Zhejiang Professional F.C.

Association football club in China From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Zhejiang Professional Football Club (Chinese: 浙江职业足球俱乐部; pinyin: Zhèjiāng Zhíyè Zúqiú Jùlèbù), commonly referred to as Zhejiang FC or simply Zhejiang and currently known as Zhejiang F.C. Greentown (Chinese: 浙江俱乐部绿城) for sponsorship reasons, is a Chinese professional football club based in Hangzhou, Zhejiang, that competes in the Chinese Super League, the top tier of Chinese football. Zhejiang plays its home matches at the Huanglong Sports Center, located within Xihu District. The club's main investors are the Zhejiang-based Greentown China Holdings Limited company and the Zhejiang Energy Group.

Full nameZhejiang Professional Football Club
浙江职业足球俱乐部
NicknameGreen Giants (绿巨人)[1]
Founded14 January 1998; 28 years ago (1998-01-14) (as Zhejiang Green Town)
Quick facts Full name, Nickname ...
Zhejiang FC
Full nameZhejiang Professional Football Club
浙江职业足球俱乐部
NicknameGreen Giants (绿巨人)[1]
Founded14 January 1998; 28 years ago (1998-01-14) (as Zhejiang Green Town)
GroundHuanglong Sports Center, Hangzhou
Capacity51,971
Owner(s)Hangzhou Commerce and Tourism Group
Zhejiang Energy Group
ChairmanZhang Weidong
Head coachRoss Aloisi
LeagueChinese Super League
2025Chinese Super League, 7th of 16
Websitewww.zhejiangfc1998.com
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The club was founded on January 14, 1998, as Zhejiang Green Town, making their debut in the third tier of China's football league pyramid in the 1999 league season. On November 23, 2000, the club bought the playing right for the Chinese Football Association Jia League as well as 32 players from the first team of Jilin Aodong for 25 million Yuan. They have subsequently won promotion to the top tier after finishing runners-up in the 2006 league season. The highest position they have ever finished is third, achieved in the 2022 and 2023 Chinese Super League seasons.

History

Zhejiang Green Town Football Club Co., Ltd. was officially established on January 14, 1998, with a capital base of 16 million yuan. Zeng Leming was appointed as general manager. Greentown Real Estate Company, Hangzhou Qiantang Real Estate Company, Zhejiang University and Zhejiang Provincial Football Association all participated in the creation and registration of the club.[2] The team participated in the third tier[of what?] with Bao Yingfu as their first head coach. They made the play-offs in 2000 before losing to Tianjin Lifei.[3]

In November 2000, the club bought the playing rights to participate in the Chinese Football Association Jia League as well as 32 players from Yanbian F.C. for 25 million Yuan. Under the new general manager Shen Qiang, the club failed to win promotion to the top tier league, as several players and coaches were discovered to be taking bribes to throw games. Offending participants were banned for a year and the club had to reform and re-apply for a CFA playing license.[4] The club then went through several management changes as well as a significant ownership shift, which saw Song Weiping's company Greentown China Holdings Limited take a 96% share of the team for 20 million yuan in 2005 while Zhejiang University held on to 4%.[2]

The team achieved promotion at the end of the 2006 league season when they came second in the division.[5]

Hangzhou Greentown

In 2009, the club renamed itself to Hangzhou Greentown Football Club.

Zhejiang Green Town Football Club logo used in 1998

The club was set to be relegated at the end of the 2009 season, but were allowed to stay remain in the 2010 CFA Super League after it was discovered that Chengdu Blades and Guangzhou GPC were guilty of match-fixing.[6]

AFC Champions League debut

After the 2009 season, the club signed several established Chinese internationals such as Du Wei, Li Yan and Wang Song.[7] The club's results significantly improved throughout the 2010 league campaign, which saw them achieve their highest ever finish of fourth and a chance to play in the 2011 AFC Champions League for the first time.[8]

They were relegated to the 2017 China League One after finishing in second-to-last place in the 2016 Chinese Super League.[9]

Huanglong Sports Center On July 28, 2024, Zhejiang team hosted Chengdu Rongcheng in the Chinese Super League match

Aiming to win the 2017 National Games of China, Hangzhou Greentown prioritized the club's youth. However, the team struggled near the relegation zone in their first season of China League. Young trainer Xu Lei filled for manager Hong Myung-bo and the team returned to 9th place in the league. Former player and veteran Jiao Fengbo returned as the new general manager.

