Full name | TTM Thailand Tobacco Monopoly Football Club สโมสรฟุตบอลยาสูบ |
---|---|
Nickname(s) |
Cigarette-smoker (สิงห์อมควัน) |
Founded | 1963 |
Dissolved | 2015 |
Ground |
Lad Krabang 54 Stadium Bangkok, Thailand |
Capacity | 2,000 |
Thailand Tobacco Monopoly Football Club (Thai: สโมสรฟุตบอลยาสูบ), commonly known as the TTM FC, was a Thai football club originally based in Bangkok. The Club, founded in 1963, was one of the oldest clubs in Thailand. Their biggest achievement was winning the Thai Premier League title in 2005.
The club was subject to a number of renamings and moves from 2009: first to TTM Samut Sakhon F.C, then to TTM Phichit for the 2010 season, whereupon the team re-located to the Northern province. In 2012 the club once again relocated to Chiang Mai and would be known as TTM Chiangmai. In 2013 they moved to Lopburi, then in 2014 they returned to their original home of Bangkok. In 2015 they finished 19th and were relegated to the Regional League. The club dissolved in 2015.
Thailand Tobacco Monopoly football club were formed in 1963 as the works teams of the company of the same name. They have been ever presents in the structure of Thai football since the game became professional in the 1996-97 season.
TTM as the team were more commonly known began life in the professional era in the 1996–97 Thailand Soccer League with 17 other teams. As this was the first season to use a traditional league format, it was determined that the bottom six teams would be relegated to form a new feeder league. TTM were one of the bottom 6 teams that would be relegated. They would not come back to the Thai Premier League until the 2001–02 Thai League season when they won their first silverware, the Thai Division 1 League.
On their return to the TPL, they comfortably found themselves as a mid table outfit, finishing in 8th position in their first three seasons. Although comfortably above the relegation zone, they were somewhat rather behind the leading pack.
In the 2004–05 Thai League TTM were to win their first and only league title. They won 9, drew 7 and lost 2 matches over the season.
In July 2005, the team went quietly confident into the ASEAN Club Championship, a competition for league winners of the ASEAN region. TTM were drawn into Group B with the host club DPMM of Brunei, Tampines Rovers of Singapore and the Finance and Revenue team of Myanmar.