FC Wil

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

This is an old revision of this page, as edited by 2a02:c7d:865:1e00:7485:f0e6:a85c:f9c8 (talk) at 21:56, 4 November 2016. The present address (URL) is a permanent link to this revision, which may differ significantly from the current revision.

FC Wil
Full nameFussball Club Wil 1900
Founded1900
GroundIGP Arena, Wil, Switzerland
Capacity6,958
ChairmanMurathan Doruk Günal
ManagerUgur Tütüneker
LeagueSwiss Challenge League
2015–163rd

FC Wil, also known as FC Wil 1900, is a Swiss football club, playing in the town of Wil, Canton St. Gallen in the east of Switzerland. The club was founded in 1900, hence the name.

Although the city of Wil has only 17,000 inhabitants, in 2004 FC Wil won the final of the Swiss Cup against Grasshopper Club Zürich.

Honours

2004

History

FC Wil was formed in 1900 in the east of Switzerland by two workers from England. For the first two years of their life they were known as "FC Stella". In 1902 the club was renamed as "FC Fors" before finally settling in 1907 on FC Wil.

The early years of the club were very unremarkable, playing in the lower echelons of the Swiss football pyramid. Up until 1990 they had spent just three seasons in the second tier, the Challenge League, in 1922/23, 1952/53 and 1953/54.

In 1988 the club appointed Christian Gross as player manager. Gross managed the club between 1988 and 1993 and during this time guided the club to two promotions. Firstly to the third tier and then to the second tier. Christian Gross left in 1993 to manage Grasshopper Club Zürich and has since managed Tottenham Hotspur and FC Basel.

In 2002 the club were promoted to the top flight for the first time in history. They finished in 4th place. In 2003 the club took part in European competition for the first time by playing in the Intertoto Cup. The club got to the third round before losing to FC Nantes.

In 2004 the club were relegated from the Super League but the club managed to win the Swiss Cup, beating Grasshoppers Zurich in the final.

In 2003 club president, banker Andreas Hafen, was discovered to have embezzled 51 million Swiss francs (US$40 million) from the UBS Bank. He was given a jail term of five years. Approximately 10 million Swiss francs was discovered to have ended up at FC Wil. UBS waived any money outstanding as the other board members knew nothing of it.

After the Andreas Hafen saga the club was taken over by Ukrainian footballer Igor Belanov and his time in charge of the club was a success notwithstanding the frequent changes of coaches. FC Wil was promoted to Swiss Super League and won the final of the Swiss Cup against Grasshopper Club Zürich under the first de facto coach hired by Belanov, Ukrainian Aleksandr Zavarov (because he lacked the necessary UEFA licence, Aleksandr Zavarov was given the position of director of football with the club).

Since then, notable managers included Uli Forte, now coach of Young Boys and Axel Thoma, now employed as Grasshoppers' director of football.

In November 2013, the club's stadium was renamed from Stadion Bergholz to IGP Arena until 2023, for sponsorship reasons.[1]

On 5 November 2014, Francesco Gabriele succeeded Axel Thoma as the team's manager,[2] after the latter left the club to become director of football at Grasshoppers Zürich.[3] Former Turkey international Erdal Keser replaced Gabriele on 23 May 2015.[4]

Players

Current squad

As of 31 August 2016 [5] 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 Switzerland SUI Steven Deana
2 DF Romania ROU Paul Papp
4 DF Turkey TUR Egemen Korkmaz
6 MF Senegal SEN Rémi Gomis
7 MF Switzerland SUI Johan Vonlanthen
8 MF Germany GER Erhan Yilmaz
9 FW Switzerland SUI Jocelyn Roux
11 FW Latvia LVA Artūrs Karašausks
12 MF Switzerland SUI Sandro Lombardi
13 MF Switzerland SUI Basil Stillhart
14 DF Switzerland SUI Silvano Schäppi
15 DF Switzerland SUI Arnaud Bühler
17 MF Nigeria NGA Nduka Ozokwo
18 MF Switzerland SUI Mattia Bottani
No. Pos. Nation Player
21 FW North Macedonia MKD Samir Fazli
22 DF Republic of the Congo CGO Igor Nganga
32 MF Turkey TUR Murat Akin
33 DF Switzerland SUI Caine Keller
34 MF Switzerland SUI Pascal Huber
40 GK Netherlands NED Jim Freid
44 MF Switzerland SUI Magnus Breitenmoser
46 GK Dominican Republic DOM Noam Baumann
60 MF Switzerland SUI Heroid Gjoshi
77 MF Iran IRN Shaho Maroufi
88 MF Croatia CRO Frano Mlinar
89 DF Switzerland SUI Dylan Stadelmann
96 MF Switzerland SUI Marvin Spielmann
97 DF Albania ALB Adonis Ajeti

Out on loan

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

No. Pos. Nation Player
GK Croatia CRO Hrvoje Bukovski (on loan to ENTHOI Lakatamia until 31 May 2017)

Former players

European Cup History

Season Competition Round Country Club Home Away Aggregate
2004/05 UEFA Cup Q2 Slovakia Dukla Banská Bystrica 1–3 1–1 2–4

References

  1. ^ "IGP sichert sich Naming-Right am Wiler Bergholz". fcwil.ch. FC Wil 1900 AG. Retrieved 28 November 2013.
  2. ^ "Francesco Gabriele neuer Cheftrainer beim FC Wil 1900". fcwil.ch. FC Wil 1900 AG. Retrieved 5 February 2015.
  3. ^ "Axel Thoma wird neuer Sportchef beim Grasshopper Club Zürich". fcwil.ch. Retrieved 5 February 2015.
  4. ^ "Trainerwechsel beim FC Wil 1900". fcwil.ch. Retrieved 24 May 2015.
  5. ^ http://www.sfl.ch/challengeleague/klubs/fc-wil-1900/

External links