Zhejiang Greentown

On 14 January 2018, the club changed their name to Zhejiang Greentown Football Club for the 20th anniversary of the club.[10] They reached third place in the China League.

Zhejiang Energy Greentown

In September 2020, the team changed their name to Zhejiang Energy Greentown Football Club, as Zhejiang Energy Group stepped in as one of the major shareholders and Song Weiping officially quit the club.[11]

Rebrand to Zhejiang

On 26 February 2021, according to the requirements of non-corporate change of club name by the Chinese Football Association, the club's name changed to Zhejiang Professional Football Club.[12]

Return to the AFC Champions League

Zhejiang finished third in the 2022 Chinese Super League season, qualifying for the 2023–24 AFC Champions League group stage.

On 20 June 2024, AFC confirmed Zhejiang would participate in the inaugural 2024–25 AFC Champions League Two group stage. Zhejiang was placed in Group F alongside Thai club Port FC, Singaporean club Lion City Sailors and Indonesian club Persib Bandung.

2026 Chinese Super League season

In 2026, Zhejiang started the 2026 Chinese Super League season with five points deducted for violation of sports ethics and loss of sportsmanship as they engaged in improper transactions to seek illegitimate benefits.[13]

Name history

More information Period, Club Name ...
Period Club Name First Team Name
1998–2001 Zhejiang Green Town 浙江绿城 Zhejiang Green Town 浙江绿城
2001–04 Zhejiang Sanhua Green Town (Sponsor Name) 浙江三花绿城
2004–09 Zhejiang Babei Green Town (Sponsor Name) 浙江巴贝绿城
2009–10 Hangzhou Greentown 杭州绿城 Hangzhou Greentown 杭州绿城
2010–12 Hangzhou Nabel Greentown (Sponsor Name) 杭州诺贝尔绿城
2012–13 Hangzhou 9Top Greentown (Sponsor Name) 杭州九好绿城
2013–14 Hangzhou Daikin Greentown (Sponsor Name) 杭州大金绿城
2014–18 Hangzhou Greentown 杭州绿城
2018–20 Zhejiang Greentown 浙江绿城 Zhejiang Greentown 浙江绿城
2020–21 Zhejiang Energy Greentown 浙江能源绿城 Zhejiang Energy Greentown 浙江能源绿城
2021– Zhejiang Professional 浙江职业 Zhejiang 浙江
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Current squad

First team

As of 5 March 2026[14]

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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Reserve team

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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Out on loan

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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Notable players

Players who have played for Zhejiang and represented their nations at senior level.

Coaching staff

As of 21 February 2025

More information Position, Staff ...
Position Staff
Head coach Australia Ross Aloisi
Assistant coach China Cai Chuchuan
Australia David Zdrillic
Australia Luciano Trani
China Fu Bo
Goalkeeping coach Portugal Ricardo Cruz
Fitness coach Germany Bjorn Rosemeier
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Source:

