Hunan Shoking F.C.

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Hunan Shoking
Húnán Xiāngjūn
湖南こなん湘军
Full nameHunan Shoking Football Club
湖南こなん湘军あしだま俱乐
Founded15 January 2004; 20 years ago (2004-01-15)
Dissolved2006

Hunan Shoking Football Club (simplified Chinese: 湖南こなん湘军; traditional Chinese: 湖南こなん湘軍; pinyin: Húnán Xiāngjūn) was a professional Chinese football club based in Changsha, Hunan Province, and participated in the China League One division under licence from the Chinese Football Association (CFA), after taking over Chongqing Lifan's place in the league before the 2014 season, but was relegated and dissolved after spending three seasons there.

History[edit]

Before the start of the 2004 Chinese football league season, Chongqing Lifan annexed Yunnan Hongta and took over their place in Chinese Super League. A new club, Hunan Shoking F.C., was formed by Hunan Corun New Energy Co. Ltd. (湖南こなんりょく远新のうげん有限ゆうげん公司こうし) by merging existing two amateur teams already representing Hunan Province, Yiyang Corun and Hunan Wuqiang Hongdao, to take over Chongqing Lifan's spot in China League One by buying the club's registration into the division for 20 million Yuan.[1] On January 15, 2004, the club was inaugurated into the Chinese football league. They hired former Chinese Olympic medalist Xiong Ni as their chairman and former Chinese international footballer Zhu Bo as their first manager. Playing in the 55,000-seat Helong Stadium in Changsha, the club had international players – Fu Bin and Srđan Bajčetić – while the youth team called Xiangxue Pharmaceutical participated in the 2004–05 Hong Kong First Division League to gain experience.[2] Although the youth team had limited success, the senior team fared little better and struggled in their debut season by finishing tenth at the end.[3]

The following season was extremely difficult for the club, Miloš Hrstić came in as manager but had an extremely high-profile dispute with the owners about unpaid wages. It was soon discovered that the club were in financial difficulties due to an excessive wage bill for their players along with renting of Helong Stadium.[4] The ownership of the club moved to the company Bailong and their general manager Sun Yingui for a brief period. However this was short-lived and Hunan Corun took over the club again. While this was going on Li Hui was managing the side with little success. He and his players reached a breaking point after a humiliating 5–1 defeat to Shanghai Yungtay on June 18, 2005, in a Chinese FA Cup game. Li Hui publicly criticized his players' lack of commitment before deciding to leave the club.[5] Wang Tao was brought in as his replacement to manage the club. The team finished in a disappointing twelfth but remained in the league.[6] Li Kejia was brought in as a new manager in the 2006 league season, but was unable to stop the losing streak of the club in the new season, to the point when former Chinese international Hao Haidong was brought in as a General manager to help with the team. This turned out to be fruitless and the club finished at the bottom of the league, relegated to the third tier, and the club was dissolved soon afterwards.[7]

Managerial history[edit]

Results[edit]

All-time league rankings

Year Div Pld W D L GF GA GD Pts Pos. FA Cup Super Cup AFC Att./G Stadium
2004 2 32 7 10 15 34 51 −17 31 14 R1 DNQ DNQ Xiangtan City Sports Center
Helong Stadium
Hunan Provincial People's Stadium
2005 2 26 5 4 17 24 56 −32 19 12 R2 DNQ DNQ Helong Stadium
Liuyang City Sports Center
2006 2 24 2 9 13 16 33 −17 15 13 R1 DNQ DNQ Helong Stadium

References[edit]

  1. ^ ""あしだま湘军"加速かそく本土ほんど 海南かいなんもう练体のう". sina.com.cn. 2004-01-27. Retrieved 2012-07-16.
  2. ^ "Hongkong 2004/05". RSSSF. 17 Nov 2005. Retrieved 2012-07-16.
  3. ^ "China 2004". RSSSF. 7 Apr 2005. Archived from the original on September 29, 2012. Retrieved 2012-07-16.
  4. ^ "まい罗西中国ちゅうごくあしだまじょう结:あずかべい卢亲みつ こばめ绝假赌黑". sports.qq.com. 2010-11-29. Retrieved 2015-07-15.
  5. ^ "湖南こなん湘军しつひかえあし协杯むごしゅ帅李辉黯然あんぜん逃离(图)". sports.sohu.com. 2005-06-27. Retrieved 2012-07-16.
  6. ^ "China 2005". RSSSF. 26 Oct 2006. Archived from the original on September 29, 2012. Retrieved 2012-07-16.
  7. ^ "郝海东出しゅおさむ购湖みなみ湘军(图)". sohu.com. 2006-07-18. Archived from the original on 2012-09-20. Retrieved 2012-07-16.