Relocation of professional sports teams

Relocation of professional sports teams occurs when a team owner moves a team, generally from one metropolitan area to another, but occasionally between municipalities in the same conurbation. The practice is most common in North America, where a league franchise system is used and the teams are overwhelmingly privately owned. Owners who move a team generally do so seeking better profits, facilities, fan support, or a combination of these.

North America

Unlike most professional sport systems worldwide, North America does not have comprehensive governing bodies whose authority extends from the amateur to the highest levels of a given sport. North American sports generally do not operate a system of promotion and relegation in which poorly performing teams are replaced with teams that do well in lower-level leagues.

A city wishing to get a team in a major professional sports league can wait for the league to expand and award new franchises. However, such expansions are infrequent, and generally limited to a narrow window in time. Many current owners believe 32 is the optimal size for a major league due to playoff structure and ease of scheduling. As of 2018, each of the major leagues has between 30 and 32 franchises. The National Hockey League (NHL) has expanded to 32 teams, with the Vegas Golden Knights having become the league's 31st team in 2017 and the Seattle Kraken due to become the 32nd team in 2021.[1][2]

In past decades, aspiring owners whose overtures had been rejected by the established leagues would respond by forming a rival league in hopes that the existing major league would eventually agree to a merger; the new league would attain major league status in its own right; or the established league was compelled to expand. The 1960s American Football League (AFL) is perhaps the most recent example of a successful rival league, having achieved each of the three goals listed above in reverse order. However, all major sports have had a rival league achieve at least some of these goals in the last half of the 20th century. Baseball's proposed Continental League did not play a game but only because Major League Baseball responded to the proposal by adding teams in some of the new league's proposed cities. The American Basketball Association (ABA) and World Hockey Association (WHA) each succeeded in getting some of their franchises accepted into the established leagues, which had both unsuccessfully attempted to cause their upstart rivals to fold outright by adding more teams.

However, the upstart leagues owed their success in large part to the reluctance of owners in the established leagues to devote the majority of their revenues to player salaries and also to sports leagues' former reliance primarily on gate receipts for revenue. Under those conditions, an ambitious rival could often afford to lure away the sport's top players with promises of better pay, in hopes of giving the new league immediate respect and credibility from fans. Today, however, established leagues derive a large portion of their revenue from lucrative television contracts that would not be offered to an untested rival. Also, the activism of players' unions has resulted in the established leagues paying a majority of their revenues to players, thus the average salary in each of the big four leagues is now well in excess of $1 million per season.

Under present market and financial conditions, any serious attempt to form a rival league in the early 21st century would likely require hundreds of millions (if not billions) of dollars in investment and initial losses, and even if such resources were made available the upstart league's success would be far from guaranteed, as evidenced by the failure of the WWF/NBC-backed XFL in 2001 and the UFL from 2009 to 2012. The current major leagues have established lucrative relationships with all of the major media outlets in the United States, who subsidize the league's operations because their established fame ensures strong ratings; the networks are far less willing to provide such coverage to an unproven upstart league, often requiring the upstart league to pay the network for those leagues to be covered.

Therefore, as long as leagues choose not to expand and/or reject a city's application, the only realistic recourse is to convince the owner(s) of an existing team to move it (or convince a prospective owner to purchase a team with the intent of moving it). Owners usually move teams because of weak fan support or because the team organization is in debt and needs an adequate population for financial support or because another city offers a bigger local market or a more financially lucrative stadium/arena deal. Governments may offer lucrative deals to team owners to attract or retain a team. For example, to attract the NFL's Cleveland Browns in 1995, the state of Maryland agreed to build a new stadium in Baltimore and allow the team to use it rent-free and keep all parking, advertising and concession revenue. (This move proved so unpopular in Cleveland that the move was treated as the Baltimore Ravens being awarded an expansion franchise, and the Browns name and their official lineage would remain in Cleveland for a "reactivated" team that rejoined the NFL three years later.) A little more than a decade earlier, the Baltimore Colts left for Indianapolis (NFL owners voted to give Colts owner Robert Irsay permission to move his franchise to the city of his choosing after no satisfactory stadium would be built).

Moving sports teams is often controversial. Opponents criticize owners for leaving behind faithful fans and governments for spending millions of dollars of tax money on attracting teams. However, since sports teams in the United States are generally treated like any other business under antitrust law, there is little sports leagues can do to prevent teams from flocking to the highest bidders (for instance, the Los Angeles Rams filed suit when the other NFL owners initially blocked their move to St. Louis, which caused the NFL to back down and allow the move to proceed). Major League Baseball, unique among the major professional sports leagues, has an exemption from antitrust laws won by a Supreme Court decision but nonetheless has allowed several teams to change cities. Also recently, courts denied the attempted move of the team then known as the Phoenix Coyotes by siding with the NHL, which claimed that it had final authority over franchise moves.

Newer sports leagues tend to have more transient franchises than more established, "major" leagues, but in the mid-1990s, several NFL and NHL teams moved to other cities, and the threat of a move pushed cities with major-league teams in any sport to build new stadiums and arenas using taxpayer money. The trend continued in the 2000s, when three National Basketball Association (NBA) teams moved in a seven-year span after there were no moves at all in the 16 years before it. Critics referred to the movement of teams to the highest-bidding city as "franchise free agency."

United States and Canada

The following charts list movements of franchises in the modern eras of the major North American sports leagues. It does not include:

  • Moves within a city, which have occurred many times in all major leagues.
  • Short distance moves from one city in a metro area to another city in the same metro area. (For example, San Francisco to Oakland or vice versa.)
  • Short-distance city-suburb moves. (For example, Los Angeles to Anaheim, both of which are in the same urban agglomeration.)
  • Team moves that happened before the organization joined its current league.
    • Note, however, that the NFL considers the American Football League of the 1960s as an integral part of its own history. Therefore, moves of AFL teams during the existence of that league are included.
  • Moves of teams that, as of 2021, no longer exist. There were many such moves in the early years of the NFL in particular.
  • Teams that have threatened to move as leverage for a new stadium or arena in their current market without actually moving, as well as teams that nearly moved for other reasons, not related to team dissatisfaction in a given market. (For example, the Pittsburgh Pirates nearly moving to Denver following the Pittsburgh drug trials in 1985, the Minnesota Timberwolves almost moving to New Orleans in 1994, or the Sacramento Kings almost moving to Anaheim, Seattle, and Virginia Beach from 2011 to 2013.)

Major League Baseball

National Basketball Association

National Football League

The history of the NFL fully incorporates that of the fourth American Football League, which began operation in 1960 with eight teams and became by far the most successful rival to the NFL. In 1966, the two leagues agreed to a merger that took full effect in 1970. All teams from the 1960–1969 AFL were brought intact to the NFL, and the current NFL recognizes all AFL records and statistics as its own.

National Hockey League

Only one NHL team that moved has kept its name: the Calgary Flames.

The Edmonton Oilers nearly moved to Houston in 1998, but the team remained in the city after a limited partnership raised enough money to purchase the franchise before the deadline.[9][10] The then-Phoenix Coyotes were placed into bankruptcy with the intent to circumvent the league's relocation rules, but this was blocked by a judge. Other threats to leave came from two of the 1967 expansion teams, the Pittsburgh Penguins (on multiple occasions) and St. Louis Blues (in 1983), but ultimately stayed in their existing markets.

Major League Soccer

  • 2006: The San Jose Earthquakes moved to Houston and became the Houston Dynamo; however, the team records, logo, colors, championships, and history were left in San Jose. An option for an MLS franchise was awarded to Oakland Athletics owner Lew Wolff in 2006, and the option was exercised in 2007. The Earthquakes resumed play in MLS in 2008 as a continuation of the previous Earthquakes franchise under new ownership.

Canadian Football League

While none of the CFL's core Canadian franchises have moved from one market to another, the league's short-lived expansion into the United States did include one team move.

The league also attempted to move the Las Vegas Posse after their single season of 1994. Prior to the 1995 season, multiple ownership groups unsuccessfully tried to buy the team for a move to Jackson, Mississippi. Following that, plans were made to move the team to Miami, Florida as the Manatees, but plans fell through when the league chose to end the US expansion before the Manatees' scheduled launch in 1996.

The CFL's expansion into the US both began and ended with events that were not technically team moves, but were also not truly new teams being formed. The staff of the Ottawa Rough Riders moved from Ottawa to Shreveport, Louisiana, to become the Shreveport Pirates in 1993, but the CFL forced the team itself to be left in Ottawa, where a new owner kept the franchise alive. In 1996, the owners of the Baltimore Stallions folded the team upon the announcement that the Cleveland Browns would be moving to Baltimore (but see Cleveland Browns relocation controversy). Despite high attendance and success on the field, management felt that they would be unable to directly compete with an NFL team in the same city. The Stallions' ownership group took over the then-dormant Montreal Alouettes franchise. While the players were released from their contracts with the Stallions, many were subsequently signed to the Alouettes. The CFL and the Alouettes do not consider the Stallions' records, including the 1995 Grey Cup victory, as part of the team's legacy. The Alouettes are instead considered a continuation of the previous teams of that name.