Managerial history

As of Beginning of 2025 Chinese league season[15][citation needed]
  • China Bao Yingfu (22 Jan 1999 – Dec 1999) (general coach)
  • China Zhu Haibo (May 1999 – Dec 1999)
  • China Wu Tingrui (Dec 1999 – Jul 2000)
  • China Zhang Jingtian (18 Jan 2000 – 2000) (general coach)
  • China Zhou Chenggui (Jul 2000 – Oct 2000)
  • China Gu Mingchang (23 Dec 2001 – 7 Jul 2001)
  • China Wang Changtai (8 Jul 2001 – 21 Jul 2001) (caretaker)
  • Federal Republic of Yugoslavia Goran Kalušević (24 Jul 2001 – 28 Aug 2001)
  • China Wang Changtai (28 Aug 2001 – 6 Oct 2001) (caretaker)
  • England Bobby Houghton (Jan 2002 – 21 Jul 2003)
  • China Li Bing (21 Jul 2003 – Dec 2003)
  • China Wang Zheng (Dec 2003 – 15 May 2007)
  • China Zhou Suian (15 May 2007 – Dec 2007)
  • China Sun Wei (Dec 2007 – 21 Apr 2008)
  • China Zhou Suian (21 Apr 2008 – 21 Sept 2009)
  • China Wu Jingui (21 Sept 2009 – Nov 2011)
  • Team Committee (16 Oct 2011 – Nov 2011)
  • Japan Takeshi Okada (15 Dec 2011 – 5 Nov 2013)
  • China Yang Ji (6 Nov 2013 – 4 Nov 2014)
  • France Philippe Troussier (2 Dec 2014 – 1 Jul 2015)
  • China Yang Ji (1 Jul 2015 – Nov 2015)
  • South Korea Hong Myung-bo (17 Dec 2015 – 25 May 2017)
  • Bulgaria Zdravko Zdravkov (25 May 2017 – Nov 2017) (caretaker)
  • Spain Sergi Barjuán (26 Nov 2017 – 3 July 2019)
  • China Zheng Xiong (3 July 2019 – 31 Dec 2020)
  • Spain Jordi Vinyals (1 Jan 2021 – 31 Dec 2024)
  • Spain Raúl Caneda (29 Jan 2025 – 21 Dec 2025)
  • Australia Ross Aloisi (22 Dec 2025 – present)

Grounds

More information Ground, Location ...
Ground Location Total CSL Jia B / CL1 Yi Cup
Zhejiang Stadium Hangzhou 13 0 0 13 0
Huanglong Sports Center Hangzhou 254 122 115 0 17
Meihu Sports Centre Jinhua 17 16 0 0 1
Jiaxing Stadium Jiaxing 9 7 0 0 2
Jinhua Sports Center Jinhua 7 3 4 0 0
Zhoushan Sports Center Zhoushan 2 0 1 0 1
Huzhou Olympic Sports Center Huzhou 1 1 0 0 0
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Records

Honours

Major

League

Cup

Minor / Reserve / Youth

Results

All-time League rankings

As of the end of 2025 season.[17][18]

More information Season, Division ...
Season Division Pld W D L GF GA GD Pts Pos. FA Cup Other Att./G Stadium Top league scorer(s) Scores
1998 did not enter league system DNQ - - - - -
1999 Yi 1st Stage

Group B

10 3 2 5 12 15 −3 11 5 Final 17 DNQ - Unknown Zhejiang Stadium Yao Changming

Qin Peng

3
2000 Yi 1st Stage

Group C

10 7 2 1 20 4 16 23 1 Final 8[19] DNQ - Unknown Zhejiang Stadium Yao Changming 12
2nd Stage

South Region

6 2 1 3 11 13 −2 7 4
3nd Stage

1st Round

2 0 0 2 0 5 −5 lost - - tournament (Wuhan)
2001 Jia B1 22 6 10 6 33 26 7 28 8 R1 - 24,182 Huanglong Sports Center Adolfo Valencia 12
2002 Jia B 22 8 5 9 29 33 −4 29 7 SF - 16,364 Huanglong Sports Center

