Early history In June 1954, the local
Guangzhou sports body founded Guangzhou Football Team to take part in the newly formed Chinese national football league. The league had grown to incorporate a second tier and their debut season performance final standing relegated them to the second division. Guangzhou won the division championship, however the
Chinese Football Association decided to restructure the league at the beginning of the 1957 season and Guangzhou were denied promotion. Despite this, Luo Rongman managed the team to win the 1958 second division title; however, the club were unable to gain promotion because this time they went into receivership. They were not re-established until April 1961 and were allowed to take part in the top tier. Back within the top division Guangzhou often struggled within the league and were again relegated to the second tier at the end of the 1963 league season. They remained there until 1966 when the
Cultural Revolution halted football in China.
Back-to-back promotions and sponsorship deal When the Chinese football league restarted, Guangzhou took the unusual step of abstaining from the competition and instead on 26 October 1977 brought Luo Rongman to manage their youth team. The team played within the National Youth League until 1980 when it was decided that they were mature enough to play in the senior football league pyramid. They started in the recently established third division. The club's youth team development immediately paid off and players such as
Mai Chao,
Zhao Dayu and later
Wu Qunli all rapidly rose into Chinese international footballers. Guangzhou gained successive promotions until they reached the top tier. At the end of the 1982 league season Guangzhou were relegated again. They returned to the top division at the end of the 1984 season via the
Chinese FA Cup. Guangzhou also became the first Chinese team to gain sponsorship when the Guangzhou Baiyunshan Pharmaceutical Factory signed a $200,000 annual deal with the club.
Becoming fully professional and match-fixing scandal Throughout the 1990s, the Chinese Football Association were demanding more professionalism from their football teams. Guangzhou was one of the first fully professional football clubs in China after the Apollo Group took over the club on 8 January 1993. The investment aided the manager
Zhou Sui'an to help create a competitive squad.
Hu Zhijun won the top goalscoring award. Guangzhou were able to gain a runners-up spot in the
1994 league season. The following season Zhou Sui'an left the team after having twice guided the club to a runners-up position within the league and a runners-up spot against
Shanghai in the 1991
Chinese FA Cup. After his exit, the club were unable to replicate the same results. When influential international footballers
Peng Weiguo and Hu Zhijun left the club, the team went into free fall and were relegated at the end of the 1998 league season. With the management concerned about the team's performance, an investigation was launched which discovered that Wen Junwu and three other players were in collusion with gambling groups and were immediately expelled from the club. In 2001, the Guangzhou Sports Bureau took over the club again. With significant investment coming from the
Zhejiang Geely Holding Group Co., Ltd it was hoped that the club could push for promotion. The division was rocked by a
match-fixing scandal involving
Changchun Yatai,
Chengdu Wuniu,
Jiangsu Sainty, and
Zhejiang Greentown. Guangzhou's new sponsors Geely immediately pulled their funding from the team to distance themselves from the bad publicity. The club went through a tough transitional period until the Sunray Cave Group took over the club in 2004 and started to invest money in hopes of pushing for promotion. When the
Guangzhou Pharmaceuticals group took over the club in 2006, they were able to realize the ambition of gaining promotion. The club won the 2007 second division title and entry to the
Chinese Super League. In February 2010, Guangzhou was relegated back to the
China League One in the fallout of
a match-fixing scandal despite having achieved a ninth-place finish in the
2009 season. The match in question was the 19 August 2006 league game against
Shanxi Wosen Luhu, which Guangzhou won 5–1 when they were still playing in the China League One. It was discovered by the police that the Guangzhou general manager Yang Xu paid ¥200,000 to the opposing general manager Wang Po to secure a win at home and that Guangzhou's vice presidents Wu Xiaodong and Xie Bin knew about it. With the offending participants sentenced to jail for fraud, the club was put up for sale. On 28 February 2010,
Evergrande Real Estate Group took over the club for a fee of ¥100 million. Xu Jiayin, chairman of Evergrande Real Estate Group, said that they would pump more funds into the transfer market. His first act was to sign in
Chinese national team striker
Gao Lin from
Shanghai Shenhua for a reported fee of ¥6 million. Then, he replaced the head coach Peng Weiguo with former
Beijing Guoan manager
Lee Jang-soo with no indication. In the 2010 summer transfer window, the club signed
Sun Xiang, the first Chinese footballer to play in the
UEFA Champions League with
PSV Eindhoven, and the Chinese national team captain
Zheng Zhi on 28 June 2010. On 30 June 2010, Guangzhou confirmed that they had signed
Muriqui on a four-year deal from
Campeonato Brasileiro Série A side
Atlético Mineiro with a domestic record fee of ¥23 million. On 30 October 2010, Guangzhou became League One champions for the second time and returned to the Super League after a 3–1 win against
Hunan Billows.
