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B71 Sandoy

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B71
Full nameSandoyar Ítróttarfelag, B71
Nickname(s)B71
Founded01.01.1970
GroundInni í Dal
Sandur, Faroes
Capacity300 seated
ChairmanFaroe Islands Ragnar Fossdalsá
Head CoachFaroe Islands Eli Hentze
LeagueFaroe Islands 1. deild
20089th

B71 (Sandoy) (B71 being short for Bóltfelagið 1971 - literal translation: "Ball Club 1971") is a Faroese football team, playing their home games Inni í Dal in Sandur, although the team is composed of players from all the towns on the island of Sandoy.

Current squad

As of November 13, 2008 Note: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.

No. Pos. Nation Player
1 GK Serbia SRB Predrag Markovic
22 GK Faroe Islands FRO Wilhelm Gustav Hentze
29 DF Faroe Islands FRO Hanus Clementsen
15 DF Iceland ISL Annel Helgi Daly Finnbogason
6 DF Faroe Islands FRO Allan Tungá
24 DF Faroe Islands FRO Tummas Dam Clementsen
8 DF Faroe Islands FRO Eirikur Poulsen (captain)
14 MF Faroe Islands FRO René Clementsen
9 MF Faroe Islands FRO Tummas Pauli Olsen
25 MF Faroe Islands FRO Mikkjal Hentze
No. Pos. Nation Player
17 MF Iceland ISL Guðbjörn "Gassi" Alexander Sæmundsson
14 MF Faroe Islands FRO Rúni Joensen
15 MF Faroe Islands FRO Jón í Koytu Petersen
13 MF Faroe Islands FRO Mads Hentze
21 MF Faroe Islands FRO Jóhannis Jensen
18 MF Faroe Islands FRO Høgni Midjord
3 MF Faroe Islands FRO Meinhard Winther
10 FW Brazil BRA Clayton Soares
5 FW Faroe Islands FRO Jónsvein Thomsen
7 FW Faroe Islands FRO Símin Hansen


For recent transfers, see List of Faroese football transfers Winter 2008-09

The Club history

Origins (b.1971)

File:Screenshot 30 (B71 youths in the 70's).JPG
B71 youth players in the 1970's

Although B71 is one of the youngest football-teams in the Faroe Islands, there has always been a considerable amount of interest in sports on the particular island from which the team fares. Football had been played well before B71 was established in 1970, but since sand-surfaces were deemed unsuitable for football, a team had yet to be formed.[1]

In the late 60’s, two of the island’s towns, Sandur and Skopun, started to compete. There were no goals, so instead they used two rocks each, representing goalposts. This rivalry between two of Sandoy’s biggest towns went on for several summers, bringing in truckloads of people from Skopun, even though cars had yet to be accessible to the common man.[2]

At around the same time, a new school was being built on Sandoy, where there also would be built a field on which to play sports. As a result of this, people started talking about forming a new team and on New Year’s Day 1970, a sports team was established. The preliminary year, the team was called Sand, since only players from the town of Sandur were fielded. But the following year the team’s name was changed to B71. Since players from the entire island wanted to be a part of the team, it no longer seemed fitting to name the team after just one town.[3]

The first year only two teams were fielded. One senior team, playing in, what in those days was referred to as Meðaldeildin and one boys-team.[4]

The Early Years (1972-1985)

File:Screenshot 10 (1986).JPG
B71 senior player positioning the ball for a corner

In the beginning, B71 took baby-steps towards their eventual greater years in the late 80's, early to mid 90’s. Players like Eli Hentze, Torbjørn Jensen, brothers Róin and Jóan Petur Clementsen, and many more, were still playing in the youth divisions, and wouldn’t feature prominently until they came of age in the second half of the eighties.

Faroese Champions (1986-1989)

Nothing really spectacular happened until B71 became 3. division champions in 1986. Two years later, in 1988, they won the 2. division and then, remarkably, they became 1. division champions in 1989, without losing a single game that year. When all was said and done, B71 ended up with a resounding 31 point tally, as opposed to a more modest 22 points by runners-up HB, who, coincidentally, were pummeled 6-2 in the final match of the season against none other than, B71.

B71 also reached the final of the Faroese Cup in 1989. The initial match resulted in a 1-1 draw, but they ended up losing 2-0 after the replay.

In the space of 3-4 years B71 had gone from being an obscure 3. division side, to Faroese 1. division champions.

Relegation shocker (1990)

For some reason or another, B71 were unable to defend their title the following year. Instead, everything ended in catastrophe. Rather than posing a title challenge, B71 were relegated, forced to spend at least a year in the second-best division. The shame would, however, be short-lived, since B71 immediately bounced back and were promoted the very next year.