Meihu Sports Centre

Bertin Tomou 7
2003 Jia B 26 6 9 11 39 39 0 27 10 R1 - 11,615 Huanglong Sports Center Adolfo Valencia 14
2004 CL 32 12 9 11 38 39 −1 45 8 R1 - 3,625 Huanglong Sports Center Shen Liuxi 10
2005 CL 26 17 4 5 50 23 27 55 3 R2 - 14,917 Huanglong Sports Center Bertin Tomou 11
2006 CL 24 17 4 3 41 18 23 55 RU SF - 25,500 Huanglong Sports Center Alex Chandre de Oliveira 15
2007 CSL 28 6 10 12 25 35 −10 28 11 NH - 19,571 Huanglong Sports Center

Meihu Sports Centre

Alex Chandre de Oliveira 5
2008 CSL 30 9 12 9 38 32 6 39 9 NH - 12,188 Huanglong Sports Center Erivaldo Antonio Saraiva 10
2009 CSL 30 8 8 14 30 43 −13 32 152 NH - 14,790 Huanglong Sports Center Erivaldo Antonio Saraiva 13
2010 CSL 30 13 9 8 38 30 8 48 4 NH - 14,550 Huanglong Sports Center

Meihu Sports Centre

Luis Alfredo Ramírez 14
2011 CSL 30 10 9 11 28 32 −4 39 8 QF ACL Group 8,586 Meihu Sports Centre

Jiaxing Stadium

Luis Alfredo Ramírez 7
2012 CSL 30 9 9 12 34 46 −12 36 11 QF - 10,563 Huanglong Sports Center Wang Song

Renatinho

8
2013 CSL 30 8 10 12 34 42 −8 34 12 QF - 14,164 Huanglong Sports Center Davy Claude Angan 9
2014 CSL 30 8 8 14 43 60 −17 32 12 R4 - 13,766 Huanglong Sports Center Anselmo Ramon 16
2015 CSL 30 8 9 13 27 35 −8 33 11 R4 - 12,566 Huanglong Sports Center Anselmo Ramon 12
2016 CSL 30 8 8 14 28 37 −9 32 15 R4 - 11,723 Huanglong Sports Center

Jinhua Sports Center

Anselmo Ramon 7
2017 CL 30 8 12 10 31 39 −8 36 9 R4 - 4,881 Huanglong Sports Center

Jinhua Sports Center

Zhoushan Sports Center

Anselmo Ramon 6
2018 CL 30 14 9 7 53 38 15 51 3 R3 - 8,717 Huanglong Sports Center

Zhoushan Sports Center

Dino Ndlovu 19
2019 CL 30 14 9 7 49 40 9 51 6 R4 - 8,678 Huanglong Sports Center Dino Ndlovu 17
2020 CL 1st Stage

Group B

10 5 4 1 19 8 11 19 2 RU3 R2 - - tournament (Meizhou) Nyasha Mushekwi 7
2nd Stage

Group D

5 3 1 1 8 5 3 10 2 tournament (Chengdu)
2021 CL 34 22 8 4 69 28 41 74 34 R4 - - tournament (Meizhou) Nyasha Mushekwi 23
2022 CSL 34 18 11 5 64 28 36 65 3 F - 3,500 Huzhou Olympic Sports Center

tournament (Haikou, Round 1-10)

Nyasha Mushekwi 18
2023 CSL 30 16 7 7 57 34 23 55 3 R4 ACL Group 8,053 Huzhou Olympic Sports Center Léo Souza 19
2024 CSL 30 11 5 14 55 60 −5 38 7 R5 - 19,805 Huanglong Sports Center Léo Souza 9
2025 CSL 30 10 12 8 60 51 9 42 7 R4 - 25,024 Huanglong Sports Center Wang Yudong 11
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^1 Bought the first team of Jilin Aodong as well as their position in second tier.

^2 Two CSL clubs were involved in match-fixing scandal and relegated to China League, so Hangzhou Greentown could stay at top level.

^3 Failed to achieve promotion in the play-off.

^4 Promotion was achieved via the play-off.