Domestic domination and international success During the 2011 season, Guangzhou Evergrande further strengthened its squad with the purchase of Argentinean
Dario Conca and Brazilian
Cléo. Although the team was promoted to the Super League in the first year, they clinched the league title in late September 2011 although there were four games yet to play. In March 2012, Guangzhou played and won their first-ever
AFC Champions League match, defeating South Korean champions
Jeonbuk Hyundai Motors 5–1. In addition, Paraguayan
Lucas Barrios left the German champions
Borussia Dortmund in summer 2012 to join Guangzhou Evergrande.
Marcello Lippi replaced Lee Jang-soo as the head coach and brought in South Korean defender
Kim Young-gwon and Chinese midfielder
Huang Bowen. Guangzhou was knocked out of the
2012 AFC Champions League when they lost 5–4 on aggregate to
Al-Ittihad in the quarter-finals. They became the first Chinese side to reach the quarter-finals since 2006. During the 2012 season, Guangzhou won the league for the second time in a row, becoming the first team in China to win the Super League title twice in a row, while also securing the Chinese FA Cup to become
double winners for 2012. In the 2013 season, Guangzhou Evergrande strengthened their squad by signing Chinese goalkeeper
Zeng Cheng and Brazilian
Elkeson. This proved to be beneficial to Guangzhou as they became the first team in China to win the Super League three times in a row. The club also won the
2013 AFC Champions League by defeating
FC Seoul in the final on the
away goals rule, after drawing 2–2 in the first leg in
Seoul and 1–1 in the second leg in Guangzhou, becoming the first Chinese side to win the tournament since 1990. By winning the AFC Champions League, Guangzhou was assured a place in the
2013 FIFA Club World Cup, entering in the quarter-finals, beating the
African champions Al-Ahly 2–0. In the semi-finals, they were defeated by the
European champions Bayern Munich 3–0. In the third place match, the club lost against the
South American champions Atlético Mineiro 3–2 and finished in fourth place. Guangzhou won its fourth and fifth consecutive Chinese Super League titles in
2014 and
2015, respectively. On 21 November 2015, the club won its second continental championship, defeating
Al-Ahli 1–0 on aggregate in the
2015 AFC Champions League Final. In the
2015 FIFA Club World Cup, Guangzhou won 2–1 against
Club América in the quarter-finals before losing 3–0 against
Barcelona in the semi-finals. Guangzhou also lost the third place match 2–1 against
Hiroshima Sanfrecce, ending up in the same position as in the 2013 edition. By 2020, Guangzhou Evergrande won a total of eight Super League championships, including seven consecutive titles from 2011 to 2017.
Financial troubles, relegation and disbandment Ahead of the 2021 season, the team was renamed Guangzhou FC due to the Chinese Football Association's request for "neutral" names that would omit references to the investors and companies that own the club. In the same year, the
Chinese financial crisis and the problems of the Evergrande Group caused the financial collapse of the club. After losing several key players, the team was relegated from the Super League in
2022, ending their twelve-season stay in the top flight. In January 2025, Guangzhou FC were expelled from the professional leagues of Chinese football, following the failure to pay off enough of their debt. As a result, the club announced its disbandment. ==Stadiums==