Australia and New Zealand

The two major professional sporting leagues in Australia are the Australian Football League (AFL) and National Rugby League (NRL). Both competitions were originally based in one city (Melbourne and Sydney respectively) and expanded to a national level, and through that process, there have been team moves, mergers and closures in both leagues. The clubs are owned by members, not privately, but the North American franchise model exists, which means entry to the league is restricted. The hybrid model has meant that the leading promoter of moving is the league itself, trying to grow the football code by encouraging poorly performing clubs to move interstate.

AFL

The AFL is the national competition in Australian rules football and grew out of the mostly suburban Melbourne based Victorian Football League competition; as a result, the member clubs have had to move to adjust to a changing national focus.

Major interstate moves and mergers

  • South Melbourne Football Club: In 1982, it moved interstate to Sydney, 963 km north and became the Sydney Swans. Despite early struggles, the club has more than tripled its membership since, and has won premierships (championships) in 2005 and 2012.
  • Fitzroy Football Club: In 1996, the Melbourne-based club merged its playing operations with the interstate Brisbane Bears, a club 1669 km north of its original home, with the Bears becoming the Brisbane Lions. Since the merger, the Brisbane club almost doubled its membership and won three consecutive premierships between 2001 and 2003. The Fitzroy Football Club ceased fielding a team in professional competitions, but it continues as a standalone entity based at its traditional home, and has fielded a team in the amateur Victorian Amateur Football Association (VAFA) since 2009.

Suburban based club joins the National competition

  • The Port Adelaide Football Club, established in 1870, participated in the SANFL competition until 1997 when the club joined the AFL. In 1997 the Port Adelaide Magpies Football Club was formed to maintain the clubs presence in the SANFL at the request of the SANFL winning premierships in 1998 and 1999. The Port Adelaide Football Club won the 2004 AFL Premiership and maintains strong links to its community in the Port Adelaide area. It is the only suburban club to join the national AFL competition with all other additions to the expanded VFL being composite sides or newly established clubs like the Sydney Swans, the Brisbane Bears ( see above ), West Coast, Adelaide, Fremantle, Gold Coast and Greater Western Sydney.

Minor moves

Home ground-only moves

Secondary interstate 'homes'

Some Melbourne-based clubs began selling home games interstate in the late 1990s and conducting community camp clinics to build up local supporter bases.

  • Western BulldogsDarwin, Northern Territory since 2000 (approximately 1–2 games a year). In 2007, the Bulldogs reduced their commitment to 1 game and signed a deal to also play 1 game a year in Canberra. They suspended their operations in Canberra in 2010, and stopped playing games in Darwin in 2013. They played 1 match a year in Cairns against the Gold Coast Suns from 2014 to 2018, and now play 1 game per year in Ballarat
  • St Kilda Football ClubLaunceston, Tasmania (approximately 2 games a year between 2002 and 2010).
  • Hawthorn Football ClubLaunceston, Tasmania (approximately 2 games a year between 2011 and 2015). In 2015 they increased the number of games to 4 per year.
  • North Melbourne Football Club – in 1999, backed by the AFL, the club changed their trading name to the Kangaroos, and played a handful of home games interstate in Sydney. The move proved unsuccessful, and the club has since played in Canberra for several years (2002–2006) before abandoning the area for the more lucrative, and potential goldmine at the Gold Coast, Queensland (2007–2008). However, the club pulled out from moving 'home' games altogether after declining a league offer of a full move to the Gold Coast. The club then started playing 2 games a year in Hobart in 2013 and now play 4 games per year at Hobart's Blundstone Arena as of 2017
  • Melbourne Football Club – a single home game a year to the Brisbane Lions at the Brisbane Cricket Ground in Queensland (2005–2007). The Demons added a single game to Gold Coast, Queensland in Queensland in 2006. In 2007, the Demons shifted its Gold Coast commitment to Canberra for a single game each year whilst also playing one game a year in Brisbane.

The Demons abandoned operations in Canberra and the Gold Coast in 2011 after the addition of the Gold Coast Suns as a new AFL franchise, in 2014 the club started playing 1 game a year in Darwin and 1 game a year in Alice Springs

A-League

New Zealand Knights FC, who played in Auckland, New Zealand, were dissolved and moved to Wellington in 2004, becoming Wellington Phoenix FC. During the later stages of the 2006–07 A-League season, Football Federation Australia (FFA) removed New Zealand Knights A-League licence due to the club's financial and administrative problems and poor on-field performance. After much delay, the final amount needed for the application came from Wellington property businessman Terry Serepisos in the latter stages of the bid. Serepisos, the club's majority owner and chairman, provided NZD $1,000,000 to ensure the beginnings of a new New Zealand franchise and a continuation of New Zealand's participation in the A-League. FFA finalised a three-year A-League licence to New Zealand Football who then sub-let the licence to the Wellington-based club.[11] The new Wellington club was confirmed on March 19, 2007. The name for the new club was picked from a shortlist of six, pruned from 250 names suggested by the public, and was announced on March 28, 2007.[12][13] Serepisos said of the name, that "It symbolises the fresh start, the rising from the ashes, and the incredible Wellington support that has come out".[14]

NRL

The NRL is the national competition in rugby league and was born out of the Sydney-based Australian Rugby League and New South Wales Rugby League competitions. In 1987, the Western Suburbs Magpies agreed to move from its (inner) Western suburbs base to the outer south-western Macarthur district following a prior move west to Lidcombe Oval. In 1999, they merged with the remaining Inner Western team, the Balmain Tigers, (both teams having been established in 1908) to become Wests Tigers. The North Sydney Bears attempted to move from their Northern Suburbs base to the swiftly growing Central Coast region just north of Sydney in 1999, however problems with construction at the proposed home ground now known as Bluetongue Central Coast Stadium meant that the Bears continued to play home matches in a variety of Sydney grounds before being forced into a merger with the Manly Sea Eagles as the Northern Eagles. The merged clubs played home matches at both the Central Coast and Manly's home ground of Brookvale Oval, but after the bears were expelled from the partnership, poor crowds at the former location led to a reversion to the name of Manly and games played exclusively at Brookvale Oval. Subsequently, one of the owners of Bluetongue Central Coast Stadium, John Singleton, has attempted to lure another club to play there, notably the South Sydney Rabbitohs who have experienced poor crowds at their new home ground of ANZ Stadium.

The Canterbury Bulldogs were formed in 1935 and played their first season without a home ground. In 1936, they settled at Belmore Oval (renamed the Belmore Sports Ground) and played home matches there until the end of the 1998 season. The Bulldogs trialled a number of alternative home grounds during the 1990s, including Concord Oval in 1994. In 1995, they changed their name to the Sydney Bulldogs and played most of the Premiership winning season at Parramatta Stadium, sharing the ground with bitter rivals, the Parramatta Eels and the also moved-and-renamed Sydney (Balmain) Tigers. They finally settled on Stadium Australia, the main stadium for the Sydney 2000 Olympic Games as their home ground, and in 2008, moved their training and administration facilities from Belmore to the Homebush Olympic Park Site, though have since re-embraced the Belmore region by returning to the name of the Canterbury-Bankstown Bulldogs and playing some of their home games at the new Belmore Sports Ground.

Other clubs have moved to new home grounds but have retained their original base.

Europe

In Europe, moves are very rare because of the different relationship between clubs and their league in the European system of professional sports league organization. The practice is considered anathema.[15] In most European sports, teams can be relegated from their current league to a lower one or promoted to the one above.

Armenia

  • FC Banants were founded in 1992 in the village of Kotayk, representing the Kotayk Province. Between 1992 and 1995, the club was commonly referred to as Banants Kotayk.[16] During the 1992 season, the club won the first Armenian Cup. At the end of the 1995 transitional season, Banants suffered a financial crisis. The club owners decided that it was better to merge the club with FC Kotayk of Abovyan, rather than disband it. In 2001, Banants demerged from FC Kotayk, and was moved from Abovyan to the capital Yerevan.
  • FC Alashkert was founded in 1990 in the town of Martuni of Gegharkunik Province. In 1992, the team played in the Premier League representing Martuni and using the City Stadium of the town as their home venue. In 1999, they did not participate in the First League competition and later in early 2000, the club was dissolved. In February 2013, the club purchased the Nairi Stadium in Yerevan, to become the official venue of their home games. As a result, the club was officially moved from Martuni to Yerevan starting from the 2013–14 season.

