Dalian Professional F.C.


Dalian Professional Football Club is a professional Chinese football club based in Dalian, Liaoning, that participates in the Chinese Super League under licence from the Chinese Football Association. The team is owned by Dalian Wanda Group headquartered in Beijing and their home stadium is Dalian Sports Center Stadium with a capacity of 61,000.
The club was refounded on September 20, 2009, by Dalian Aerbin Group Company, Ltd., and started from the third tier of the Chinese football pyramid, the China League Two. Winning two consecutive league titles in the second and third tier professional football leagues, they were promoted to the top tier in 2012 Chinese Super League season where they experienced their highest ever placing of fifth in the same season.

History

Club history

Dalian Aerbin (2009–2014)

On September 20, 2009, Dalian Aerbin Group Co. Ltd. established a new professional football club named Dalian Aerbin and hired former Chinese footballer Li Ming to become the club manager. The club's name Aerbin comes from the Manchu language meaning a place with water, which is also the name of a small town in Jinzhou District of Dalian where Dalian Aerbin Group Co. Ltd is located. They would soon move into the Dalian University Stadium in the Dalian Development Area and bring in Chi Shangbin as their co-manager and Sun Xianlu as their Head coach. Starting in the third tier league, the club made their debut in 2010 China League Two season. The club brought in established top tier Chinese Super League players such as Guo Hui, Chang Lin and Yang Lin. The quality of these players helped the club win their regional division section and later the league title over Tianjin Songjiang as the club won the championship.
In the following season, the club hired its first foreign coach, Bulgarian manager Aleksandar Stankov. Dalian Aerbin F.C. set up a surprising winning streak and won the 2011 China League One championship. With their meteoric rise to the Super League, the club decided to use the 30,775 seater Jinzhou Stadium as its home stadium and shared it with their local rival Dalian Shide as well as signing a more experienced manager in Chang Woe-Ryong who had previously managed in the Chinese Super League with Qingdao Jonoon. The club initially struggled in the league and the club brought in Aleksandar Stanojević as the head coach. By July 11, 2012 Dalian Aerbin brought in a marquee player in former Barcelona F.C. midfielder Seydou Keita who departed the Spanish team on a free transfer and helped ensure Dalian Aerbin remain within the league. At the end of the 2012 league season Stanojevć managed to not only avoid relegation but actually guided the club to fifth within the league.
On 30 November 2012, Aerbin Group acquired the local rival Dalian Shide F.C. by taking on responsibility of their 330 million RMB debt after Dalian Shide's chairman Xu Ming was arrested for bribing and corruption. In hopes of bringing in a harmonious merger of the two teams, former Dalian Shide manager Xu Hong was brought in for the start of the 2013 Chinese Super League. However, after only 63 days in charge he had to resign after the Chinese Football Association found that he manipulated a match while as a manager at Sichuan Guancheng and was given a 5-year suspension from all football activity, which forced Li Ming to start the season as their caretaker manager. Chinese Football Association called off this merger according to regulations, and decided that former Dalian Shide players should join the free market, while Dalian Aerbin could only sign them through normal transfer, 5 at most, instead of taking over the whole team. This incident caused Aerbin to face some serious financial problems, being unable to pay the salaries, bonuses, or even maintenance of the stadium. At the end of 2014 Chinese Super League, Aerbin was relegated to China League One.

Dalian Yifang (2015–2019)

