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FC Nordsjælland

Football Club Nordsjælland, commonly known as FC Nordsjælland, Nordsjælland (Danish pronunciation: [ˈnoɐ̯ɕeˌlænˀ]) or FCN, is a professional Danish football team from the North Zealand town of Farum. Founded as Farum Boldklub from the merger of the town's two football clubs Farum IK and Stavnsholt BK in 1991, the club changed its name to FC Nordsjælland in 2003.[6] In international competitions, the club can be transliterated as Nordsjaelland.

Nordsjælland
Full nameFootball Club Nordsjælland
Nickname(s)Tigrene (The Tigers)[1][2]
Short nameFCN
Founded1991; 33 years ago (1991)[3]
GroundRight to Dream Park, Farum
Capacity10,300[4]
OwnerPathways Group (99%)[5]
ChairmanTom Vernon[5]
Head coachJohannes Hoff Thorup
LeagueDanish Superliga
2022–23Danish Superliga, 2nd of 12
WebsiteClub website
Current season

FCN plays in the Danish Superliga, winning its first medal in the 2002–03 season, taking third place. Since then, the Wild Tigers have made four appearances in Europe under both the old UEFA Cup format in 2003–04, 2008–09 and in the UEFA Europa League during the 2010–11 and 2011–12 seasons. In 2010, the club won its first Danish Cup[7] and successfully defended it the following year in 2011, beating Midtjylland in both finals.[6][8] FCN won the 2011–12 Danish Superliga in May 2012 which qualified the team to participate in the 2012–13 UEFA Champions League.

Nordsjælland plays its home matches at Right to Dream Park, which has a capacity of 10,100 of which 9,800 seating and 300 standing spectators.[4][9]

History edit

Farum BK (1991–2003) edit

 
Farum Boldklub badge.

Established on 1 January 1991 from the merger of two football clubs, Farum Idræts Klub (formed in 1910) and Stavnsholt Boldklub af 1974,[3][6] both from the former Farum municipality (now consolidated with Værløse as the Furesø municipality), Farum BK would become one of the few successful mergers in Danish football, but not without controversy.[6] The club was an initiative of Farum residents[10] including mayor Peter Brixtofte, who took a personal interest in the club by arranging sponsorship.[11][12] The club kit colours became a combination of the two merged clubs, the red and white of Stavnsholt with the yellow and blue of F.I.K. combined into a kit with yellow and red striped shirts and dark blue shorts and socks, which is still used in some form to this day. Colours were not the only thing the newly formed club inherited, as Thomas Andreasen who had been with Stavnsholt BK was carried over into the new Farum squad, Andreasen would go on to make a record 295 appearances, playing from the Denmark Series all the way to the Danish Superliga, until his departure from the club in 2007.[10]

Farum BK was placed in the second group of the Denmark Series, the fourth tier in the Danish football pyramid, though it gained promotion to the first group after the club's maiden season.[6] Jørgen Andersen, a former goalkeeper for Hvidovre, took over as the club's first head coach in 1992. The club stayed in the Denmark Series first group for six years. Under the guidance of manager Jørgen Tideman, who took over in 1994, Farum qualified for promotion into the 2nd Division in the 1997–98 season and subsequently turned professional for the first time in club history.[6][10]

Farum's first full season as a professional club was a fruitful one, edging out Aalborg Chang and Skive by one point, gaining promotion for the second time in two years into the 1st Division.[6] The club's meteoric rise was slowed at first with the new challenge of playing in the Danish second tier, though it was not stopped, ending the 1999–2000 campaign with a respectable eighth-place finish, winning the same number of games as it lost. Farum, however, remained unable to make any sort of impact in the Danish Cup, having lost in the first round for the previous three years since making its debut in the tournament in the 1997–98 season. The following year saw some progression in both the league and cup, improving on the previous year's finish by finishing fifth, three spots and nine points behind second-placed promotion winners Vejle, as well as breaking out of the first round of the Danish Cup to eventually fall to Fremad Amager in the third round following a 2–1 loss.

With the 2001–02 season, unconventional coach Christian Andersen was brought in to manage the team, building on the foothold the club had gained in the 1st Division. Jeppe Tengbjerg played a pivotal role, brought in from B.93 the previous year. He scored 16 goals, becoming Farum's top goalscorer of the season and third overall in the league. The team went on to earn promotion into the Superliga after finishing in second place, 11 points clear of third-placed Sønderjylland, one point behind first-place winners Køge, scoring a team total of 69 goals, the highest in the division that season, and losing only four games.

Farum's 2002–03 appearance in the top flight of Danish football would be its first and last under the Farum BK name. It ended the season in third place, qualifying for the UEFA Cup for the first time in its history.[6] The club's achievement, however, was overshadowed by the scandal involving Peter Brixtofte, who had arranged for the municipality to deliberately overpay for welfare services bought from private companies that in return would sponsor the Farum football team.[6][11][13] Brixtofte was forced to step down as chairman and the club came close to bankruptcy.[10]

FC Nordsjælland (2003–present) edit

 
The full-time score at Farum Park.

