From Champions of the Deccan to a Delhi File Transfer.
Hyderabad FC didn’t die. It was quietly transferred: zip-filed, renamed, and uploaded to a location near Noida. Founded in 2019, born from the ashes of FC Pune City, the club began as an afterthought and ended as a cautionary tale. In between, though, it gave Indian football one of its most beautifully built sides.
The beginning was messy. The club was co-owned by Varun Tripuraneni, Vijay Madduri, and actor Rana Daggubati, and projected as the symbol of Hyderabad’s football revival. Phil Brown at the helm, a team stitched together from leftovers, a stadium half asleep in Gachibowli. Their first season was a trainwreck. Bottom of the table, 2 wins and 12 losses in an eighteen-match-long season. But then came Manolo Márquez, the Spaniard who didn’t sell dreams; he built systems. With a mix of Indian core and foreign brains, Hyderabad turned from comic relief into tactical poetry. In 2020, the Spanish tactician transformed the struggling side into one of the most organized outfits in the ISL. Hyderabad missed the playoffs by a whisker. However, they impressed their fans and pundits.
The 2021-22 ISL season was their magnum opus. The Nizams pressed with precision, defended like their rent depended on it. Eleven wins in the league phase out of the 20 matches and when the final whistle blew in Fatorda, they had conquered the league. The 3-1 penalty win over Kerala Blasters was peak Hyderabad. They were organized, ruthless, and totally unfilmy. Laxmikant Kattimani turned into a superhero that night, saving penalties like his career depended on it (which, let’s be honest, it did). Ogbeche became the club’s prophet: zero drama, 100 percent efficiency.
Hyderabad FC were everything Indian football needed. They nurtured Yasir, Akash Mishra, Asish Rai, and Poojary, proving that local talent could play possession football without panicking.
Their home, the GMC Balayogi Stadium, was more than concrete. It was a memory machine. A fanbase that called itself Deccan Legion, loud, loyal, and painfully self-aware that heartbreak was part of the deal. The yellow-and-black flags, the chants that echoed through the Gachibowli, gave an impression that something real was growing.

They even had European friends. Borussia Dortmund and Marbella FC signed partnerships, making Hyderabad sound like a football laboratory rather than an ISL franchise. Their crest, the Charminar’s minarets and Koh-i-Noor’s sparkle, was a promise that the old Hyderabad footballing soul reborn in modern skin.
By 2023-24, the club was collapsing under unpaid wages, ownership squabbles, and a talent exodus. The B.C. Jindal Group arrived with cash and calm, but the damage was terminal. And that’s that.
Hyderabad FC, the team that went from a joke to a champion, will soon exist only in flashbacks and fan chants. They didn’t just play football; they gave it a spine. Their rise was genius. Their fall? Bureaucratic inevitability.
So here’s to the Nizams, the club that made yellow beautiful, defended like poets, and reminded us that success in Indian football is a temporary privilege. Rest in peace, Hyderabad FC.
The Deccan will remember. Delhi probably won’t.