Austria

Azerbaijan

Belgium

  • Football Couillet La Louvière was formed in June 2009 as the result of a merger between R.A.C.S. Couillet and R.A.A. Louviéroise. The matricule of the club is the number 94 of RACS Couillet, so technically it is a continuation of Couillet, whereas La Louvière has dissolved into Couillet, with their matricule (number 93) being lost. At the time of the merger, La Louvière played in the third tier of Belgian football and Couillet in the fourth, as a result, the new team started in the fourth tier. After the merger, the team was based in La Louvière and renamed to Football Club Couillet-La Louvière with abbreviation FCLL. However, the team moved back to Couillet in Charleroi in 2011 after third division team URS Centre moved to the center of La Louvière and changed its name to UR La Louvière Centre. As a result, the team name was changed again to Football Club Charleroi.
  • RFC Liège, after its home stadium the Stade Vélodrome de Rocourt in Liège was destroyed, the club became 'homeless'. After having played during 4 years at rue Gilles Magnée, in Ans where a temporary stand was built, the RFC Liège is currently playing in Seraing at the Pairay Stadium.

Cyprus

At least three clubs were forced to move due to the 1974 Turkish invasion of that country:[23]

Czech Republic

  • Dukla Prague, a successful football team under the patronage of the Czech Armed Forces, originally from Prague, merged with second division side FC Portál Příbram in 1996.[24][25] The new club, which later became known as 1. FK Příbram, played one season in Prague at the Juliska Stadium before moving to Příbram in 1997, the last home match at Juliska being a 2–2 draw with relegated Baník Havířov on June 1, 1997,[26] effectively meaning that the original FC Příbram, founded in 1929, moved to Prague, merged and then moved back. The club currently playing under the Dukla Prague name, and the current spiritual successor of the original team, FK Dukla Prague, was founded in 1958 as FK Dukla Dejvice and advanced to the Prague Championship in the 1983–84 season.[27] Prior to 2001, the club's best finish in a season had been second in the Prague Championship in the 1984–85 season.[27] In 2001, the club became known as FK Dukla Prague, but not the legal successor of the original Dukla Prague team. In November 2006, the new FK Dukla Prague management announced that it had agreed to a takeover of second league rights of the Jakubčovice team[24] and in 2007 Dukla took Jakubčovice's place in the Czech 2. Liga,[28] having finished the 2006–07 season in second place.[29]
  • In ice hockey, the Kontinental Hockey League, based in Russia but also including teams from several other post-Soviet states, expanded outside the former Soviet Union for the first time in 2011, adding the Slovakian team Lev Poprad. The team was purchased by Czech interests after the 2011–12 season; the new owners folded the club and replaced it with a similarly named team, the Prague-based Lev Praha. Although the two Lev teams are technically separate corporate entities, this situation can effectively be viewed as a move; not only are the team names similar, but the new owners retained much of the Poprad roster.
  • Mountfield HK originated with a club that began playing ice hockey in České Budějovice in 1928. Following the 2012–13 season, the Czech Extraliga reached a sponsorship deal with Radegast to sell its beer in all Extraliga arenas. This agreement conflicted with the naming rights deal HC České Budějovice already had with Budweiser Budvar Brewery for their arena. Under the agreement, the club and the city would face stiff penalties for selling any beer other than Budvar products.[30][31] Unable to resolve the dispute, the club decided on June 18, 2013, that no agreement could be reached between the parties involved and voted to immediately move to Hradec Králové for the 2013–14 season.[32][33] The ice hockey traditions of HC České Budějovice was continued in the town by a club which adopted the historical club name "Motor" – ČEZ Motor České Budějovice

Estonia

France

In 1967, the top-tier but deep in-debt Toulouse FC, located in Toulouse, merged with Paris suburbs Red Star, then a tier-2 club, actually moving the entire club, including players and staff, 700 kilometres (430 mi) North. This created a major scandal, leading to legislation changes, in particular the 1984 Avice law, which prevents out-of-departement fusions or moves for all sports

  • Athlétic Club Arles founded in 1913 in Arles, moved in 2010 to the nearby (45 kilometres (28 mi)) Avignon and adopted its current name, Athlétic Club Arles-Avignon
  • Evian Thonon Gaillard F.C. were rumoured to be pursuing a move to play its home matches at the Stade de la Praille in Geneva, Switzerland after it was determined that the club's current facility, the Stade Joseph-Moynat, did not meet the Ligue de Football Professionnel's (LFP) standards. Thonon-les-Bains, the commune where the club situates itself, is a few kilometres from the Swiss border and is only 34.6 kilometres (21.5 mi), a 45-minute car drive, from the city of Geneva. It was reported that the club's president, Patrick Trotignon, had been in the process of advocating for the move since the beginning of the 2009–10 Championnat National season just in case the club had achieved promotion to the second division. The vice-president of Swiss club Servette FC, who occupy the stadium, questioned the move citing possible schedule conflicts, as well as the health of the pitch if both clubs were to use the stadium on a weekly basis.[34] However, his claims were refuted by Benoît Genecand, who serves as president of Fondation du Stade de Genève (FSG), which owns and operates the facility. The club responded immediately to Genecand's comments via a press release posted on the club's official website.[35] Evian petitioned to the State Council of Geneva and obtained approval from the LFP for the move in early May. On May 20, 2010, Evian received a favourable ruling from the French Football Federation (FFF) with the Federal Council voting in favour of the move. According to the federation, the move now had to be agreed upon by a UEFA executive committee, which is composed of seventeen officials.[36][37] On June 8, UEFA officially denied Evian's request to play at the Stade de la Praille meaning the club would play its home matches at the Parc des Sports in nearby Annecy.[38]

Georgia

Due to the Abkhaz–Georgian conflict several clubs from the region cannot compete in the Georgian league and therefore several clubs have been re-founded by internally displaced persons from Abkhazia in Tbilisi, and although the original clubs continue to exist in exile, and no actual move has occurred, the Abkhaz peoples who had founded these club consider the clubs to be the continuation of the original club:

  • Dinamo Sokhumi continues to exist however two phoenix clubs have been found. FC ASMC Sokhumi was first founded as Dinamo Sokhumi and continues to represent the city in Tbilisi. FC Tskhumi Sukhumi was formed to represent Sokhumi initially in 1990, due to FC Dinamo Sokhumi refusing to join Umaglesi Liga and played in the Soviet First League, when the vast majority of the Georgian clubs withdrew from the Soviet League system and joined the Georgian SSR regional league, as the first Umaglesi Liga. After bankruptcy in 1993, the club was re-founded in 1999.
  • FC Gagra was founded in 2004 as a continuation of the city of Gagra's disrupted by war football traditions, although a dormant amateur side in Gagra by the same name remains in the local Abkhaz league. Initially there have been efforts to move the Abkhaz team to Tskhaltubo, ground-sharing with Samgurali Tskhaltubo due to the number of internally displaced persons in the town but these plans failed due to lack of finances and facilities.[39]

Due to the Georgian–Ossetian conflict, several teams have been displaced:

  • Spartaki Tskhinvali originally from the South Ossetian capital Tskhinvali currently play their league matches in either Gori or Tbilisi.[40]

Germany

While football club moves have so far been unusual in West German football, it was a rather common practice in communist East Germany. As teams were dependent on the regime, it intervened several times to promote an equal distribution of teams across the country. A number of prominent East German teams were affected by these political moves, and even in modern-day Germany, the reason for the regional dominance of some teams and the roots of many strong rivalries can be found there.

Major moves in the DDR-Oberliga:

  • In 1954, the entire team of Empor Lauter, a club from a small industrial town in southern Saxony, moved to the very north of the country to compete as Empor Rostock. Under the name Hansa Rostock, they have been the most successful East German team since 1990.
  • Also in 1954, Dynamo Dresden lost all its players to the newly formed side of Dynamo Berlin. Dresden passed almost a decade in the lower leagues, returned to top-level football in 1962 and became one of the fiercest rivals of by-then record champion Dynamo Berlin.
  • Vorwärts Frankfurt (Oder) was the only major team to move twice. Founded as Vorwärts Leipzig in 1951, the team was moved to East Berlin in 1953, where they won six East German championships. They became Vorwärts Frankfurt in 1971 and were renamed to FFC Viktoria in 1991.

In recent times, team moves have become a more common feature in sports that are less popular with the German public. Notable examples include former ice hockey team München Barons (became the Hamburg Freezers in 2002), former handball side VfL Bad Schwartau (became HSV Handball in 2002) and basketball club Bayer Giants Leverkusen (Düsseldorf Giants since 2008).