In March 2003, Farum BK was bought by AKP Holding, the holdings company of local businessman Allan K. Pedersen, and in an effort to distance the club from the Brixtofte scandal, Farum BK was re-branded as FC Nordsjælland,[10] named after the North Zealand (Danish: Nordsjælland) region to clarify the club was to represent both the region as well as the town in which the club is based.[6] To reinforce the status as a regional team, a network of local football clubs from the surrounding area was created, consisting of around 66 teams, with the aim to highlight young talent in the region and bring it to national attention via FC Nordsjælland. The network is known as Fodbold Samarbejde Nordsjælland (FSN).[3][6]

The club's second year in the Superliga, first as Nordsjælland, struggled to improve on the previous year's outing. With its worst goal difference since turning professional, not one FCN player ended in the top ten goal scorers, fighting to avoid relegation for most of the season, ending the campaign in ninth place. The Wild Tiger fans, however, were rewarded with European football with the club's first appearance in the UEFA Cup; it beat Armenian team Shirak 6–0 on aggregate in the qualifying round, but were eliminated in the first round by Greek team Panionios.[6] Christian Andersen was sacked at the end of the 2003–04 season, replaced by Johnny Petersen as head coach.

The following two years under Johnny Petersen were spent avoiding relegation, with no success to speak of in either the Superliga or Danish Cup. Petersen's reign was not completely amiss, as he was noted for creating a good young team and the emergence of players Mads Junker and Anders Due. For the 2006–07 season, Morten Wieghorst was promoted from assistant to head coach,[12] a position the former Celtic player would retain for five years.

Wieghorst's first dilemma in charge of FCN was to fill the gap left by top scorer Mads Junker, sale to Dutch side Vitesse the previous winter. Morten Nordstrand came in on a free from nearby Lyngby after scoring 29 goals in the 1st Division that previous season. Nordstrand would go on to make an instant impact, topping the goal scorers charts for the first half of the 2006–07 season and earning himself a call up to the Denmark national team.[12] Helping the club to a fifth-place finish, Nordstrand ended the season with 18 goals after appearing in every league match that season. Danish champions Copenhagen purchased the player at the end of the season for a then record 15 million Danish kroner, becoming the largest transfer fee ever paid for a player between two Danish clubs.

With lower-than-average attendance and issues still arising from the Brixtofte scandal, chairman Allan Kim Pedersen confirmed there had been discussions to move the club north to Hillerød, where it would be able expand to other sports such as ice hockey and basketball.[14] The move, however, never materialized.

Nordsjælland would find itself in a similar position the following season, again having sold its star striker Martin Bernburg to Copenhagen. The team only managed a ninth-place finish, yet qualified for the UEFA Cup for the second time via the UEFA Respect Fair Play rankings.[6] 2008–09 would become a good year for the Wild Tigers in terms of cup competitions, making it to the quarter-finals in the Danish Cup for the second time in its history, and improving on its previous European outing with wins over TVMK Tallinn and Queen of the South, though later being knocked out by Greek side Olympiacos 0–7 aggregate.[6]

In October 2008, Allan K. Pedersen sold FC Nordsjælland from AKP Holding to himself for a reported 500,000 Danish kroner, shortly before his holding company went bankrupt, a price Pedersen, however, denies. Following an investigation from his creditors, it was found that the sale was forced through without the bank's consent, and that the value for which the club was sold was too low, which ultimate reduced the finances the creators received for the sale. FCN was reevaluated to be worth 35 million kroner at the time of sale.[15][16][17] The case has gone to the Supreme Court and is yet to be resolved; it speculated that it could take one-to-four years.[18]

The 2009–10 season saw Nordsjælland lift its first trophy, the Danish Cup. FCN was not drawn against another Superliga team until the quarter-final meeting with Silkeborg, where it won 3–1 in extra time. The team would go on to face Midtjylland in Nordsjælland's first cup final, winning in extra time[6] 2–0 with goals from new signing Nicolai Stokholm and Bajram Fetai,[19] and qualifying for European competition in the newly remodeled UEFA Europa League. The team would repeat this feat the following season, facing Midtjylland once again in the finals of the Danish Cup and winning the trophy for the second time[6] with a 3–2 win. This would be Morten Wieghorst's last trophy with the Wild Tigers, however; he moved to manage the Denmark under-21 national team at the end of the 2010–11 campaign.

 
FCN celebrating the championship

Kasper Hjulmand was named Wieghorst's successor in June 2011, promoted from the coaching staff.[6] In preparation for the 2011–12 season, the former Lyngby head coach brought in two Danish internationals in Mikkel Beckmann (from relegated Randers) and Patrick Mtiliga (on a free from Málaga). FCN sought to improve on the previous season's sixth-place finish and to defend its Danish Cup title for the second year running. It would go on to play in the Europa League for second year in a row, exiting the competition in the third qualifying round after losing to Sporting CP 2–1 aggregate, which had also eliminated Nordsjælland from Europe the previous season.[6]

 
FCN against Juventus in the UEFA Champions League

FCN started the new season in good form, peaking as high as second in the Superliga, and an undefeated run at home in all competitions until 30 October, including an impressive 0–0 draw with Portuguese side Sporting CP, making the start of the 2011–12 campaign one of its best starts in recent years. For the first time in club history, a total of five players were called up to the Denmark national team[6] to face Sweden and Finland in November: Mikkel Beckmann, Andreas Bjelland and debutantes Tobias Mikkelsen, Jesper Hansen and Jores Okore.[20][21][22] FCN ended the season as Superliga champions for the first time in its history.[6]

In 2012–13, for the first time FCN participated in the UEFA Champions League, where it was drawn into a difficult group alongside defending champions Chelsea, Serie A champions Juventus and Ukrainian Premier League champions Shakhtar Donetsk. FCN played all its home matches at the Danish national stadium, Parken. It gained one point from the group stage – playing 1–1 against Juventus at home thanks to a direct free-kick goal from Beckmann. In the last group match, a controversial goal from Luiz Adriano became the talking point of the match.

