Gauhati Town Club

Gauhati Town Club is an Indian sports club based in Guwahati, Assam. Founded in 1906, the club had participated in the I-League 2nd Division, the second highest level football tournament in India for two seasons. It currently plays in the GSA Super Division League. The Gauhati Town Club football academy was set up to identify, train and nurture the local talents of northeast India at grassroots level. It has highly equipped infrastructure.[1]

Gauhati Town Club
Full nameGauhati Town Club
Nickname(s)GTC
Founded1906 (1906)
GroundJudges Field
Capacity5,000
PresidentHimanta Biswa Sarma
LeagueGSA Super Division League,
Youth League U15,
Youth League U18 (Youth Team)
WebsiteClub website

History

1906–2010

Gauhati Town Club is one of the oldest and the premier sporting organization in the north-east. It was born at the initiative of a dedicated group of sports-lovers in the person of Capt. L.B.Scott, I.M.S. who was a Civil Surgeon, Dr. H.K. Das, an Assistant Surgeon and founder Secretary of the club; Sir Saiyid Saadullah, an eminent lawyer and Khan Saheb Khalilur Rahman Significantly, the club was essentially instrumental in introducing the coveted Bordoloi Trophy Football Tournament, initially played at the Judges' Field from 1952 to 1957. Ranji Trophy Cricket matches were also played at the same venue. .[2] Apart from football the club also provides excellent facilities for other sports like cricket, swimming, chess etc.

2011–present

On 21 January 2010, it is announced that Juliano Silveira Fontana, a professional Brazilian football coach, has been appointed as the chief coach of the academy who later coached the Senior team in the I-League 2nd Division.[3]

In February 2011,it was announced that Gauhati Town Club will participate in the 2011 I-League 2nd Division. Team finished the season at the bottom of the table and did not gain promotion to the 2011 I-League 2nd Division Final Round. They participated in the 2012 I-League 2nd Division and finished 7th in the Group stage.

Players

First-team

Note: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.

No. Pos. Nation Player
GK  IND Subal Rabha
4  IND Swgwmsar Boro
7  IND Manoj Bose
9  IND Binoka Somi
 IND Jimlong Chaba
12  IND Thiyam Thanil
 IND Nobin Chawria
 IND Firujit Singh
10  IND Kakhebhi Asumi
No. Pos. Nation Player
 IND Binan Singh
 IND Ashis Thapa
 IND Imlong Chaba
 IND Tingnyek Konyak
 IND R. Kasumochi
FW  IND Sanjeeva Rongpi
 IND N Bijan Singh
 IND Shyam Mura
21 GK  IND Amit Lodh

GTC Football Academy team

[4] Note: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.

No. Pos. Nation Player
GK  IND Maheshwar Boro
GK  IND Manish Singh
DF  IND Hirok Jyoti Roy
DF  IND Khoiorom Rocky Singh
DF  IND Manas Pratin Das
DF  IND Prasenjeet Nath
DF  IND Farhan Ahmed
DF  IND Naorem Mukesh Meitei
DF  IND Ranjan Englanj
DF  IND Sansuma Basumatary
RB  IND Sudarshan Boro
RB  IND Molen Boro
RW  IND Rinku Medhi
No. Pos. Nation Player
RW  IND Munna Boro
LW  IND Hidangmayum Sanatomba Sharma
MF  IND Pranjal Bhumij
MF  IND Sonny Munda
MF  IND Diganta Gayari
MF  IND Rahul Chetri
MF  IND Rahul Das
MF  IND Shyam Narzari
MF  IND Shumit Rabha
FW  IND Abhishek Dey
RW  IND Biswajit Das
LW  IND Rabi Boro
DF  IND Anubahb Baruah

Club honours

  • Winner (3):
gollark: Hmm, so what you're saying is that tail calls are incomprehensible dark magic.
gollark: Tail calls are where you call a function at the end of a function or something, and this is magically optimized better because something something stack.
gollark: Couldn't you just PR it to not not do that?
gollark: You can, as far as I know, emulate pcall-type stuff with temporary coroutines (which is very hacky but oh well), and those would probably not be subject to stack stuff.
gollark: Maybe you could abuse coroutines instead of pcall.

References

  1. "Gauhati Town Club Football Academy". Retrieved 5 December 2016.
  2. "Archived copy". Archived from the original on 11 July 2011. Retrieved 13 March 2011.CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link)
  3. "Brazilian coach arrives for GTC soccer academy". The Assam Tribune. Retrieved 19 December 2016.
  4. "GTC Football Academy Players". Gauhati Town Club. Retrieved 2 December 2016.
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