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Beijing Sport University F.C.

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Beijing BSU
Běijīng Běitǐdà
北京北体大
File:Beijing Sport University F.C..jpg
Full nameBeijing Sport University Football Club
北京北体大足球俱乐部
Founded2000; 24 years ago (2000)
GroundOlympic Sports Centre (Beijing)
Capacity36,228
ChairmanYang Junsheng (杨俊生)
ManagerSu Maozhen
LeagueChina League One
2019League One, 8th

Beijing Sport University Football Club (Chinese: 北京北体大; pinyin: Běijīng Běitǐdà) or commonly known as BSU (Chinese: 北体大; pinyin: Běi Tǐ Dà), is a professional Chinese football club that currently participates in the China League One division under license from the Chinese Football Association (CFA). The team is based in Beijing and their home stadium is the Olympic Sports Center (Beijing) that has a seating capacity of 36,228. Their current majority shareholder is the conglomerate Beijing Enterprises Holdings Limited.

History

Beijing Enterprises Group F.C. was founded as Beijing Baxy F.C. in 2004 by former Chinese footballers Guo Weiwei, Wang Tao and Guo Weijian as an amateur football club.[1] By 2009 the club's youth team were considered good enough to take part in professional football and the club entered the third tier of Chinese football at the beginning of the 2009 China League Two season. Within their first professional campaign Wang Tao was their Chairman who brought in Cao Xiandong to manage the team. The players wore white tops, black bottoms, white socks for the home kits and blue tops, white bottoms, dark blue socks for their away kit.[2] After a promising start to the campaign that saw them lead the table within the group stage the club ultimately finished third in the play-off and just missed out of promotion to the second division.[3] After failure to win promotion from the previous season the club decided to take over financially struggling China League One side Beijing Hongdeng and took over their position within the league at the beginning of the 2010 league season.[4] In Beijing Baxy's first season in the second tier, they were given a 6-point deduction due to Beijing Hongdeng's late payment of wages for Rajko Vidović in the 2007 season.[5]

Beijing Baxy finished the 15th of 16 teams in the 2012 season and was supposed to relegate to China League Two; however, they were spared from relegation due to Dalian Shide's dissolvation. On 26 February 2013, Croatian manager Goran Tomić was officially announced as the new coach of the club.[6] After signing some high level players such as Stephen Makinwa, Lucian Goian, Ryan Griffiths and Hu Zhaojun, Beijing Baxy finished historic high record of 7th place if the 2013 season. Beijing Baxy had a 21-match-unbeaten (8 wins and 13 draws) start in the 2014 season. They remained the hope of promotion until the last round and eventually finished in 4th place. Goran Tomić won China League One Coach of the Year award in December 2014.

On 25 December 2014, Beijing Enterprises Holdings Limited bought majority shares of the club and the club name was changed into Beijing Enterprises Group F.C.[7] They would also change the club's badge and home kit from all white to blue and red as well as bring in former Beijing Guoan manager Aleksandar Stanojević on 12 January 2015 on a three-year contract with the club.[8]

On 30 December 2016, the team officially sacked Aleksandar Stanojević, and signed Yasen Petrov as their new manager.[9] On 5 June 2017, Beijing Enterprise player, Cheick Tioté died after suffering a heart attack during training at the age of 30. The club retired Tioté's number 24 shirt on 24 June 2017.[10]

On 23 June 2017, in the pre-match media conference, team manager Gao Hongbo announced that team has signed former Everton and Sunderland forward Victor Anichebe as a free agent.

Name history

  • 2004–2014 Beijing Baxy F.C. 北京八喜
  • 2015–2018 Beijing Enterprises Group F.C. 北京控股
  • 2019– Beijing Sport University F.C. 北京北体大

Grounds

The home ground of Beijing Baxi FC was the Chaoyang Sports Centre which is located on Yaojiayuan Road No. 77 in the Chaoyang District. The stadium was used during the 2008 Beijing Olympics and the grounds also incorporate a golf driving range, equestrian shop, baseball venue, indoor tennis, and training pitches.[11] Baxy do not train at this venue, but amateur football club Forbidden City Football Club often play weekend matches at the pitches located directly behind the main stadium. Beijing BG moved their home stadium to Olympic Sports Centre (Beijing) in 2015.