Players edit

Current squad edit

As of 1 January 2024[23][24]

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

No. Pos. Nation Player
22 MF   FIN Oliver Antman
23 DF   DEN Oliver Villadsen
24 DF   DEN Lucas Høgsberg
25 GK   FIN Carljohan Eriksson
27 DF   SWE Daniel Svensson
29 MF   CIV Mario Dorgeles
30 DF   DEN Jonas Jensen-Abbew
31 GK   DEN Andreas Gülstorff
32 FW   USA Milan Iloski
39 DF   BFA Adamo Nagalo
40 FW   DEN Conrad Harder
41 FW   CIV Yannick Agnero
42 DF   DEN Kaare Barslund
47 MF   DEN Magnus Munck
GK   GHA Emmanuel Ogura
MF   FIN Leo Walta

Out on loan edit

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

No. Pos. Nation Player
MF   CIV Lasso Coulibaly (at Randers until 30 June 2024)

Retired numbers edit

26 –   Jonathan Richter (2005–09)[6]

Overall most appearances edit

Rank Nationality Name Years Appearances[25]
1   Thomas Andreasen 1999–07 295
2   Søren Christensen 2005–14 233
3   Jesper Hansen 2001–13 179
4   Nicolai Stokholm 2008–14 178
5   Henrik Kildentoft 2007–13 155
6   Morten Karlsen 2005–09 145
7   Patrick Mtiliga 2011–17 138
8   Bajram Fetai 2007–10 131
9   Michael Parkhurst 2009–12 128
10   Tobias Mikkelsen 2009–13,2016–18 125[26]

Overall top scorers edit

Rank Nationality Name Years Goals[27]
1   Martin Bernburg 2007–09 43
2   Emiliano Marcondes 2012–2017 38
3   Joshua John 2012–2016 30
  Marcus Ingvartsen 2014–2017 30
5   Bajram Fetai 2007–10 29
  Tommy Olsen 2003–06 29
7   Mads Junker 2004–06 28
8   Rawez Lawan 2009–13 21
9   Morten Nordstrand 2006–07, 2012–2014 20
10   Thomas Kristensen 2005–08 19
  Tobias Mikkelsen 2009–2013,2016–18 19[28]

Former players edit

Denmark

Norway

Canada

Costa Rica

Ghana

Ivory Coast

Japan

Macedonia

Malawi

Slovakia

Sweden

Switzerland

Turkey

United States

Club captains edit

Since 2001, seven players have held the position as club captain for Farum BK or FC Nordsjælland. The first recorded captain was Michael Elbæk. All recorded captains to date have been of Danish nationality. The captain to have lifted the most trophies for FCN is Nicolai Stokholm, who won the Danish Cup on two occasions. Stokholm is also the current and longest-serving captain, having taken over from Henrik Kildentoft when the former arrived at the club in 2009.

Years Nationality Name
????–2002   Michael Elbæk
2002–2004   Martin Birn
2004–2005   Jacob Rasmussen
2005–2006   Tommy Olsen
2006–2008   Kim Christensen
2008–2009   Henrik Kildentoft
2009–2014   Nicolai Stokholm
2014–2018   Patrick Mtiliga
2018   Mathias Jensen
2018–2019   Victor Nelsson
2019–2020   Nicolai Larsen
2020–   Kian Hansen

Stadium edit

Nordsjælland plays its home matches in Right to Dream Park, which has a capacity of 10,100 attendances (9,800 seated). The stadium is the first in Denmark with artificial turf.

Club officials edit

As of 22 February 2023[29][30]
Administration
  • Chairmen: Trine Hesselund Hopp Møller
  • Financial director: Flemming Junggaard Skou
  • Administration management: Phil Radley
  • Commercial director: Hanne Rolighed
  • Sporting director: Jan Laursen
  • Technical director: Flemming Pedersen
  • Club director: Søren Kristensen
  • Media officer: Mette Andersen
  • FCN academy leader: Mikkel Hemmersam
Coaching and medical staff
  • Manager: Johannes Hoff Thorup
  • Assistant manager: Casper Røjkjær
  • Player coach: Michael Essien
  • Goalkeeping coach: Magnus Pondus Hansen
  • Trasitional coach: Lasse Stensgaard
  • Analyzers: Thor Herdal & Alan Arac
  • Physiotherapists: Joakim Dilling & Jonas Petersen
  • Doctor: Jesper Petersen
  • Head of Nutrition: Bruno Cirillo
  • Head of Physical Performance: Casper Skovgaard

Managerial history edit

Name Nationality From To Honours
Christian Andersen   Denmark 1 July 2003 2004 Promotion to Superliga
Johnny Petersen   Denmark 1 January 2005 30 June 2006
Morten Wieghorst   Denmark 1 July 2006 30 June 2011 2 Danish Cups
Kasper Hjulmand   Denmark 1 July 2011 1 June 2014 1 Superliga Championship
Ólafur Kristjánsson   Iceland 1 June 2014 15 December 2015
Kasper Hjulmand   Denmark 1 January 2016 25 March 2019
Flemming Pedersen   Denmark 25 March 2019 7 January 2023
Johannes Hoff Thorup   Denmark 7 January 2023

Key

* Served as caretaker manager.
† Served as caretaker manager before being appointed permanently.

