Army United F.C. Explained

Clubname:Army United
อาร์มี่ ยูไนเต็ด
Fullname:Army United Football Club
สโมสรฟุตบอล อาร์มี่ ยูไนเต็ด
Nickname:Gentleman Ranger
(สุภาพบุรุษวงจักร)
Founded:1916; as Royal Thai Army Football Club
Dissolved:2019
Ground:Royal Thai Army Stadium
Bangkok, Thailand
Capacity:20,000
Owner:Royal Thai Army
Mgrtitle:Head Coach
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Army United Football Club (Thai: สโมสรฟุตบอลอาร์มี่ ยูไนเต็ด) was a Thai professional football club under the stewardship of the Royal Thai Army based in the Din Daeng District of Bangkok. It was one of the oldest football clubs in Asia, until it was discontinued at the end of the 2019 season after 103 years in existence.

The club was founded in 1916 and was known as Royal Thai Army until November 2010. Their home stadium was known locally as the Thai Army Sports Stadium and was more widely known around Asian circles as the Royal Thai Army Stadium, which had been host to numerous international youth matches due to its central Bangkok location. The club played in red shirts with red shorts and red socks. Despite finishing bottom of the Thai Premier League in 2010, they managed to regain their top-flight status after winning Group B of the Thai League Play-off in 2011.

History

Army United represented the Royal Thai Army and had traditionally been Thailand's yo-yo club along with the Navy and Police clubs. Up until 2010, and the name change from the Royal Thai Army to Army United, the club lacked support and had dwindling crowds, and were mainly supported by Army personnel shipped in for the games.

The Army team had always been a mid ranking Thai team with their biggest successes coming in the Thai Division 1 League with a championship in the 2004–05 season and 2nd place in 2009. Both of these successes had of course come after relegation from the Thai Premier League.

The club were based in the Din Daeng District of Central Bangkok, which is the area that bases the Royal Thai Army. Up until the 2011 season, the club operated a policy of only playing homegrown talent, but ditched this as the game became more professional and foreign players were brought into the team. Previously, the players would work for the Army during the week and play football on weekends, somewhat different from most clubs who operated on a full-time basis.

In the 2010 season, they were reprieved from relegation after an end of season relegation/playoff system was announced to expand the Thai Premier League, and thus escaped relegation despite finishing 16th.

In 2011, rebranded Army United signed five Brazilians and surprised all expectations as they topped the TPL in the early weeks of the season, with Leandro Dos Santos scoring regularly. Crowds rose from a few hundred to a season average of 5,580. However, the early season form petered out and Army finished in 13th position.In 2012, most of the Brazilians had moved on but were replaced with other highly rated foreign stars. Daniel Blanco was the most impressive performer as Army flirted with the Top 6 for long periods before eventually finishing in 10th position.

The 2012 season also coincided with Army reaching the 2012 Thai FA Cup final. On the way to the final, Army was given a reprieve after they lost a penalty shoot-out to regional league side Trat. It turned out that Trat had fielded an unregistered player and was booted out of the cup with Army reinstated. Army United then defeated runaway TPL leaders Muangthong United on the way to the final. However, Army lost the final 2–1 to Buriram United.[1]

In 2013, the club signed a strategic partnership deal with Thai-owned English club Leicester City.[2]

In 2019, Army United decided to dissolve the club, ending the history of the club after 103 years.[3] [4] [5] [6]

Stadium

Thai Army Sports Stadium is a multi-purpose stadium on Vibhavadi-Rangsit Road in the Din Daeng District of north Bangkok, Thailand. It is currently used mostly for football matches and is the home stadium of Army United F.C.[7] The stadium holds 20,000 and has a single stand with covered seating on one side and terracing on three sides. An athletics track surrounds the pitch. It is often used by Thai club sides in international football competitions and was used by Bangkok University in the 2007 AFC Champions League and Osotsapa in the 2007 AFC Cup. Additionally, it has been used for matches involving national sides in international tournaments hosted by Thailand where the hosts are not involved.

