Viking F.K.
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Viking F.K. is a Norwegian football club from the city of Stavanger. The club was founded in 1899 as football was becoming increasingly popular. It is one of the aristocrats of Norwegian football, having won 8 Norwegian Premier Football League titles, last in 1991, and 5 domestic cup titles. The club has played and won more top-flight league games than any other club, and it has played in the top division since the league was established, except for the years 1966-67 and 1987-88. Its most recent claim to fame on a continental scale came during the 2002-03 season, when it eliminated English giants Chelsea from the UEFA Cup.
History
Viking F.K. was founded in Stavanger in 1899 and played mainly local games in the early years. From the 1930s, the club established itself at the national level, playing in the 1933 cup final, which it lost to Mjøndalen. During the 1930s the club produced several of its best known players, most prominently Reidar Kvammen, who played in Norway's bronze medal winning 1936 olympic team. His brother Arthur Kvammen was also capped for Norway, while Bernhard Lund later went on to write the club anthem.After the Second World War, Viking became a dominant side in the 1950s, beating Lillestrøm S.K. in the 1953 cup final and Sandefjord in the 1959 final, as well as the league title in 1958. Long-serving goalkeeper Sverre Andersen was the most prominent player in this generation, while Edgar Falch also earned several caps for Norway. Rolf and Kåre Bjørnsen, Asbjørn Skjærpe and Leif Nicolaysen were other prominent players, while a young Olav Nilsen began his remarkable Viking career in 1959. The club attendance record also stems from 1959, when 18,892 spectators saw Viking beat Odd 4-0 in the cup semifinal.
While the 1960s was a somewhat quieter decade for Viking, the club returned to dominate Norwegian football in the 1970s. Viking won four straight league titles from 1972 to 1975, as well as the double in 1979. Innovative 1972 manager Kjell Schou Andreassen has been credited for laying the foundation for the success, with his ideas on cooperative behaviour and his revolutionary use of pacey, attacking full backs Sigbjørn Slinning and Anbjørn Ekeland. However, the team had a new manager every year, with Sverre Andersen, Stewart Williams and Olav Nilsen leading them to the title in the subsequent years, and Tony Knapp managing the 1979 team. Midfielder Olav Nilsen was also a crucial player on the pitch in the first half of the decade, earning the nickname "Olav Viking", while fellow midfielder Svein Kvia was awarded the Norwegian Player of the Year title on several occasions. Reidar Goa, Hans Edgar Paulsen, Erik Johannessen, Inge Valen, Johannes Vold, Svein Hammerø, Gunnar Berland and Trygve Johannessen were other key players.
The 1980s started well for the club. Kjell Schou Andreassen returned to guide the club to the league title in 1982. They also finished runners-up in the league in 1981 and 1984, and in the cup in 1984, producing players such as Bjarne Berntsen, Per Henriksen, Erik Thorstvedt, Svein Fjælberg, Nils Ove Hellvik, Tonning Hammer, Isak Arne Refvik, Torbjørn Svendsen, Trygve Johannessen and Gary Goodchild. However, the mid-80s saw the club relegated to the second division, and 1987 was the club's worst season in recent memory as the club fell to 8th position in the Second Division, while local rivals Bryne F.K. won the cup and neighbouring minnows Vidar almost won promotion to the Premier League.
Something had to be done, and the solution was a massive financial gamble which saw Swedish manager Benny Lennartsson and players Kjell Jonevret and Per Holmberg arrive on large salaries. The gamble paid off when charismatic striker Alf Kåre Tveit secured a controversial penalty in the 95th minute against Vard in the final league game of the 1988 season. Arild Ravndal converted the spot kick to give Viking the victory and secure promotion, dubbed "the miracle in Haugesund". This signalled the start of a new era, and the club won the cup in 1989 and the league in 1991. Lars Gaute Bø, Roger Nilsen, Kent Christiansen, Egil Fjetland, Jan Fjetland, Trond Egil Soltvedt, Mike McCabe, Børre Meinseth were other key players in a young Viking team.
However, many of the young players from the 1991 league winning squad did not manage to live up to their expectations, and the club was almost relegated under new manager Arne Larsen Økland in 1992. Bjarne Berntsen took over as manager in mid-season and secured renewed Premiership status, as well as almost knocking FC Barcelona out of the European Cup. While the club spent most of the 1990s challenging for Premier League medals, it did however never manage to challenge Rosenborg B.K. for the league championships. The 1990s was also the era of player exports in Norwegian football, and Viking made substantial earnings from the sales of striker Egil Østenstad to Southampton F.C. for £900,000 in 1996 and goalkeeper Thomas Myhre to Everton F.C. for £800,000 in 1997, among others. Gunnar Aase, Lars Gaute Bø, Magnus Svensson, Bjarte Aarsheim, Kenneth Storvik, Roger Nilsen and Ingve Bøe were other key players in this generation.
Benny Lennartson returned in 2000 to take over from Dane Poul Erik Andreasen, and this resulted in two bronze medals, a cup title and a memorable European Cup victory over Chelsea. In 2003, Kjell Inge Olsen took over as manager, and the club finished fifth in the league. At the beginning of the 2004 season, the club moved to its new stadium in Jåttåvågen, named Viking Stadion. At the same time, Roy Hodgson took over as manager. The club finished ninth in its first season in the new stadium and fifth in the 2005 campaign. Brede Hangeland, Egil Østenstad, Peter Kopteff and Frode Hansen were notable players in this period. At the end of the season, Roy Hodgson quit his job as Viking coach to take over as Finland manager, and he was replaced by Tom Prahl. The star players in the current squad are Allan Gaarde, Peter Ijeh, Alexander Ødegaard, Toni Nhleko and Ragnvald Soma.