Honours edit

National tournaments edit

Champions: 2011–12
Runners up (2): 2012–13, 2022–23
Runners up (1): 2001–02
Runners up: 1996
Winners: 2009–10, 2010–11

International tournaments edit

Friendly tournaments edit

Winners: 2012

Season results edit

Season[31][32] League performance Cup performance[33]
Pos Pts Pld W D L GF GA GD
1997–98: Denmark Series 1 #3/8 20 14 6 2 6 22 27 −5 Eliminated in First round by Virum-Sorgenfri, 0–3
1998–99: 2nd Division #5/16 50 30 15 5 10 57 38 +19 Eliminated in First round by Nakskov, 2–3
1999–2000: Faxe Kondi Divisionen #8/16 42 30 12 6 12 48 58 −10 Eliminated in First round by Roskilde, 1–2
2000–01: Faxe Kondi Divisionen #5/16 50 30 15 5 10 62 48 +14 Eliminated in Third round by Fremad A., 1–2
2001–02: 1st Division #2/16 66 30 20 6 4 69 33 +36 Eliminated in Third round by Køge, 2–4
2002–03: SAS Ligaen #3/12 51 33 16 3 14 49 58 −9 Eliminated in the Quarter-finals by Viborg, 2–5
2003–04: SAS Ligaen #9/12 32 33 7 11 15 35 59 −24 Eliminated in Fifth round by Copenhagen, 2–4
2004–05: SAS Ligaen #10/12 30 33 8 6 19 36 59 −23 Eliminated in Fifth round by Fremad A., 2–3
2005–06: SAS Ligaen #9/12 38 33 9 11 13 49 55 −6 Eliminated in Fourth round by Viborg, 0–3
2006–07: SAS Ligaen #5/12 57 33 16 9 8 67 39 +28 Eliminated in Third round by OB, 0–1
2007–08: SAS Ligaen #9/12 43 33 11 10 12 47 51 −4 Eliminated in Third round by Vejle, 1–2
2008–09: SAS Ligaen #8/12 35 33 9 8 16 44 53 −9 Eliminated in the Quarter-finals by AaB, 1–2
2009–10: SAS Ligaen #7/12 43 33 12 7 14 40 41 −1 Winner, won the Final against Midtjylland, 2–0 (aet)
2010–11: Superligaen #6/12 39 33 10 9 14 38 50 −12 Winner, won the Final against Midtjylland, 3–2
2011–12: Superligaen #1/12 68 33 21 5 7 49 22 +27 Eliminated in the Quarter-finals by Copenhagen, 0–2
2012–13: Superligaen #2/12 60 33 17 9 7 60 37 +23 Eliminated in the Fourth round by Midtjylland, 2–3
2013–14: Superligaen #6/12 46 33 13 7 13 38 44 −6 Eliminated in the Semi-finals by Copenhagen, 1–2
2014–15: Superligaen #6/12 44 33 13 5 15 39 44 −5 Eliminated in the Second round by SC Egedal, 1–1 (3–4 p)
2015–16: Superligaen #9/12 38 33 11 5 17 35 51 −16 Eliminated in the Second round by Næstved BK, 0–1
2016–17: Superligaen #5/14 49 36 13 10 13 59 55 +4 Eliminated in the Third round by Næstved BK, 0–1
2017–18: Superligaen #3/14 59 36 17 8 11 76 58 +18 Eliminated in the Fourth round by Hobro IK, 1–1 (3–4 p)
2018–19: Superligaen #6/14 44 36 10 14 12 52 54 –2 Eliminated in the Fourth round by Vendsyssel FF, 0–1
2019–20: Superligaen #6/14 47 36 13 8 15 59 54 +5 Eliminated in the Fourth round by Copenhagen, 1–4
2020–21: Superligaen #5/12 43 32 11 10 11 51 51 0 Eliminated in the Third round by Hvidovre IF, 0–2
2021–22: Superligaen #9/12 36 32 8 12 12 38 47 -9 Eliminated in the Fourth round by OB, 1–4
2022–23: Superligaen #2/12 55 32 15 10 7 50 35 +15 Eliminated in the Semi-finals by Copenhagen, 6-7

FC Nordsjælland in European competition edit

FC Nordsjælland's first competitive European match was on 14 August 2003, in the 2003–04 UEFA Cup, beating Shirak F.C. 4–0 at home. In total, the club has participated in European competitions in seven different seasons, reaching as far as the Group stage of the 2012–13 UEFA Champions League. However, as of August 2018, they have never qualified for the group stage after starting from a qualifying round.[34]

Fodbold Samarbejde Nordsjælland edit

 
Fodbold Samarbejde Nordsjælland badge for clubs in the FSN network.

