Angkor Tiger FC

Association football club in Cambodia From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Angkor Tiger Football Club (Khmer: ក្លឹបបាល់ទាត់អង្គរថាយហ្គឺរ, Klœ̆b Băltoăt Ângkôr Thayhkœr), formerly known as TriAsia Phnom Penh FC and Cambodian Tiger FC, is a Cambodian professional football club based in Siem Reap City, Siem Reap province.[1] Founded in 2013 and under the new ownership in 2015, the club plays in the Cambodian Premier League, the top tier of Cambodian football. The club is owned by the Japanese businessman Akihiro Kato.[2]

Full nameAngkor Tiger Football Club
NicknameThe Tiger
Founded2013; 13 years ago (2013) (as TriAsia Phnom Penh FC)
2015; 11 years ago (2015) (as Cambodian Tiger FC)
2018; 8 years ago (2018) (as Angkor Tiger FC)
GroundAkihiro Kato Stadium
Quick facts Full name, Nickname ...
Angkor Tiger
អង្គរថាយហ្គឺរ
Full nameAngkor Tiger Football Club
NicknameThe Tiger
Founded2013; 13 years ago (2013) (as TriAsia Phnom Penh FC)
2015; 11 years ago (2015) (as Cambodian Tiger FC)
2018; 8 years ago (2018) (as Angkor Tiger FC)
GroundAkihiro Kato Stadium
Capacity2,000
OwnerAkihiro Kato
Head coachSotaro Yasunaga
LeagueCambodian Premier League
2024–25Cambodian Premier League, 6th of 11
Websiteangkor-tiger.com
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History

Angkor Tiger was primarily established in 2013 as TriAsia Phnom Penh FC owned by TriAsia Group Co. Ltd based in Phnom Penh City. In 2015, TriAsia Group Co. Ltd sold the club to another businessman, Akihiro Kato, who changed the club name to Cambodian Tiger FC. The new president of the club saw the potential of Siem Reap province, so he relocated the club to Siem Reap province in 2017. After one year based in Siem Reap province, the club rebranded its name as Angkor Tiger FC, in which represents the city of Siem Reap, globally famous for the Angkor Wat temple. In August 2023, Indian holding company SkaSports acquired minority stakes in the club.[3]

Stadium

Since its establishment, Angkor Tiger played at National Stadium (Olympic) until it moved to Western Stadium in 2015 then moved back to National Stadium (Olympic) for the 2016 season. With the new relocation of the club to Siem Reap province in 2017, the club played its home game at Siem Reap Stadium (Svay Thom) until it moved to SRU Stadium in 2020. In October 2024, Tiger unveiled its new home stadium, the Akihiro Kato Stadium, named after the club's owner with an initial capacity of 2,000. The stadium hosted its first game on 10 November 2024.[4]

Spectators

In 2018, at the Cambodia Football Award which was hosted by the Cambodian Football League, it won the award for the most popular club in Cambodia.[5]

Players

Current squad

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

More information No., Pos. ...
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Players with multiple nationalities

Staff

More information Position, Staff ...
Position Staff
PresidentJapan Akihiro Kato
General managerJapan Yusuke Shinoda
General SecretaryCambodia Oum karona
Marketing ManagerJapan Kiyone Takahisa
Sale ManagerJapan Taiga Shoji
Marketing AssistantCambodia Teng Sreyleakna
Team managerCambodia Sok Dara
Head coachJapan Sotaro Yasunaga
Assistant coachJapan Kota Miyagi
Goalkeeper coachBrazil Juliano Rodrigues
PhysiotherapistBrazil Daniel Tavares
Assistant physiotherapistCambodia Kun Tol
Kit manCambodia Men Vicheka
Finance and AdminCambodia Heap Vandy
General AssistantCambodia Vann Chomrong
Assistant Finance and AdminCambodia Dan Kimhouy
PhotographerCambodia Dorn Dom
VideographerCambodia Sitha Kimhong
Graphic DesignerCambodia Sen Bunhour
Social Media adminCambodia Sok Rathana
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Head coaches

More information Name, Nationality ...
Name Nationality Period Tournament
Daisuke Yoshioka Japan 2013–2015 2013 Cambodian Second League winner
2015 Hun Sen Cup third place
Masakazu Kihara Japan 2015–2016
Hok Sochivorn Cambodia 2016–2017
Kenichi Yatsuhashi Japan 2017
Oriol Mohedano Spain 2017–2021 2018 Hun Sen Cup third place
Alistair Heath England 2021–2023
Ny Yuth[6] (caretaker) Cambodia 2023–2024
Kota Miyagi Japan 2024–2025
Sotaro Yasunaga Japan 2025–
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References

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