Beijing Institute of Technology F.C.

BIT
北京理工大学足球俱乐部
Full name Beijing Institute of Technology Football Club
北京理工大学足球俱乐部
Nickname(s) Student Army (学生军)
Founded 2000 (2000)
Ground BIT Eastern Athletic Field, Beijing
Ground Capacity 5,000
Chairman Liu Qixiao (刘启孝)
Manager Zhang Dongping (张冬平)
League China League Two
2015 China League One, 15th (Relegated)

Beijing Institute of Technology Football Club (Simplified Chinese: 北京理工大学足球俱乐部) or simply BIT is a professional Chinese football club that currently participates in the China League Two division under licence from the Chinese Football Association (CFA). The team is based in Haidian, Beijing and their home stadium is the 5,000 capacity BIT Eastern Athletic Field. Their current majority shareholders are Beijing Institute of Technology (BIT) and Xinyuan Real Estate.

The club was founded in 2000 by the Beijing Institute of Technology initially as a College football team where they experienced significant success by winning four Chinese Collegiate Championships before deciding to enter the 2006 league campaign at the bottom of the professional Chinese football league pyramid in the third tier. After winning the 2006 division championship the club would comply with the requirements of full professionalism by having their full-time students register as professionals, increase the player wages and gain sponsorship.

History

College football

In 2000 Beijing Institute of Technology (BIT), a co-educational public university established an amateur football team to participate in the Chinese University Football League (CUFL, Simplified Chinese: 中国大学生足球联赛) after they separated from high school football team Beijing Yicheng BTV Sangao.[1] The club would have an annual budget of 100,000 Yuan with financial support coming from school grants, donations and corporate sponsorship. The players were paid 400 Yuan a mouth as nominal allowance while continuing with their studies. The clubs recruitment policey saw them particularlly scout youth players wishing to continue their education, however Beijing Yicheng BTV Sangao would ultimately be the main source of their first roster.[2][3][4]

After making their debut in the 2001 Chinese Collegiate championship the club went on to win the 2002, 2003, 2004 and 2006 championships. With this success the team were invited by the Chinese Football Association to represent China in the 2003 Summer Universiade Games where they placed seventh. Professional coach Jin Zhiyang was initially brought in for the tournament, however once they championship ended he decided to stay on and publicly declared that this club should be participating within the Chinese national leagues.[5] After participating within the 2005 Summer Universiade Games BIT decided to participate at the bottom of the Chinese league pyramid in the third tier. In their debut season of the 2006 China League Two division their roster consisted of 30 players that had eight graduate students and 22 university students, a statistic that the club would proudly proclaim made them the best educated team in Chinese history.[1]

Professional football

On 2 November 2006 BIT beat Harbin Yiteng 3-0 to win the division championship and gained promotion to the second tier of Chinese football.[6] The promotion drew great attention in the nation, because it was the first time a team consisting of full-time college students won such a promotion. Concerns were raised regarding the impact that professional football will have on the students and whether a university should allow its sports team to participate in a professional league. The CFA would allow the club to participate within the league after giving them special dispensation despite failing to move to a 20,000 seater stadium required for all professional football teams within the league. The club would comply with the other requirements of professionalism when the owners had to register all the players as footballers rather than students and increased their wages to 1000 Yuan a mouth.[7] Sponsorship was required to help pay for running costs which had risen to 15 million Yuan a year. Their first sponsors were Beijing Huaqi Information Digital Technology Co., Ltd. who signed a two-year sponsorship contract worth 6 million Yuan over two years. With the new sponsor the club changed their name to Beijing Patriotic Students and finished the league campaign in 11th.[8]

In the 2008 league season Beijing Huaqi Information Digital Technology Co., Ltd. decided to change the clubs name to Beijing Aigo to reflect their ownership of the Aigo brand. The following season the club signed a new one year sponsorship for 3 million Yuan, which changed the clubs name to Beijing Guirenniao.[9] When this sponsorship ended at the beginning of the 2010 league season the club would be in a financial precarious situation that required the Beijing Sports Bureau to step in with a 400 million Yuan investment.[7] The departure of Cao Xiandong as coach further exasperated the situation and Zhang Ning was appointed to help the club avoid relegation. After avoiding relegation at the beginning of the 2011 league season the club were able to regain a sponsorship contract with sports manufacturer 361 ° International Limited for 5.5 million Yuan, which resulted in a change of name to Beijing 361 ° Students. Throughout this the club have continued to further move into the realms of professionalism with the inclusion of professional foreign imports such as Dutch-born Raphael Maitimo, however the club would still stick to their Collegiate roots by competing within the 2011 Summer Universiade and even 2015 Summer Universiade games despite the exclusions of many of their fully professional players as well as the significant shift of ownership with Xinyuan Real Estate becoming their second largest shareholder on 9 April 2015.[10]

