Beijing Renhe F.C.

Beijing Renhe Football Club
Běijīng Rénhé
北京人和足球俱乐部
Full name Beijing Renhe Football Club
北京人和足球俱乐部
Founded February 3, 1995 (1995-02-03)
Ground Beijing Fengtai Stadium, Beijing
Ground Capacity 31,043
Owner Renhe Commercial Holdings Company Limited
Dai Yongge
Xiuli Hawken
Chairman Gong Lei
Head coach Luis García Plaza
League China League One
2016 League One, 4th
Website Club website

Beijing Renhe Football Club (Chinese: 北京人和; pinyin: Běijīng Rénhé) is a professional football club that currently participates in the China League One division under licence from the Chinese Football Association (CFA). The team is based in Fengtai, Beijing and their home stadium is the Beijing Fengtai Stadium that has a seating capacity of 31,043. Their current majority shareholder is Chinese property developers of shopping centers Renhe Commercial Holdings Company Limited.

The club was founded in Pudong, Shanghai in February 3, 1995 and were originally known as Shanghai Pudong before they made their debut in the third tier of China's football league pyramid in the 1995 league season. They would work there way up to the top tier while changing name to accommodate their sponsors. In the 2006 league season the club would relocate the team to Shaanxi and rename themselves Xi'an Chanba International, however by the 2012 league season, the club relocated this time to Guizhou, and changed their name to Guizhou Renhe.[1] Throughout the clubs history their greatest achievement has been winning the 2013 Chinese FA Cup while the highest position they have ever finished was second within the 2003 league season.

History

The club was founded on February 3, 1995 in Pudong, Shanghai to take part in the recently formed fully professional football league system and they started at the bottom of the football pyramid in the third division, where they named themselves Shanghai Pudong. Playing in all blue in their debut season, they would immediately taste success when they won the division title and promotion to the second tier.[2] The following seasons, however, saw the team languish within the division until they brought in Xu Genbao to manage the side at the beginning of the 2000 season and would make the club promotion contenders. Under Xu Genbao's leadership, they didn't have to wait long to win promotion when they would go on to win the division title at the end of the season and a chance to play in the top tier.[3] Under the ownership of Shanghai Yungtay Engineering and COSCO Real Estate, the club rebranded themselves with a new blue and white striped football kit. They were big spenders who wanted to achieve immediate success by bringing in established Chinese internationals such as Cheng Yaodong, Jiang Jin and particularly Wu Chengying who set a Chinese transfer fee record of 13,000,000 RMB. This saw them become genuine title contenders and under their new manager Cheng Yaodong, they would fight for the league title with Shanghai Greenland Shenhua and only come second by a single point at the end of the 2003 season.[4] On June 13, 2012 it was discovered by the police the real reason the team lost the 2003 title was because the club's players Shen Si, Qi Hong, Jiang Jin and Li Ming (1975) took a bribe from former Tianjin Teda general manager Yang Yifeng to lose their November 30, 2003 game, which saw all offending participants fined and jailed for their crimes.[5]

The owners could not maintain the level of spending that they had done and the team's results would start to slip. Finding that they could not compete with Shanghai Shenhua and in the 2005 season, they had to face additional competition in Shanghai Zobon, the team decided to move to Xi'an after months of speculation. With the newly branded team known as Shanghai International, or Inter Shanghai by the fans, they would start to move away from the previous Yuanshen Stadium to the Shaanxi Province Stadium and renamed themselves Xi'an Chanba International by 2006 or Inter Xi'an by the fans. In 2007, their ownership was transferred to Baorong Investment and it was during this period that the club would start to experiment with a new yellow football kit. This would surprisingly seem to work when the club looked as if they were title contenders once more during the 2008 season, however their title hopes quickly faded and the team eventually finished fifth. The following season, however, would see the team languish near the bottom of the table and Cheng Yaodong decided to resign, which would see former Chinese national football coach Zhu Guanghu come in and guide the team away from the relegation zone.

