Beijing Fly Dragons

Beijing Beikong Fly Dragons
Leagues CBA
Founded 2009 (2009)
History Guangzhou Free Man
(2009–2012)
Chonqqing Fly Dragons
(2012–2015)
Beikong Fly Dragons
(2015–present)
Arena Beijing National Indoor Stadium
Arena Capacity 6,000
Location Beijing, China
Team colors Gold, Black White
              
Main sponsor Nanhai Corporation
(2009–2012)
Black Valley
(2012–2015)
Beijing BG / Beikong
(2015–present)
Team manager Lü Jinqing
Head coach Wang Xidong
Ownership Li Chunli
Uniforms
Home
Away

The Beijing Beikong Fly Dragons (simplified Chinese: 北京北控翱龙; traditional Chinese: 北京北控翺龍; pinyin: běi jīng běi kòng áo lóng) or Beijing Enterprises Water Group Fly Dragons or Beijing BG Fly Dragons are a Chinese professional men's basketball team which is based in Beijing and plays in the Northern Division of the Chinese Basketball Association (CBA). Beijing BG (known in Chinese as Beijing Beikong) is the club's corporate sponsor while its mascot is a fly dragon.

History

The franchise was founded in 2009 in Guangzhou and spent its first five seasons of existence competing at the lower levels of China's hardwood hierarchy. The team relocated to Chongqing in 2012. The club entered the CBA in the 2014–15 season as an expansion team and finished at the bottom of the league standings with a record of 4-34.

In September 2015, the club relocated again and was initially renamed Beijing BG[1] but to avoid confusion with the city's association football team from the second-tier China League One, which is also called Beijing BG, or Beijing Beikong, as well as to avoid confusion with the Beijing Ducks when only the geographical names of CBA clubs are used—a large number of Chinese sports websites refer to the team as the Beikong Fly Dragons (the club's jerseys and official logo have always used the badly-translated English term "Fly Dragons" instead of "Flying Dragons" or "Soaring Dragons").[2]

This practice is consistent with the way a lot of Chinese sports websites shorten the second Zhejiang team's name to Guangsha Lions and the second Jiangsu team's name to Tongxi Monkey Kings. So this means Beikong replaces Beijing as the club's "geographical" designation on such lists.[3]

It remains to be seen whether the team will keep the "Fly Dragons" moniker over the long haul or switch to another nickname, since the CBA also has the Jiangsu Dragons and the Shanxi Brave Dragons monikers in place.

Roster

To be uploaded in future.

Notable players

Current

Former

References

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