Aalesunds FK
Full name | Aalesunds Fotballklubb | ||
---|---|---|---|
Nickname(s) | Tangotrøyene (Tangoshirts), Tango, De oransje og blå (Orange and blue) | ||
Short name | AaFK | ||
Founded | 25 June 1914 | ||
Ground |
Color Line Stadion Ålesund | ||
Capacity | 10,778 | ||
Chairman | Reidar Mjelde | ||
Manager | Trond Fredriksen | ||
League | Tippeligaen | ||
2016 | Tippeligaen, 9th | ||
Website | Club home page | ||
| |||
Aalesunds Fotballklubb is a Norwegian football club from the city of Ålesund, currently playing in the Norwegian Premier League. The club was founded on 25 June 1914. As of 2004, the football club had 835 members and several teams on both professional and amateur levels. These teams are the 1st and 2nd teams, junior team, and also several age-specific teams.
Aalesunds F.K. played their home matches at Kråmyra Stadium until the 2005 season, when they relocated to the new Color Line Stadium with an approximate capacity of 11,000 people. Boosted by the new stadium, recent success and general increasing attendance in Norway, Aalesund has gone from attracting crowds of approximately 1,000 to regularly selling out their stadium in only a few years. Their average attendance of 9,943 in Adeccoligaen 2006 became the new record for attendances at the second tier of the Norwegian league system.
The local supporter club for AaFK is called "Stormen", or "The Storm", with about 2000 members.
In 2009 the club won the Norwegian Cup for the first time in its history. They beat rival Molde FK in the Final, and thereby qualified for participation in the UEFA Europa League. Aalesund also won the 2011 Cup Final, where they beat SK Brann.
Achievements
Famous former players
Liverpool, Roma, Fulham and Norway player John Arne Riise started and ended his career in the club, as did his younger brother Bjørn Helge Riise.
West Bromwich Albion goalkeeper and Denmark international Anders Lindegaard played two seasons for the club, in which he won the Norwegian Cup, and made his debut for the Denmark national team
Jonathan Parr played for Crystal Palace and Ipswich Town, and he currently plays for the Norwegian national team.
The club also has several national players for countries such as Finland, Costa Rica, Estonia and Jamaica.
Tor Hogne Aarøy played for the club for nearly a decade (2001–11), and is famous for being the tallest outfield football player in the world, standing at approximately 2.04 m (6 ft 8 1⁄2 in) tall.
Former player and manager Bobby Gould was once signed for the club, but never played because he got signed by Hereford United.
John Arne and Bjørn Helge are now both in the team.
Recent history
- {|class="wikitable"
|-bgcolor="#efefef" ! Season ! ! Pos. ! Pl. ! W ! D ! L ! GS ! GA ! P !Cup !Notes |- |2001 |1. Divisjon |align=right |6 |align=right|30||align=right|13||align=right|8||align=right|9 |align=right|65||align=right|51||align=right|47 |Third round | |- |2002 |1. Divisjon |align=right bgcolor=#DDFFDD| 2 |align=right|30||align=right|19||align=right|7||align=right|4 |align=right|77||align=right|26||align=right|64 |Semifinal |Promoted to the Tippeligaen |- |2003 |Tippeligaen |align=right bgcolor="#FFCCCC"| 13 |align=right|26||align=right|7||align=right|7||align=right|12 |align=right|30||align=right|33||align=right|28 |Quarterfinal |Relegated to the 1. Divisjon |- |2004 |1. Divisjon |align=right bgcolor=#DDFFDD| 2 |align=right|30||align=right|21||align=right|1||align=right|8 |align=right|67||align=right|36||align=right|64 |Third round |Promoted to the Tippeligaen |- |2005 |Tippeligaen |align=right bgcolor="#FFCCCC"| 13 |align=right|26||align=right|6||align=right|9||align=right|11 |align=right|30||align=right|42||align=right|27 |Fourth round |Relegated to the 1. Divisjon |- |2006 |1. Divisjon |align=right bgcolor=#DDFFDD| 2 |align=right|30||align=right|17||align=right|9||align=right|4 |align=right|71||align=right|35||align=right|60 |Fourth round |Promoted to the Tippeligaen |- |2007 |Tippeligaen |align=right |11 |align=right|26||align=right|9||align=right|3||align=right|14 |align=right|49||align=right|56||align=right|30 |Fourth round | |- |2008 |Tippeligaen |align=right |13 |align=right|26||align=right|7||align=right|4||align=right|15 |align=right|29||align=right|42||align=right|25 |Fourth round | |- |2009 |Tippeligaen |align=right |13 |align=right|30||align=right|9||align=right|9||align=right|12 |align=right|34||align=right|43||align=right|36 |bgcolor=gold|Winner | |- |2010 |Tippeligaen |align=right |4 |align=right|30||align=right|14||align=right|5||align=right|11 |align=right|46||align=right|37||align=right|47 |Third round |Europa League Third qualifying round |- |2011 |Tippeligaen |align=right |9 |align=right|30||align=right|12||align=right|7||align=right|11 |align=right|36||align=right|38||align=right|43 |bgcolor=gold|Winner |Europa League Play-off round |- |2012 |Tippeligaen |align=right |11 |align=right|30||align=right|9||align=right|11||align=right|10 |align=right|40||align=right|41||align=right|38 |Fourth round |Europa League Third qualifying round |- |2013 |Tippeligaen |align=right |4 |align=right|30||align=right|14||align=right|7||align=right|9 |align=right|55||align=right|44||align=right|49 |Third round | |- |2014 |Tippeligaen |align=right |7 |align=right|30||align=right|11||align=right|8||align=right|11 |align=right|40||align=right|39||align=right|41 |Fourth round | |- |2015 |Tippeligaen |align=right |10 |align=right|30||align=right|11||align=right|5||align=right|14 |align=right|42||align=right|57||align=right|38 |Third round | |- |2016 |Tippeligaen |align=right |9 |align=right|30||align=right|12||align=right|6||align=right|12 |align=right|46||align=right|51||align=right|42 |Third round | |}[1]
European record
UEFA Europa League
Season | Competition | Round | Country | Club | Home | Away | Aggregate |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
2010–11 | UEFA Europa League | Q3 | Motherwell | 1–1 | 0–3 | 1–4 | |
2011–12 | UEFA Europa League | Q1 | Neath | 4–1 | 2–0 | 6–1 | |
Q2 | Ferencváros | 3–1(aet) | 1–2 | 4–3 | |||
Q3 | Elfsborg | 4–0 | 1–1 | 5–1 | |||
Play-off | AZ | 2–1 | 0–6 | 2–7 | |||
2012–13 | UEFA Europa League | Q2 | Tirana | 5–0 | 1–1 | 6–1 | |
Q3 | APOEL | 0–1 | 1–2 | 1–3 | |||
Rivalries
Rival football clubs in the city include Herd, Rollon, Skarbøvik and Spjelkavik, with Molde and Hødd traditionally being the main regional rivals. Hødd has been less competitive with AaFK in recent years, as they have not been in the same division for some time. More recent rivalries have centred on Molde and Strømsgodset, and to some extent Brann.
The club's supporters enjoy a good relationship with supporters of Oslo club Vålerenga, and it is not uncommon for supporters of one club to support the other in competitions where only one team participates. In the 2011 game against Neath in Wales, some supporters of 2010's Europa League opponents Motherwell also made their way to support the club.
Current squad
As 27 September 2016
Note: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.
|
|
For season transfers, see transfers winter 2016–17 and transfers summer 2017.
Coaching staff
- Head coach: Trond Fredriksen
- Assistant coach: Karl Oskar Fjørtoft
- Goalkeeper coach: Frank Mathiesen
- Physical trainer: Bjørn Erik Melland
- Youth coach: Jan Erik Sørnes
- Youth coach: Erling Ytterland
Managers
- Bobby Gould
- Egil "Drillo" Olsen (1989)
- Eivind Syversen (19??–93)
- Knut Torbjørn Eggen (1994–96)
- Bård Wiggen (July 1, 1997 – June 30, 1999)
- Geir Hansen (2000)
- Ivar Morten Normark (Jan 1, 2002 – Dec 31, 2005)
- Per Joar Hansen (Jan 1, 2006 – Dec 31, 2007)
- Sören Åkeby (Jan 1, 2008 – Aug 31, 2008)
- Kjetil Rekdal (Sept 5, 2008 – Nov 26, 2012)
- Jan Jönsson (Jan 8, 2013 – Dec 31, 2014)
- Harald Aabrekk (Jan 1, 2015 – Apr 28, 2015)
- Trond Fredriksen (Apr 28, 2015–)
References
- ↑ "Norsk & Internasjonal Fotballstatistikk" (in Norwegian).