000. The club joined the bottom of the Chinese football league system in the 2006 and has so far have won the 2007 China League Two and the 2012 China League One divisions. In addition, they represented Shanghai at the 2009 China National Games and won the men's football gold medal.

Shanghai Dongya also earns its fame largely because of its success in youth development. In China, the team is sometimes nicknamed as "China's Manchester United", because of Xu's well-known ambition "to create a China's Manchester United".

History

Est.-2007: League Two

On May 16, 2000 former Chinese international football coach Xu Genbao founded the Genbao Football Base and enrolled 96 academy members born between 1988 and 1991, who were to be trained in the recently built Genbao Football Base Arena.[1]

Initially, Xu Genbao had no intention of establishing a professional football club. However as the youngsters in the Base grew up, the lack of youth football competition in China prompt Xu to set up a football club so that his protégés could earn match experiences in professional football. On December 25, 2005, Shanghai Dongya Football Club was jointly established by Xu Genbao and Shanghai Dongya Sports and Culture Center Co. Ltd, with Xu Genbao being the club chairman. Xu appointed Claude Lowitz, a French youth coach in the Base, as the team manager.

With young players aged between 14 and 17, Shanghai Dongya competed in the 2006 China League Two, the third tier of the Chinese league system. The team played their home games at Genbao Football Base Arena training ground in Chongming, Shanghai, and eventually finished their first season at the seventh place. During the campaign Xu's players broke a few records during the season, with Cao Yunding being the youngest Chinese goalscorer aged 16 years and 242 days,[2] and Wu Lei the youngest Chinese professional footballer, aged only 14 years and 287 days.[3] At the end of 2006, Claude Lowitz left the club, and former assistant manager Jiang Bingyao took up the manager position. With lessons learned and experiences gained from their debutante season, the young Dongya went on to win the division title in 2007, by beating Sichuan in the final, and thus gaining promotion to China League One, the second tier football league.[4]

2008–2012: League One

Despite the successful promotion, questions arose as to what would happen to the team, especially given that Xu's previous effort to create a professional club (Shanghai Cable 02) ended up being sold off to Shanghai Shenhua in 2002 due to financial difficulties. In June 2007, Shanghai government came to Xu's rescue with financial aid, in exchange Dongya would represent Shanghai in the 2009 National Games.[5]

With the club in a higher division, Shanghai Dongya moved into the 30,000 seater Jinshan Sports Centre in Jinshan District of Shanghai and finished the 2008 China League One division campaign in a respectable sixth. In summer 2009, Shanghai Dongya represent Shanghai football team and take part in the 2009 National Games. Xu Genbao took up the management post himself and led the team to win the gold the men's football gold medal. Meanwhile in the league, Shanghai Dongya chose the 65,000 seater Shanghai Stadium as their home stadium for their 2009 China League One campaign. Shanghai Dongya finished the season in fourth place and just missed out on promotion by a single win, but such an achievement is still considered quite remarkable especially given that the team was made up of players under 20 years old, and no foreign players.

The 2010 league season saw former Chinese international Fan Zhiyi receive his first management job at the club as well as the introduction of their first ever foreign players in Macedonian Nikola Karçev and Haitian Fabrice Noël. Despite these new signings the club failed to improve upon the previous season's results and finished in the fourth place. Failure to gain promotion and financial difficulties caused the club unable to hold onto their rising stars. Before the 2011 season, five of the team's starting XI left the club: team captain Wang Jiayu, Chinese international Zhang Linpeng and Chinese U-23 players Cao Yunding, Jiang Zhipeng, and Gu Chao.[6] In the following 2011 season, Xu Genbao promoted several young players into the first team and the team finished the season in a disappointing ninth place.

At the beginning of the 2012 season. The club sold team name to a Sponsor, Zobon Group for 30 million Yuan on a three-year deal, which saw the club change first team's name to Shanghai Tellace on December 31, 2011, while the club name remains unchanged as Shanghai Dongya F.C.[7] At the end of the season, Shanghai Tellace won the league title and was promoted to Chinese Super League.

2013-present: CSL

Before the 2013 season, Shanghai Dongya changed its first team name again to Shanghai SIPG, under a 40-million sponsorship deal with Shanghai International Port (Group).[8]

In January 2013, another Shanghai-based football club Shanghai Pudong Zobon, which was previously playing in 2012 China League Two, was dissolved. Most of its players, born between 1993 and 1994 and graduated from Genbao Football Base, were brought back under Xu Genbao's wing and would become the reserve team of Shanghai Dongya F.C.[9]

Name history

Honours

Results

All-time League Rankings

Year Div Pld W D L GF GA GD Pts Pos. FA Cup Super Cup AFC Att./G Stadium
2006 3 16 3 5 8 26 29 -3 14 7 1 NH DNQ - Genbao Football Base Arena
2007 3 17 11 4 2 35 15 +20 30 1 W NH DNQ - Genbao Football Base Arena
2008 2 24 7 7 10 26 30 -4 28 6 NH DNQ - Jinshan Football Stadium
2009 2 24 13 5 6 43 25 +18 44 4 NH DNQ - Shanghai Stadium
2010 2 24 9 10 5 25 18 +7 37 4 NH DNQ - Shanghai Stadium
2011 2 26 7 11 8 29 25 +4 32 9 R2 DNQ - Shanghai Stadium
2012 2 30 17 8 5 47 25 +22 59 W R3 DNQ - 3,113 Shanghai Stadium
2013 1 30 10 7 13 38 35 3 37 9 R4 DNQ - 10,161 Shanghai Stadium
2014 1 30 12 12 6 47 39 8 48 5 R3 DNQ - 12,460 Shanghai Stadium

