Qingdao Red Lions F.C.

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Qingdao Red Lions
Qīngdǎo Hóngshī
青岛红狮
logo
Full nameQingdao Red Lions Football Club
青岛红狮足球俱乐部
Founded14 March 2016; 8 years ago (2016-03-14)
GroundTiantai Stadium
Capacity20,525
ChairmanPiet van der Pol
ManagerSun Xinbo
LeagueChina League One
2023China League Two, 4th of 16 (promoted)

Qingdao Red Lions Football Club (Chinese: 青岛红狮足球俱乐部; pinyin: Qīngdǎo Hóngshī Zúqiú Jùlèbù) is a Chinese professional football club based in Qingdao, Shandong, that competes in China League One, the second tier of Chinese football. Qingdao Red Lions plays its home matches at the Tiantai Stadium, located within Shinan District. The club's youth training takes part in Laixi and several other districts of Qingdao.

As Adelaide and Qingdao incidentally became sister cities in 2014, building on from a sister state relationship between South Australia and Shandong which was established back in 1986 and has since evolved into a prosperous partnership, the club aims to contribute to the development of Chinese football, both on youth level as in competitive league football.

History

Qingdao Red Lions was established by Piet van der Pol, and his consortium after founding the club from scratch in March 2016. The Red Lions spent the initial three years of their existence in the fourth tier, before gaining promotion to the third division known as China League Two ahead of the 2019 season. Qingdao avoided relegation in their maiden campaign in 2019, finishing two points above the drop zone.

Club badge and colours

The club badge consists of a shield containing a lion's head —a symbol for strength— and Wuyue Feng (May Wind), the iconic monument on Qingdao's May Fourth Square. The 2020 home and away kit for Qingdao Red Lions are designed and manufactured by Guangzhou-based sports clothing and equipment producer UCAN.

Stadium and training ground

From the start of the 2020 season, the first team play its games in the stadium at Laixi Sports Center, which was built for the 2015 Leisure Games. The stadium is facilitated with a natural grass pitch and has a capacity of 10.000 seats. Training takes places at separate training pitches at the same Laixi Sports Center.

During the 2019 China League Two season Qingdao Red Lions played its home games in the Zhonglian Sports Center in the northern Jimo district of Qingdao. In the 2017 Qingdao Super League the club played its home games at the newly developed football pitch within the Fushan Mountain Ecological Park. In the 2016 football season Qingdao Red Lions played their home games in a stadium with 10.000 seat capacity, located on the premises of a factory in Chengyang district.

Red Lions Training Base in Laixi Sports Center

Affiliated clubs

Both Adelaide and Qingdao based clubs are owned by current chairman, Piet van der Pol and the goal of the partnership is to give more opportunities to Chinese players. Then Director of Football Bruce Djite has said, "The idea is to develop Chinese players to create stronger links between us and Qingdao Red Lions."[2] Chen Yongbin was the first player to sign from Qingdao to Adelaide on a one-year deal.[3] He did not make an appearance for the senior side but made appearances in the Y-League, he departed following the end to his contract.

Players

Current squad

As of 28 February 2024

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

No. Pos. Nation Player
1 GK China CHN Zhu Quan
2 MF China CHN Fang Xinfeng
3 DF China CHN Sun Ningzhe
4 DF Brazil BRA João Pedro
5 DF China CHN Huang Xuheng
6 DF China CHN Zheng Haokun
9 FW France FRA Yaya Sanogo
10 MF Togo TOG Samuel Asamoah
12 GK China CHN Liu Yuxin
13 FW China CHN Zanhar Besathan
15 MF China CHN Jia Xiaochen
16 DF China CHN Chen Long
17 FW China CHN Lian Chen
18 FW China CHN He Youzu
19 FW China CHN Ren Lihao
No. Pos. Nation Player
20 MF China CHN Nie Aoshuang
21 MF China CHN Hai Xiaorui
22 FW China CHN Chen Jiaqi (on loan from Qingdao Hainiu)
23 DF China CHN Zhang Liang
24 DF China CHN Jiang Yukai
26 GK China CHN Zeng Yi
27 FW China CHN Li Kai (on loan from Qingdao West Coast)
28 DF China CHN Sun Xu (on loan from Qingdao Hainiu)
29 MF China CHN Chen Ji
33 MF China CHN Sun Weijia (on loan from Qingdao Hainiu)
35 DF China CHN Zhang Shuai
37 FW Chinese Taipei TPE Chen Hao-wei
40 MF China CHN Pi Ziyang
43 MF China CHN Wang Guanqiao
44 MF China CHN Wu Junhao

Coaching staff

Position Name Nationality
Head coach Raul Cañete Lozano Spain
Assistant coach Li Yinan China
Goalkeeper coach Zhu Huiqian China