The Fodbold Samarbejde Nordsjælland (Football Cooperation North Zealand or FSN in short) is a network of affiliated clubs headed by FC Nordsjælland, in which to highlight talent, youth development, cooperation and community in the North Zealand region. Where clubs participating receive benefits from FCN such as loan moves, friendlies, tickets to games, merchandise, coach visits, training camps and coaching courses. In return, FC Nordsjælland get access to a large scouting network of youth players, which has helped develop many young talent to become youth internationals, who have gone on to play professionally in the Danish Superliga and beyond. FSN has also played an important role in the attendance rise in Farum Park.

Affiliated clubs edit

As of 6 February 2013[35]
  • Allerød FK
  • Alsønderup IF
  • Ålholm Fodbold
  • Ølsted IF
  • Ølstykke FC
  • Ballerup IF
  • BFC Lundegården
  • Blistrup SI
  • Brødeskov IF
  • Blovstrød IF
  • BSV
  • Dalby IF
  • Dragør BK
  • Døllefjelde Musse IF
  • Elite 3000
  • Espergærde IF
  • FA 2000
  • Farum BK
  • Faxe Ladeplads IF
  • FC Holte
  • FC Jonstrup
  • FIF Hillerød
  • Frederikssund IK
  • Frem Hellebæk
  • G77 Gundsømagle
  • Gilleleje FK
  • Gørløse SI
  • Grantoften IF
  • Græsted IF
  • Gundsølille IF
  • Gundsømagle 77
  • Gurre IK
  • Hasle IF
  • Hørsholm-Usserød IK
  • Helsinge Fodbold
  • Helsingør IF
  • Hillerød GI
  • Hornbæk IF
  • Humlebæk BK
  • Hundested IK
  • IF Skjold Birkerød
  • IS Skævinge
  • Jyllinge FC
  • Jægersborg BK
  • Kalundborg GB
  • Karlebo IF
  • KBK Hillerød
  • Kirke Hyllinge IF
  • Kirke Værløse IF
  • KFUM Roskilde
  • Kr. Værløse IF
  • Lolland-Falster Alliancen
  • Lynge Uggeløse IF
  • Måløv BK
  • NB Bornholm
  • Nordstevns GI
  • Nødebo IF
  • Nivå Kokkedal FK
  • Oppe Sundby IF
  • ORI Fodbold
  • Raklev GI
  • Ramløse Fodbold
  • Skovshoved IF
  • Slangerup og Omegns IF
  • Slangslunde-Ganløse IF
  • Snekkersten IF
  • Store Lyngby IF
  • Tikøb IF
  • Uvelse IF
  • Værløse BK
  • Vejby-Tisvilde Fodbold