Current squad

First team squad

As of 7 March 2019 [12]

Note: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.

No. Pos. Nation Player
3 DF China CHN Wang Jiong (on loan from Shandong Luneng)
5 DF China CHN Nie Tao
9 FW Brazil BRA Lins
12 FW Chinese Taipei TPE Wen Chih-hao
13 FW Ecuador ECU Juan Luis Anangonó
14 FW China CHN Zhang Dingkang
15 DF China CHN Wang Haitao
17 DF China CHN Fan Lingjiang
18 MF China CHN Yang Yun
19 FW China CHN Li Xiang
20 MF China CHN Xu Borui
No. Pos. Nation Player
22 GK China CHN Liu Tianxin
23 DF China CHN Chen Zepeng (on loan from Guangzhou Evergrande)
25 GK China CHN Jiang Hao
26 DF China CHN Cui Zhongkai
27 DF China CHN Zou Zhongting
28 DF China CHN Zhuang Jiade
29 MF China CHN Han Yi
30 MF China CHN Yao Xuchen (on loan from Hebei China Fortune)
32 FW China CHN Tian Yuda (on loan from Shandong Luneng)
33 MF China CHN Yan Xiangchuang
37 GK China CHN Dong Hang
38 DF China CHN Duan Xinlong

Reserve squad

As of 7 March 2019

Note: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.

No. Pos. Nation Player
31 FW Nigeria NGA Dominic Vinicius
41 MF China CHN Yang Shaobo
42 DF China CHN Zhang Hao
43 MF China CHN Zhang Xiaoyu
44 DF China CHN Gong Hao
45 DF China CHN Huang Tao
46 MF China CHN Yao Shuo
47 MF China CHN Han Xizheng
48 DF China CHN Ma Guobao
49 DF China CHN Sun Aoning
50 FW China CHN Jia Yinbo
51 MF China CHN He Yuan
52 FW China CHN Wu Xiaobo
No. Pos. Nation Player
53 GK China CHN Liu kaixuan
56 DF China CHN Qin Cheng
57 MF China CHN Hu Yannan
58 DF China CHN Peng Xinbin
60 DF China CHN Yao Liang
62 GK China CHN Zhang Xiushuo
63 FW China CHN Su Zheng
64 GK China CHN Li Shuaishuai
65 DF China CHN Zhou Zhangyong
66 MF China CHN Cheng Yuchi
67 MF China CHN Xu Yi
68 MF China CHN Yun Bowen
69 MF China CHN Zhou Peng

Retired numbers

24 – Ivory Coast Cheick Tioté, Midfielder, 2017 posthumous. The number was retired in June 2017.[10]

Out on loan

Note: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.

No. Pos. Nation Player
35 MF China CHN Wei Chaolun (at Suzhou Dongwu until 31 December 2019)
DF China CHN Jia Hongnian (at Beijing BIT until 31 December 2019)
No. Pos. Nation Player
MF China CHN Song Yi (at Beijing BIT until 31 December 2019)
FW China CHN Gong Zheng (at Suzhou Dongwu until 31 December 2019)

Coaching staff

Position Staff
Head coach China Gao Hongbo
Team Manager China Tang Pengju
Team Manager China Yang Chen
Assistant coach China Zhao Xudong
Goalkeeping coach China Zhao Lei
Fitness coach China Cui Enlang
Team Physician China Xiao Bin

Source: sina.com

Managerial history

Only League matches are counted.