Greece

Hungary

Until the mid-2000s, moving and renaming smaller teams was a common method for larger teams in Hungary to evade their financial crisis or to level up in the league system without winning promotion on-pitch, a method that became so popular and controversial it had to be prohibited.

  • Diósgyőri VTK from Miskolc, then named Diósgyőr FC went into bankruptcy after the 1999–2000 NB1 season. After immediately forming a fan-owned club in the seventh tier of the Hungarian league system, during the winter the club took over fellow Miskolc team Borsod Volán SE to gain promotion to the third division. After years of third and second league football, the team gained promotion in 2004 on-pitch, but failed to obtain license for the 2004–05 NB1 season. Therefore the club took over Balaton FC, a team from Siófok with financial problems, and took up the name Diósgyőri Balaton FC. After having two teams with two different coaches during the summer pre-season – one that gained promotion and one that got moved to Miskolc with the proper licensing -, and even being excluded from the league for a brief period, the team regained its original name DVTK and cemented itself in the highest tier of Hungarian football once more.
  • BFC Siófok, which had its predecessor Balaton FC moved to Miskolc in 2004, bought the team of Bodajk playing in the second tier next year, and renamed itself to Bodajk FC Siófok.
  • Vasas SC from Angyalföld, 13th district, Budapest: the six-time championship winner team, which already faced financial difficulties over the millennium, was relegated in the 2001–02 season after finishing third in the season before. In the second league, matters became worse, and the new owner János Jámbor moved fellow second division team Kecskeméti TE to the capital and transforming it to the club's football team instead of saving the original.
  • Lombard Pápa: Péter Bíró, owner of jewelry trader firm Lombard, was a long-time football investor, having been the owner of Tatabánya FC and Szombathelyi Haladás, both carrying the Lombard name during his reign respectively. In 2004, he decided to move his team to Pápa, which meant that the team, never been playing in the first league before, took hold of the first league license of Szombathely.
  • Szombathelyi Haladás, in the same vein as its first league license got transferred to Pápa, had bought Dabas and took hold its second league license just days after its demise.

Association football

Current Italian football laws allow clubs to move only between bordering cities, although there have been some exceptions. Some examples include:

  • F.C. Südtirol was founded in Brixen as Sport Verein Milland in 1974. In 1995, after unsuccessfully trying to buy A.C. Bolzano of Bolzano (a club in financial difficulties that filed for bankruptcy shortly after and was refounded as F.C. Bolzano 1996), new owners bought Milland and renamed it Football Club Südtirol-Alto Adige, changing their colors from yellow and black to red and white (the colours of both South Tyrol and Bolzano). The club quickly won promotions, reaching Serie D in 1997 and staying at that level until 2000. After briefly moving from Brixen to Tramin an der Weinstraße in the second half of the 1999-2000 Serie D season, due to problems with the Brixen stadium management, the club won promotion to the professional Serie C2 at the end of that campaign. Due to the fact that the only stadium in South Tyrol suitable to host professional matches being Stadio Druso in Bolzano, the club moved there to play their home matches and dropped the Italian part in their name, shortening and "Germanizing" it to Fussball Club Südtirol. The team ownership immediately also tried to move the registered office of the club to the South Tyrol capital, but this was contrasted by the Italian Football Federation until 2011 (causing the club to continuously move from Brixen to Bolzano and vice versa also during the same season). The club reached the third level of the Italian professional football at the end of the 2010 season and it still plays there.
  • U.C. AlbinoLeffe was founded in 1998 after the merger of Albinese Calcio of Albino and Società Calcio Leffe of Leffe, two small towns closed to each other in the Val Seriana, in the province of Bergamo; at the time of the merger, both the clubs were playing in Serie C2. The club took home in Stadio Carlo Martinelli of Leffe. The newborn club immediately won promotion to Serie C1, and at the end of the 2002–03 season also reached Serie B for the first time. This forced the club to move to the Stadio Atleti Azzurri d'Italia of Bergamo to play their home matches, because the stadium of Leffe was to small to host Serie B matches (the club kept on using the Stadio Martinelli for the youth teams, though). The club spent 9 consecutive years in the second division and during this period it moved its legal headquarters to Bergamo without much fuss and also built a training center in Zanica, a town south of Bergamo and several kilometers away from the Val Seriana, while still nominally representing Albino and Leffe. The club exploited the Bergamo stadium until 2019, when it was pushed out by Atalanta B.C., the main team in Bergamo, that in the meantime had bought the Stadio Atleti Azzurri d'Italia and started to rebuild it. This forced to club to move again to another sports facility, the Stadio Città di Gorgonzola in Gorgonzola, in the province of Milan, while builing a new stadium owned by them inside their training centre in Zanica.
  • In 2003, after Cosenza Calcio 1914 was not admitted to Serie B, a new ownership bought sports rights from then-Serie D club Castrovillari to permit a Cosenza franchise to play football in the upcoming season. The new club however proved to be short-lived, as it declared bankruptcy in 2007, but was promptly replaced by Fortitudo Cosenza, born as a move of neighbouring Serie D club Rende Calcio.
  • Serie D's Neapolis, located in Naples, was born as a move of Sangiuseppese, a club hailing from the neighbouring city of San Giuseppe Vesuviano.
  • In 1994, one year after the cancellation of Calcio Catania, Atletico Leonzio's chairman Franco Proto moved his club, renaming it Atletico Catania (the club was actually founded in Catania as Atletico Catania and later moved to Lentini, effectively meaning that this was a "moving back"). The club, previously located in Lentini, went on to play up to Serie C1 (the league now known as Lega Pro Prima Divisione), losing promotion to Serie B on playoffs twice before being cancelled in 2001 because of financial difficulties also related to Calcio Catania's return into professional football and the consequent drop in attendance. The club was immediately refounded by a group of fans and has remained to the amateur levels since, while many clubs in Lentini tried to continue the football tradition of the town, the most recent one being Sicula Leonzio (born by moving there Real Belpassese of Belpasso), that reached Serie C in 2017, but was disbanded at the end of the 2019–20 season.
  • A.C.D. Città di Vittoria, born in 2007 as merger of Serie D's Comiso with minor league club Junior Vittoria (possibly a trick to allow the club to legally move from Comiso to Vittoria).
  • A.S.D. Pol. Libertas Acate of Serie D are a club officially settled in Acate, which however actually plays their home matches in Modica and are recognized by both fans and the regional press as Modica's club, being frequently referred to as Libertas Acate-Modica. In fact, after a takeover bid in 2006 the club left Acate to play their home matches in Modica despite the fact they were not eligible to change the "legal" home city.
  • S.S. Racing Club Roma, playing in Rome, was founded in 2013 as A.S.D. Lupa Castelli Romani in the town of Frascati. Lupa Castelli Romani was founded in summer 2013 after A.S.D. Real T.B.M. Zagarolo transferred the seat and its sports title of Eccellenza from Zagarolo to Frascati (meanwhile, Lupa Frascasti moved out of Frascati to Rome and changed its name to Lupa Roma, see below). After gaining promotion to Lega Pro in 2015, Lupa Castelli Romani was forced to play its home games in Rieti and also tried make the move permanent, by taking the place of local Serie D team F.C. Rieti unsuccessfully, even changing its colors from red and yellow to claret and sky blue, the colors of F.C. Rieti. After only one season, the club was relegated to Serie D and was bought by Antonio Penzone, the owner of Racing Club Ardea, a team based in Ardea, playing in Eccellenza at the time. The new owner renamed the club Racing Club Roma and moved to the Italian capital city, while retiring the first team of Racing Club Ardea, but not its youth system. The club immediately benefited of a repechage in Lega Pro, but was again relegated after a single season, ending at the bottom of its group. In 2017, Penzone bought Fondi Calcio, renaming it Racing Club Fondi, while retiring Racing Club Roma. After a single year, Penzone sold the rights to take part to Serie D to F.C. Aprilia (that was consequently renamed Aprila Racing Club) and concentrated only to the youth teams of Racing Club Ardea.
  • Lupa Frascati was founded in 1974 after the merger of Associazione Sportiva Frascati of Frascati and OMI Roma of Rome, taking the place of OMI in Serie D, while playing in Frascati, effectively meaning that the first team of the Roman club was moving to the town of Frascati. The new club gained promotion in Serie C2 at the end of 1977–78 season. In 1980 the club was relegated back in Serie D and sold its sports rights to another club based in the city of Rome, Romulea, while it restarted from the amateur levels as SIRS Frascati. After several name and property changes, it took back the Lupa Frascati moniker in the 2006. In the season 2013–14 the club moved to the Axa district of Rome[41] changing its name to A.S.D. Lupa Roma, and playing the home matches in nearby Stadio Pietro Desideri of Fiumicino[41] (in the meanwhile A.S.D. Real T.B.M. Zagarolo of Zagarolo moved to Frascati ad took the name of Lupa Castelli Romani, see above). In the next season it was promoted to Lega Pro as Group G champions, changing its name again to Lupa Roma F.C. as a sign of return to the professional ranks after a 34-season absence. The team had also to move its home to Aprilia due to the Fiumicino field being unfit for professional league games, and the immediate lack of an available venue in Rome. In 2016–17 season the club moved its home games to Stadio Olindo Galli of Tivoli, also moving its leagal address there.[42] At the end of 2019 season, the club disbanded all its teams.[43]

Basketball

Ireland

Irish clubs moving out of their original district are slightly more common. In certain cases, the club has moved within a conurbation.

