Shanghai Zobon F.C.
上海中邦
logo
Full nameShanghai Zobon Football Club
上海中邦足球俱乐部
Founded?
Dissolved27 December 2012 (27 December 2012)
GroundYuanshen Sports Centre Stadium,
Shanghai, China
Capacity16,000

Shanghai Zobon F.C. (Chinese: 上海中邦足球俱乐部) is a defunct football club that predominantly competed in the China League One division. Originally founded by Zhu Jun, the CEO of The9 Limited as an nondescript amateur club, it took over Shanghai Tianna to turn professional before the 2004 season, played their home games in the 16,000 seater Yuanshen Sports Centre Stadium in Shanghai and won the China League Two championship in the exact same year. In 2008 Wei Ping took ownership of the club until on January 28, 2011, Guizhou Zhicheng F.C. bought significant shares of the club for 5 million Yuan and thus began to merge the two clubs. The youth and reserve players were still allowed to play under the club's name in the third tier of Chinese football until they were sold-off to Shanghai East Asia F.C. on December 27, 2012 that eventually saw the club officially dissolved.

History

Formation

The club was founded near the turn of the century as Shanghai The 9 by Zhu Jun, the CEO of The9 Limited and finished 4th in the 2003 China Amateur Football League. The following season would see the club merge with professional Chinese Yi league club Shanghai Tianna, and the new club would breeze through the third tier without losing a single game while winning the play-offs of the China League Two and gaining promotion to China League One at the end of the season.[1] The club's first season in the second tier would see them finish ninth position within the league.[2] Throughout the season the club's owner wanted to unify the team by renaming the team Shanghai United, however the team's lack of immediate success saw Zhu Jun abandon these plans so he could take over top tier Chinese side Shanghai Zobon instead.[3]

Separation from Zhu Jun

In 2005, Zhu Jun and The9 Limited purchased Shanghai Zobon, a top tier Chinese Super League team and renamed the club Shanghai United instead and tried to merge the two clubs, however except for five players such as star midfielders Qi Hong and Jiang Kun, the rest of the players at the old Shanghai The 9 could not join the new Shanghai United, due to transfer rules in Chinese football. The remainder of the old Shanghai The 9 was bought by the Euro-China Group (Chinese: 中欧集团) who renamed the team as Shanghai Stars and would make sure that the club would remain within the second tier. In the club's desperate attempts to remain within the league they would hire a string of managers including former player Shen Si, Peng Weiguo and Cao Xiandong to keep them within the league until the start of the 2008 league season, the club moved Wuxi, Jiangsu Province, to the 30,000 seater Wuxi Sports Center, and the club was renamed as Wuxi Zobon. The club would also bring in experienced manager Ma Liangxing, however the move to a new city was not successful either on the field or off it and after only one year within Wuxi the club returned to Shanghai again in the 2009 league season. The club would bring in Shen Si again and was renamed as Shanghai Zobon as well as moving into the 16,000 seater Pudong Yuanshen Sports Centre.

Starting over again

On January 28, 2011 Guizhou Zhicheng F.C. bought significant shares of the club for 5 million Yuan and thus began to merge the two clubs, while taking over the club's place in China League One.[4] The former youth and reserve players were still allowed to play under the club's name in the third tier of Chinese football. This saw Cheng Yaodong brought in to manage the team in the 2011 league campaign where he guided them to a fifth-place finish. He stayed on for another season until the management decided sell-off the remaining youth team players to Shanghai East Asia F.C. on December 27, 2012 that eventually marks the end of the club.[5]

Name history

  • –2005: Shanghai The 9 (上海九城)
  • 2006–2007: Shanghai Stars (上海群英)
  • 2008: Wuxi Zobon (无锡中邦)
  • 2009–2012: Shanghai Zobon (上海中邦)

Honours

League

Results

  • As of the end of 2012 season

All-time League Rankings

Season 2003 2004 2005 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011 2012
Division 4 3 2 2 2 2 2 2 3 3
Position 4 1 9 10 8 11 9 10 51 61
  • ^1 in North Group

See also

References

  1. "China 2004".
  2. "China 2005".
  3. "九城更名联城未有好运 主场1-1遭河南建业逼平-搜狐体育".
  4. "西部足球2011迎中甲新军 贵州智诚成功收购中邦". 29 January 2011.
  5. "东亚收回中邦小队 根宝证实战怡麟转会达口头协议--上海东亚足球俱乐部官方网站--上海热线". Archived from the original on 2013-02-27. Retrieved 2013-01-07.
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