Himalayan Sherpa Club

Himalayan Sherpa Club is a top flight Nepali football team based in Kathmandu and originally from Hattigauda.[1] They play at the 30,000-capacity Dasarath Rangasala Stadium.

Himalayan Sherpa Club
GroundDasarath Rangasala Stadium,
Kathmandu, Nepal
Capacity30,000
ManagerSanjeev Budhathoki
LeagueMartyr's Memorial A-Division League
2018–197th

History

The club was founded on 25 September 2006[2] and played their first tournament at the 2007 edition of the Aaha! Gold Cup.[3] According to RSSSF, the club was "promoted from 4th to 2nd level within 2 months".[4] The club were promoted to the ANFA 'A' Division League one year later.[5] Due to financial disagreements between the League Association ANFA and the Nepal Football Association, the 2007/08 season was canceled before the start of the season. In the following three years, the league paused, the game operations only started again with the 2011 season. Himalayan Sherpa was fifth in his first season in the top Nepalese league of 18 clubs.[6] Through this success, the club managed to sign the Ugandan international Samuel Mubiru on loan from Uganda Revenue Authority SC in 2011/12, the Tanzania's Castory Mumbala and the two former Nigerian youth players Hope Rally and Segun Akinade.[7] Mubiru became the top assist-giver of the league and was therefore ordered back to Uganda Revenue Authority SC after the expiry of his loan agreement.[8] The club celebrated the greatest success in club history in its second season in the top division, when it took second place and thus won the runner-up title of the National League.[9]

Since 2011, Yeti Airlines is sponsoring Himalayan Sherpa Club with Nrs 20 lakh per year for which the club's official name is Yeti Himalayan Sherpa Club.[10]

Honours

Himalayan Sherpa Club won the Sindhu Gold Cup, Sayapatri Gold Cup, and the All Star Cup in Aabu Khaireni once each.[5]

League finishes

The season-by-season performance of Himalayan Sherpa Club:

Season League Position
2007[11] Martyr's Memorial C-Division League Qualification 1st (Group A)
2007-2008[12] Martyr's Memorial C-Division League 1st
2008 Martyr's Memorial B-Division League 2nd
2009-2010 ? ?
2011 Martyr's Memorial A-Division League 5th
2011-12 Nepal National League 2nd
2012-13 Martyr's Memorial A-Division League 10th
2013-14 7th
2015 Nepal National League banned by ANFA[13]
2016-18 League not held
2018-19 Martyr's Memorial A-Division League 7th
2019-20
gollark: That might be hard since I don't really have electronic components at home, but I'm sure i have an LED or something.
gollark: What if I find a diode somewhere and put it on a shrine? WHAT THEN?!?!?
gollark: The others do sort of, since people talk about them on here. We also have emojis: <:diode:694648592916283463> <:diode_superiority:694649066717446144> <:Transistor:694654534634569809>
gollark: It doesn't *physically exist*, though.
gollark: The diode and transistor cults still live on spirit, if not actually in role.

References

  1. "About Himalayan Sherpa Club". Himalayan Sherpa Club. Archived from the original on 13 November 2013. Retrieved 29 December 2019.
  2. Himalayan Sherpa (YHSC)
  3. "Nepal 2006/07". RSSSF. Retrieved 16 February 2020.
  4. "Nepal 2007-09". RSSSF. Retrieved 16 February 2020.
  5. Himalayan Sherpa Club – History at the Wayback Machine (archived November 13, 2013)
  6. Martyr's Memorial ANFA 'A' Division League '2067/68'
  7. Himalayan Sherpa
  8. Himalayan Sherpa secures place in A division at the Wayback Machine (archived November 13, 2013)
  9. Nepal 2011/12
  10. Main Sponsor at the Wayback Machine (archived November 13, 2013)
  11. "Nepal 2007-09". RSSSF. Retrieved 16 February 2020.
  12. "Nepal 2007-09". RSSSF. Retrieved 16 February 2020.
  13. "ANFA Releases First Installment Of Rs 5 Lakhs To All Nine National League Participating Teams". GoalNepal.com. 16 January 2015. Retrieved 19 January 2015.


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