  • Shamrock Rovers Played in Glenmalure Park on the Southside of Dublin from 1926 to 1987. The club's owner Louis Kilcoyne announced he was selling Glenmalure Park, which they had recently purchased from the Jesuits.[44] The team played the entire 1987–88 season in an almost empty Tolka Park on Dublin's Northside as a result of a boycott called for by the Shamrock Rovers Supporters Club and KRAM (Keep Rovers at Milltown),[44] which was observed by the vast majority of Hoops fans.[45] Following the completion of the boycott season in Tolka, the Kilcoynes sold the football club to Dublin businessman, John McNamara, who put forward a controversial proposal to move in with Rivals Bohemians at Dalymount Park. KRAM congregated to vote on whether to lift the boycott and on the proposal to move to Dalymount. Both motions were passed and the club spent the next two seasons at the Phibsboro venue, with an unrecognisable side playing in front of small attendances.[46] Rovers spent two season's in Dalymount Park before moving to the RDS Arena in Ballsbridge, just two miles away from Glenmalure Park. In 1996, the club's new owner Alan McGrath unveiled a plan to build a permanent home state-of-the-art stadium in the Dublin southwest suburb of Tallaght for Rovers,[47] The club also played home matches in Morton Stadium, Richmond Park and again in Tolka Park before moving to their new home in Tallaght in 2009.
  • Shelbourne were originally from Ringsend in the South of Dublin. The club played in Harold's Cross Stadium in Harold's Cross briefly in the 1970s before moving to the stadium in 1982 where they remained until 1989 when they moved to Tolka Park, in the North of Dublin.

Israel

Kazakhstan

Latvia

  • FK Jūrmala, founded in 2003, moved from Jūrmala to Riga in March 2012 and renamed themselves after the historic Riga club, becoming FK Daugava.
  • RAF Jelgava in the early 1990s RAF was one of the strongest teams in Virslīga. However, when the plant ran into financial difficulties, the team received new sponsorship from the University of Latvia in 1996 and, as a result, changed their name and moved to Riga, and played in the Latvian University Stadium.[49] The move was a sporting disaster and the club folded. A team under the name RAF Jelgava appeared again in 2001 in the 1. līga, and after the 2003 season the club merged with another Jelgava club, FK Viola Jelgava forming FK Jelgava.

Lithuania

Moldova

Netherlands

Team moves are very rare in the Netherlands. The most prominent case involves professional football club Almere City FC. When 1964 Eredivisie champion and 1964–65 European Cup quarter finalist DWS was merged into FC Amsterdam, its supporters founded amateur football club De Zwarte Schapen, named after their nickname, which translates as Black Sheep. The club quickly rose through the ranks of amateur football, eventually reaching the Hoofdklasse. After several violent incidents on the pitch and a six-month suspension by the Royal Dutch Football Association, the club moved from Amsterdam to nearby Almere (a "new town") and changed its name to Sporting Flevoland. That name was changed to FC Omniworld in the 1990s, and FC Omniworld was admitted to the Eerste Divisie for the 2005–06 season.

Team moves are slightly more common in other sports in the Netherlands. Volleyball club AMVJ, for instance, moved from Amsterdam to Amstelveen in 1980. The men's team was subsequently moved to Almere in 1999, becoming VC Omniworld, the volleyball branch of the aforementioned FC Omniworld.

Norway

The most notable example is the 1996 move of the ice hockey team Spektrum Flyers from Oslo to Bergen.

Otherwise, team moves are rare, although mergers, for instance of teams of neighboring settlements, are common. Moving has sometimes happened on the top level of women's football. SK Sprint-Jeløy was moved from Jeløy to Moss under the new name FK Athene Moss. Asker Fotball's women's team was absorbed by Stabæk Fotball ahead of the 2009 season. Ahead of the 2010 season Team Strømmen FK (which formerly had been moved from Aurskog-Høland) was absorbed by Lillestrøm SK, and Gjøvik FK absorbed by Raufoss IL.

Poland

  • Olimpia Poznań was moved from Poznań and merged with Lechia Gdańsk in 1995 creating Olimpia-Lechia Gdańsk. It only lasted one season in the top division and by 1997 it was already in the third division. The club tried to rescue its fall through another merger with local club Polonia Gdańsk, in turn dropping Olimpia's heritage and changing its name to Lechia-Polonia Gdańsk, with Antoni Ptak's company as the main sponsor. In 2001 Lechia decided to leave the merger, and started as an independent club from the bottom of the football pyramid as the sole legal and spiritual continuator of BKS Lechia, which folded the merged club in 2002, forcing Polonia to start in a lower league as well.
  • Pogoń Szczecin in 2002 was on the brink of bankruptcy. As a result, fans created a new team on the basis of the reserves in the fourth division. However owner of Piotrcovia Piotrków Trybunalski Antoni Ptak decided to move the team and renamed the club MKS Pogoń Szczecin. The initial distrust was lost when the team performed well and used local players, however halfway through the 2005/2006 season the team started underperforming and Ptak decided to replace almost the entire squad with only Brazilian nationals, making it the "most Brazilian team outside Brazil". Antoni Ptak also built a small training facility in Gutów Mały, meaning the home games were played almost 500 kilometres (310 mi) away from Szczecin. The experiment failed and in 2007 Antoni Ptak moved away from football, leaving the club to be rebuilt on the basis of the 4th division counterpart set up originally by the fans, which acted as the reserve team in the meantime.
  • Prokom Trefl Sopot was a successful basketball team, however it moved from Sopot to Gdynia and was renamed Asseco Prokom Gdynia. A phoenix club was set up straight away in 2009 called Trefl Sopot.
  • Sokół Pniewy was moved to Tychy and merged with the local club GKS Tychy, which resulted in unorthodox renaming, first to Sokół Pniewy in Tychy, then from January 9, 1996 Sokół Tychy. After 26 games in its 2nd season the new fused club folded, leaving the reserve team Sokół Pniewy in the fourth division to become its senior team, whereas GKS Tychy started anew.
  • WKS Zawisza Bydgoszcz was founded in Koszalin, however a year later in 1947, being an army club, when the army offices moved to Bydgoszcz so did the team, however up until that point the team only played friendly matches.[51]
  • Zawisza Bydgoszcz SA was a club that was created when Kujawiak Włocławek were moved to Bydgoszcz and renamed by Hydrobudowa, their owners. The original WKS Zawisza Bydgoszcz continued playing in the fourth division,[52] however the new club had a very similar logo and an identical name, resulting in an unusual situation of having two almost identical clubs playing in 2 different divisions; for the purposes disambiguation, the new merged Zawisza was called Zawisza Bydgoszcz (2) by official sources and Kujawiak/Zawisza or Hydrobudowa Bydgoszcz by many others. As a result of the merger, Kujawiak, Zawisza and supporters all over the country boycotted the moved team.[53] The reserve team continued to play under the name Kujawiak Włocławek in the Fourth Polish league. The club folded in 2007[54] as a result of serious corruption allegations[55] and widespread condemnation.[56]