Footnotes and references edit

  1. ^ "Optakt: FC Nordsjælland – Brøndby IF" (in Danish). Danish Superliga. 23 June 2020. from the original on 10 January 2021. Retrieved 16 September 2020.
  2. ^ "Kommentar: Tigrene fra Farum skal på jagt, og det kan AGF lukrere på" (in Danish). Århus Stiftstidende. 17 June 2020. from the original on 24 December 2020. Retrieved 16 September 2020.
  3. ^ a b c . FCN.dk (F.C. Nordsjælland). Archived from the original on 4 November 2018. Retrieved 10 August 2011.
  4. ^ a b (in Danish). FCN.dk (F.C. Nordsjælland). Archived from the original on 11 July 2015. Retrieved 10 August 2011.
  5. ^ a b "EXCLUSIVE: Right to Dream Academy owner Tom Vernon completes takeover of Danish giants Nordsjaelland". soccernet.com. 15 December 2015. from the original on 27 June 2021. Retrieved 18 December 2015.
  6. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u . qosfc.com. Queen of the South F.C. Archived from the original on 17 November 2019. Retrieved 27 May 2012.
  7. ^ . KickOff.com. 14 May 2010. Archived from the original on 28 August 2018. Retrieved 10 August 2011.
  8. ^ Bruun, Peter (2 June 2011). "Season review: Denmark". UEFA. from the original on 28 August 2018. Retrieved 10 August 2011.
  9. ^ Per-Gunnar (18 July 2009). "Nordsjælland". Groundhopping.se. from the original on 30 December 2019. Retrieved 10 August 2011.
  10. ^ a b c d e Birch, Claus. (in Danish). Nordsjællands Fodboldhistorie. Archived from the original on 30 March 2012. Retrieved 10 August 2011.
  11. ^ a b Blem, Hans (19 June 2006). "Dommens dag for Brixtofte". Ekstra Bladet (in Danish). JP/Politikens Hus. from the original on 22 May 2014. Retrieved 10 August 2011.
  12. ^ a b c Exner, Mikkel (6 March 2007). "FC Nordsjælland" (in Danish). TotalBold.dk. from the original on 7 March 2016. Retrieved 10 August 2011.
  13. ^ "Dom står fast: Brixtofte to år i fængsel" (in Danish). DR Radio. 8 February 2007. from the original on 29 December 2016. Retrieved 10 August 2011.
  14. ^ Baunsgaard, Casper (6 June 2007). "FC Nordsjælland går med flytteplaner" (in Danish). Bold.dk. from the original on 25 September 2012. Retrieved 14 August 2011.
  15. ^ Horn, Jakob (20 February 2009). "Allan K. Pedersen solgte FCN til sig selv" (in Danish). Bold.dk. from the original on 25 September 2012. Retrieved 14 August 2011.
  16. ^ Horn, Jakob (5 March 2009). "Kurator: FCN kostede en halv million" (in Danish). Bold.dk. from the original on 25 September 2012. Retrieved 14 August 2011.
  17. ^ Horn, Jakob (21 April 2009). "Kurator: Allan K gav 35 millioner for lidt" (in Danish). Bold.dk. from the original on 27 December 2016. Retrieved 14 August 2011.
  18. ^ Houlind, Søren (12 January 2011). "FCN-ejer i landsretten" (in Danish). Bold.dk. from the original on 25 September 2012. Retrieved 14 August 2011.
  19. ^ . Ritzau (in Danish). TV 2 Sport. 13 May 2010. Archived from the original on 18 March 2012. Retrieved 11 August 2011.
  20. ^ Helmin, Jesper (31 October 2011). "Beckmann: Har ikke grebet chancen" (in Danish). Bold.dk. from the original on 12 October 2016. Retrieved 3 November 2011.
  21. ^ Helmin, Jesper (3 November 2011). "Hansen stolt af landsholdsplads" (in Danish). Bold.dk. from the original on 23 September 2015. Retrieved 3 November 2011.
  22. ^ Blond, Mikael (6 November 2011). "19-årig FCN-komet afløser Kjær" (in Danish). Bold.dk. from the original on 23 September 2015. Retrieved 6 November 2011.
  23. ^ "Spillere Arkiv – FC Nordsjælland". from the original on 17 November 2020. Retrieved 8 September 2021.
  24. ^ "DANMARKSTURNERINGEN 2022/23, SUPERLIGAEN, KLUBSIDER". from the original on 22 May 2019. Retrieved 12 July 2018.
  25. ^ "FCN: Hall of Fame" (in Danish). FCN.dk (F.C. Nordsjælland). from the original on 16 July 2015. Retrieved 10 August 2011.
  26. ^ (in Danish). FCN.dk (F.C. Nordsjælland). Archived from the original on 2 July 2017. Retrieved 13 May 2016.
  27. ^ (in Danish). FCN.dk (F.C. Nordsjælland). Archived from the original on 28 January 2012. Retrieved 10 August 2011.
  28. ^ (in Danish). FCN.dk (F.C. Nordsjælland). Archived from the original on 2 July 2017. Retrieved 20 July 2016.
  29. ^ "FCN: Stab" (in Danish). FCN.dk (F.C. Nordsjælland). from the original on 22 February 2023. Retrieved 22 February 2023.
  30. ^ "FCN: Administrationen" (in Danish). FCN.dk (F.C. Nordsjælland). from the original on 22 February 2023. Retrieved 22 February 2023.
  31. ^ Haslund, Henrik; Haslund, Christian; Jørgensen, Palle. (in Danish). Haslund.info. Archived from the original on 28 September 2011. Retrieved 10 August 2011.
  32. ^ "Danmarksturneringen 1997/98, slutstillingen" (in Danish). DanskFodbold.com (DBU's Officielle Statistikere). from the original on 14 October 2020. Retrieved 12 August 2011.
  33. ^ Haslund, Henrik; Haslund, Christian; Jørgensen, Palle. (in Danish). Haslund.info. Archived from the original on 20 October 2007. Retrieved 10 August 2011.
  34. ^ "Nordsjælland – Profile". UEFA. from the original on 23 March 2019. Retrieved 22 August 2018.
  35. ^ (in Danish). FCN.dk (F.C. Nordsjælland). Archived from the original on 26 September 2011. Retrieved 14 August 2011.

External links edit

  • Official website (in Danish)
  • F.C. Nordsjælland at UEFA (in English)

