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Stjarnan

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Stjarnan.
Full nameUngmennafélagið Stjarnan
Founded1960
GroundSamsungvöllur
Garðabær, Iceland
Capacity1,000
ChairmanJóhann Ingimundarson
ManagerRúnar Páll Sigmundsson
LeagueÚrvalsdeild
20154th
WebsiteClub website
Current season

Ungmennafélagið Stjarnan is an Icelandic sports club specialising in football, located in Garðabær,

They won the promotion from the 1. deild karla in 2008. Stjarnan won the Úrvalsdeild for the first time in 2014.

History

The association was founded in 1960. The men's division played in 1997 in the first Icelandic League (then Landsbankadeild) and managed the 2006 promotion to the second highest Icelandic league. In 2008 men's reached the summit and thus to play in Úrvalsdeild since 2009.

The club gained worldwide fame when their elaborate goal celebrations, including highly choreographed depictions of landing a fish, diving, a human toilet, a human bicycle, and a Rambo shooting spree, were published widely across the Internet and football television shows.[1]

In the 2014–15 Europa League, they reached the play-off rounds after beating Scottish club Motherwell and Polish team Lech Poznań, before Italian giants Inter Milan denied them a place in the group stages.

First-team squad

As of 5 January 2016

Note: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.

No. Pos. Nation Player
2 DF Iceland ISL Brynjar Gudjónsson
3 DF Iceland ISL Aron Rúnarsson Heiðdal
4 DF Iceland ISL Jóhann Laxdal
6 MF Iceland ISL Þorri Geir Rúnarsson
7 MF Iceland ISL Atli Jóhannsson
9 DF Iceland ISL Daniel Laxdal
10 FW Iceland ISL Veigar Páll Gunnarsson (vice-captain)
11 FW Iceland ISL Arnar Már Björgvinsson
12 MF Iceland ISL Heiðar Ægisson
13 GK Iceland ISL Arnar Darri Pétursson
14 DF Iceland ISL Hörður Árnason
16 FW Iceland ISL Guðjón Baldvinsson
17 FW Iceland ISL Ólafur Karl Finsen
18 FW Iceland ISL Jón Arnar Barðdal
20 FW Iceland ISL Atli Freyr Ottesen
21 MF Iceland ISL Snorri Páll Blöndal
No. Pos. Nation Player
22 DF Iceland ISL Thórhallur Kári Knútsson
23 MF Iceland ISL Halldór Orri Björnsson
25 GK Iceland ISL Sveinn Sigurður Jóhannesson
26 FW Iceland ISL Kristófer Konrádsson
30 FW Iceland ISL Kári Pétursson
GK Iceland ISL Gudjón Orri Sigurjónsson
DF Iceland ISL Brynjar Már Björnsson
DF Iceland ISL Atli Freyr Pálsson
DF Iceland ISL Baldur Sigurðsson
DF Iceland ISL Grétar Sigfinnur Sigurdarson
MF Iceland ISL Jón Arnar Barddal
MF Iceland ISL Aron Heiddal
MF Iceland ISL Eyjólfur Héðinsson
MF Iceland ISL Hilmar Árni Halldórsson
FW Iceland ISL Aevar Ingi Jóhannesson
FW Iceland ISL Ólafur Karl Finsen

Managers

  • Iceland Olafur Thor Gudbjörnsson (interim) (Jan 1, 2010 – Dec 31, 2010)
  • Iceland Bjarni Jóhannsson (Jan 1, 2010 – Dec 31, 2012)
  • Iceland Logi Ólafsson (Jan 1, 2013 – Oct 16, 2013)
  • Iceland Rúnar Páll Sigmundsson (Jan 1, 2014–)

Women's team

The Stjarnan Women play in Iceland's top division, the women's Úrvalsdeild. In 2011 the team won the championship two weeks before the end.[2] The team also reached the final of the Icelandic Women's Cup in 1993 and 2010, losing 1–3 and 0–1 respectively.[3] The team won the cup eventually in 2012 with a 1–0 win over Valur.[4] In 2013 they won their second league title, winning every single game that season thus not dropping a single point.[5]

Trophies and achievements

Football

Basketball

Volleyball

  • Icelandic Championship (5):
    • 2003, 2004, 2006, 2007, 2008

European record

Season Competition Round Opponent Home Away Aggregate
2014–15 UEFA Europa League 1Q Wales Bangor City 4–0 4–0 8–0
2Q Scotland Motherwell 3–2 (aet) 2–2 5–4
3Q Poland Lech Poznań 1–0 0–0 1–0
PO Italy Inter Milan 0–3 0–6 0–9
2015–16 UEFA Champions League 2Q Scotland Celtic 1–4 0–2 1–6
Notes
  • 1Q: First qualifying round
  • 2Q: Second qualifying round
  • 3Q: Third qualifying round
  • PO: Play-off round

See also

References

  1. ^ Lorna Blount (28 July 2010). "Is This The Best Goal Celebration Ever?". Sky News.
  2. ^ "Stjarnan women win 1st championship" (in Icelandic). stjarnan.is. 31 August 2011. Retrieved 31 August 2011.
  3. ^ "Bikarmeistarar meistaraflokks kvenna" (in Icelandic). ksi.is. Retrieved 9 July 2011.
  4. ^ "Kate Deines and Veronica Perez Win Icelandic Cup".
  5. ^ "Stjarnan storm to Iceland's women's title". freenewspos.com. 29 August 2013. Retrieved 3 September 2013.