At the beginning of the 2010 season, Dai Yongge and the Renhe Commercial Holdings Company would start to invest heavily within the club. This would see the club bring in Chinese internationals Sun Jihai, Zhao Xuri, Qu Bo and Mao Jianqing into the team. However, despite the signings, the club struggled within the league and Zhu Guanghu left the club while three time Chinese league winner Milorad Kosanović replaced him.[6] Milorad Kosanović's reign at the club was unsuccessful and he was soon replaced by Slobodan Santrač. After a poor string of results, Slobodan Santrač was fired and former Chinese international manager Gao Hongbo came into the club while it languished in mid-table throughout much of the 2011 season.[7] After another disappointing season, Dia Yongge would start to get frustrated at the team's lack of success and decided to take advantage of Guiyang's government promise of the recently developed Guiyang Olympic Centre for the club, and with Renhe Commercial Holdings Company having better business connections within Guiyang, the club decided that it would move the team, which has recently made them one of the best supported teams in China.[8] The 2012 season saw Guizhou have a successful year, with the club achieving fourth place and gaining entry into its first AFC Champions League.

Ownership and naming history

Year Owner Club name Sponsored team name
1995–96 Shanghai Pudong New Area Social Development Bureau
Fuhao Group
Shanghai Pudong Football Club
1997–98 Fuhao Group
1999 Daqiao Group Shanghai Pudong Whirlpool
2000 Pudong Lianyang 8848
2001–02 Shanghai COSCO Liangwan Real Estate Development Co.,Ltd
Shanghai Huili Group Co.,Ltd
Hainan Bo'ao Investment Holding Co., Ltd
Shanghai COSCO Huili Football Club
2003 Shanghai COSCO Sanlin Real Estate Group Co.,Ltd Shanghai COSCO Sanlin Football Club
2003–04 Shanghai International / Inter Shanghai
2005 Shanghai Yongda Holding Group Co.,Ltd Shanghai Yongda Football Club
2006 Xi'an Chanba International
2007–09 Beijing Baorong Investing Management Co.,Ltd Shaanxi Baorong Chanba Football Club Shaanxi Neo-China Chanba
2009 Shaanxi Greenland Chanba
2010 Shaanxi Zhongjian Chanba[9]
2011 Shaanxi Renhe Commercial Chanba[10]
2012 Renhe Commercial Holding Co.,Ltd Guizhou Renhe Moutai
2013–15 Guizhou Renhe Football Club Guizhou Moutai
2016– Beijing Renhe Football Club

Crest and colours

When the club originated their home colours would predominantly be blue until the club won promotion to the top tier and decided that they needed to differentiate themselves from their local rivals Shanghai Greenland Shenhua, who also play in blue.[11] This saw them employ a blue and white stripe top at the beginning of the 2003 league season and a new crest design of a horse in front of a striped background which was directly inspired by Juventus F.C. own logo.[12] When the club was bought out by Baorong Investments who moved the club to Xi'an they decided that the club should use a new yellow top by the beginning of the 2008 league season and a new crest of a wolf was employed.[13] When the Renhe Commercial Holdings Company bought a majority within the club they wanted to try out a new all black kit during the 2011 league season, however this colour did not last very long and when the company decided to move the club to Guizhou the club decided they needed a new kit to signify this move and launched an all orange kit at the beginning of the 2012 league season.[14][15]

Kit evolution

2002
2003–2007
2008–09
2010
2011
2012

Rivalries

When the club was founded in Shanghai they decided to take advantage of the 1994 Chinese football league professionalism reforms that allowed more than one club in each city. With Shanghai Shenhua already established within the city the potential for China's first top-flight city derby emerged. On 9 March 2002 the first top-flight city derby became a reality when they met in a league game, which saw the club win 2–0 away to Shenhua in front of a sold out Hongkou Football Stadium. Known as the Shanghai derby it would be the start of an intense but short rivalry between the two clubs, which reached its peak on the final day of the 2003 league season with both teams able to win the league title.[16] Shenhua won their game while the club surprisingly lost theirs to relegation fighting club Tianjin Kangshifu. This saw critics dispute the title win and it was eventually discovered that both teams had players and officials match-fix games throughout the campaign.[17] Shenhua would retrospectively lose their title while the club owners decided it was financially unviable to remain in Shanghai and relocated their team to Xi'an, which effectively ended the rivalry.

