Pattaya United F.C. (2008)

Pattaya United
พัทยา ยูไนเต็ด
Full namePattaya United Football Club
Nickname(s)The Blue Dolphins
(โลมาสีนํ้าเงิน)
Short namePUTD
Founded1989 (1989), as Coke Bangpra
2008 (2008), as Pattaya United
Dissolved2018 (became Samut Prakan City)[1]
GroundNong Prue Stadium
Pattaya, Chonburi, Thailand
Capacity5,500

Pattaya United Football Club (Thai: สโมสรฟุตบอลพัทยา ยูไนเต็ด) was a Thai defunct football club based in Pattaya, Chonburi Province. Defunct after the 2018 season, the club was renamed to Samut Prakan City and relocated to Samut Prakan.[1]

Pattaya United's first-ever competitive game was against Thailand Division 2 League side Rajpracha in the 2009 Queen's Cup which they won 5–0. For six years the club remained in the TPL, and finished as high as sixth, and fourth in 2010 and 2011 respectively. The Dolphins were relegated to the Yamaha League One in 2014 and promoted to Thai League 1 again in 2016.

History

Coke-Bangpra Chonburi

The club was founded under the name Coke-Bangpra Chonburi FC which derived from the sponsor and the community Bang Phra in the district of Si Racha, the province of Chonburi. After several years in the Provincial League of Thailand, the club was promoted to the Thai Premier League for the 2008 season. As a result of the promotion to the TPL, the team was renamed to "Pattaya United" and moved to the city of Pattaya. In the first season in the top-flight division, the team finished in 11th place at the end of the season.

Pattaya United

The team moved to Pattaya for the 2008 season, and changed its name to Pattaya United FC (The Dolphins), in their first season under the new name the team finished in 11th place in the Thai Premier League, only avoiding relegation in the final game of the season. However, the following seasons the team improved to finishing as high as sixth, and fourth in 2010 and 2011 respectively. The team which has always been looked at as a "little brother" team to Chonburi FC as they both were owned by the Kunpluem family, an affluence local family in Chonburi province. The club has shown potentials, winning against teams with double or triple its annual budget, winning the hearts of the Thai, and Foreign fans alike. After spending 6 years in the TPL, and the Dolphins were relegated to the Yamaha League One in 2014. During the offseason, the future of the club was uncertain with various speculations.

However, in January 2015 the club was sold to Enigma Sports Ventures (ESV), the sporting arm of the Enigma Global. It marked the first change in ownership in the club history, after several lucrative bids were submitted for the Kunpluem family's consideration. The family and Pattaya United board felt that the club's best interest and future lie with Enigma Sports Ventures. The new ownership's management team moves very quickly in rebranding the club, appointing the new President is, Club's first foreign Head Coach, and securing 8 top players from TPL to play in Division One. Many players were former first elevens players from Muangthong United, as well as couple thai and foreign national team players. In 2016, Pattaya United was taken over by the Kiarti Thanee Group led by Tanet Phanichewa.[2]

Renaming and relocation to Samut Prakan

At the end of season 2018, club owner decided to change the club name to Samut Prakan City and relocated to Samut Prakan Province due to local politic conflict.[3][4][5]

Rivalries

The club's fierce local rivals are Chonburi and Sriracha which all are in the same province of Chonburi. Despite all three teams were previously own by the Kunpluem family, they have always compete hard against one another. Also the team over the years were not often in the same division/league as one another, when they met the game have always been a very highest attendance games. In recent years, the rivalries between Chonburi and Pattaya have been the most highly anticipated game of the year in Chonburi Province.

Stadium

Nong Prue Stadium, formally known as Nongprue Municipality Stadium in Pattaya originally designed to hold just over 3,000 spectators, but over the year the additional seats were required to accommodate more fans. So as the result of that, the stadium was renovated once in 2011. Under the new ownership of Enigma Sport Ventures, the stadium is currently undergo the renovation to accommodate up to 5,500 spectators. As well as additional required upgrades by the TPL to make the stadium competition worthy for the 2015 season. In addition to the renovation to the stadium, the new gift shop and club onsite office are added to the stadium ground.

