Guangdong South China Tiger Football Club () or simply Guangdong South China Tiger () was a professional
Chinese
Chinese can refer to:
* Something related to China
* Chinese people, people of Chinese nationality, citizenship, and/or ethnicity
**''Zhonghua minzu'', the supra-ethnic concept of the Chinese nation
** List of ethnic groups in China, people of va ...
football
Football is a family of team sports that involve, to varying degrees, kicking a ball to score a goal. Unqualified, the word ''football'' normally means the form of football that is the most popular where the word is used. Sports commonly c ...
club that last participated in
China League One. The team was based in
Meixian District,
Meizhou,
Guangdong and their home stadium was the
Meixian Tsang Hin-chi Stadium
Meixian Tsang Hin-chi Stadium () is a multi-purpose stadium in Meixian District, Meizhou, Guangdong
Guangdong (, ), alternatively romanized as Canton or Kwangtung, is a coastal province in South China on the north shore of the South Chin ...
. Their majority shareholder was engineering, and construction company Shenzhen Techand Ecological Environment Co., Ltd.
History
The club was founded on 3 July 2003 as Dongguan Nancheng F.C. (Simplified Chinese: 东莞南城足球俱乐部) by the Dongguan City Sports Bureau who created them as a
Phoenix club
The Phoenix Building and Cincinnati Club are two historic buildings in downtown Cincinnati, Ohio, United States. The membership of these two clubs was chiefly Jewish.
Located at 812 Race Street, the Phoenix Building was constructed in 1893, desi ...
to
Guangdong Hongyuan F.C.
Guangdong Winnerway Football Club () was a Chinese football club, established on September 15, 1992 by Guangdong Winnerway Group and Guangdong Football Association. It was one of the earliest professional football clubs in China.
History
The c ...
who were sold-off and moved cities in 2001. The club would then gain entry to participate within the
2003–04 Hong Kong First Division League
The 2003–04 Hong Kong First Division League season was the 92nd since its establishment.
League table
References
{{DEFAULTSORT:2003-04 Hong Kong First Division League
Hong Kong First Division League, 2003–04
Hong Kong First Divisi ...
as a foreign team within the league. The Dongguan City Sports Bureau gained sponsorship and investment from real estate developers South City Real Estate Development Company, Guangdong Hongyuan Real Estate Development Company, Guangdong Enterprises Group Co., Ltd.,
China Everbright, Huang City Development Co., Ltd., Dongguan City Royal Garden residential construction Limited, Carnation New Garden Construction Co., Ltd., The new Bank of Development and Construction Co., Ltd., Dongguan Kuari Footwear Holdings Limited and
Dongguan CITIC Group before participating within the league where they finished sixth. The club only spent one season within the Hong Kong league, which was mired by their on-field disciplinary issues against
Buler Rangers on March 7, 2004 that saw nine players from Dongguan Nancheng and six from Buler Rangers suspended for their behaviour. After the season ended the club deciding to switch to the Chinese league system in the 2005 league season where they started within the third tier. In the campaign they topped the group stages and reached the semi-final within the play-off's where they lost 3–2 to
Nancheng Bayi Hengyuan in extra time, missing out on promotion. After that disappointment the club pulled out of the league and disbanded their first team, however they still maintained their youth system after the season ended.
The club rejoined the
China League Two division in 2011 and made significant changes to the club, such as changing their home ground to Dongguan Nancheng Sports Park Stadium, altering their uniforms from red to yellow tops with blue shorts, building a new squad from their existing youth team, changes that saw the club reach the semi-finals of the division play-offs. The club moved to the city of
Meizhou and changed their name as Meixian Hakka F.C. on 12 December 2012 making them the first professional football club in Meizhou, which the city like to proclaim as the "Homeland of football" in China due to it being where the Europeans introduced
Association football to the country as well as paying homage to the former Chinese footballer and coach
Lee Wai Tong who grew up there. This was followed by a move into
Meixian Tsang Hin-chi Stadium
Meixian Tsang Hin-chi Stadium () is a multi-purpose stadium in Meixian District, Meizhou, Guangdong
Guangdong (, ), alternatively romanized as Canton or Kwangtung, is a coastal province in South China on the north shore of the South Chin ...
