JCT FC

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

  (Redirected from JCT Mills Football Club)
Jump to: navigation, search
JCT FC
Logo
Full name Jagatjit Cotton & Textile Mills FC
Nickname(s) The Millmen
Founded 1971
Ground Guru Gobind Singh Stadium, Ludhiana
(Capacity: 12,000)
Chairman India Samir Thapar
Manager India Parminder Singh
League I-League
2007-08 3rd
Home colours
Away colours

JCT Football Club, founded in 1971, is an Indian professional football club based in Phagwara, Punjab (India). They are sponsored by Jagatjit Cotton and Textile Mills under the leadership of Samir Thapar and have emerged as one of the most successful Indian football clubs in recent years. They play in the national I-League and Punjab State Super League.

JCT FC has long been synonymous with football in Punjab and northern India. Like the other two institutional teams from the state, Border Security Force SC and FC Punjab Police, JCT have played a pivotal role in raising the standard of football in Punjab.

JCT have won many prestigious tournaments and brought laurels to the State of Punjab. They won the inaugural edition of the National Football League in 1996. The success of the outfit can be partly attributed to the fact that their owners, the Thapars, apart from being business moguls, are also keen followers of the game.

Contents

[edit] History

Jagatjit Cotton and Textile Mills constituted the football club in 1971. However, the club got recognition from 1974 onwards when several players joined the club from the Leader Club of Jalandhar. Included among these players was Inder Singh, who had captained the Indian national team in previous years and won the Arjuna Award in 1969. The Leader Club, started by Lala Dwarka Das Sehgal had played a major role in popularizing football in Northern India in the 1960s and 1970s. Though the Leader Club is no more, JCT Mills have since taken the mantle and become the biggest and most successful football club in this part of India.

JCT Limited has been involved in the Punjab Football Association (PFA) for the last three decades. JCT won the innagural NFL title in the 1996-1997 season. In January 2007, the JCT management decided to change the club name from JCT Mills FC to JCT FC.

In May 2008, JCT announced a partnership with Wolverhampton Wanderers of the Coca Cola Championship in England

[edit] Current Status

Sponsored by the Jagatjit Cotton and Textile Mills under the leadership of Samir Thapar, the Jagatjit Cotton and Textile Mills Football team has emerged as one of the most successful Indian football clubs in recent years. They play in the national I-League and Punjab State Super League. JCT Limited has also set up the JCT Football Academy at Phagwara, Punjab in 2000 to skill the budding football players in the state. JCT Academy as well as Club is known for producing high quality skilled youth players for the national team of the country. JCT Limited set up the JCT Football Academy at Phagwara in 2000 to train budding players. It funds their studies in colleges, especially at the Guru Nanak College, Phagwara.Jct is know for producing high quality youth players in recent times.[1]

[edit] Facts

JCT was the first Indian club to hire a foreign coach.

JCT was the first Indian team outside Kolkata to win the IFA Shield.

JCT is a part of the flagship JCT group that was started by the late Karam Chand Thapar.

[edit] Performance in AFC Competitions

1997: Second Round

[edit] Current Season

JCT finished 3rd in the 2007-2008 season of the newly formed I-League, the successor to the NFL Premier Division.

[edit] Affiliated Clubs

Wolverhampton Wanderers[2]

[edit] Players

[edit] Current Roster

No. Position Player
1 India GK Karanjit Singh
2 India DF Jaspal Singh
6 India MF Baljit Singh Sahni
8 India MF Jaswinder Singh
9 India MF Asim Hassan
12 India DF Daljit Singh
13 India MF Baldeep Singh Sr
14 India MF Ram Pal
4 India FW Balwant Singh
Nigeria MF Penn Orji
No. Position Player
16 India MF Rakinderjit Singh
18 India FW Amrinder Singh
19 India Yadvinder Singh Bajwa
21 India GK Mukhwinderjit Singh
22 India GK Pawan Kumar
23 India DF Harish Sharma
24 India DF Gurwinder Singh
25 India FW Sakatar Singh
27 India MF Baldeep Singh Junior
28 India DF Shivraj Singh
7 India MF Jagpreet Singh

[edit] Notable former players

[edit] Team Management

Team Management Table
Name Position
India Samir Thapar Chairman/President
India Parminder Singh Manager
India Sukhvinder Singh Coach
India Harjinder Singh Assistant Coach
India Kuldip Singh Assistant Coach
India Dr.Manjeet Singh Doctor
India Dr.Vishal Kumar Physio

[edit] Transfers

[edit] Retained

Karanjit Singh, Narinder Singh, Harish Sharma, Daljit Singh, Jaspal Singh, Shivraj Singh, Baldeep Singh Sr, Jaswinder Singh, Sakatar Singh, Anwar, Tajinder Singh, Rakinderjit Singh, Baldeep Singh Jr., Eduardo da Silva Escobar, Gurwinder Singh, Julius Irabor Akpele

[edit] New

[edit] Left

[edit] Achievements

n last 3 decades of its existence, the JCT is the first Indian team outside Kolkata to win the IFA Shield. Apart from this, the JCT Club have won many prestigious tournaments and brought laurels to the State of Punjab. They also won the opening edition of the National Football League in 1996. JCT Club has also been the winner of the Asain Club Championship and finished 3rd in the 2007-2008 season of the newly formed I-League. The team has been 8 times winner of the Punjab Football League and 5 times winner of the Durand club. The success and the constant good performance of the club is attributed to its owner, the Thapars who apart from being business moguls, have been in constant effort to enhance the bar of their club at all the levels.[3]


1996/97
1976, 1983, 1987, 1992, 1996
1995, 1996
1996

9x Punjab Football League
1987, 1990/91, 1991, 1995, 2002, 2003, 2004, 2005, 2006

10xGurdarshan Memorial Cup
1982, 1983, 1985, 1988, 1989, 1990, 1992, 1995, 2001, 2002

4x Sait Nagjee Cup
1976, 1979, 1985, 1995

1978 Madura Coats Trophy

1995 Scissors Cup

1997 Rovers Cup

2002 Shaheed-e-Azam Sardar Bhagat Singh Memorial Trophy

2005 Principal Harbhajan Singh Memorial Football Trophy

[edit] References

http://www.tribuneindia.com/2008/20081012/sports.htm#6 http://www.tribuneindia.com/2008/20081019/sports.htm#4 http://www.tribuneindia.com/2008/20081118/sports.htm#11 http://www.tribuneindia.com/2008/20081123/sports.htm#4

Languages