Management

  • Netherlands Piet van der Pol (President)
  • Indonesia Esti Lestari (CEO)
  • Netherlands Lon Weijers (COO)
  • China Anna Zhang (Commercial Affairs)
  • Spain Hector Buraglia (Head of Youth Academy)

Former notable head coaches

Name Nationality
Jan Poortvliet Netherlands 19 caps for the Netherlands national team. Played during the 1978 FIFA World Cup Final against Argentina.
Gert Heerkes Netherlands Former head coach at Willem II and Heracles, both in Dutch Eredivisie, the highest league level.
Guo Zuojin China Former assistant coach of the national team of China.
Tomaž Kavčič Slovenia Former head coach of the national team of Slovenia.

Notable players

Results

  • 2019 China FA Cup Tournament: Qingdao Red Lions beat Chongqing High Wave in the first round, then got eliminated in the second round by Zhejiang Yiteng after a penalty shoot out.
  • 2018 Qingdao FA Cup Tournament: Qingdao Fortschritt Red Lions reached the semi-finals, in which it drew with Qingdao Yinglian (1–1), but lost the penalty shoot out.
  • 2018 Qingdao City Super League: Qingdao Red Lions finish 2nd.
  • 2018 CFA MA Champions League finals: In the 2018 season the competition was re-branded China FA Member Associations Champions League (CMCL). Qingdao Fortschritt Red Lions in August finished second in the regional final (group 4 North) and qualified for the national finals stage. In the finals, the Red Lions lost 0–1 home and 2–1 away against Lhasa Urban Construction, after which they finished 15th.
  • 2017 Qingdao FA Cup Tournament: Qingdao Fortschritt Red Lions reached the semi-finals, in which it lost to Qingdao Yinglian (0–1).
  • 2017 Qingdao City Super League (6 teams): Qingdao Fortschritt Red Lions finished second in the league, one point behind champions MaiDiShen.
  • 2017 China Amateur Football League Finals: Qingdao Fortschritt Red Lions qualified for the regional final tournament in Zibo, Shandong province. It finished second after wins against Jinzhong (9–0) and Luoyang (2–1) and a loss against Zibo Sunday (0–1), meaning the team did not qualify for the final phase of the national finals.
  • 2016 Qingdao FA Cup Tournament: Qingdao Red Lions did not participate.
  • 2016 Qingdao City Super League (6 teams): Qingdao Red Lions finished in third place, qualifying for 2016 China Amateur League finals.
  • 2016 China Amateur Football League Finals: Qingdao Red Lions played the Southeast Regional final tournament that took place 1–7 October in Shanghai. It did not qualify for the national stage phase.

All-time league rankings As of the end of 2019 season.

Year Div Pld W D L GF GA GD Pts Pos. FA Cup Super Cup AFC Att./G Stadium
2016 4 3 0 0 3 1 8 −7 0 41 DNQ DNQ DNQ
2017 4 3 2 0 1 11 2 +9 6 21 DNQ DNQ DNQ
2018 4 3 2 0 1 8 3 +5 61 15 DNQ DNQ DNQ
2019 3 30 7 6 17 25 53 −28 271 24 R2 DNQ DNQ
  • ^1 In group stage.

Key

Youth Academy

Qingdao Red Lions Youth Academy has established three youth training centers in Laixi city and the Laoshan and Licang districts of Qingdao, with a total of more than 200 registered players. Qingdao Red Lions Youth Academy is led by UEFA A LEVEL professional coach Hector Buraglia from Spain. The academy coaching staff consists of AFC qualified local coaches. With the support of the Laixi Government and the local Education and Sports Bureau, Qingdao Red Lions FC is carrying out in-depth cooperation with schools to build out the club's youth development structure, and respectively make a strong contribution to develop local youth football talent.

Academy Notable Players

-Chen Yongbin – A-League – Adelaide United

In 2019 Chen Yongbin was transferred to Adelaide United, where he was registered for the 2020 A-League season.

References

  1. ^ "Adelaide United sold to Netherlands-based European consortium". espn.com.au. 7 March 2018. Archived from the original on 7 June 2019. Retrieved 7 June 2019.
  2. ^ Migliaccio, Val (26 November 2019). "Adelaide United's boom Chinese recruit Yongbin Chen expected to land in South Australia next week". The Advertiser. Retrieved 2 February 2021.
  3. ^ Windon, Jacob (15 October 2019). "Signing news: Yongbin Chen to join Adelaide from Qingdao Red Lions". A-League. Retrieved 2 February 2021.
  4. ^ "Förre allsvenska stjärnan fick nytt jobb – tack vare Instagram?". 23 March 2016.

External links