Key

More information W, RU ...
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Feeder teams

  • Hangzhou Luyuan (1999–2003) [Youth team of Zhejiang Green Town FC]
    • 2000, 2001 Chinese Yi League
  • Ningbo Huaao (2006) [Youth team of Zhejiang Green Town FC]
    • 2006 China D2 League
  • Wenzhou Provenza (2011) [U19 team of Hangzhou Greentown FC]
    • 2011 China D2 League

International friendlies

  • On 26 July 2009, Manchester United visited the Huanglong Stadium and played a friendly against Hangzhou Greentown as part of their pre-season Asian tour.[20] Manchester United won by 8 goals to 2.
  • On 16 July 2011, Arsenal visited the Meihu Stadium and played a friendly against Hangzhou Greentown as part of their pre-season Asian tour.[21] The game was drawn 1–1.
  • Zhejiang Greentown also played two friendly games at the Mini Estadi in 2017 and 2019, against FC Barcelona B with the Spanish side won 1-0 and 3-1 respectively.

Continental results

More information Season, Competition ...
Season Competition Round Opposition Home Away Rank
/Agg.
2011 AFC Champions League Group stage Japan Nagoya Grampus
2–0
0–1
4th
South Korea FC Seoul
1–1
0–3
United Arab Emirates Al-Ain
0–0
0–1
2023–24 AFC Champions League Play-off round Thailand Port
1–0
N/a N/a
Group stage Thailand Buriram United
3–2
1–4
3rd
Australia Melbourne City
1–2
1–1
Japan Ventforet Kofu
2–0
1–4
2024–25 AFC Champions League Two Group stage Thailand Port TBA
Singapore Lion City Sailors
Indonesia Persib
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Kit history

More information Season, Kit manufacturer ...
Season Kit manufacturer Colour (H) Sponsor (H) Colour (A) Sponsor (A)
1998 - - - - - - -
1999 Adidas Blue Green Town 绿城 Red Green Town 绿城
2000
2001 Ucan White Green Town (Round 1) 绿城(第1轮) Blue / Red Green Town (Round 1) 绿城(第1轮)
Sanhua (from Round 2) 浙江三花(第2-4轮) Sanhua (from Round 2) 浙江三花(第2-4轮)
三花(第5-22轮) 三花(第5-22轮)
2002 Blue Sanhua 三花 White / Green Sanhua 三花
2003 Green White
2004 White Babei 巴贝 Green / Yellow / Red Babei 巴贝
2005 Umbro Green / Yellow / Blue / Red
2006 Kika Red
2007 Asics Black
2008 Kappa Green
2009 Nike Green CIMIC (from Round 10) 斯米克 Black CIMIC (from Round 10) 斯米克
2010 Green & White Nabel 诺贝尔瓷砖 White Nabel 诺贝尔瓷砖
2011 Green
2012 Daikin 大金空调 Daikin 大金空调
2013 500.com 500.com 500.com 500.com
2014 Toshiba Toshiba(第1-6轮) Toshiba Toshiba(第1-6轮)
Toshiba 东芝空调(第7-30轮) Toshiba 东芝空调(第7-30轮)
2015 Toshiba 东芝空调 Toshiba 东芝空调
2016
2017 Panasonic Panasonic 松下洁乐 Panasonic Panasonic 松下洁乐
2018 Anta Panasonic 松下洗碗机
2019 Panasonic 松下卫浴 Panasonic 松下卫浴
2020 Kelme Panasonic 松下电器 Panasonic 松下电器
2021
2022 Nike
2023
2024 Leapmotor Leapmotor 零跑汽车 Leapmotor Leapmotor 零跑汽车
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Rivals

Because there are not many football clubs based on Zhejiang in history, Zhejiang FC has rarely been able to have a rival in the province for a long time. In 2017, after being relegated to China League, Hangzhou Greentown briefly had a 2-seasons Zhejiang derby with Zhejiang Yiteng but only won 1 out of 4 matches. More often than not, Zhejiang FC has a stronger rivalry with other teams of the same level in the Wu Chinese region, particularly Shanghai Shenhua, and Shanghai Zhongyuan historically.

References

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