nordsjælland, this, article, about, football, club, women, football, club, women, football, club, nordsjælland, commonly, known, nordsjælland, danish, pronunciation, ˈnoɐ, ɕeˌlænˀ, professional, danish, football, team, from, north, zealand, town, farum, founde. This article is about the men s football club For the women s football club see FC Nordsjaelland women Football Club Nordsjaelland commonly known as FC Nordsjaelland Nordsjaelland Danish pronunciation ˈnoɐ ɕeˌlaenˀ or FCN is a professional Danish football team from the North Zealand town of Farum Founded as Farum Boldklub from the merger of the town s two football clubs Farum IK and Stavnsholt BK in 1991 the club changed its name to FC Nordsjaelland in 2003 6 In international competitions the club can be transliterated as Nordsjaelland NordsjaellandFull nameFootball Club NordsjaellandNickname s Tigrene The Tigers 1 2 Short nameFCNFounded1991 33 years ago 1991 3 GroundRight to Dream Park FarumCapacity10 300 4 OwnerPathways Group 99 5 ChairmanTom Vernon 5 Head coachJohannes Hoff ThorupLeagueDanish Superliga2022 23Danish Superliga 2nd of 12WebsiteClub websiteHome coloursAway coloursCurrent seasonFCN plays in the Danish Superliga winning its first medal in the 2002 03 season taking third place Since then the Wild Tigers have made four appearances in Europe under both the old UEFA Cup format in 2003 04 2008 09 and in the UEFA Europa League during the 2010 11 and 2011 12 seasons In 2010 the club won its first Danish Cup 7 and successfully defended it the following year in 2011 beating Midtjylland in both finals 6 8 FCN won the 2011 12 Danish Superliga in May 2012 which qualified the team to participate in the 2012 13 UEFA Champions League Nordsjaelland plays its home matches at Right to Dream Park which has a capacity of 10 100 of which 9 800 seating and 300 standing spectators 4 9 Contents 1 History 1 1 Farum BK 1991 2003 1 2 FC Nordsjaelland 2003 present 2 Players 2 1 Current squad 2 2 Out on loan 2 3 Retired numbers 2 4 Overall most appearances 2 5 Overall top scorers 2 6 Former players 2 7 Club captains 3 Stadium 4 Club officials 4 1 Managerial history 5 Honours 5 1 National tournaments 5 2 International tournaments 5 2 1 Friendly tournaments 6 Season results 7 FC Nordsjaelland in European competition 8 Fodbold Samarbejde Nordsjaelland 8 1 Affiliated clubs 9 Footnotes and references 10 External linksHistory editFarum BK 1991 2003 edit nbsp Farum Boldklub badge Established on 1 January 1991 from the merger of two football clubs Farum Idraets Klub formed in 1910 and Stavnsholt Boldklub af 1974 3 6 both from the former Farum municipality now consolidated with Vaerlose as the Fureso municipality Farum BK would become one of the few successful mergers in Danish football but not without controversy 6 The club was an initiative of Farum residents 10 including mayor Peter Brixtofte who took a personal interest in the club by arranging sponsorship 11 12 The club kit colours became a combination of the two merged clubs the red and white of Stavnsholt with the yellow and blue of F I K combined into a kit with yellow and red striped shirts and dark blue shorts and socks which is still used in some form to this day Colours were not the only thing the newly formed club inherited as Thomas Andreasen who had been with Stavnsholt BK was carried over into the new Farum squad Andreasen would go on to make a record 295 appearances playing from the Denmark Series all the way to the Danish Superliga until his departure from the club in 2007 10 Farum BK was placed in the second group of the Denmark Series the fourth tier in the Danish football pyramid though it gained promotion to the first group after the club s maiden season 6 Jorgen Andersen a former goalkeeper for Hvidovre took over as the club s first head coach in 1992 The club stayed in the Denmark Series first group for six years Under the guidance of manager Jorgen Tideman who took over in 1994 Farum qualified for promotion into the 2nd Division in the 1997 98 season and subsequently turned professional for the first time in club history 6 10 Farum s first full season as a professional club was a fruitful one edging out Aalborg Chang and Skive by one point gaining promotion for the second time in two years into the 1st Division 6 The club s meteoric rise was slowed at first with the new challenge of playing in the Danish second tier though it was not stopped ending the 1999 2000 campaign with a respectable eighth place finish winning the same number of games as it lost Farum however remained unable to make any sort of impact in the Danish Cup having lost in the first round for the previous three years since making its debut in the tournament in the 1997 98 season The following year saw some progression in both the league and cup improving on the previous year s finish by finishing fifth three spots and nine points behind second placed promotion winners Vejle as well as breaking out of the first round of the Danish Cup to eventually fall to Fremad Amager in the third round following a 2 1 loss With the 2001 02 season unconventional coach Christian Andersen was brought in to manage the team building on the foothold the club had gained in the 1st Division Jeppe Tengbjerg played a pivotal role brought in from B 93 the previous year He scored 16 goals becoming Farum s top goalscorer of the season and third overall in the league The team went on to earn promotion into the Superliga after finishing in second place 11 points clear of third placed Sonderjylland one point behind first place winners Koge scoring a team total of 69 goals the highest in the division that season and losing only four games Farum s 2002 03 appearance in the top flight of Danish football would be its first and last under the Farum BK name It ended the season in third place qualifying for the UEFA Cup for the first time in its history 6 The club s achievement however was overshadowed by the scandal involving Peter Brixtofte who had arranged for the municipality to deliberately overpay for welfare services bought from private companies that in return would sponsor the Farum football team 6 11 13 Brixtofte was forced to step down as chairman and the club came close to bankruptcy 10 FC Nordsjaelland 2003 present edit Parts of this article those related to this section need to be updated Please help update this article to reflect recent events or newly available information August 2020 nbsp The full time score at Farum Park In March 2003 Farum BK was bought by AKP Holding the holdings company of local businessman Allan K Pedersen and in an effort to distance the club from the Brixtofte scandal Farum BK was re branded as FC Nordsjaelland 10 named after the North Zealand Danish Nordsjaelland region to clarify the club was to represent both the region as well as the town in which the club is based 