Results

China Super League 01/03 07:30 22 [4] Wuhan v Chongqing Liangjiang [6] W 1-2
China Super League 12/31 07:30 21 [5] Chongqing Liangjiang v Shanghai Shenhua [1] D 0-0
China Super League 12/28 07:30 20 [5] Dalian Pro v Chongqing Liangjiang [6] W 0-1
China Super League 12/25 11:30 19 [6] Chongqing Liangjiang v Tianjin Jinmen Tigers [7] L 0-1
China Super League 12/21 07:30 18 [6] Chongqing Liangjiang v Wuhan [3] D 0-0
China Super League 12/18 11:30 17 [1] Shanghai Shenhua v Chongqing Liangjiang [6] L 4-1
China Super League 12/15 07:30 16 [4] Chongqing Liangjiang v Dalian Pro [3] L 0-1
China Super League 12/12 11:30 15 [6] Tianjin Jinmen Tigers v Chongqing Liangjiang [3] D 1-1
China FA Cup 10/18 11:30 11 Henan Songshan Longmen v Chongqing Liangjiang L 2-0
China FA Cup 10/13 08:00 10 Chongqing Liangjiang v Wuhan Three Towns W 2-0
China Super League 08/11 10:00 14 [5] ShenZhen v Chongqing Liangjiang [11] L 2-1
China Super League 08/08 12:00 13 [11] Chongqing Liangjiang v Guangzhou FC [2] L 1-5

Stats

 TotalHomeAway
Matches played 1 1 1
Wins 1 0 1
Draws 0 1 0
Losses 0 0 0
Goals for 2 0 2
Goals against 1 0 1
Clean sheets 0 1 0
Failed to score 0 1 0

Chongqing Liangjiang Athletic (simplified Chinese: 重庆两江竞技; traditional Chinese: 重慶兩江競技; pinyin: Chóngqìng Liǎngjiāng Jìngjì) was a Chinese professional football club based in Chongqing.

The club was founded in 1995 as Wuhan Qianwei before making their debut in the newly developed fully professional Chinese football league system where they started in the third tier within the 1995 league season. They would quickly rise up to the top tier and experience their greatest achievement of winning the 2000 Chinese FA Cup and coming fourth within the league. In 2002, they came fourth place in the last season of the Asian Cup Winners' Cup. After these achievements they struggled to replicate the same success and experienced their first relegation from the top tier in the 2006 league season. After gaining promotion in 2008 back into the top tier they were unable to remain in the top flight and were relegated once more in the 2010 season. In 2014, they finished the season at the top of Chinese League One (tier 2) division and won promotion to the Chinese Super League again. Between 2017 and 2021 the club was known as Chongqing Dangdai Lifan.

According to Forbes, in 2016, Chongqing was the 9th most valuable football team in China, with a team value of $76 million, and an estimated revenue of $17 million in 2015.

The club was dissolved on 24 May 2022.

History

Establishment in Wuhan

Wuhan Qianwei F.C. was founded in Wuhan, Hubei Province in early 1995 on the basis of the second team of Hubei WISCO, which had taken the vacant place in Jia B League created by the merger of Hubei Football Team (est. 1954) and Wuhan Football Team to form its parent team in the previous year, and was relegated to China League Two after that season.

In the 1995 season, Hubei Qianwei took part in the bottom level (tier-3) China League Two and finished fourth to gain promotion to the second division. In the second tier, they quickly received significant funding from the Ministry of Public Security along with the Huandao Group, a notable company in tourism industry based in Hainan, which in turn also saw the club change its name to Qianwei Huandao to represent their new stockholder. Qianwei Huandao tried to relocate their home ground in Haikou, the capital city of Hainan province, but the team finally chose to stay in Wuhan since there was no suitable stadium in Hainan to serve as the home ground. With significant investment coming into the team, they bought several former Chinese international players such as Feng Zhigang and Xu Tao to strengthen the squad. This soon paid off when the club won the second-tier league and promoted to the top tier at the end of the 1996 league season.

Move to Chongqing

In the top tier the owners decided that the club needed to affiliate itself with a major region that had a great football fan population, so they decided to move to the nearby city of Chongqing and chose the Datianwan Stadium as their new home ground. This was followed by more Chinese internationals such as Jiang Feng and Han Jinming joining the team and ensuring the club stayed up in the tier one at the end of the season. Ensuring that the club remain the only team within the Chongqing region, the club went on to merge and essentially take over a club in the lower-level league, Chongqing Hongyan, after the 1999 season. This was then followed by a complete shift of the club ownership. Lifan Group, a local flagship company in automobile industry, bought the club for 55,800,000 yuan on 19 August 2000 and renamed the club Chongqing Lifan. While all of this was happening the club's manager Lee Jang-Soo was ensuring that the club would gradually improve each successive season and provide the club with their greatest achievement of winning the 2000 Chinese FA Cup for the first time in the club's history. Chongqing Lifan would then be eligible to enter their first continental competition when they competed in the 2001–02 Asian Cup Winners' Cup and with Edson Tavares as their new manager he would lead the club to a semi-finals position where the club lost 0:2 to Anyang Cheetahs before ending the competition in fourth after losing to Al Sadd by penalty kicks after a 0:0 regular-time draw in a third-place final game.

Takeover of Yunnan Hongta

In the 2003 league season Chongqing Lifan had brought in Miloš Hrstić as their new coach, however his appointment was a disaster and the club was relegated at the end of the season. With the club desperate to remain within the top tier they would buy Yunnan Hongta's registration and merge the clubs' senior teams together allowing Chongqing Lifan to remain in the top division. Surprisingly the club would actually profit from the merger when several of the surplus players from both teams would then go on to gain investment from the Hunan Corun Group and buy Chongqing Lifan's second division registration for 20,000,000 yuan to then form Hunan Shoking. Back on the field the club would bring in Yu Dongfeng as their new manager in the 2004 league season, however because it was an expansion season the club would stagnate at the bottom of the league, safe in the knowledge that there was no relegation that season. With no relegation again in the 2005 league season there was no improvement within the team despite the change in management with Ma Lin coming in. With relegation reinstated in the 2006 league season the club brought in another change of management with Xu Hong, however for the third straight season in a row the club finished bottom of the league and were relegated at the end of the season. The club would decide to bring in a new manager and hired from within with former player Wei Xin chosen. The move would pay-off when on his second season the club won promotion back into the top tier when Chongqing came second at the end of the 2008 league season.

Dangdai era

On 26 June 2016, Jiang Lizhang purchased 98.13% of Granada CF, setting up an affiliation, which has seen Feng Jing and Wang Zixiang go to the Spanish club, with Chongqing Lifan. On 5 January 2017, Jiang, alongside the Dangdai International Group, purchased 90% of Chongqing Lifan, renaming the club Chongqing Dangdai Lifan.

Chongqing Lifan is a professional soccer team based in Chongqing, China. The team competes in the Chinese Super League, the top tier of Chinese football. Chongqing Lifan was founded in 1995 and has since become a prominent and competitive team in Chinese football.

The team's colors are red and white, and they are known for their passionate fan base and exciting style of play. Chongqing Lifan has a strong roster of talented players, both domestic and international, who work together to achieve success on the field.

Chongqing Lifan plays their home matches at the Chongqing Olympic Sports Center, a modern and impressive stadium that can hold thousands of enthusiastic fans. The team has a rich history of success in Chinese football and continues to strive for excellence in every match they play.

Overall, Chongqing Lifan is a respected and formidable team in Chinese football, with a dedicated fan base and a commitment to achieving greatness on the field.