Current squad

First team

As of 3 March 2017 [18]

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 Xu Jiamin
2 China MF Yu Bin
4 China DF Luo Xin
5 China DF Wan Houliang
6 China DF Wang Qiang
7 Kenya FW Ayub Masika
8 China MF Wang Xuanhong
9 China FW Han Peng
10 Brazil MF Ivo
11 Ecuador FW Jaime Ayoví
12 China GK Zhang Lie
13 China FW Shi Liang
14 China FW Yang Yihu
15 China MF Chen Jie
16 China DF Xiang Hantian
No. Position Player
18 China DF Han Xuan
20 China MF Cao Yongjing
22 China FW Wang Gang
23 China DF Liu Yang
24 China MF Zhang Yuxuan
25 China DF Deng Hanwen
26 China MF Zhang Yufeng
29 China GK Sheng Peng
30 China MF Feng Renliang
31 China MF Rao Weihui
32 China MF Gan Chao
33 China MF Zhu Baojie
35 China MF Li Chenglong
37 China MF Sun Weizhe
43 China MF Chen Liming

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
19 China DF Liu Tianqi
27 China FW Fan Bojian
28 China DF Liu Xiangwei
41 China FW Xiang Ben
42 China MF Ji Yong
44 China FW Shao Shuai
45 China FW Sun Ya
46 China DF Chai Zhichao
47 China DF Hu Jing
48 China DF Ma Yangyang
49 China MF Cui Yijie
No. Position Player
50 China DF He Xi
51 China MF Huang Jun
52 China MF Zhang Liangjian
53 China MF Jiang Yu
54 China DF Chen Guoqing
55 China GK Li Chen
56 China DF Shao Mingxuan
57 China MF Cheng Yetong
58 China MF Zhang Hao
59 China MF Liu Xinyu
60 China DF Ling Zeen

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
21 China FW Shen Tianfeng (at Jiangxi Liansheng)
China GK Lu Ning (at Dalian Boyoung)
No. Position Player
China MF Li Shuai (at Heilongjiang Lava Spring)
Croatia FW Nikica Jelavić (at Guizhou Zhicheng)

Coaching staff

Position Staff
Manager Spain Luis García Plaza
Assistant coach China Qiu Zhiyin
China Li Chunman
Fitness Coach Serbia Duško Tomaš
Goalkeeper Coach Serbia Duško Tomić

Source: Sina.com

Managerial history

Managers who have coached the club and team since Guizhou Renhe was formed.[19][20]

Honours

League

Third-place (1): 2004
Runner-Up (1): 2003
Winners (1): 2001
Winners (1): 1995

Cup

Winners (1): 2013
Runner-Up (1): 2012
Winners (1): 2014

Results

All-time league rankings

As of the end of 2016 season.[23][24]

Year Div Pld W D L GF GA GD Pts Pos. FA Cup Super Cup League Cup AFC Other Att./G Stadium
1995 3 8 5 1 2 16 W DNQ DNQ    Chuansha Stadium
1996 2 22 6 5 11 17 31 −14 23 9 R3 DNQ   
1997 2 22 7 6 9 23 23 0 27 10 R2 DNQ   
1998 2 22 8 4 10 20 27 −7 28 7 R1 DNQ   
1999 2 22 10 6 6 32 30 2 36 4 R1 DNQ   
2000 2 22 7 12 3 28 22 6 33 4 R2 DNQ    Yuanshen Sports Centre Stadium
2001 2 22 14 4 4 51 21 30 46 W R1 DNQ    Shanghai Stadium
2002 1 28 9 8 11 37 39 −2 35 9 QF DNQ    17,500
2003 1 28 16 6 6 39 26 13 54 RU QF DNQ    17,821
2004 1 22 8 8 6 39 31 8 32 3 R2 NH R2   A3 4 8,455
2005 1 26 8 7 11 30 32 −2 31 8 R3 NH R1   4,385
2006 1 28 8 12 8 33 34 −1 36 9 R1 NH NH   17,286 Shaanxi Province Stadium
2007 1 28 4 14 10 24 29 −5 26 13 NH NH NH   24,643
2008 1 30 15 7 8 41 29 12 52 5 NH NH NH   24,625
2009 1 30 9 10 11 26 24 2 37 12 NH NH NH   23,026
2010 1 30 9 10 11 33 36 −3 37 10 NH NH NH   28,053
2011 1 30 10 8 12 34 41 −7 38 9 QF NH NH   27,836
2012 1 30 12 9 9 44 33 11 45 4 RU DNQ NH   29,574 Guiyang Olympic Sports Center
2013 1 30 11 11 8 40 41 −1 44 4 W DNQ NH Group 21,312
2014 1 30 11 8 11 33 35 −2 41 6 R4 W NH Group 12,327
2015 1 30 7 8 15 39 52 −13 29 15 QF DNQ NH   15,139
2016 2 30 15 4 11 49 35 14 49 4 R3 DNQ NH   4,542 Beijing Fengtai Stadium
2017 2 30 R3 DNQ NH  

