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Shanghai Port F.C.

Chinese association football club

Shanghai Port F.C.

Summary

Chinese association football club

FieldValue
clubnameShanghai Port
上海海港
imageShanghai Port F.C.svg
image_size240
fullnameShanghai Port Football Club
上海海港足球俱乐部
nicknameThe Red Eagles (红鹰)
founded
groundPudong Football Stadium
capacity37,000
ownerShanghai International Port Group
chairmanZhang Min
mgrtitleHead coach
managerKevin Muscat
league
season
position
pattern_la1_shanghai24h
pattern_b1_shanghai24h
pattern_ra1_shanghai24h
leftarm1DD0000
body1DD0000
rightarm1DD0000
shorts1FF0000
socks1FF0000
pattern_la2_chengdu23a
pattern_b2_chengdu23a
pattern_ra2_chengdu23a
pattern_sh2_chengdu23a
leftarm2FFFFFF
body2FFFFFF
rightarm2FFFFFF
shorts2FFFFFF
socks2FFFFFF
website
current2025 Shanghai Port F.C. season

上海海港 上海海港足球俱乐部

Shanghai Port Football Club () is a Chinese professional football club based in Shanghai that competes in . Shanghai Port plays its home matches at the Pudong Football Stadium, located within Pudong. Their owners are the Chinese group Shanghai International Port Group (SIPG).

The club was founded on 25 December 2005 as Shanghai East Asia () by former Chinese international footballer Xu Genbao. The club used graduates from the Genbao Football Base, a football academy also founded by Xu, to form their first team as they made their debut in the third tier of China's football league pyramid in the 2006 league season. They made it to the top tier in the 2013 season and changed their name to Shanghai SIPG () after SIPG's takeover in December 2014. They finished as league champions for the first time in the 2018 Chinese Super League season, and changed to their current name in 2021. Shanghai Port then won three more league titles in the 2023, 2024 and 2025 seasons.

According to a Forbes report from 2015, Shanghai Port was the third-most valuable football club in China, with a club value of $159 million and an estimated revenue of $37 million. According to the annual report of the parent company, the club had a revenue of in 2015, as well as a net loss of , total assets of , and net assets of .

History

2005–2007: League Two

On 16 May 2000, the former Chinese international football coach Xu Genbao founded the Genbao Football Base and enrolled 96 academy members born between 1988 and 1991, who were to be trained in the recently built Genbao Football Base Arena.

Xu Genbao initially had no intention of establishing a professional football club. However, as the youngsters in the Base grew up, the lack of youth football competition in China prompt Xu to set up a football club so that his protégés could earn match experiences in professional football. On 25 December 2005, Shanghai East Asia Football Club was jointly established by Xu Genbao and Shanghai East Asia Sports and Culture Center Co. Ltd, with Xu Genbao being the club chairman. Xu appointed Claude Lowitz, a French youth coach in the Base, as the team manager.

With young players aged between 14 and 17, Shanghai East Asia competed in the 2006 China League Two, the third-tier of the Chinese league system. The team played their home games at Genbao Football Base Arena training ground in Chongming, Shanghai, and eventually finished their first season in seventh place. During the campaign, Xu's players broke a few records during the season, with Cao Yunding being the youngest Chinese goalscorer aged 16 years and 242 days, and Wu Lei the youngest Chinese professional footballer, aged only 14 years and 287 days.

At the end of 2006, Claude Lowitz left the club, and former assistant manager Jiang Bingyao took up the manager position. With lessons learned and experiences gained from their debutante season, the young East Asia FC went on to win the division title in 2007, by beating Sichuan in the final, and thus gaining promotion to China League One, the second-tier of the football league.

2008–2012: League One

Despite the successful promotion, questions arose as to what would happen to the team, especially given that Xu's previous efforts to create a professional club (Shanghai 02) ended up being sold off to Shanghai Shenhua in 2002 due to financial difficulties. In June 2007, Shanghai government came to Xu's rescue with financial aid, in exchange East Asia FC would represent Shanghai in the 2009 National Games of China.