The infamous Faroese Cup finals (1993-1994)

File:Screenshot 5.JPG
Páll á Reynatúgvu being handed the 1993 cup-trophy

Although B71 continued to pose a threat in the Faroese top-division during the early 90's, (never finishing lower than 4’th) they never captured the league trophy a second time. Instead, focus turned to the Faroese Cup, where B71 had even greater success during their reign as one of the top sides in Faroese football. B71 reached the finals two times in three years. The first time in 1993 against HB who they beat 2-0, winning the trophy for the first and only time so far, and again the year later, in 1994 where they lost 2-1 against .

Relegation/Promotion saga (1996-2006)

After nearly a decade of mostly good results, it was inevitable, that B71 eventually would have some misfortune. But no one would suspect that misfortune to last another decade. B71 went from finishing 4’th in 1995 to finishing 8’th in 1996, and subsequently finishing bottom of the league a year later. This meant being relegated to the second division, only to gain promotion in 1998.

Unstability tainted B71’s play who, in spite of this, managed to escape relegation for a couple of years, until they finally went down in 2001, after having lost the relegation playoff against Skála.[5][6] B71 would have to wait until the 2006 season before finally gaining promotion again, to, what had since been renamed, Formuladeildin, for the fourth time since 1988.

Rise of the women's game

During this time, when the B71-men dissapointed time and time again, it was the women's team that really shone. Getting the results and winning match after match, was a daily occurrence for the women of B71 through much of the 90's.

The youth squads of B71 also seemed to produce quality players, greatly due to the hiring of youth-coach Martin Kúrberg who stayed with B71 for many years.

Several of the players from the youth-ranks would become regular B71-players, but sadly the women's team, which got off to a stellar start, slowly declined until B71 were unable to enter a team to the Women's competition all together. Efforts have since been made in resurrecting the team, but so far they have been unable to match the success of B71's Golden Girls.

B71’s Resurgency (2007)

B71 were touted as sure relegation candidates before the 2007 season, even before the first match, but halfway through the season, B71 had proven all of the pundits wrong, with sparkling results, such as a 0-3 away win at holders HB, a 1-0 home win against B36 and a 4-2 away thrashing against title-contenders EB/Streymur. At the end of the season B71 were well out of relegation danger and in the safe-zone.[7]

Present Day: Pre-season row and relegation (2008)

File:Wuhuuu.jpg
Magnus Olsen playing against HB in 2007

The 2008 season was kicked off with B71 once again being named underdogs, but this time B71 didn’t provide many surprises. Instead they went on a losing streak, only to salvage the first half of the season on the finishing line, when they played convincingly and won three of their last matches.

B71 had been unsettled pre-season, with the departure and absence of many key-players. The most prominent of which was one Magnus Olsen. There was much controversy and tension between B71 and B36 regarding the player in question. Allegations of tapping up and player-poaching echoed from the B71 camp, while B36 kept refuting the claims, suggesting that the B71 board had been notified of the club's interest in Magnus.[8]

This resulted in many appeals and re-appeals to the highest footballing authority in The Faroe Islands, FSF. B71 were eventually deemed to have no case and Magnus Olsen's much coveted player license was transferred to B36.[9]

Apart from Magnus Olsen, players including Hanus Clementsen, Jóhannis Jensen and Clayton Soares were all ruled out, while successful defender Anders Rasmussen had left, during pre-season. Three games into the season, B71's talented young winger Rasmus Nielsen was injured in a bout with Fróði Benjaminsen and would be out for the entire first half of the season.

The second part of the season was considered somewhat better than the first, with the team playing better football and producing fair results, but in the end they came up short with a meager 22 points. Despite the low point tally, B71 did have slim chances of avoiding relegation right up until the second-last match of the season, when they lost 0-1 at home against Víkingur

Since the relegation became a reality, two key-players from the B71 squad signed with different clubs. Goalkeeper Símun Rógvi Hansen and talented midfielder Gudmund Nielsen, both 21, signed with HB and champions EB/Streymur, respectively.[10][11] In addition to this, winger Rasmus Nielsen left during the break, to play for, then, newly promoted Tórshavn side, AB,[12] while three of B71's four Brazilian players were released, leaving Clayton Soares as the only Brazilian to reprise his role in the team.

At around the same time, coach Eli Hentze announced he had made the decision to step down from coaching B71's first-team. He was later replaced by Frankie Jensen, who hales from Sandoy, but lives in Tórshavn.[13]

Recently it was announced that Frankie Jensen had been released from his contract, and Eli Hentze was appointed new head-coach, for the third time in his career.[14]

The Kit & The Crest

The Kit

File:B71 kit montage.JPG
A variety of B71 kits:
1970 - 1986 - 1989
1993 - 1995 - 2006
2007

Although B71 is, and always has been, considered a small club, even by Faroese standards, it has, nonetheless, had its fair share of kits. Lately there has almost been a new one every year, but there has also been a variety before this; some more loved than others, during B71 almost 40 year history. The primary B71 kit is yellow and blue. B71 has never had a kit yet which didn’t include either of these colours.