Season by season domestic record

SeasonLeague[8] FA CupQueen's
Cup
League
Cup
Kor Royal
Cup
AFC
Champions
League
Top scorer
DivisionPWDLFAPtsPosNameGoals
1996–97TSL34141286050548th – – – –
1997TSL2274113145259th – – – –
1998TPL2275103542267th – – – –
1999TPL22741125302511th – – – –
2000DIV 1 – – – –
2001–02DIV 1 – – – –
2002–03DIV 1 – – – – –
2003–04DIV 1 – – – – –
2004–05DIV 1bgcolor=gold1st – – – – –
2006TPL227963138306th –GR – – –
2007TPL3013894033475th – – – – –Jakkraphong Somboon9
2008TPL30671721442515th – – – – –Jakkraphong Somboon4
2009DIV 1301844551862bgcolor=silver2ndR2GRR2 – –Tatree Seeha17
2010TPL30571827542216thSFQFR2 – –Tatree Seeha8
2011TPL301091539403913thSF –R1 – –Leandro Dos Santos18
2012TPL3410131134384310thRU –R1 – –Björn Lindemann6
2013TPL32139104840486thR4 –QF – –Aron da Silva11
2014TPL381411135255539thR3 –R1 – –Raphael Botti
Tanakorn Dangthong
9
2015TPL341181543474110thSF –SF – –Mongkol Tossakrai7
2016TL31861734463016thR3 –R1 – –Josimar16
2017T232109135357399thR3 –R1 – –Marcos Vinícius18
2018T22871383841348thR2 –R1 – –Erivelto14
2019T23415 10 9564355 5thR2 –QF – –Tanakorn Dangthong16
bgcolor=goldChampionsbgcolor=silverRunners-upThird placePromotedRelegated

Coaches

Coaches by Years (1996–2019)

NameNatPeriodHonours
Amnart Chalermchaowarit1996–97, 2007Thai Division 1 League

Winner 2004–05

Watcharakorn Antakhamphu2008
Thanadech Phooprasert2009–10Thai Division 1 League

Runners-up 2009

Pongphan Wongsuwan2011
Adul Rungrueng2011
Amnart Chalermchaowarit2012
Paniphon KerdyamSept 2012 – Nov 20122012 Thai FA Cup Runner-up
Alexandré Pölking31 Oct 2012 – Nov 2013
Matt ElliottJan 2014 – Jun 2014
Gary StevensAug 2014 – May 2015
May 2015 – October 2015
Watcharakorn AntakhamphuOctober 2015 – November 2016
Thanis AreesngarkulNovember 2016 – March 2017
Rangsiwut Chaloempathum (interim)March 2017 – July 2017
Daniel BlancoJuly 2017 – November 2017
Nascimento[9] November 2017 – June 2018
Adul LuekijnaJune 2018 – October 2018
Daniel BlancoOctober 2018 – November 2019

Honours

Domestic competitions

External links

Notes and References

  1. News: บุรีรัมย์-อาร์มี่แถลงพร้อมดวลชิงถ้วยเอฟเอคัพ.
  2. News: "อาร์มี่-เลสเตอร์" จับมือพันธมิตร ยกระดับทีมสู้ศึกไทยพรีเมียร์ลีก.
  3. Web site: ลือสนั่นอาร์มี่ยุบทีม-ส.บอลยันยังไม่มีจม.แจ้ง . 28 November 2019 .
  4. Web site: ปิดตำนาน "อาร์มี่ ยูไนเต็ด" บิ๊กแดงสั่งยุบทีม เหตุขาดทุน ไม่คุ้ม เกรงใจสปอนเซอร์ . 29 November 2019 .
  5. Web site: บิ๊กแดง สั่งยุบทีม อาร์มี่ ยูไนเต็ด เซ่นผลงานห่วย อดขึ้นชั้น ปิดตำนาน 103 ปี . 29 November 2019 .
  6. News: Gen Apirat suspends Army United football team . Bangkok Post .
  7. https://web.archive.org/web/20120406231134/http://www.thai-fussball.com/en/modules.php?name=Content&pa=showpage&pid=17 Army United Clubinfo on thai-fussball.com
  8. Web site: Thailand – List of Champions . Ian . King . Hans . Schöggl . Karel . Stokkermans . amp . Rec.Sport.Soccer Statistics Foundation . 20 March 2014 . 29 October 2014 . live . https://web.archive.org/web/20140716083045/http://rsssf.com/tablest/thaichamp.html . 16 July 2014 . Select link to season required from chronological list.
  9. News: อาร์มี่เปิดตัวกุนซือโปรไลเซนส์ ประเดิมคุมซ้อมทางการ.