With the club in a higher division, Shanghai East Asia moved into the 30,000 seater Jinshan Sports Centre in Jinshan District of Shanghai and finished the 2008 China League One division campaign in sixth place. In summer 2009, Shanghai East Asia represented the Shanghai football team and took part in the 2009 National Games. Xu Genbao took up the management post himself and led the team to win gold in the men's football tournament. Meanwhile, in the league, Shanghai East Asia chose the 65,000 seater Shanghai Stadium as their home stadium for their 2009 China League One campaign. They finished the season in fourth place and just missed out on promotion by a single win, but it was still considered quite an achievement because that team was made up of players under 20 years old, and with no foreign imports.

The 2010 league season saw former Chinese international Fan Zhiyi receive his first management job at the club as well as the introduction of their first-ever foreign players in Macedonian Nikola Karçev and Haitian Fabrice Noël. Despite these new signings the club failed to improve upon the previous season's results and finished in fourth place. Failure to gain promotion and financial difficulties caused the club unable to hold onto their rising stars. Before the 2011 season, five of the team's starting players left the club: team captain Wang Jiayu, Chinese international Zhang Linpeng, and Chinese under-23 players Cao Yunding, Jiang Zhipeng, and Gu Chao. In the following 2011 season, Xu Genbao promoted several young players into the first team and the team finished the season in ninth place.

At the beginning of the 2012 season the club sold their team name to sponsor, Zobon Group for 30 million Yuan on a three-year deal, which saw the club change first team's name to Shanghai Tellace on 31 December 2011, while the club's name remains unchanged as Shanghai East Asia. At the end of the season, they won the league title and was promoted to the Chinese Super League.

2013–present: Chinese Super League

SAIC Motor Pudong Arena]], the home ground of Shanghai Port since 2023

On 28 December 2012, Shanghai East Asia changed its first team name again to Port Shanghai F.C., under a 40-million Yuan sponsorship deal with Shanghai International Port. Within the off-season, on 7 January 2013, the club officially acquired another Shanghai-based football club, Shanghai Zobon, which had previously played in the 2012 China League Two division before they were dissolved. Most of its players, born between 1993 and 1994 and graduated from Genbao Football Base, were brought back under Xu Genbao's wing and would become the reserve team of Shanghai East Asia. In the club's debut within the top tier they brought in former Chinese national team manager Gao Hongbo as their head coach and he would go on to guide the club to a ninth-place finish at the end of the 2013 league season. The Shanghai International Port would decide to strengthen their position within the club and officially took over the whole club on 18 November 2014 and immediately appointed Sven-Göran Eriksson as their new head coach.

During the 2015 winter transfer window, Shanghai SIPG signed eight new players to strengthen the squad: Sun Xiang, Davi Rodrigues de Jesus, Dario Conca, Kim Ju-Young, Yang Boyu, Shi Ke, Jean Evrard Kouassi, and Yu Hai – who the club spent 50 million Yuan on. It became the highest transfer record of any Chinese player. The team won the first three games of the season, which creates their best CSL league start in its history. On 9 May, Shanghai SIPG secured a 5–0 victory over their rival Shanghai Greenland Shenhua, and it was their first victory in the Shanghai Derby. The team signed Ghanaian player Asamoah Gyan in the summer transfer window. Jean Evrard Kouassi was dropped into the reserve team due to the registration restriction at that time (4 foreign players + 1 Asian foreign player). Shanghai SIPG finished the season in second place with 65 points – just two points behind the champions Guangzhou Evergrande. It was their best league position in the club's history and they managed to get into the AFC Champions League qualification.

In the beginning of 2016, SAIC Motor Corporation became one of Shanghai SIPG's main sponsors. The club signed former AFC Champions League & CSL golden boot winner Elkeson from Guangzhou Evergrande for €18.5 million. It broke the record of the Chinese transfer market. On 9 February, the team secured a 3–0 victory over Muang Thong United from Thailand in the AFC Champions League qualification round, and successfully went in to the group stage of the ACL. Shanghai SIPG went through the group stage in first place. In the round of 16, Shanghai SIPG faced FC Tokyo. They lost 2–1 away in the first leg, yet thanks to Wu Lei's late 90th-minute goal in the second leg, the team went through the round of 16 with an away goal difference. During the summer transfer window, Shanghai SIPG spent €56 million to sign the Brazilian international Hulk. The team was eliminated in the ACL quarter-finals, and in the CSL, the team ended up in third place with 52 points.

