chinese professional football club football club
Wuhan Football Club, once the Wuhan Zall Football Club, [ 1 ] [ 2 ] ( simplified Chinese : 武汉卓尔 ; traditional chinese : 武漢卓爾 ; pinyin : Wǔhàn Zhuó’ěr ) is a professional Chinese football clubhouse that presently participates in the taiwanese Super League under license from the Chinese Football Association ( CFA ). The team is based in Wuhan, Hubei and their base stadium is the Dongxihu Sports Centre that has a seat capacity of 30,000. [ 3 ] Their stream majority stockholder is the investment company Wuhan Zall Development Holding Co. Ltd. The club was founded in 2009 after the withdrawal and then profligacy of its predecessor Wuhan Optics Valley from the league after the club had a dispute with the Chinese Football Association over their on-field demeanor. The Hubei Province soccer association decided to help form a raw team with players chiefly from the early Wuhan Optics Valley and Hubei youth teams. They entered at the depart of the 2009 league campaign at the penetrate of the professional Chinese football league pyramid in the third tier. The team won promotion to the 2013 Chinese Super League after coming runner-up in the 2012 China League One division and spent only one season in the top flight before being relegated back down. In 2018, the team won the League One again and earned their second gear season in the clear escape.

Reading: Wuhan F.C.

history [edit ]

2009–2011 : Hubei Luyin [edit ]

Hubei Luyin was founded in February, 2009 after its harbinger Wuhan Optics Valley withdrew from the top tier because of its controversial punishment in October 2008 after the club had a dispute with the Chinese Football Association over the club ‘s on-field behavior against Beijing Guoan in a 27 September 2008 league game. [ 4 ] Due to their coitus interruptus they were unable to register and participate in any professional chinese tournaments, however the Hubei Province football association decided that due to the lack of representation of any Hubei teams within the chinese football league system they would help create a new team to represent Hubei and use the Wuhan U-19 team arsenic well as the Hubei youth team as the initiation for the police squad. This saw the constitution of a new football clubhouse on the 26 February 2009 when the Hubei Luyin formally registered itself within the Chinese Football Association and start at the bottom of the professional football system in the third tier. [ 5 ] The club would show their unusual persuasiveness in depth when they would breeze through the regional section of the league campaign and accede into the play-off finals where they lost their only crippled of the season Hunan Billows F.C. in a punishment shoot out. Despite the kill the club would win promotion to the second tier and to strengthen their team they bought back the contracts of several Wuhan Optics Valley players who were not permanently sold off .

2011–2018 : Wuhan Zall [edit ]

With the golf club in the second grade they would go through a menstruation of joint investment from several parties until 14 December 2011 saw the Zall Group take possession of the club and rename them Wuhan Zall Football Club a well as changing the team ‘s colours back to orange, which was the club ‘s predecessor ‘s main color. [ 6 ] initially the modern owners saw the team struggle throughout the 2012 league season and decided to sack the existing coach Jose Carlos de Oliveira and replace him with Zheng Xiong on a caretaker footing. [ 7 ] As the temper went on the results well improved under Zheng Xiong who was given a full-time contract before guiding Wuhan Zall to second within the league and promotion to the chinese Super League. The cabaret ‘s get down in the 2013 league season was not a success and when the team went six games without a gain, Zheng resigned. [ 8 ] The erstwhile Shandong Luneng Head coach who had won the chinese Super League, Ljubiša Tumbaković was brought in to manage the team, however despite his feel in the league he was unable to help the club invalidate delegating and he was sacked before the temper was finished. [ 9 ] In 2015 the football club was sold to a individual company Wuhan Zall Development Holding Co. Ltd. under the ownership of their chair Yan Zhi and his relatives, for RMB 20,630,000. [ 10 ]

2019-Present : Super League [edit ]

After several seasons within the second tier, the clubhouse brought in Li Tie as the Head Coach, a coach who had previously guided Hebei China Fortune F.C. to the top tier. [ 11 ] In his debut season Li Tie was able to guide Wuhan to the victory of the division championship and promotion back into the chinese Super League at the end of the 2018 league season. [ 12 ]

name history [edit ]

  • 2009–2010: Hubei Luyin F.C. ( 湖北绿茵)
  • 2011: Hubei Wuhan Zhongbo F.C. ( 湖北武汉中博)
  • 2012–2020: Wuhan Zall F.C. ( 武汉卓尔)
  • 2021–: Wuhan F.C. ( 武汉)

current team [edit ]

First team [edit ]

As of 10 December 2021[13]

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

Read more: Wikipedia

Reserve police squad [edit ]

As of 1 March 2019
note : Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality .

Unregistered players [edit ]

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

Out on loanword [edit ]

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

Coaching staff [edit ]

managerial history [edit ]

Results [edit ]

  • As of the end of 2018 season.[14][15]

All-time League Rankings
samara

  China top division

  China second division

  China third division

W

  Winners

RU

  Runners-up

3

  Third place

  Relegated

  • 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 besides [edit ]

References [edit ]

Read more: Sevilla FC