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

Opponent Season Home Away
Australia Central Coast Mariners FC 2013 AFC Champions League Group stage 2–1 1–2
Australia Western Sydney Wanderers FC 2014 AFC Champions League Group stage 0–1 0–5
Japan Kashiwa Reysol 2013 AFC Champions League Group stage 0–1 1–1
Japan Kawasaki Frontale 2014 AFC Champions League Group stage 0–1 0–1
South Korea Suwon Samsung Bluewings 2013 AFC Champions League Group stage 2–2 0–0
South Korea Seongnam FC 2014 AFC Champions League Group stage 3–1 1–1

Asian clubs ranking

As of 5 October 2014[25]
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

References

  1. 陕西人和官方宣布球队南迁 注册地已变更贵州省 (in Chinese). sports.163.com. 2012-01-08. Retrieved 21 December 2012.
  2. "China League Tables 1995". rsssf.com. 19 Jun 2003. Retrieved 23 May 2012.
  3. "China League Tables 2001". rsssf.com. 19 Jun 2003. Retrieved 23 May 2012.
  4. "China League Tables 2003". rsssf.com. 18 Apr 2004. Retrieved 23 May 2012.
  5. "Match-fixing led to stars' downfall". shanghaidaily.com. 2012-06-14. Retrieved 2012-06-24.
  6. 陕西浐灞官方宣布主帅朱广沪下课 科萨诺维奇接任 (in Chinese). sports.sina.com.cn. 2010-05-08. Retrieved 21 December 2012.
  7. 高洪波接替桑特拉奇入主陕西 传执教年薪超百万 (in Chinese). sports.sohu.com. 2011-09-25. Retrieved 21 December 2012.
  8. "Only in the CSL: Shanxi Chanba Moving to Guizhou in 2012". wildeastfootball.net. December 6, 2011. Retrieved 21 December 2012.
  9. 中建冠名 西北狼更名:陕西中建地产浐灞足球队 (in Chinese). sports.hsw.cn. 2010-03-22. Retrieved 21 December 2012.
  10. 全新浐灞队亮相 科萨坦言希望争冠 (in Chinese). news.xiancn.com. 2011-03-17. Retrieved 21 December 2012.
  11. "上海中远vs上海申花" (in Chinese). shenhuafc.com.cn. 2011-01-01. Retrieved 21 December 2012.
  12. 足协杯西安?哄惫?际胜北京宏登[组图] (in Chinese). news.xinhuanet.com. 2006-03-16. Retrieved 21 December 2012.
  13. "Guizhou Renhe FC". weltfussballarchiv.com. 2015. Retrieved 2015-10-05.
  14. "China: Shaanxi Renhe Commercial Chanba Nike 2011 Shirts". football-shirts.co.uk. 2011-03-22. Retrieved 2015-10-05.
  15. 贵州人和2012赛季主客场球衣 (in Chinese). kitstown.com. 2012. Retrieved 21 December 2012.
  16. "A brief history of: The Shanghai Derby". wildeastfootball.net. 2013-04-27. Retrieved 2015-10-05.
  17. "China Strips Shenhua of 2003 League Title, Bans 33 People for Life". english.cri.cn. 2013-02-18. Retrieved 2015-10-05.
  18. 2017赛季北京人和球员名单 sports.sina.com 2017-03-03 Retrieved 2017-03-08
  19. "Guizhou Renhe » Manager history". worldfootball.net. Retrieved 2015-06-15.
  20. "Guizhou Renhe". footballzz.co.uk. Retrieved 2015-06-15.
  21. "China List of Cup Winners". rsssf.com. 2015-09-02. Retrieved 2015-11-09.
  22. "China List of Super Cup Winners". rsssf.com. 2015-09-02. Retrieved 2015-11-09.
  23. "China League History". rsssf.com. 22 Oct 2009. Retrieved 28 January 2014.
  24. "北京人和". sodasoccer.com. Retrieved 28 January 2014.
  25. http://footballdatabase.com/ranking/asia – footballdatabase.com

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