Football team in Thailand .
football club
TOT Sport Club ( Thai : สโมสรฟุตบอลทีโอที เอสซี ) is a Thai defunct football clubhouse based in the district of Lak Si in northern Bangkok which represents the national telecommunication caller, TOT Public Company Limited. TOT primitively stands for the Telephone Organization of Thailand, the former mention of the ship’s company at the time before their denationalization. TOT ‘s football team is a member of Football Association of Thailand ( FAT ) and a co-founder of the Thai Premier League. TOT S.C. was dissolved in 2016. [ 1 ]

history [edit ]

TOT SC is a establish member of the Thai Premier League in 1996/97 season and came second in the regular-season championship but was defeated by Bangkok Bank FC in the semi-final Championship Playoffs. This has therefore far proved to be TOT ‘s best crusade. [ 2 ] [ 3 ]

Besides being relegated to the Thailand Division 1 League in 2003, they have more or less been a middle-ranking team, yet to break into the top four since 1996/97. They have been relegated on two occasions, bouncing binding to the top trajectory at the first meter of asking and claiming the Division One championship in the 2003/04 season. [ 4 ] [ 5 ] celebrated other achievements have been winning the Thai FA Cup in 1993 and the now-defunct Pro League in 2006 with their substitute team. The skill in the early days of the club is honorably credited to the beginning long-familiar bus Pongphan Wongsuwan. [ 6 ]

Ownership challenge [edit ]

In 2010 the club was taken over by Piroj Suwannachavee and renamed the team as TOT-CAT FC. CAT Telecom, another Thai government telecommunication caller, joint the club namely as an owner. In 2011 The Football Association of Thailand ( FAT ) and Thai Premier League ( TPL ) were called to settle a dispute between original owners TOT and the newly formed TOT-CAT FC. They ruled in favor of TOT and the club will revert to the original. soon TOT changes their football baseball club ‘s identify formally to TOT SC ( TOT Sport Club ). [ 7 ]

Club home [edit ]

At the begin of the Thai Premier League 2009 season, TOT relocated from the cardinal Nonthaburi Province to the western province Kanchanaburi to try and generate a bigger sports fan base.

They left their former Namkaejon Stadium for the 13,000 capacity Kleab Bua Stadium, which would be used as their family stadium from 2009 onwards. By the manner, they stayed in Kanchanaburi only lasted one temper and then returned to Nonthaburi Province to land partake with Muangthong United F.C. at the Yamaha Stadium ( SCG Stadium presently ). The move failed to attract new supporters and TOT-CAT fans were regularly outnumbered by the away patronize at their home games during the 2010 Thai Premier League. They used the Yamaha Stadium as a home until the end of the first leg of TPL 2011. After a few years of construction, their newly 5000-seat stadium called TOT Stadium ( located in TOT HQ., Laksi District ) is completed and ready for use as the home stadium since the TPL 2011 second stage. The club aim grind and club agency is located at TOT Training Center or TOT Academy in Nonthaburi province about 15 kilometers away from their home stadium. [ 8 ]

asian competition [edit ]

TOT has played in asian contest merely once, representing Thailand in the 1994–95 asian Cup Winners ‘ Cup after winning the 1993 Thai FA Cup. In the first attack, they met East Bengal of India, dispatching them 4–1 in the first leg ; they were awarded a cinch tie in the retort when East Bengal withdrew. In the irregular round, they met vietnamese enemy Quang Nam Danang, winning through 8–2 over two legs. In the last rung, before East Asia met West Asia, TOT came up against Kuala Lumpur FA of Malaysia. This was a much tougher match and they came through in extra prison term. This took TOT through to the semi-finals, held in the UAE, where they met japanese powerhouse Yokohama Flügels. Flügels defeated TOT 4–2 in the one-legged neutral-venue match-up. But, TOT hush had one bet on to go in the third/fourth-place match against not only saudi giants, but asian giants Al Ittihad. The catch went to penalties, with Ittihad winning 4–2. [ 9 ] [ 10 ]

Honours [edit ]

performance in AFC competitions [edit ]

1995: Fourth place

stadium and locations by season records [edit ]

season by season domestic commemorate [edit ]

Champions Runners-up Third place Promoted Relegated
  • P = Played
  • W = Games won
  • D = Games drawn
  • L = Games lost
  • F = Goals for
  • A = Goals against
  • Pts = Points
  • Pos = Final position
  • N/A = No answer
  • TPL = Thai Premier League
  • QR1 = First Qualifying Round
  • QR2 = Second Qualifying Round
  • QR3 = Third Qualifying Round
  • QR4 = Fourth Qualifying Round
  • RInt = Intermediate Round
  • R1 = Round 1
  • R2 = Round 2
  • R3 = Round 3
  • R4 = Round 4
  • R5 = Round 5
  • R6 = Round 6
  • GR = Group stage
  • QF = Quarter-finals
  • SF = Semi-finals
  • RU = Runners-up
  • S = Shared
  • W = Winners

Coaches [edit ]

Coaches by Years (1988–present)

References [edit ]