FC Rosengård

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FC Rosengård
Full nameFotboll Club Rosengård
Founded7 September 1970; 53 years ago (1970-09-07) as Malmö FF Dam
12 December 2013; 10 years ago (2013-12-12) as FC Rosengård Malmö
GroundMalmö IP, Malmö
Capacity7,600
ChairmanHåkan Wifvesson
Head CoachJonas Eidevall[1]
LeagueDamallsvenskan
20172nd

FC Rosengård, formerly Malmö FF Dam (1970–2007) and LdB FC Malmö (2007–2013), is a professional football club based in Malmö, Scania, Sweden. The team was established as Malmö FF Dam in 1970 and has played a total of 35 seasons in the women's premier division,[2] of which 7 in the Division 1 (until 1987) and 28 in the Damallsvenskan (since its formation in 1988). The team has won the league a record ten times, the latest in 2015. As of the end of the 2015 season, the club ranks first in the overall Damallsvenskan table.[3] FC Rosengård play their home games at Malmö IP in Malmö. The club it merged with, FC Rosengård 1917, has both men's and women's teams.[4]

History

On 7 September 1970 the board of Malmö FF took the decision to start a women's team as part of the main club. The team was called Malmö FF Dam – the word dam meaning lady – to distinguish the team from the men's division of the same club.

In 1986 the club won the Swedish Women's Football Division 1 for the first time. The Division 1 was Sweden's highest division until 1988 when the Damallsvenskan was formed. It took three seasons for the club to win the newly formed Damallsvenskan in 1990 and more success followed in 1991, 1993 and 1994. Malmö FF Dam would then finish as runners-up for seven consecutive seasons (from 1996 to 2002).

In April 2007, Malmö FF Dam started a rebranding of the team, including a new team name, jerseys, and logo. The team was renamed LdB FC Malmö on 11 April 2007. This meant that the club fully withdrew from Malmö FF and became a club of its own. The change of name was related to a 24 million SEK sponsorship deal with Swedish skincare firm Hardford; whose leading brand Lait de Beauté (lit. beauty milk) became the name of the club.[5]

Under the LdB FC Malmö name, the club won the Damallsvenskan championship in 2010, which qualified them for the 2011–12 UEFA Women's Champions League. A successful title defense campaign followed in the 2011 season. In the final match of the 2012 season they suffered a home defeat (0–1) to Tyresö FF, the result meant Tyresö FF were champions due to better goal difference.[6] In 2013, they clinched the title once again, with a (2–3) win away against Tyresö FF being the turning point of the season.

In October 2013, LdB FC Malmö merged with FC Rosengård 1917, adopting the name of the latter.[4] The Damallsvenskan title wins of 2014 and 2015 added to the 2013 title (as LdB FC Malmö), made the club three times in a row title winners for the first time in its history.

Squad

FCR's Nilla Fischer (centre) in July 2011
FCR team in August 2015
As of January 2018[7]

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 Sweden SWE Zećira Mušović
2 DF Sweden SWE Nathalie Björn
3 DF Denmark DEN Simone Boye Sørensen
4 DF Iceland ISL Glódís Perla Viggósdóttir
DF Spain ESP Celia Jimenez Delgado
7 MF Sweden SWE Ebba Wieder
8 FW Sweden SWE Lotta Schelin
10 MF Sweden SWE Nellie Lilja
11 FW Norway NOR Lisa-Marie Utland
14 MF Sweden SWE Hanna Folkesson
17 MF Sweden SWE Caroline Seger (captain)
19 MF Croatia CRO Iva Landeka
No. Pos. Nation Player
20 MF Sweden SWE Johanna Rytting Kaneryd
22 MF Scotland SCO Fiona Brown
26 DF Sweden SWE Linnea Svensson
30 GK Sweden SWE Josephine Frigge
31 FW Germany GER Anja Mittag
32 GK Sweden SWE Olivia Elofsson
36 DF Sweden SWE Edina Filekovic
46 DF Sweden SWE Ida Lyberg
51 FW Denmark DEN Sanne Troelsgaard Nielsen
53 MF Sweden SWE Johanna Barth

Former players

For details of current and former players, see Category:FC Rosengård players.

2018 transfers

In

No. Date Player Positions played Previous club Fee/notes Ref.
30 February 2018 Sweden Josephine Frigge GK Sweden Borgeby FK Signed on a one-year contract. [8]
10 January 2018 Sweden Nellie Lilja MF Sweden LB07 Signed on a two-year contract. [9]
11 January 2018 Norway Lisa-Marie Utland FW Norway Røa IL Signed on a two-year contract. [10]
20 January 2018 Sweden Johanna Rytting Kaneryd MF Sweden Djurgårdens IF Signed on a two-year contract. [11]
22 January 2018 Scotland Fiona Brown MF/FW Sweden Eskilstuna United Signed on a two-year contract. [12]