Key

  China top division
  China second division
  China third division
W   Winners
RU   Runners-up
3   Third place
  Relegated

  • Pld = Played
  • W = Games won
  • D = Games drawn
  • L = Games lost
  • F = Goals for
  • A = Goals against
  • Pts = Points
  • Pos = Final position

  • DNQ = Did Not Qualify
  • DNE = Did Not Enter
  • NH = Not Held
  • - = Does Not Exist
  • R1 = Round 1
  • R2 = Round 2
  • R3 = Round 3
  • R4 = Round 4

  • F = Final
  • SF = Semi-finals
  • QF = Quarter-finals
  • R16 = Round of 16
  • Group = Group stage
  • GS2 = Second Group stage
  • QR1 = First Qualifying Round
  • QR2 = Second Qualifying Round
  • QR3 = Third Qualifying Round

Current squad

As of 5 March 2015 [12]

First-team squad

Note: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.

No. Position Player
1 China GK Yan Junling
2 China DF Zhang Wei
3 South Korea DF Kim Ju-young
4 China DF Wang Shenchao (Vice Captain)
5 China MF Wang Jiajie
6 China MF Cai Huikang
7 China FW Wu Lei
8 Brazil MF Davi
9 Sweden FW Tobias Hysén
10 Argentina MF Darío Conca
11 China FW Lü Wenjun
12 China FW Li Haowen
13 China MF Zheng Dalun
14 China FW Li Shenglong
15 China FW Lin Chuangyi
No. Position Player
16 China DF Wu Haitian
17 Ivory Coast FW Jean Evrard Kouassi
18 China MF Zhang Yi
19 China DF Yang Shiyuan
20 China MF Wang Jiayu
21 China FW Yu Hai
22 China GK Sun Le
23 China DF Fu Huan
27 China DF Shi Ke
28 China DF He Guan
29 China MF Zheng Zhiyun
30 China FW Zhu Zhengrong
31 China GK Dong Jialin
32 China DF Sun Xiang (Captain)
33 China DF Yang Boyu

Reserve squad

Note: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.

No. Position Player
36 China MF Li Jiawei
37 China FW Mao Jiakang
39 China DF Wu Yuyin
41 China FW Chen Binbin
42 China MF Sun Jungang
43 China MF Sun Enming
44 China GK Chen Wei
No. Position Player
45 China DF Zhang Jiaxin
46 China MF Xiao Mingjie
48 China DF Chen Kejiang
49 China GK Shi Xiaodong
51 China MF Shang Wenjie
54 China MF Liu Xiangcheng
55 China FW Hu Jinghang

Out on loan

Note: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.

No. Position Player
- Australia FW Bernie Ibini-Isei (at Sydney FC until 31 May 2015)

Coaching staff

Position Staff
Head coach Sweden Sven-Göran Eriksson
Assistant coach Sweden Roger Palmgren
Goalkeeping coach England Ian Walker
Fitness coach South Africa Divan Augustyn
Team physician Sweden Ali Kad

Source: Sina.com

Asian clubs ranking

As of 5 October 2014[13]
Current Rank Country Team
89 China Shanghai SIPG
90 South Korea Gyeongnam
91 Indonesia Persib Bandung
92 Saudi Arabia Al-Faisaly
93 China Guizhou Renhe

Notable players

Had international caps for their respective countries.

China

Africa

Europe

Central America

Managers

  • France Claude Lowitz (2006)
  • China Jiang Bingyao (2007–09)
  • China Fan Zhiyi (2010)
  • China Jiang Bingyao (Jan 31, 2011–Dec 20, 2012)
  • China Gao Hongbo (Feb 27, 2013–Nov 7, 2013)
  • China Xi Zhikang (Dec 4, 2013–Nov, 2014)
  • Sweden Sven-Göran Eriksson (Dec, 2014–)

References

  1. 上海东亚足球俱乐部介绍 at eafc.online.sh.cn 02-12-2010 Retrieved 14-06-2012 (Chinese)
  2. 中国曼联整风后创佳绩 主场重创武汉雅琪显年轻魅力 at sina.com.cn 20-08-2006 Retrieved 14-06-2012 (Chinese)
  3. 乙级也有上海德比:武磊上场创纪录 东亚遗憾负东巴 at sina.com.cn 03-09-2006 Retrieved 14-06-2012 (Chinese)
  4. 五分钟神奇逆转 徐根宝率东亚2比1胜四川乙级封王 at sina.com.cn 25-11-2007 Retrieved 14-06-2012 (Chinese)
  5. 02计划失败成遗憾根宝欲借东亚重掌国字号 at jfdaily.com 29-11-2007 Retrieved 14-06-2012 (Chinese)
  6. 恒大巧避足协限价令 1200万天价签约国足红人 at sports.163.com 26-11-2010 Retrieved 14-06-2012 (Chinese)
  7. 卫平华丽牵手徐根宝 球队正式更名"上海特莱士"队 at eafc.online.sh.cn 01-01-2012 Retrieved 14-06-2012 (Chinese)
  8. 上港集团4000万冠名东亚 资金到位徐根宝信心满满 at eafc.online.sh.cn 12-28-2012 Retrieved 01-31-2013 (Chinese)
  9. 东亚收回中邦小队 根宝证实战怡麟转会达口头协议 at eafc.online.sh.cn 01-07-2013 Retrieved 01-31-2013 (Chinese)
  10. "China - List of Champions". rsssf.com. 10 Oct 2013. Retrieved 31 January 2014.
  11. "上海东亚". sodasoccer.com. Retrieved 31 January 2014.
  12. 2015年上海上港足球俱乐部中超联赛名单
  13. http://footballdatabase.com/ranking/asia – footballdatabase.com

External links