Stadium and locations by season records

Coordinates Location Stadium Capacity Year
13°21′52″N 100°58′35″E / 13.364452°N 100.976357°E / 13.364452; 100.976357 Chonburi Chonburi Municipality Stadium 8,680 2008
12°55′28″N 100°56′14″E / 12.924339°N 100.937163°E / 12.924339; 100.937163 Chonburi Nong Prue Stadium 7,000 2009–2010
13°24′41″N 100°59′37″E / 13.411302°N 100.993618°E / 13.411302; 100.993618 Chonburi IPE Chonburi Stadium 11,000 2011
12°55′28″N 100°56′14″E / 12.924339°N 100.937163°E / 12.924339; 100.937163 Chonburi Nong Prue Stadium 5,500 2012–2018

Season by season records

Season League[6] FA Cup Queen's
Cup
Kor Royal
Cup
League Cup Top scorer
Division P W D L F A Pts Pos Name Goals
2007 DIV 1 22 11 8 3 30 14 41 2nd  –
2008 TPL 30 8 11 11 24 27 35 11th  – Tana Chanabut 4
2009 TPL 30 7 11 12 27 33 32 11th R4 SF  –  – Anderson Machado 4
2010 TPL 30 12 9 9 43 38 45 6th QF QF  – QF Ludovick Takam 17
2011 TPL 34 14 11 9 38 27 53 4th R5  –  – R2 O. J. Obatola 8
2012 TPL 34 9 10 15 35 47 37 15th R3  –  – R3 Kengne Ludovick 10
2013 TPL 32 9 2 21 39 66 29 17th R3  –  – R2 Rod Dyachenko 7
2014 DIV 1 34 12 5 17 42 53 41 14th R2  –  – R3 Cristiano Lopes 14
2015 DIV 1 38 18 11 9 77 40 65 2nd R1  –  – QF Milan Bubalo 20
2016 TL 31 9 7 15 46 66 34 12th R2  –  – R3 Júnior Negrão 20
2017 T1 34 15 6 13 60 53 51 8th R2  –  – R2 Miloš Stojanović 15
2018 T1 34 13 7 14 50 62 46 8th R2  –  – R2 Lukian 18
Champions Runners-up Third place Promoted Relegated

Coaches

Coaches by Years (2007–2018)

Honours

Domestic

References

  1. ^ a b "AFC appointed to change their name for 2 clubs". thaileague.co.th. Thai League. 9 November 2018. Archived from the original on 10 November 2018. Retrieved 1 May 2020.
  2. ^ "คาดปีหน้าพัทยาทุ่มเกิน70ล.-ผลงานดี2บิ๊กไฟเขียว"อั๋น"คุมต่อ". www.siamsport.co.th. 2 September 2017.
  3. ^ "ปิดตำนานโลมา!เอเอฟซีรับรองชื่อใหม่ พัทยา-อุบล | Goal.com". www.goal.com.
  4. ^ "สมุทรปราการคืนชีพ! ไทยลีกไฟเขียว พัทยาเปลี่ยนชื่อและสนามเป็นสมุทรปราการ ซิตี้". 8 November 2018.
  5. ^ "SpringNews | ผ่านฉลุย!! "ไทยลีก" อนุมัติ "พัทยา" เปลี่ยนชื่อเป็น "สมุทรปราการ ซิตี้" ลุยไทยลีก 2018". LINE TODAY.
  6. ^ King, Ian; Schöggl, Hans & Stokkermans, Karel (20 March 2014). "Thailand – List of Champions". RSSSF. Retrieved 29 October 2014. Select link to season required from chronological list.

External links

  • https://web.archive.org/web/20171014111404/http://www.pattayaunited.com/
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