and a new Head coach in
Hirokazu Sakuma. In March 2015 engineering, and construction company Shenzhen Techand Ecological Environment Co., Ltd. took over the club. Once again the club changed its name to Meizhou Meixian Hakka F.C. in January 2016. On 30 December 2016, they changed their name to Meizhou Meixian Techand F.C. so as not to be confused with local rivals
Meizhou Hakka F.C. A new badge, a change in home colours to red over the previous yellow tops and blue shorts would complete their transformation of the club. In the
2017 league season under the management of
Li Haiqiang
Li Haiqiang () is a former Chinese-born Hong Kong professional footballer. He played for various professional clubs and also the Hong Kong national football team. Li played the role of a midfielder and is nicknamed "The Golden Left Foot" bec ...
the club came runners-up to
Heilongjiang Lava Spring F.C.
Heilongjiang Ice City Football Club (), previously known as Heilongjiang Lava Spring Football Club, is a professional Chinese football club that participates in the China League One division under licence from the Chinese Football Association (CF ...
in the division and gained promotion to the second tier for the first time, which saw the players given a bonus of £2.86 million.
The club deleted the owner's information from their name and changed to Guangdong South China Tiger F.C. in answer to Chinese FA's new regulation in January 2019. The club announced its dissolution in February 2020.
Name history
*2003–2012 Dongguan Nancheng F.C. 东莞南城
*2013–2015 Meixian Hakka F.C. 梅县客家
*2016 Meizhou Meixian Hakka F.C. 梅州梅县客家
*2017–2018 Meizhou Meixian Techand F.C. 梅州梅县铁汉
*2019–2020 Guangdong South China Tiger F.C. 广东华南虎
Coaching staff
Managerial history
*
Li Hu (2011)
*
Goran Paulic
Goran may refer to:
Ethnic groups
*Gorane, or Goran, an ethnic group of northern Africa
*Goran (Kurdish tribe), an ethnic group of the Middle East
*Gorani (ethnic group), an ethnic group of the southeastern Europe
Other uses
*Göran, a Swedis ...
(2012)
*
Hirokazu Sakuma (2013)
*
Tomoo Tsukoshi
Tomoo is a masculine Japanese given name.
Possible writings
Tomoo can be written using different combinations of kanji characters. Some examples:
*友雄, "friend, masculine"
*友男, "friend, man"
*友夫, "friend, husband"
*知雄, "know, masc ...
(2014)
*
Wang Hongwei
Wang Hongwei (; born in Anyang, Henan) is a Chinese actor. Wang is perhaps best known for his work with director Jia Zhangke. The two men were classmates at the Beijing Film Academy when they began their professional relationship, with Wang star ...
(2015–2016)
*
Li Haiqiang
Li Haiqiang () is a former Chinese-born Hong Kong professional footballer. He played for various professional clubs and also the Hong Kong national football team. Li played the role of a midfielder and is nicknamed "The Golden Left Foot" bec ...
(2017)
*
Juan Ignacio Martínez
Juan Ignacio Martínez Jiménez (; born 23 June 1964), is a Spanish football coach and former player, who played as a left back, and is a current head coach.
Playing career
Martínez was born in Alicante. After playing youth football for both ...
(2018)
*
Fu Bo (2018–2020)
Results
All-time league rankings
''As of the end of 2019 season.''
Dongguan Nancheng didn't compete in 2006–2010.
* At
Hong Kong First Division League
* In group stage.
Key
* Pld = Played
* W = Games won
* D = Games drawn
* L = Games lost
* F = Goals for
* A = Goals against
* Pts = Points
* Pos = Final position
* DNQ = Did not qualify
* DNE = Did not enter
* NH = Not Held
* – = Does Not Exist
* R1 = Round 1
* R2 = Round 2
* R3 = Round 3
* R4 = Round 4
* F = Final
* SF = Semi-finals
* QF = Quarter-finals
* R16 = Round of 16
* Group = Group stage
* GS2 = Second Group stage
* QR1 = First Qualifying Round
* QR2 = Second Qualifying Round
* QR3 = Third Qualifying Round
See also
*
Guangdong Winnerway F.C.
References
External links
Official club website{{in lang, zh
Defunct football clubs in China
Football clubs in China
2003 establishments in China
Association football clubs established in 2003
Sport in Meizhou
2020 disestablishments in China
Association football clubs disestablished in 2020