Liaoning Hongyun

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Liaoning Whowin
Template: Infobox Football Club / Maintenance / No picture
Basic data
Surname Liaoning Whowin Football Club
Seat Panjin , China
founding 1995
president Cheng Penghui
First soccer team
Head coach Gao Sheng
Venue Shenyang Olympic Stadium
Places 60,000
league China League One
2019 15th place
home
Away

Liaoning Whowin is a Chinese football club from the northeast of the People's Republic . Before the professionalization of Chinese football in 1994, Liaoning was one of the most successful clubs in China and was the first Chinese football club to win the Asian Club Championship (1989/90). The club plays in the China League One , the second highest division in the country.

Club history

The club has its origins in the northeast Chinese team of the early 1950s, which consisted of players from all over the greater region and formed in Shenyang . After the Chinese central government approved its own provincial representatives, the team split up and largely came under the control of the Shenyang Sports Institute. Over time, Liaoning developed into one of the strongest football teams in the country and the most successful troupe of the late 1980s and early 1990s: After winning the first time in 1978, Liaoning was able to win the national championship seven more times (1985, 1987, 1988, 1990, 1991, 1992, 1993) and twice the Chinese national cup (1984 and 1986). Under coach Li Yingfa , who looked after the team between 1984 and 1992, Liaoning was the first Chinese team to win the highest Asian club title in the Asian Club Championship in 1989/90 : Liaoning defeated Japanese FC Nissan in the final with a 3-2 win . The following year Liaoning reached the final again, but lost to FC Esteghlal from Tehran .

In the course of the professionalization of the Chinese football business in 1993/94 and the privatization of the clubs, Liaoning FC was re-established as a fully professional club in 1995, but could no longer build on previous successes. After a fourth place in 1994, the club finished the 1995 season as bottom of the table (12th) and was relegated to the second division.

In the third year, the re-entry into the top football league and the surprising runner-up of the promoted club in the 1999 season, just behind the, only one point ahead champion, Shandong Luneng Taishan . At the end of 2008, the club had to relegate again after a 10-year stay in the top division, but managed to return to the following season when he left the second division as first in the table.

Placements in the Jia A and Super League

season league space S. U N Gates Points Cup AFC Champions League
1994 Chinese Jia-A League 4th 11 3 8th 47:36 25th
1995 Chinese Jia-A League 12. 4th 5 13 29:47 17th ?
1996 Chinese Jia-B League 4th ? ? ? ? ? ?
1997 Chinese Jia-B League 9. ? ? ? ? ? ?
1998 Chinese Jia-B League 2. ? ? ? ? ? finalist
1999 Chinese Jia-A League 2. 13 8th 5 42:24 47 ?
2000 Chinese Jia-A League 8th. 8th 8th 10 28:26 32 ?
2001 Chinese Jia-A League 3. 15th 3 8th 39:32 48 ?
2002 Chinese Jia-A League 5. 12 6th 10 45:44 42 finalist
2003 Chinese Jia-A League 6th 11 8th 9 39:34 41 2nd round
2004 Chinese Super League 4th 10 2 10 39:40 32 1 round
2005 Chinese Super League 10. 7th 8th 11 34:42 29 Quarter finals
2006 Chinese Super League 12. 6th 8th 14th 24:42 26th 1 round
2007 Chinese Super League 9. 9 8th 11 26:36 35
2008 Chinese Super League 15th 6th 9 15th 34:47 27
2009 China League One 1. 18th 3 3 49:17 57
2010 Chinese Super League 7th 10 10 10 39:36 40
2011 Chinese Super League 3. 14th 8th 8th 38:23 50 3rd round
2012 Chinese Super League 10. 8th 12 10 40:41 36 Semifinals Participation canceled
2013 Chinese Super League 10. 8th 11 11 35:44 35 Quarter finals
2014 Chinese Super League 10. 8th 9 13 33:48 33 3rd round
2015 Chinese Super League 14th 7th 10 13 30:46 31 3rd round
2016 Chinese Super League 10. 9 9 12 38:47 36 ?
2017 Chinese Super League 16. 4th 6th 20th 30:74 18th ?
Note: Playing times with a green background indicate an ascent, while playing times with a red background indicate a descent.

Name history

The traditional FC Liaoning Hongyun, like other Chinese clubs, experienced numerous name changes, but always kept the name of the province in the club name.

  • 1959-1992 Liaoning
  • 1993 Liaoning Dongyao
  • 1994 Liaoning Yuandong
  • 1995 Liaoning
  • 1996 Liaoning Hangxing
  • 1997 Liaoning Shuangxing
  • 1998 Liaoning Tianrun
  • 1999 Liaoning Fushun
  • 2000-2001 Liaoning Fushun Tegang
  • 2002 Liaoning Bird
  • 2003 Liaoning Zhongshun
  • 2004 Liaoning Zhongyu
  • 2005-2007 Liaoning FC
  • 2008- Liaoning Hongyun

Well-known trainers

Individual evidence

  1. ↑ The 1993 championship is a special case, which is why it is often not included. During this season, the Chinese soccer league was in a professionalization reform; The championship was not held in league, but in cup mode.
  2. Championship of China - China League 1995 rsssf.com, accessed on August 22, 2010.
  3. Championship of China - China League 1999 rsssf.com, accessed August 22, 2010.

Web links