Current squad
Playing squad
Coaching staff
| Coach | Tom Prahl |
| Assistant coach | Arvi Taaler |
| Reserve team coach | Gary Goodchild |
| Development coach | Geir Lunde |
| Goalkeeping coach | Kurt Hegre |
| Physical trainer | Thor Arne Aasen |
| Physio | Stian Rosnes |
Administrative staff
| Chairman | Ole Rugland |
| Director | Erik Forgaard |
| Director of Football | Egil Østenstad |
| Marketing director | Hans-Øyvind Sagen |
| Marketing consultants | Børge Moi Nilsen, Arild Gjerde |
Honours
Winners: 1958, 1972, 1973, 1974, 1975, 1979, 1982, 1991
Third place: 1955, 1968, 1971, 1978, 1994, 1996, 2000, 2001
Winners: 1953, 1959, 1979, 1989, 2001
Runners up: 1933, 1947, 1974, 1984, 2000
Famous
- 1st round: Beat IBV Vestmannaeyar 1-0 on aggregate (1-0 at home, 0-0 away).
- 2nd round: Beat 1. FC Köln 1-0 at home, lost 9-2 on aggregate.
1982/83 UEFA Cup:
- 1st round: Beat Lokomotive Leipzig on away goals, after 1-0 at home and 2-3 away.
- 2nd round: Lost 1-3 on aggregate to Dundee United (1-3 at home, 0-0 away).
- 1st round: Held Barcelona to 0-0 draw at home, lost 0-1 away two weeks earlier.
- Preliminary round: Beat Principat 18-0 on aggregate.
- 1st round: Beat Sporting Lisbon 3-1 on aggregate (3-0 at home, 0-1 away).
- 2nd round: Lost to Werder Bremen on away goals (0-0 away, 2-2 at home).
- Preliminary round: Beat F.C. Brotjno 2-1 on aggregate (1-0 at home, 1-1 away).
- 1st round: Beat Kilmarnock 3-1 on aggregate (1-1 away, 2-0 at home).
- 2nd round: Lost 0-3 on aggregate to Hertha BSC Berlin (0-1 at home, 0-2 away).
- 1st round: Beat Chelsea 5-4 on aggregate, after losing 1-2 away and winning 4-2 at home two weeks later.
- 2nd round: Lost 4-1 to Celta Vigo (0-3 away, 1-1 at home).
- 1st preliminary round: Beat Portadown 3-1 on aggregate (1-0 at home, 2-1 away).
- 2nd preliminary round: Beat Rhyl 3-1 on aggregate (2-1 at home, 1-0 away).
- 1st round: Beat Austria Vienna 2-2 on away goals (1-0 at home, 1-2 away)
- Group stages: Beat AS Monaco 1-0 at home, lost 0-2 to Hamburg away, drew 2-2 with Slavia Prague at home, lost 0-2 to CSKA Sofia away.
Norwegian Youth Cup
Winners: 1965, 1979, 1995, 2003Runners up: 1969, 1970, 1981, 1992, 1996, 1998
Records
Largest victory
11-0 v Principat, Andorra, August 26, 1999 (UEFA cup)8-1 v Rosenborg B.K., August 12, 1984 (Norwegian Premier League)
Heaviest defeat
2-11 v Lyn, July 28, 1968Largest attendance
Stavanger Stadion: 19,563 v Odd, 1959Viking Stadion: 15,300 v Molde F.K., 2004
Most appearances
- 551 Svein Kvia
- 523 Sigbjørn Slinning
- 501 Erik Johannesen
- 500 Torbjørn Svendsen
- 482 Sverre Andersen
- 422 Bjarte Lunde Aarsheim
- 414 Olav Nilsen
Top goal scorers
- 202 Reidar Kvammen
- 181 Trygve Johannessen
- 180 William Danielsen
- 176 Arthur Kvammen
- 150 Egil Østenstad
- 146 Åsbjørn Skjærpe
- 132 Erik Nevland
Most capped players
- 97 Erik Thorstvedt
- 62 Olav Nilsen (19 goals)
- 51 Reidar Kvammen (17 goals)
- 42 Sigbjørn Slinning (1 goal)
- 41 Sverre Andersen
- 39 Thomas Myhre
- 38 Svein Kvia (3 goals)
- 33 Bjarne Berntsen
External links
- [Official website]
- [Vikinghordene - Official supporter club]
- [VikingForum.no - Largest Viking Forum]
- [Vikingsupporter.no]
- [Berserk Fanzine]
- [Sports links in Stavanger]
|- !colspan="3" style="background:#ccf; text-align:center;"|Norwegian Premier League, 2006 |- |colspan="3" style="padding:0 5% 0 5%; text-align:center;"| Brann | Fredrikstad | Ham-Kam | Lillestrøm | Lyn | Molde | Odd Grenland | Rosenborg | Sandefjord | Stabæk | Start | Tromsø | Viking | Vålerenga |- !colspan="3" style="background:#ccf; text-align:center;"|Football in Norway |- |colspan="3" style="padding:0 5% 0 5%; text-align:center;"| Norwegian men's national team | Norwegian women's national team | Football Association of Norway | Norwegian football cup | Tippeligaen | Adeccoligaen | Toppserien (for women) |- | style="font-size: 75%; padding:0 5% 0 5%; text-align:center;" | Northern Norwegian Cup | Norway Cup |}
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