Out

No. Date Player Positions played Destination club Fee/notes Ref.
2 November 2017 Canada Erin McLeod GK Germany USV Jena
5 July 2018 New Zealand Ali Riley DF England Chelsea
6 November 2017 England Anita Asante DF England Chelsea
13 November 2017 Sweden Sophie Sundqvist FW Denmark Brøndby IF
16 November 2017 Sweden Lina Nilsson DF Retired
23 November 2017 Canada Jenna Hellstrom FW Sweden Djurgårdens IF
30 November 2017 United States Ella Masar MF Germany VfL Wolfsburg
32 July 2018 Sweden Olivia Elofsson DF

Achievements

Note: Achievements of Malmö FF Dam, LdB FC Malmö and FC Rosengård are all counted here

Domestic

League

Cups

Record in UEFA competitions

All results (away, home and aggregate) list Rosengård Malmö's goal tally first.

Competition Round Club Away Home Aggregate
2003–2004 Second qualifying round Finland Jakobstad–Pietarsaari 3–0
Israel Maccabi Holon 6–1
Ukraine Legenda Chernihiv (Host) 3–0
Quarter-final Norway Kolbotn 0–1 2–0 a 2–1
Semi-final Germany Frankfurt 1–4 0–0 a 1–4
2011–2012 Round of 32 Italy Tavagnacco 1–2 a 5–0 6–2
Round of 16 Austria Neulengbach 3–1 a 1–0 4–1
Quarter-final Germany Frankfurt 0–3 1–0 a 1–3
2012–2013 Round of 32 Hungary MTK Budapest 4–0 a 6–1 10–1
Round of 16 Italy Verona 2–0 1–0 a 3–0
Quarter-final France Olympique Lyon 0–5 a 0–3 0–8
2013–2014 Round of 32 Norway Lillestrøm 3–1 a 5–0 8–1
Round of 16 Germany Wolfsburg 1–3 1–2 a 2–5
2014–2015 Round of 32 Russia Ryazan 3–1 a 2–0 5–1
Round of 16 Denmark Fortuna Hjørring 2–0 2–1 a 4–1
Quarter-final Germany Wolfsburg 1–1 a 3–3 4–4 (agr)
2015–2016 Round of 32 Finland Vantaa 2–0 a 7–0 9–0
Round of 16 Italy Verona 3–1 a 5–1 8–2
Quarter-final Germany Frankfurt 1–0 a.e.t. (4p–5p) 0–1 a 1–1
2016–2017 Round of 32 Iceland Breiðablik Kópavogur 1–0 a 0–0 1–0
Round of 16 Czech Republic Slavia Prague 3–1 a 3–0 6–1
Quarter-final Spain FC Barcelona 0–2 0–1 a 0–3
2017–2018 Round of 32 Romania Olimpia Cluj-Napoca 1–0 a 4–0 5–0
Round of 16 England Chelsea 0–3 a 0–1 0–4
2018–2019 Round of 32 Russia Ryazan 1–0 a 2–0 3–0

a First leg.

Footnotes

  1. ^ Magnus Ericsson (31 October 2017). "Jonas Eidevall tillbaka i FCR". fcrosengard.se (in Swedish). FC Rosengård. Retrieved 30 May 2018.
  2. ^ "Women's Top Division All Time Table". svenskfotboll.se (in Swedish). Swedish Football Association (SvFF). Retrieved 16 February 2016.
  3. ^ "Damallsvenskan All Time Table". svenskfotboll.se (in Swedish). Swedish Football Association (SvFF). Retrieved 16 February 2016.
  4. ^ a b "LDB blir FC Rosengård". sydsvenskan.se (in Swedish). Sydsvenskan. 9 October 2013. Retrieved 13 October 2013.
  5. ^ "MFF dam byter namn till LDB Football Club". sydsvenskan.se (in Swedish). Archived from the original on 7 August 2011. Retrieved 2010-03-06. {{cite web}}: Unknown parameter |deadurl= ignored (|url-status= suggested) (help)
  6. ^ "Damallsvenskan 2012 Table and Results". svenskfotboll.se (in Swedish). Swedish Football Association (SvFF). Retrieved 16 February 2016.
  7. ^ Truppen: FC Rosengårds Dam FC Rosengård
  8. ^ "Josephine Frigge klar för FC Rosengård". FC Rosengård. 27 February 2018. Retrieved 2 March 2018.
  9. ^ "Nellie Lilja klar för FC Rosengård". FC Rosengård. 6 November 2017. Retrieved 6 November 2017.
  10. ^ "Lisa-Marie Utland klar för FC Rosengård". FC Rosengård. 16 November 2017. Retrieved 13 January 2018.
  11. ^ "Johanna Rytting Kaneryd klar för FC Rosengård". FC Rosengård. 2 November 2017. Retrieved 2 November 2017.
  12. ^ "Fiona Brown klar för FC Rosengård". FC Rosengård. 21 November 2017. Retrieved 13 January 2018.

External links

Media related to FC Rosengård at Wikimedia Commons