With Dalian Aerbin back in the China League One division and with the loss of revenue generated from being in the top tier the club could not afford to maintain their squad, which saw a mass exodus of players. Mikael Stahre was hired as the Head coach at the start of the 2015 league campaign and looked to be pushing for promotion, which saw Dalian Yifang Group Co. Ltd on 8 July 2015 buy majority shares within the club. The purchase was promoted by Wang Jianlin and his Dalian Wanda Group who are a main shareholder of the Yifang Group, with the investment signalling a return of football ownership from Wang Jianlin who had previously owned Dalian Wanda F.C.. The club failed to win promotion back into the top tier after finishing third place at the end of the 2015 season and officially changed their name to Dalian Yifang F.C. in December 2015. On 10 July 2015 in a press conference to confirm the Yifang Group's investment The General manager Shi Xueqing admitted that the club was still losing money.
In the 2017 China League One season Dalian Yifang won the division title and promotion back into the top tier under Head coach Juan Ramón López Caro. Despite this success the Dalian Football Association announced he was replaced by Ma Lin, which saw speculation grow that the club were still in financial difficulties and were looking for the local government Dalian Sports Bureau to takeover the club. On 20 February 2018 the Wanda Group took full control on the club after selling their 17% share Atlético Madrid to Israeli businessman Idan Ofer on 14 February 2018. The Wanda Group would use the money taken from Atlético Madrid and invest it in bringing in Argentinian international Nicolás Gaitán and Belgium international Yannick Carrasco. In February 2019, the club completed another Marquee signing from Europe, this time acquiring the services of Napoli man Marek Hamšík, who signed for a reported fee of about €20 million. Gaitán left the team to play for the MLS side Chicago Fire after just one season.

Dalian Professional (2020–present)

On 21 January 2020, Dalian Yifang changed their name to Dalian Professional.

Ownership and naming history

Current squad

First team

Reserve squad

As of 1 March 2019

Unregistered players

Out on loan

Coaching staff

As of 24 July 2020.
Head coach Rafael Benítez
Assistant coach Mikel Antía
Assistant coach Antonio Gómez Pérez
Fitness coach Francisco "Paco" de Míguel Moreno
Goalkeeping coach Joaquín Enrique Valerio
First team coach Darko Matić
Medical advisor Song Jinhua
Team doctor Jan Jungwirth
Team doctor Yu Jiatian
Physiotherapist Javier Sagaste
U19 Team coach Lü Gang
U17 Team coach Li Huayun
U15 Team coach Yang Xianmin
U15 Team coach Lei Tao
U13 Team coach Liu Yujian
U13 Team coach Wang Zhaochen

Managerial history

ManagersPeriod
Chi ShangbinJan 1, 2009 – Dec 31, 2010
Sun Xianlu2010
Aleksandar StankovJune 2010 – Dec 11, 2011
Chang Woe-RyongJan 1, 2012 – April 3, 2012
Aleksandar StanojevićApril 4, 2012 – Nov 9, 2012
Xu HongDec 11, 2012 – Feb 18, 2013
Li Ming Feb 18, 2013 – June 5, 2013
Simo KrunićJune 3, 2013 – Dec 5, 2013
Ma LinNov 5, 2013 – May 28, 2014
Yasuharu KurataMay 30, 2014 – Dec 19, 2014
Mikael StahreJan 5, 2015 – Jul 5, 2016
Milinko PantićJul 5, 2016 – Aug 31, 2016
Sergio PiernasAug 31, 2016 – Nov 29, 2016
Juan Ramón López CaroNov 29, 2016 – Dec 26, 2017
Ma LinDec 26, 2017 – Mar 20, 2018
Bernd SchusterMar 20, 2018 – Feb 11, 2019
Choi Kang-heeFeb 11, 2019 – July 1, 2019
Rafael BenítezJuly 1, 2019 –

Honours

All-time League Rankings
YearDivPtsPos.FA CupSuper CupAFCAtt./GStadium
2010321143437142334WDNQDalian University Stadium
2011226166445202554WR2DNQDalian University Stadium
20121301111851465445QFDNQDNQ15,774Jinzhou Stadium
2013130118114043−3415SFDNQDNQ10,538Jinzhou Stadium
2014130611133245−132915R3DNQDNQ10,993Dalian Sports Center Stadium
20152301776462224583R3DNQDNQ15,233Dalian Sports Center Stadium
2016230143134344−1455R3DNQDNQ10,806Dalian Sports Center Stadium
2017230197448232564WR3DNQDNQ20,596Dalian Sports Center Stadium
2018130105153757−203511SFDNQDNQ33,145Dalian Sports Center Stadium
2019130108124451-7389SFDNQDNQ32,822Dalian Sports Center Stadium
20201DNQDNQ-

Key


Had international caps for their respective countries.
China
Africa
Asia
Europe
South America