Romania

  • Astra Ploiești was moved in September 2012 from Ploiești to Giurgiu becoming Astra Giurgiu.
  • CS Buftea was founded in 2005 after a merger between a local team from Buftea, which was playing in the fourth division and Cimentul Fieni, being located only 20 km north-west of Bucharest, in the town of Buftea, Ilfov County. The club had originally a red, white and blue combination of colours and played its home matches on Orășenesc Stadium. In 2013–2016, the club moved three times. First time in 2013, the club was bought by the local authorities from Clinceni, 30 km away from Buftea, renamed as FC Clinceni and re-branded, then one year later, businessman Constantin Moroianu bought the club, moved it to Pitești, renamed it as Academica Argeș, changing its colours and logo. After another year the club was moved again to Clinceni, renamed as Academica Clinceni, changed its colours back in black and blue and also the logo. After financial problems, the club started in 2017 a collaboration with FCSB, having some young players on loan from the multiple champions of Romania.
  • Damila Măciuca was founded in 2010. In the summer of 2013 after the over average performance of the team and also the ranking that was with 3 places and 10 points over CSM Râmnicu Vâlcea, county's first team, appeared the idea that Damila should be the new team of the city of Râmnicu Vâlcea.[57] After several rounds of negotiations Daniel Nițu (Damila's owner) and Cătălin Rufă (CSM's owner) changed the camps, so Rufă became the new owner of the white and greens and also the squads were changed between them.[58] After the transaction Rufă has received the financial support of the Reșița Municipality, with the condition that the club must change its name, headquarters, colors and stadium. So in the summer of 2013 Damila Măciuca was renamed as CSM Metalul Reșița, moved from Măciuca to Reșița, their colors were changed from white and green in red and black, the traditional colours of Reșița and the Damila Stadium has been replaced by Mircea Chivu Stadium. Though sustained at first by Guardia Rosso-Nera, CSM Școlar Reșița supporters, club that was at that time in a hard financial situation, the relationship between the owner and the supporters chilled subsequently and they went back to supporting their original club, CSM.[59] Also in the summer of 2015 the relations between Reșița Municipality and Cătălin Rufă have become increasingly distant.[60] In the summer of 2016 Snagov Commune was interested in supporting the team, of course there was a new move in the business, this time from Reșița to Snagov.[61] With the financial support of Snagov Commune the club changed its name again in the summer of 2017, this time from CSM Metalul Reșița to CS Sportul Snagov and their colours were changed from red and black in red and blue.[62] In February 2018 it was announced that Sportul will play in the second part of the championship on Dumitru Mătărău Stadium from Ștefăneștii de Jos due to the changing of the surface from Voința Stadium, a pitch with major problems in the past, in terms of quality.[63][64][65]
  • Foresta Fălticeni was founded in 1954 in Fălticeni under the name of Avântul Fălticeni. In 1997, the club was moved to Suceava after it won the promotion to the Divizia A for the first time in history. The main reason for the move was the inadequate state of Foresta's stadium in Fălticeni, which was both small and had a cracked stand. Another reason for the move was, that the main team in the city, CSM Suceava had failed to achieve any notable performances during the previous decade. Before it was dissolved in 2003 it moved back to Fălticeni to play the last matches in its history there.[66][67][68]
  • Petrolul Ploiești was founded in Bucharest in 1924. They moved to Ploiești in 1952.
  • Unirea Tărlungeni in the summer of 2016 was moved from Tărlungeni to Ștefăneștii de Jos.[69] After the move, the team faced financial problems due to non-involvement of Ștefăneștii de Jos Municipality, one of its new owners. During the winter break all the players terminated their contracts and left the team. Despite the efforts to maintain the club, Unirea Tărlungeni withdrew from Liga II in February 2017.[70]

Russia

Slovakia

  • In 2011, the Kontinental Hockey League, based in Russia but also including teams from several other post-Soviet states, expanded outside the former Soviet Union for the first time, adding the Slovakian team Lev Poprad. The team was purchased by Czech interests after the 2011–12 season; the new owners folded the club and replaced it with a similarly named team, the Prague-based Lev Praha. Although the two Lev teams are technically separate corporate entities, this situation can be viewed as an effective move; not only are the team names similar, but the new owners retained much of the Poprad roster.

Spain

Sweden

Although no major moves have occurred, two clubs from the capital Stockholm have changed municipality (AIK) and acquired another team into their club colours (Hammarby Ishockey) respectively. AIK was formed in Stockholm in 1891 but then moved to neighbouring Solna in 1937. Hammarby IF had an ice hockey section that was shut down in 2008. In 2013, the club Bajen Fans Hockey then changed their name to Hammarby Ishockey,[72] thereby becoming one of very few clubs in Sweden that have acquired another club and made it their own. Also see AFC Eskilstuna.

Switzerland

In Switzerland only one move has happened so far. The Zürich-based football club Grasshoppers Zürich under company name "Die Neue Grasshopper Fussball AG" controversially moved their headquarters in 2005 from the city itself to Niederhasli. The addition of Zurich was remained in the club's name and the team is still playing in the city of Zurich at Letzigrund (the home stadium of their old rival FC Zürich, a temporary measure while Stadion Zürich is being built). All other teams of the club are playing Niederhasli.

The fans of Grasshoppers Club protested the move, claiming the club has lost part of its identity.

Turkey

Ukraine

  • Lokomotyv Donetsk was created sometime around 1957 and initially represented city of Artemivsk. After being promoted to the Soviet Class B in 1958, the club moved to Stalino (now Donetsk) in mid-season.[73] The club existed until 1973 when it relegated from the Soviet Second League and was dissolved.
  • Shakhtar Shakhtarsk in 1996 became a new club Metalurh Donetsk which became based in Donetsk, and based on the senior squad of Shakhtar. The youth squad of Shakhtar Shakhtarsk joined the youth academy of Shakhtar Donetsk, while other players who were not suited for the club formed new team Fortuna Shakhtarsk and until 1999 were playing in a town of Kontarne, now a part of the Shakhtarsk municipality.
  • SKA Kyiv in 1972 the team moved to Chernihiv and changed its name to SK Chernigov but had moved back to Kyiv in 1976 as SKА Kyiv.

Due to the War in Donbass, several clubs have temporarily moved for an indefinite period of time due to safety concerns. Shakhtar Sverdlovsk and Avanhard Kramatorsk could not find alternative venues and withdrew from all competitions as a result. Those teams that moved continue to participate in all competitions:

Due to the 2014 Crimean Conflict initially none of the Crimean clubs, Tytan Armyansk, Tavriya Simferopol, Zhemchuzhina Yalta or FC Sevastopol were able to move due to the Annexation of Crimea by the Russian Federation, and subsequently they all disbanded or became dormant. However some have managed to re-establish themselves:

United Kingdom

Latin America

Team moves in Latin America occur very rarely for the established teams with established bases. Smaller teams, either small team from large agglomerations or provincial teams with little or no fan base frequently move in search of a larger market and/or more affordable facilities, as frequently, there are only large complexes available with a necessity to groundshare with a larger club. The practice is considered anathema.[15]

Brazil

The first move of a first division football team was in 2010. Grêmio Barueri moved to Presidente Prudente, becoming Grêmio Prudente, only to return as Grêmio Barueri in the middle of 2011.

Esporte Clube Dom Pedro II,[80] named after Pedro II of Brazil was founded on February 22, 1996, in Guará. The club moved to Núcleo Bandeirante in 2009, and it was renamed to Esporte Clube Dom Pedro Bandeirante. On November 1, 2016, after achieving promotion back to the first division of the Campeonato Brasiliense, the club changed its name to Real Futebol Clube and moved to Brasília. Ahead of the 2020 campaign, the club again changed name to Real Brasília Futebol Clube.

In other sports, such as volleyball, basketball or futsal, moving more common, although it does not occur frequently.

Chile

  • Badminton F.C., was a football club based in the city of Santiago, until 1969, when they moved to Curicó, before folding in 1972.
  • C.D. Green Cross, founded on June 27, 1916, were a sports club that were based in the city of Santiago until 1965, when they moved to Temuco, where then they merged with the local football team Deportes Temuco. Since when they were known as Green Cross Temuco until 1985 when the club changed its name to its current one.

Colombia

In Colombia historic teams from first division are rarely moved, but newer teams created in second division are often moved from city to city looking for a responding fan base.

Costa Rica

Honduras

  • Real Maya were founded on April 7, 1985. They played in first division for many season under many different names, Real Maya being the most used. In the 2002/2003 season they took the place of Real Comayagua.[90] They were named Real Patepluma and moved to Santa Bárbara for their final two seasons in the top tier of Honduran football before being excluded from the league.[91]

Mexico

Liga MX has a relegation system but its teams have some territorial rights recognized, perhaps due to U.S. influence as many league matches are aired in the U.S., where only traditional top-flight teams are perceived to most effectively reach the immigrant fan-base.

Peru

In Peru several teams have had to use already built large stadiums, including ones in the interior of the country, to be able to participate in Peruvian Primera División; this includes several teams from the capital, Lima, who have not been able to establish fanbases in their districts due to the required moves.

Venezuela

Asia

Team moves in Asia are done according to the type of sport played and/or the predominant style of league organization, as well as individual economic circumstances. For instance, in Japan there is a difference between Nippon Professional Baseball which is run like MLB, and the J.League which is run like European football leagues.

Club moves are also common when an amateur or semiprofessional club tries to acquire its own facilities to become a professional club, and no money and/or space is available to build their own in a long-established location.