In 2018, Shanghai rode the momentum of Wu Lei, who was the league's top scorer in that year, to win their first-ever CSL title. In 2019, they won the Super Cup for their second top tier trophy.

Ownership and naming history

YearOwnerClub nameSponsored team name
2005–2011Genbao Football Base
Shanghai East Asia Sports and Culture Center Co. LtdShanghai East Asia Football Club
2012Shanghai Tellace (上海特莱士)
2013–2014Shanghai SIPG
2015–presentShanghai International Port GroupShanghai SIPG Football Club (2015–2020)
Shanghai Port Football Club (2021–present)

Rivalries

Main article: Shanghai derby

The club's main rival is Shanghai Shenhua, with whom they contest the local Shanghai derby. With the club's founder Xu Genbao having managed Shenhua to the 1995 league title, the Shenhua tie holds a direct personal link between the two teams. On 28 April 2013 the two sides met for the first time in a league game that saw the club defeated 2–1 to Shenhua. The tie against Shanghai Shenxin also holds strong links between the two teams with Jiang Zhipeng and Wang Jiayu both having represented both teams before the two clubs met in their first derby on 2 June 2013, which resulted in a 6–1 victory. The club's geographical location has also opened them up to rivalries with neighbouring clubs Hangzhou Greentown and Jiangsu Guoxin-Sainty with whom they contest the Yangtze Delta Derby.

Squad

First-team squad

B-team squad

Out on loan

Coaching staff

Managerial history

List of Shanghai Port managers:

  • FRA Claude Lowitz (2006)
  • CHN Jiang Bingyao (2007–2009)
  • CHN Fan Zhiyi (2010)
  • CHN Jiang Bingyao (January 2011 – 20 December 2012)
  • CHN Gao Hongbo (27 February 2013 – 7 November 2013)
  • CHN Xi Zhikang (4 December 2013 – 17 November 2014)
  • SWE Sven-Göran Eriksson (18 November 2014 – 4 November 2016)
  • POR André Villas-Boas (4 November 2016 – 30 November 2017)
  • POR Vítor Pereira (13 December 2017 – 31 December 2020)
  • CRO Ivan Leko (1 January 2021 – 1 December 2022)
  • CHN Xi Zhikang (1 December 2022 – 28 February 2023)
  • ESP Javier Pereira (1 March 2023 – 31 December 2023)
  • AUS Kevin Muscat (1 January 2024 – present)

Honours

League

Cup

Results

Season-by-season rankings

YearDivPldWDLGFGAGDPts.Pos.FA CupSuper CupAFCStadium
20063163582629−3147DNENHDNQGenbao Football Base
200731711423515+2030WNHNHDNQ
200822477102630−4286NHNHDNQJinshan Football Stadium
200922413564325+18444NHNHDNQShanghai Stadium
201022491052518+7374NHNHDNQ
201122671182925+4329R2NHDNQ
201223017854725+2259WR3DNQDNQ
2013130107133835+3379R4DNQDNQ
2014130121264739+8485R3DNQDNQ
201513019836335+2865RUQFDNQDNQ
2016130141065632+24523R4DNQQuarter-finals
201713017767239+3358RURUDNQSemi-finals
201813021547733+4468WQFDNQRound of 16
201913020646226+36663SFWQuarter-finals
202011410222611+15324R2NHRound of 16Yuanshen Sports Centre Stadium
202112213634214+2845RURUNHPlay-off roundCentralised venues
202213420595525+30654SFNHWithdrewDalian Sports Centre Stadium
202313019656130+3163WR4DNQPlay-off roundPudong Football Stadium
202413025329630+6678WWRURound of 16
202513020647244+2866WR16RU
  • In group stage
  • The season was shortened due to the COVID-19 pandemic
  • Lost in the semifinals
  • Withdrew from the competition due to the COVID-19 lockdown measures

;Key

WRU3
Winners
Runners-up
Third place
  • Div = Division
  • Pld = Played
  • W = Games won
  • D = Games drawn
  • L = Games lost
  • GF = Goals for
  • GA = Goals against
  • GD = Goal difference
  • Pts. = Points
  • Pos. = Final position
  • DNQ = Did not qualify
  • DNE = Did not enter
  • NH = Not held
  • R2 = Second round
  • R3 = Third round
  • R4 = Fourth round
  • QF = Quarter-finals
  • SF = Semi-finals

International results

All results list Shanghai's goal tally first.