The first ever B71 kit was an all yellow jersey (except for the blue sleeves and neck-line), blue shorts and yellow socks. As B71 didn’t have any sponsors during its humble beginnings, the only decorative item on the shirt was the crest. The yellow colour of the initial jerseys was also a considerably lighter shade, than they would be in later years.

During the 2007 season, B71’s away kit was white, mixed with blue, resembling the Faroese flag.

The Crest

The club’s crest shows the Faroese flag (a red, white and blue Scandinavian Cross) centred on a shield. On top of the flag, sits a yellow football, representing the primary colour of the team and the sport they play, upon which the team’s name is displayed.[15]

The crest has never been changed or altered in any way since 1970, except for the shade of yellow sometimes getting darker or lighter.

Former Coaches

Dates Name
1986 Denmark Finn Melin
1987-1989 Poland Jan Kazcynski
1990–1996 Poland Piotr Krakowski
1997 Faroe Islands Eli Hentze
1998-1999 Bulgaria Ivan Hristov
2000 Denmark Per Langvad
2001 Faroe Islands Kári Reynheim
2002-2003 Belgium Tom Saintfiet
2003 Poland Waldemar Nowicki[16]
2004-2005 Denmark Ole Andersen
2006 Serbia Dragan Kovačević
2007 Serbia Dušan Mokan[17]
2007-2008 Faroe Islands Eli Hentze
2009 Faroe Islands Frankie Jensen[18]
2009 Faroe Islands Eli Hentze

Notable former players

UEFA club competition record

Competition Matches W D L GF GA
UEFA Cup 2 - - 2 3 9
UEFA Cup Winners' Cup 2 - - 2 - 7

Honours

Domestic

League

Cups

References and notes

  1. ^ "B71 Official Club History, b.1971". b71-sandoy.com. 2008. Retrieved 2008-07-07.Template:Fo icon
  2. ^ "Ibid". b71-sandoy.com. 2008. Retrieved 2008-07-07.Template:Fo icon
  3. ^ "Ibid". b71-sandoy.com. 2008. Retrieved 2008-07-07.Template:Fo icon
  4. ^ "Ibid". b71-sandoy.com. 2008. Retrieved 2008-07-07.Template:Fo icon
  5. ^ "Faroe Islands 2001 season-review". uefa.com. 2008. Retrieved 2008-07-08.
  6. ^ Despite finishing second in 2002, 2004 and 2005, B71 weren't automatically promoted, because of the way the system of promotion/relegation worked. Runner-ups and the second-last teams had to play two playoff matches against each other, for promotion and relegation, respectively.
  7. ^ "2007 Formula Division Aftermath". soccerandequipment.com. 2008. Retrieved 2008-07-09.
  8. ^ "B71 accuse B36 of player poaching, B36 say B71 gave the OK". soccerandequipment.com. 2008. Retrieved 2008-07-09.
  9. ^ "Aganevndin's decision regarding Magnus Olsen" (PDF). football.fo. 2008. Retrieved 2008-07-09.Template:Fo icon
  10. ^ "B71 lose goalkeeper". sportal.fo. 2008. Retrieved 2008-11-15.Template:Fo icon
  11. ^ "Gudmund Nielsen leaves B71". b71-sandoy.com. 2008. Retrieved 2008-11-15.Template:Fo icon
  12. ^ "Rasmus Nielsen leaves B71 for AB". portal.fo. 2008. Retrieved 2008-02-09.Template:Fo icon
  13. ^ "Frankie Jensen new B71 coach". b71-sandoy.com. 2008. Retrieved 2008-11-15.Template:Fo icon
  14. ^ "B71 appoint Hentze as new head-coach". sportal.fo. 2009. Retrieved 2009-07-06.Template:Fo icon
  15. ^ "The B71 Crest". VFLnet.com. 2008. Retrieved 2008-08-12.
  16. ^ Tom Saintfiet was sacked halfway through the 2003 season, and goalkeeper Waldemar Nowicki had to finish the remainder of the season's coaching
  17. ^ Terminated his contract with mutual consent from the B71 board. Eli Hentze took over.
  18. ^ Sacked, due to differences with the playing staff. Eli Hentze took over.
  19. ^ Played as player/manager for one year and didn't really make that many appearances for the club
  20. ^ From 2004, the second best division (2. deild) became known as 1. deild
  21. ^ From 2004, the third best division (3. deild) became known as 2. deild

Official

International sites

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