China

Team moves in China are very common, as teams are privately owned or owned by businesses, and there are neither rules regarding moves nor many established fan bases outside of the handful of established top teams:

Association football

Basketball

Hong Kong

India

In 2019, the Delhi Dynamos moved from Delhi to Bhubaneswar, Odisha, and renamed the club Odisha FC.[105]

Association football

The J.League is run similarly to European football leagues. In contrast to the baseball league it has allowed only a few teams to move out of crowded or unprofitable markets:

Baseball

Nippon Professional Baseball is run in similar fashion to MLB and has moved several franchises out of crowded markets. Moves also happened when the teams changed ownership (which also sometimes involved changing the team name).

Kyrgyzstan

Lebanon

Philippines

Association football

Football club moves were frequent in the 1980s and 1990s. South Korea has three national tiers, but as in the North American system, there was initially no promotion or relegation between them.

There were 3 professional football clubs Ilhwa Chunma (currently Seongnam FC), LG Cheetahs (currently FC Seoul), Yukong Elephants (currently Jeju United) in Seoul by 1995. However, due to K League's decentralization policy, these three clubs were forced to move to other cities in 1996, changing their name in the process. These moves are done under the accord that if any of these teams build a football specific stadium in Seoul, they can return there, of which 2 clubs took advantage of. As a result, the following moves occurred:

Other sports

In South Korean major professional sports such as Korea Professional Baseball, Korean Basketball League, V-League, moves were common.

In ice hockey, Mando Winia were a team based in Mok-dong, Seoul, which moved to Anyang, Gyeonggi in 2005 and became Anyang Halla.

Thailand

Africa

South Africa

In South Africa most football clubs are privately owned, and club moves are relatively common. Several clubs, including top division Premier Soccer League clubs have moved and taken on new identities. There are many other cases of South African moves. The ease of selling and buying of club licences make moves common and sometimes difficult to determine what determines a continuation of a relocated club or whether it is an entirely separate new entity.

