This article needs additional citations for verification. (October 2014) |
DRB-HICOM Football Club is a football club established to compete in Malaysia football league. The team played in the Malaysia Premier League (the second tier of the country's professional league – Liga M) since 2010 until 2016 before they withdrew from the league. It was simultaneously decided that the club's 2nd team (previously known as DRB-HICOM 2) to remain competing in an amateur league. Therefore, DRB-HICOM FC remained competing in the Kuala Lumpur Football Association (KLFA) League, where they have played since 2014. This team is composed of employees of DRB-HICOM Group of Companies and experienced local players.
Full name | DRB-HICOM Football Club | ||
---|---|---|---|
Nickname(s) | The Great Bees (D'gReatBees) | ||
Founded | 2008 | ||
Ground | Glenmarie, Shah Alam | ||
Capacity | Unterraced free seating | ||
Owner | DRB-HICOM | ||
President | Mahmood Abdul Razak | ||
Coach | Fisol Abdul Razak | ||
League | KLFA Super League | ||
2023/2024 | Semi-finalist | ||
Website | http://www.drb-hicom.com | ||
|
The club is commonly known as The Great Bees (D'GreatBees), and previously used Proton City Stadium in Tanjung Malim as their official home ground. The well-facilitated stadium currently has a capacity for 3,000 fans. However, since it now plays in a league in the Klang Valley, DRB-HICOM FC is now based in Glenmarie, Shah Alam; the PROTON Casting Plant field is about 3 km away from the headquarters of DRB-HICOM Berhad. The conglomerate owns 50.1% of national carmaker PROTON.[1]
Club's names
edit- 2008-2013 : Pos Football Club (Pos FC)
- 2014–present : DRB-HICOM Football Club (DRB-HICOM FC)[2]
Official team attire
editPeriod | Manufacturer |
---|---|
2010 | Lotto |
2011 | Lotto |
2012 | Eider |
2013 | Kappa |
2014 | Custom made |
2015 | Mizuno |
2016 | Mizuno |
2017 | Mizuno |
2017-2018 | Skyhawk[3] |
2019-2020 | Skyhawk[3] |
2022 | Skyhawk[3] |
2023/24 | Skyhawk[3] |
History
editThe club was established in 2008 as Pos Malaysia Football Club, by the national postal company Pos Malaysia Berhad [1]. Then in 2011, DRB-HICOM acquired the business from the government's investment arm, Khazanah Nasional,[4] and in 2012, efforts began to take root to adopt the DRB-HICOM brand as the club's name. This was finalised in 2014, and the club's current name was formalised. A year after its formation, Pos Malaysia FC played in the FAM Cup[5][circular reference], the third-tier of the Malaysian Football League. The debut season was a successful one, emerging as champions of the 8-team tournament. En route, they recorded a W-D-L record of 11–3–2, scoring 29 goals and letting in 11. Promotion to the second tier Malaysia Premier League in 2010 was approved after Football Association of Malaysia's Local Competitions Committee approved the promotion. Their debut season in the league saw Pos FC finishing the season in eighth place in the 12-team competition. Subsequently, their performance was as follows: -
2011 - 9th place
2012 - 7th place
2013 - 6th place
2014 (as DRB-HICOM FC) - 7th place
2015 - 10th place
2016 (Final season 1st team compete in professional league) - 7th place
The company sees the existence of the club as an internal corporate social responsibility effort. It presents employees with a platform to showcase their other talents, which can potentially become an important avenue to uncover and nurture talents within the Group. These players can go on to become stars in the local as well as regional football arena in the future.
Since its inception, as a professional club, DRB-HICOM FC attracted local players and international footballers from Nigeria, Japan, Croatia, Ghana, Denmark and South Korea to don DRB-HICOM FC's colours and to continue building the club's reputation in the domestic league. Now as an amateur club, more locals are signed as players. In the 2017/18 season, it only had one foreign player.