SeasonCompetitionRoundOppositionHomeAway2016201720182019202020212023–24
AFC Champions LeaguePlay-off roundTHA Muangthong United
Group stageAUS Melbourne Victory
KOR Suwon Samsung Bluewings
JPN Gamba Osaka
Round of 16JPN FC Tokyo
Quarter–finalsKOR Jeonbuk Hyundai Motors
AFC Champions LeaguePlay-off roundTHA Sukhothai
Group stageKOR FC Seoul
AUS Western Sydney Wanderers
JPN Urawa Red Diamonds
Round of 16CHN Jiangsu Suning
Quarter–finalsCHN Guangzhou Evergrande
Semi-finalsJPN Urawa Red Diamonds
AFC Champions LeaguePlay-off roundTHA Chiangrai United
Group stageAUS Melbourne Victory
JPN Kawasaki Frontale
KOR Ulsan Hyundai
Round of 16JPN Kashima Antlers
AFC Champions LeagueGroup stageJPN Kawasaki Frontale
KOR Ulsan Hyundai
AUS Sydney FC
Round of 16KOR Jeonbuk Hyundai Motors
Quarter–finalsJPN Urawa Red Diamonds
AFC Champions LeaguePlay-off roundTHA Buriram United
Group stageAUS Sydney FC
KOR Jeonbuk Hyundai Motors
JPN Yokohama F. Marinos
Round of 16JPN Vissel Kobe
AFC Champions LeaguePlay-off roundPHI Kaya–Iloilo
AFC Champions LeaguePlay-off roundTHA BG Pathum United

References

References

  1. "Leaders' biographies". Shanghai International Port Group.
  2. "Chinese Soccer's Most Valuable Teams". [[Forbes]].
  3. (29 March 2016). "2015 Annual Report". Shanghai International Port Group.
  4. (2 December 2010). "上海东亚足球俱乐部介绍".
  5. (20 August 2006). "中国曼联整风后创佳绩 主场重创武汉雅琪显年轻魅力".
  6. (3 September 2006). "乙级也有上海德比:武磊上场创纪录 东亚遗憾负东巴".
  7. (25 November 2007). "五分钟神奇逆转 徐根宝率东亚2比1胜四川乙级封王".
  8. (29 November 2007). "02计划失败成遗憾根宝欲借东亚重掌国字号".
  9. (26 November 2010). "恒大巧避足协限价令 1200万天价签约国足红人".
  10. (1 January 2012). "卫平华丽牵手徐根宝 球队正式更名"上海特莱士"队".
  11. (28 December 2012). "上港集团4000万冠名东亚 资金到位徐根宝信心满满".
  12. (7 January 2013). "东亚收回中邦小队 根宝证实战怡麟转会达口头协议".
  13. (18 November 2014). "上港足球俱乐部宣告成立 埃里克森携团队亮相".
  14. (8 November 2018). "Shanghai SIPG win first CSL title".
  15. (2 January 2012). "上海东亚更名征战新赛季 赞助额每年达到1000万".
  16. (28 December 2012). "上海东亚获4000万赞助 以上海上港集团队亮相".
  17. (29 April 2013). "Spectacular Comeback Once More As Shenhua Snatch Shanghai Derby Win".
  18. (28 April 2013). "SHANGHAI SHENHUA VS. PORT SHANGHAI 2–1". Soccerway.
  19. (2 June 2013). "武磊帽子戏法吕文君2球 东亚客战6–1申鑫".
  20. (11 February 2015). "Attending A Shanghai Shenhua Match: A First Time Visitor's Guide".
  21. (22 February 2025). "上海海港新赛季大名单:武磊领衔徐新6号 蒯纪闻入选".
  22. "上海海港富盛经开".
  23. "教练". Shanghai Port F.C..
  24. "成耀东挂帅海港B队!上海海港B队换帅,成耀东出任主教练于海助教".
  25. "Shanghai SIPG » Manager history".
  26. "CHINA LEAGUE ONE – 2012". Soccerway.
  27. (10 October 2013). "China – List of Champions".
  28. "上海东亚".
  29. (11 April 2022). "Covid-19 lockdowns force Shanghai Port out of Asian Champions League".
  30. "Asian Club Competitions 2016".
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