See also

References

  1. Rosen, Dan (June 24, 2015). "Board of Governors OKs start of expansion process". NHL.com. NHL Enterprises, L.P. Retrieved September 7, 2015.
  2. Muir, Allan (July 21, 2015). "NHL expansion bid results disappoint league, leave Seattle out in cold". Sports Illustrated. Retrieved September 7, 2015.
  3. Bloom, Barry M. (September 29, 2004). "MLB selects D.C. for Expos". MLB.com. MLB Advanced Media. Retrieved February 16, 2019.
  4. "Charlotte Hornets Name Returns to Carolinas". Hornets.com. NBA Media Ventures, LLC. May 20, 2014. Retrieved May 20, 2014.
  5. "Hornets all the buzz in Charlotte". ESPN.com. ESPN Internet Ventures, LLC. Associated Press. May 20, 2014. Retrieved May 23, 2014. [Hornets president and CEO Fred] Whitfield also announced that, in collaboration with the NBA and the Pelicans, all the statistical information, records and history of Charlotte NBA basketball will be restored to the franchise. That means the Hornets will now own and have access to all the historical elements from the recent Bobcats era (2004–14) as well as the original Hornets teams that played in Charlotte....
  6. Rosenthal, Gregg (March 27, 2017). "NFL team owners approve Raiders' move to Las Vegas". NFL.com. NFL Enterprises, LLC. Retrieved March 27, 2017.
  7. "Oakland sues NFL, Raiders over move to Las Vegas". NFL.com. NFL Enterprises, LLC. Associated Press. December 11, 2018. Retrieved February 16, 2019.
  8. Beaton, Andrew (December 11, 2018). "Oakland Files Lawsuit Against Raiders, NFL". The Wall Street Journal. Retrieved December 11, 2018.
  9. "A New Oilers Team Could Hit Houston". The New York Times. February 12, 1998. Retrieved January 5, 2016.
  10. Flores, Lucien (October 30, 2012). "NHL Relocation: 7 Scares That Almost Happened". Bleacher Report. Retrieved January 5, 2016.
  11. "New franchise keeps NZ in A-League". Herald and Weekly Times. March 20, 2007. Retrieved June 5, 2010.
  12. "NZ franchise for A-League". Archived from the original on March 6, 2011. Retrieved March 20, 2007.
  13. "NZ Phoenix to rise in A League". News.com.au. March 28, 2007. Retrieved March 28, 2007.
  14. Wellington Phoenix rises from the ashes, Fox Sports (Australia), March 28, 2007
  15. Stefan Szymanski. National Pastime: How Americans Play Baseball and the Rest of the World plays Soccer. p. 130.
  16. History of Football Club Banants, from fcbanants.com, retrieved May 1, 2009.
  17. Endgültig keine Lizenz für SK Austria Kärnten > Kleine Zeitung
  18. SK Austria Kärnten hat Konkurs angemeldet – oesterreich.ORF.at
  19. "Olimpik" club to be renamed Archived February 25, 2012, at the Wayback Machine
  20. ФК "Олимпик" переименован (in Russian) Archived March 7, 2009, at the Wayback Machine
  21. "Olimpik-Şüvəlan" adını dəyişib, AZAL oldu (in Azerbaijani)
  22. АЗАЛ в премьер-лиге (in Russian)
  23. Perry, Alex (December 19, 2014). "Flying the nest: Wasps, Lord's and ... super-mobile Millwall". ESPN (UK). Retrieved December 21, 2014.
  24. Bouc, František (December 6, 2006). "Dukla Returns". Prague Post. Retrieved June 14, 2013.
  25. Pivoda 2013, p. 99.
  26. Pivoda 2013, p. 100.
  27. Pivoňka, Vladislav (April 2001). "Fotbalová Dukla hraje stále dál…" [Dukla Football still plays on…] (in Czech). Praha 6. Archived from the original on March 3, 2009. Retrieved December 3, 2012.
  28. Včeliš, Michal (November 9, 2010). "Fotbalová Dukla má namířeno do první ligy. Získá zpět ztracenou slávu?" [Dukla football heads to the first league. Will they win back their lost glory?] (in Czech). Mladá fronta DNES. Retrieved June 21, 2011.
  29. Pivoda 2013, p. 128.
  30. "V Českých Budějovicích kvůli sporu o pivo mohou přijít o extraligový hokej" (in Czech). ihned.cz. May 29, 2013. Archived from the original on April 13, 2014. Retrieved July 28, 2013.
  31. Tuniz, Davide (June 6, 2013). "The War of the Beers". eurohockey.com. Retrieved July 28, 2013.
  32. "Hradec Králové schválil přesun HC Mountfield" (in Czech). ceskatelevize.cz. June 18, 2013. Retrieved July 28, 2013.
  33. Tuniz, Davide (June 29, 2013). "HC Mountfield definitely moves to Hradec Kralove". eurohockey.com. Retrieved July 28, 2013.
  34. "Evian-Thonon-Gaillard au Stade de Genève, Servette ne peut pas s'y opposer". Tribune de Geneve. TDG. April 15, 2010. Retrieved May 20, 2010.
  35. "Servette FC et le Stade de Genève". Servette FC. Servette Football Club. April 15, 2010. Archived from the original on June 17, 2011. Retrieved May 21, 2010.
  36. "Evian-Thonon-Gaillard se rapproche du Stade de Genève!". Tribune de Geneve. TDG. May 20, 2010. Retrieved May 20, 2010.
  37. "Evian se rapproche de Genève". France Football. May 20, 2010. Archived from the original on May 23, 2010. Retrieved May 20, 2010.
  38. "L'ETGFC jouera à Annecy". France Football. France Football. June 8, 2010. Archived from the original on June 11, 2010. Retrieved June 8, 2010.
  39. http://futbolgrad.com/football-abkhazia-three-stories-gagra/
  40. http://futbolgrad.com/spartaki-tskhinvali-georgias-football-memorial-south-ossetia/
  41. "La storia" (in Italian). Lupa Roma F.C. 2014 [circa]. Archived from the original on March 21, 2016. Retrieved September 27, 2016.
  42. "Lupa Roma" (in Italian). Lega-Pro.com. 2016 [circa]. Archived from the original on September 30, 2016. Retrieved September 27, 2016.
  43. "Lupa Roma, nessuna iscrizione per dilettanti e giovanili" (in Italian).
  44. "Who dropped the ball when it came to protecting our sporting heritage?". Sunday Tribune. December 3, 2006. Archived from the original on March 8, 2016. Retrieved February 4, 2009.
  45. Rice, Eoghan (2005). "The Sale of Milltown". We Are Rovers. Nonsuch. p. 148. ISBN 1-84588-510-4. The Supporters Club called for a boycott, which was observed by the vast majority of Rovers fans.
  46. "Ex-Hoops hero Byrne saddened by plight of his former club". Archived from the original on October 23, 2012. Retrieved February 4, 2009.
  47. "Wednesday, July 10, 1996 – Page 16". Irish Times. Retrieved February 5, 2009.
  48. ЧЕМПИОНАТ КАЗАХСТАНА ПО ФУТБОЛУ – 2009. ПЕРВАЯ ЛИГА
  49. Virsliga table 1996 at RSSSF.com. Note E explains the relocation to Riga. Retrieved November 30, 2006
  50. "Oficialu. "Trakai" tampa "Riteriais"". fkriteriai.lt (in Lithuanian). February 19, 2019. Retrieved March 6, 2019.
  51. http://www.zawiszafans.pl/klub/historia
  52. http://bydgoszcz.gazeta.pl/bydgoszcz/1,35591,3095744.html
  53. http://zawiszafans.net/news/289_JEDNAK_ZAWISZAHYDROBUDOWA_BYDGOSZCZ_.html
  54. http://www.90minut.pl/news.php?id=520821
  55. "Archived copy". Archived from the original on July 7, 2012. Retrieved July 7, 2012.CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link)
  56. "Archived copy". Archived from the original on July 18, 2012. Retrieved July 18, 2012.CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link)
  57. Niculescu dezvăluie noua denumire a Damilei: "O spun în premieră". liga2.prosport.ro (in Romanian)
  58. Tranzacţia dintre Niţu şi Rufă, votată în unanimitate de CL. liga2.prosport.ro (in Romanian)
  59. Guardia Rosso-Nero, alături de Sorin Ciobanu în conflictul cu Rufă. Suporterii reşiţeni i-au arătat spatele patronului Metalului. liga2.prosport.ro (in Romanian)
  60. Schimb de cluburi între patronii din liga a doua! Dispare Damila Măciuca. digisport.ro (in Romanian)
  61. Ca la nebuni! Rufă a mutat Metalul Reșița la Snagov, primarul Popa îl avertizează să readucă echipa în Valea Domanului!. expressdebanat.ro (in Romanian)
  62. FRF a acceptat-o pe Metalul Reşiţa în Liga 2, club care de astăzi îşi schimbă denumirea. Programul competiţional stabilit cu 20 de echipe rămâne acelaşi. liga2.prosport.ro (in Romanian)
  63. Ferfelea, printre marcatorii Sportului Snagov în amicalul câştigat înainte de reluarea Ligii 2. liga2.prosport.ro (in Romanian)
  64. "Orezărie" la Snagov – Luceafărul. Bihorenii au câştigat un meci disputat în mocirlă. digi24.ro (in Romanian)
  65. Orezărie, nu fotbal! Sportul Snagov a câştigat meciul cu ASU Politehnica, desfăşurat pe un teren într-o stare incredibilă. Timişorenii au refuzat amânarea meciului. liga2.prosport.ro (in Romanian)
  66. http://www.rsssf.com/tablesr/roemfound.html
  67. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=vsnVwqGp7NY
  68. http://www.romaniansoccer.ro/clubs_2/foresta_suceava/foresta_suceava.shtml
  69. http://www.ilfovsport.ro/exclusiv-stefanestiul-are-o-noua-echipa-in-liga-a-2-a/
  70. http://liga2.prosport.ro/seria-1/conducerea-frf-si-reprezentantii-cluburilor-din-liga-2-s-au-intalnit-in-weekend-la-cheile-gradistei-subiectele-care-au-fost-puse-in-discutie-16164758
  71. "Desaparece el BM Atlético". MARCA.com. July 10, 2013. Retrieved April 17, 2014.
  72. "Hammarby Hockey, publiksveket och konkursen". Retrieved October 2, 2013.
  73. 1958 Soviet Class B season.
  74. http://www.profootball.ua/blog/991.html
  75. Champions League – Shakhtar stadium hit by explosions Archived August 26, 2014, at the Wayback Machine
  76. Near miss for young girl at Donetsk stadium as blast hits
  77. "Таврия" и "Севастополь" прекратили свое существование [Tavriya and Sevastopol terminated their existence] (in Russian). Sport Express in Ukraine. June 3, 2014. Retrieved June 4, 2014.
  78. Ukraine trying to revive Crimean champion football club, USA Today (June 19, 2015)
  79. (in Ukrainian) Tavriya added to Ukraininan Amateur League
  80. Rodolfo Rodrigues (2009). Escudos dos Times do Mundo Inteiro. Panda Books. p. 45.
  81. ""Las Águilas Doradas fueron expulsadas de Itagüí", Fernando Salazar" ["The "Golden Eagles" were expelled from Itagüí", Fernando Salazar]. Win Sports. Retrieved July 14, 2014.
  82. "De manera unánime, la DIMAYOR autorizó a Águilas Doradas jugar en Pereira" [Unanimously, DIMAYOR authorized Águilas Doradas to play at Pereira]. Win Sports. Retrieved July 15, 2014.
  83. "Águilas ya tiene 'nido': jugará en Rionegro". Futbolred.com (in Spanish). March 18, 2015.
  84. "Centauros ya no es de Villavicencio y ahora es de Popayán" [Centauros is no longer from Villavicencio and now it is from Popayán]. Antena 2. Archived from the original on March 9, 2016. Retrieved February 15, 2016.
  85. "Archived copy". Archived from the original on January 21, 2015. Retrieved June 27, 2014.CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link)
  86. Alejandro Fonseca Hidalgo (January 12, 2010). "Otro nombre y mismas deudas" (in Spanish). diarioextra.com. Archived from the original on August 28, 2010. Retrieved September 13, 2011.
  87. Brujas es un hervidero Trasladarse de Nicoya a Escazú aumentó penurias a jugadores Nación (in Spanish)
  88. Brujas a Desamparados Nación (in Spanish)
  89. Honduras 2002/03 – RSSSF
  90. Honduras 2003/04 – RSSSF
  91. "China League 1996". rsssf.com. June 19, 2003. Retrieved September 17, 2014.
  92. "中国球队消失多数因为钱 汉军退赛八一受困体制". sports.sohu.com. November 13, 2012. Retrieved September 17, 2014.
  93. 关于湖北华凯尔工商迁移并更名的公示 (in Chinese)
  94. 2008年中国足球协会乙级联赛(确定) 江西球迷论坛(南昌八一衡源足球俱乐部唯一指定官方球迷论坛) – powered by phpwind.net Archived May 26, 2008, at the Wayback Machine
  95. 东进更名主场落户呼和浩特 老总:只是换了个名字
  96. 昆明锐龙足球俱乐部成立 云南人迎来职业足球队(in Chinese)
  97. 山西嘉怡足球俱乐部在并成立 Archived November 4, 2014, at the Wayback Machine(in Chinese)
  98. 关于太原中优嘉怡足球俱乐部有限公司工商迁移并更名的公示 (in Chinese)
  99. 拖欠安徽九方540万元转让费 天津润宇隆处境难
  100. 沈阳沈北足球队成立 收购天津润宇隆征战中甲
  101. 润宇隆已更名沈阳沈北 队员沈阳报到开始新生活 (in Chinese)
  102. 毅腾证实主场迁离大连 近卫军时隔三年重返冰城 at sports.163.com. April 1, 2011. Retrieved April 10, 2013
  103. 重庆翱龙正式变更为北京控股男篮 (in Chinese)
  104. "ISL: Delhi Dynamos relocate base to Odisha | Goal.com". www.goal.com. Retrieved July 12, 2020.
  105. "Kaya FC signs agreement for transfer to Iloilo". Fox Sports Philippines. February 6, 2018. Retrieved February 6, 2018.
  106. Co, Adrian Stewart (February 2, 2018). "Kaya FC makes Iloilo home field". Panay News. Retrieved February 2, 2018.
  107. Ferer, Cindy (February 6, 2018). "Kaya Futbol Club chooses Iloilo as its new home court". Philippine News Agency. Retrieved February 6, 2018.
  108. "Kaya FC is now Kaya FC–Makati, makes UMak its home stadium". Una Kaya. January 11, 2016. Retrieved January 11, 2017.
  109. 군경기단체 국군체육부대로 통합 팀 명칭 상무, 마스코트는 불사조로 (in Korean). Dong-a Ilbo. January 11, 1984.
  110. 육,해,공 3군통합 스포츠팀 상무 창단 (in Korean). Maeil Business Newspaper. January 12, 1984.
  111. https://www.facebook.com/HellenicFootballClub/posts/1106847482726750
  112. Dawid Van Lill (2004). Van Lill se Suid-Afrikaanse trivia. page 137. ISBN 9781868729272.
  113. "Platinum Stars club history". Archived from the original on June 10, 2010. Retrieved December 9, 2010.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.