Club officials as at 2024
editList of players - 2024/25 season
editTeam staff - 2024/25
editList of Head Coaches - M-League Team (2009–2016)
editYear | Coach |
---|---|
2009 | Mohd Anizam Daud |
2010–2010 | Lim Kok Onn |
2010–2011 | Mat Zan Mat Aris |
2012–2014 | G. Torairaju |
Dec 2014 – Feb 2015 | Marshall Soper |
Feb 2015 – 2016 | Chong Yee Fatt |
List of Head Coaches - KLFA League (2014-now)
editHonours
editDomestic competitions
edit- Malaysia FAM League
- Champion: 2009
- KLFA Division 1 League
- Champion: 2017–18
- KLFA Super League
- Champion: 2019
Team achievement - Malaysia Premier League
edit- 2014 Malaysia Premier League - 8th
- 2015 Malaysia Premier League - 10th
- 2016 Malaysia Premier League - 7th
Team achievement - Kuala Lumpur (KLFA) League
edit- 2014 Kuala Lumpur League
- Division 1 - 10th
- 2016 Kuala Lumpur League
- Division 1 - Quarter Final
- FA Cup - Quarter Final
- 2017/2018 Kuala Lumpur League
- Division 1 - Champions (won final playoffs 2–1 against PULAPOL FC)
- 2019/2020 Kuala Lumpur League
- Super Division - Champions (won final playoffs against IMIGRESEN FC)
- FA Cup - Reached Quarter Final stage (competition called-off due to COVID-19 pandemic)
- 2020 - No league due to COVID-19 pandemic
- 2021 - No league due to COVID-19 pandemic
- 2022 Kuala Lumpur League
- Super Division - 4th
- FA Cup - Quarter Final
- 2023/24 Kuala Lumpur League
- Super Division - Semi Finalist
- FA Cup - Runner-up
Official partners
edit2014
- Pos Malaysia 2015
2015
- PROTON
- Mizuno
- Altel Communications 2016
2016
- PROTON
- Mizuno
- DRB-HICOM Auto Solutions (DHAS) 2017/18
2017/18
- Pos Malaysia (Official Partner)
- Bank Muamalat (Official Bank)
- DRB-HICOM Environmental Services (Official Facility Management Partner)
- Sky Hawk Apparel (Official Attire Supplier)
- Glenmarie Golf & Country Club (Official Facilities Services Provider)[6] 2019/20
2019/20
- Composites Technology Research Malaysia - CTRM (Official Partner)
- Bank Muamalat (Official Bank)
- Pos Malaysia (Official Partner)
- Liberty Insurance (Official Partner)
- PROTON Holdings (Official Partner)
- DRB-HICOM Environmental Services (Official Facility Management Partner)
- Isuzu HICOM Malaysia Sdn. Bhd (Official Partner)
- Mitsubishi Motors Malaysia (Official Partner)
- Sky Hawk Apparel (Official Attire Supplier)
- Glenmarie Golf & Country Club (Official Facilities Services Provider)[6]
2022
- HICOM HBPO
- PROTON Holdings (Official Partner)
- Isuzu HICOM Malaysia Sdn. Bhd (Official Partner)
- Sky Hawk Apparel (Official Attire Supplier)
2023/24
- Isuzu HICOM Malaysia Sdn. Bhd (Official Partner)
- CoffeeBot (Official Partner)
- DRB-HICOM Auto Solutions (Official Partner)
- DRB-HICOM Commercial Vehicle (Official Partner)
- Sky Hawk Apparel (Official Attire Supplier)
2024/25
- Isuzu HICOM Malaysia Sdn. Bhd (Official Partner)
- CoffeeBot (Official Partner)
- Sky Hawk Apparel (Official Attire Supplier)
See also
editExternal links
editReferences
edit- ^ "Geely acquires Proton stake for RM460mil | The Star".
- ^ "KL Pos Malaysia FC tukar nama". Teka Skor. 2 October 2013. Archived from the original on 3 December 2013. Retrieved 8 November 2013.
- ^ a b c d https://www.facebook.com/SkyhawkApparels/ [user-generated source]
- ^ "Khazanah sells Pos Malaysia stake to DRB-HICOM | The Star".
- ^ 2009 Malaysia FAM League
- ^ a b "Glenmarie Golf & Country Club".