Name From To Pld W D L Notes
China Xu Hui 2009 2009 15 8 3 4
China Cao Xiandong 2010 2010 24 10 4 10
Belgium Piet Demol 2011 2011 5 1 1 3
China Cao Xiandong 2011 2011 21 6 8 7
China Cui Enlang 2012 2012 15 3 2 10
China Gai Zengjun 2012 2012 4 1 1 2
China Cao Xiandong
China Wang Tao
2012 2012 11 4 4 3
Croatia Goran Tomić 2013 2014 60 25 21 14 2014 Chinese League One Manager of the Year
Serbia Aleksandar Stanojević 2015 2016 60 28 13 19
Bulgaria Yasen Petrov 2017 2017 6 0 1 5
China Gao Hongbo 2017 9 6 0 3

Results

All-time League Rankings

Year Tier Pld W D L GF GA GD Pts Pos Cup Asian Avg league att Stadium
2009 3 15 8 3 4 25 22 +3 21 1 3 NH DNQ Eastern Aojing Sports Centre
2010 2 24 10 4 10 24 24 0 28 2 8 NH DNQ Chaoyang Sports Centre
2011 2 26 7 9 10 18 28 −10 30 11 R1 DNQ
2012 2 30 8 7 15 34 46 −12 31 15 R2 DNQ 845 Shijingshan Stadium
2013 2 30 11 8 11 35 42 −7 41 7 R2 DNQ 2,269 Chaoyang Sports Centre
2014 2 30 14 13 3 45 27 18 55 4 R2 DNQ 1,668
2015 2 30 17 5 8 48 29 19 56 4 SF DNQ 5,435 Olympic Sports Centre (Beijing)
2016 2 30 11 8 11 40 38 2 41 8 R3 DNQ 3,463
2017 2 30 11 4 15 43 50 -7 37 8 R2 DNQ 5,227
2018 2 30 12 11 7 43 34 9 47 5 R3 DNQ 2,083
2019 2 30 R4 DNQ
  • ^1 in group stage ^2 6-point deduction for late payment of wages

Key

Notable players

Had international caps for their respective countries.

See also

References

  1. ^ "2013中国足球协会甲级联赛北京八喜赛区". damai.cn. 2013-03-17. Archived from the original on 2013-03-18. Retrieved 2013-03-17.
  2. ^ "中乙-两队上演进球大战 北京4–3湖南冲甲稍占优". sports.sohu.com. 2009-11-24. Retrieved 2014-09-09.
  3. ^ "China 2009". rsssf.com. 2010-04-23. Retrieved 2014-01-07.
  4. ^ "北京宏登队同意转让 北京八喜队借"壳"战中甲". sports.sohu.com. 2010-02-02. Retrieved 2014-01-07.
  5. ^ "北京八喜收到中国足协罚单 联赛积分被扣除6分". sports.sohu.com. 2010-04-08. Retrieved 2015-01-12.
  6. ^ "八喜官方宣布新任主帅 克罗地亚少帅托米奇掌舵". sports.sohu.com. 2013-02-26. Retrieved 2015-01-12.
  7. ^ "关于中甲北京八喜联合竞技足球俱乐部有限公司主要股权转让并更名为北京控股足球俱乐部有限公司的公示". Chinese Football Association. 2014-12-25. Archived from the original on 2014-12-25. Retrieved 2015-01-12.
  8. ^ "斯塔诺出任北控主帅:签约三年 任务率队冲超". sports.qq.com. 2015-01-12. Retrieved 2015-01-12.
  9. ^ "北控官宣斯塔诺下课 前永昌主帅亚森正式上任". sports.qq.com. 30 Dec 2016. Retrieved 30 Dec 2016.
  10. ^ a b "北京北控官方宣布退役蒂奥特24号球衣:只属于你". Sina. 2017-06-24. Retrieved 2017-06-25.
  11. ^ "Chaoyang Stadium". Chaoyang Stadium. Retrieved 2012-08-20.
  12. ^ 2019中甲联赛16队大名单. Sohu.com (in Chinese). 2019-03-07. Retrieved 2019-03-07.
  13. ^ "China – List of Champions". rsssf.com. 10 Oct 2013. Retrieved 3 February 2014.
  14. ^ "北京八喜". sodasoccer.com. Retrieved 3 February 2014.