Name history

Current squad

As of 22 March 2016 [11]

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

No. Position Player
1 China GK Yan Xiangshan
2 China DF Wang Meng
3 China DF Li Jiejun
4 China DF Han Weilin
5 China FW Wang Wei
6 China DF Meng Yang
7 China MF Li Sichen
8 China MF Cui Wei
10 China DF Guo Ziyin
11 China MF Chen Zixuan
12 China GK Guan Anda
14 China DF Cui Boyu
15 China MF Liang Dongpo
16 China MF Zhou Lei
No. Position Player
17 China DF Hu Ming
18 China MF Cui Wei
19 China DF He Zichao
21 China FW Cui Hefeng
22 China GK Wang Wei
23 China DF Xie Wenkai
24 China MF Jin Dichuanqi
25 China DF Zhang Jizhou
26 China DF Jing Xuan
27 China MF Zhang Yang
28 China MF Li Gonghao
29 China FW Pei-Xu Junjie
30 China DF Fan Bo

Reserve squad

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

No. Position Player

Coaching Staff

Position Staff
Head coach China Yuan Wei
Assistant coach China Yu Fei
Goalkeeping coach
Fitness coach

Source: sina.com

Honours

2006
2001/02, 2002/03. 2003/04, 2005/06, 2010/11, 2012/13, 2013/14, 2014/15

Results

All-time CUFL League Rankings

Season 00/01 01/02 02/03 03/04 04/05 05/06 06/07 07/08 08/09 09/10 10/11 11/12 12/13 13/14 14/15
Position 3 1 1 1 4 1 41 3 7 -2 1 -2 13 13 13

All-time Professional League Rankings

Year Div Pld W D L GF GA GD Pts Pos. FA Cup Super Cup AFC Att./G Stadium
2006 3 21 12 8 1 45 13 -32 35 1 1 DNQ DNQ DNQ Engineering University Stadium
2007 2 24 5 7 12 27 40 -13 22 11 NH DNQ DNQ BIT Eastern Athletic Field
2008 2 24 7 7 10 27 39 −12 28 7 NH DNQ DNQ BIT Eastern Athletic Field
2009 2 24 7 7 10 29 33 −4 28 8 NH DNQ DNQ BIT Eastern Athletic Field
2010 2 24 4 6 14 22 40 −18 18 12 NH DNQ DNQ BIT Eastern Athletic Field
2011 2 26 5 9 12 15 33 −18 24 13 R1 DNQ DNQ BIT Eastern Athletic Field
2012 2 30 8 8 14 27 41 −14 32 14 R2 DNQ DNQ 1,491 BIT Eastern Athletic Field
2013 2 30 10 5 15 32 42 −10 35 9 R2 DNQ DNQ 1,792 BIT Eastern Athletic Field
2014 2 30 11 4 15 46 57 −11 37 9 R3 DNQ DNQ 1,637 BIT Eastern Athletic Field
2015 2 30 8 5 17 40 64 −24 29 15 R2 DNQ DNQ 1,749 BIT Eastern Athletic Field
2016 3 R1 DNQ DNQ BIT Eastern Athletic Field

Key

  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

References

  1. 1 2 "北理工,夹缝中的足球梦". sports.163.com. 2011-08-16. Retrieved 2015-08-18.
  2. "高考比联赛更重要--记北京BTV三高足球队". sports. sports.sina.com.cn. 2000-07-10. Retrieved 2015-08-18.
  3. "三高简介". sangaoclub.com. 2012-09-01. Retrieved 2015-08-18.
  4. "中国足球后备人才近枯竭人大附"三高"模式探索". education.news.cn. 2000-07-28. Retrieved 2015-08-18.
  5. "北理工足球队中甲4年一支"学生军"困惑与坚守". education.news.cn. 2010-07-29. Retrieved 2015-08-19.
  6. "China 2006". rsssf.com. 2014-09-04. Retrieved 2015-08-20.
  7. 1 2 "学生球队参加中甲生存艰难". sports.163.com. 2011-08-16. Retrieved 2015-08-20.
  8. "China 2007". rsssf.com. 2008-04-18. Retrieved 2015-08-25.
  9. "China 2009". rsssf.com. 2010-04-23. Retrieved 2015-08-25.
  10. "鑫苑成北理工第二大股东 将冠名学生军三年". sports.sina.com.cn. 2015-04-09. Retrieved 2015-08-26.
  11. 2016中乙联赛俱乐部报名表 at fa.org.cn 2016-04-12 Retrieved 2016-04-18
  12. 1 2 "China - List of Champions". rsssf.com. 20 March 2014. Retrieved 2014-08-25.
  13. "北京理工". sodasoccer.com. Retrieved 2014-09-01.

External links

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