6 To reinforce the status as a regional team a network of local football clubs from the surrounding area was created consisting of around 66 teams with the aim to highlight young talent in the region and bring it to national attention via FC Nordsjaelland The network is known as Fodbold Samarbejde Nordsjaelland FSN 3 6 The club s second year in the Superliga first as Nordsjaelland struggled to improve on the previous year s outing With its worst goal difference since turning professional not one FCN player ended in the top ten goal scorers fighting to avoid relegation for most of the season ending the campaign in ninth place The Wild Tiger fans however were rewarded with European football with the club s first appearance in the UEFA Cup it beat Armenian team Shirak 6 0 on aggregate in the qualifying round but were eliminated in the first round by Greek team Panionios 6 Christian Andersen was sacked at the end of the 2003 04 season replaced by Johnny Petersen as head coach The following two years under Johnny Petersen were spent avoiding relegation with no success to speak of in either the Superliga or Danish Cup Petersen s reign was not completely amiss as he was noted for creating a good young team and the emergence of players Mads Junker and Anders Due For the 2006 07 season Morten Wieghorst was promoted from assistant to head coach 12 a position the former Celtic player would retain for five years Wieghorst s first dilemma in charge of FCN was to fill the gap left by top scorer Mads Junker sale to Dutch side Vitesse the previous winter Morten Nordstrand came in on a free from nearby Lyngby after scoring 29 goals in the 1st Division that previous season Nordstrand would go on to make an instant impact topping the goal scorers charts for the first half of the 2006 07 season and earning himself a call up to the Denmark national team 12 Helping the club to a fifth place finish Nordstrand ended the season with 18 goals after appearing in every league match that season Danish champions Copenhagen purchased the player at the end of the season for a then record 15 million Danish kroner becoming the largest transfer fee ever paid for a player between two Danish clubs With lower than average attendance and issues still arising from the Brixtofte scandal chairman Allan Kim Pedersen confirmed there had been discussions to move the club north to Hillerod where it would be able expand to other sports such as ice hockey and basketball 14 The move however never materialized Nordsjaelland would find itself in a similar position the following season again having sold its star striker Martin Bernburg to Copenhagen The team only managed a ninth place finish yet qualified for the UEFA Cup for the second time via the UEFA Respect Fair Play rankings 6 2008 09 would become a good year for the Wild Tigers in terms of cup competitions making it to the quarter finals in the Danish Cup for the second time in its history and improving on its previous European outing with wins over TVMK Tallinn and Queen of the South though later being knocked out by Greek side Olympiacos 0 7 aggregate 6 In October 2008 Allan K Pedersen sold FC Nordsjaelland from AKP Holding to himself for a reported 500 000 Danish kroner shortly before his holding company went bankrupt a price Pedersen however denies Following an investigation from his creditors it was found that the sale was forced through without the bank s consent and that the value for which the club was sold was too low which ultimate reduced the finances the creators received for the sale FCN was reevaluated to be worth 35 million kroner at the time of sale 15 16 17 The case has gone to the Supreme Court and is yet to be resolved it speculated that it could take one to four years 18 The 2009 10 season saw Nordsjaelland lift its first trophy the Danish Cup FCN was not drawn against another Superliga team until the quarter final meeting with Silkeborg where it won 3 1 in extra time The team would go on to face Midtjylland in Nordsjaelland s first cup final winning in extra time 6 2 0 with goals from new signing Nicolai Stokholm and Bajram Fetai 19 and qualifying for European competition in the newly remodeled UEFA Europa League The team would repeat this feat the following season facing Midtjylland once again in the finals of the Danish Cup and winning the trophy for the second time 6 with a 3 2 win This would be Morten Wieghorst s last trophy with the Wild Tigers however he moved to manage the Denmark under 21 national team at the end of the 2010 11 campaign nbsp FCN celebrating the championshipKasper Hjulmand was named Wieghorst s successor in June 2011 promoted from the coaching staff 6 In preparation for the 2011 12 season the former Lyngby head coach brought in two Danish internationals in Mikkel Beckmann from relegated Randers and Patrick Mtiliga on a free from Malaga FCN sought to improve on the previous season s sixth place finish and to defend its Danish Cup title for the second year running It would go on to play in the Europa League for second year in a row exiting the competition in the third qualifying round after losing to Sporting CP 2 1 aggregate which had also eliminated Nordsjaelland from Europe the previous season 6 nbsp FCN against Juventus in the UEFA Champions LeagueFCN started the new season in good form peaking as high as second in the Superliga and an undefeated run at home in all competitions until 30 October including an impressive 0 0 draw with Portuguese side Sporting CP making the start of the 2011 12 campaign one of its best starts in recent years For the first time in club history a total of five players were called up to the Denmark national team 6 to face Sweden and Finland in November Mikkel Beckmann Andreas Bjelland and debutantes Tobias Mikkelsen Jesper Hansen and Jores Okore 20 21 22 FCN ended the season as Superliga champions for the first time in its history 6 In 2012 13 for the first time FCN participated in the UEFA Champions League where it was drawn into a difficult group alongside defending champions Chelsea Serie A champions Juventus and Ukrainian Premier League champions Shakhtar Donetsk FCN played all its home matches at the Danish national stadium Parken It gained one point from the group stage playing 1 1 against Juventus at home thanks to a direct free kick goal from Beckmann In the last group match a controversial goal from Luiz Adriano became the talking point of the match Players editCurrent squad edit As of 1 January 2024 23 24 Note Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules Players may hold more than one non FIFA nationality No Pos Nation Player2 DF nbsp SWE Ben Engdahl4 DF nbsp DEN Kian Hansen5 DF nbsp DEN Martin Frese6 DF nbsp DEN Jeppe Tverskov7 FW nbsp DEN Marcus Ingvartsen8 FW nbsp NOR Andreas Schjelderup loan from Benfica 9 FW nbsp SWE Benjamin Nygren10 MF nbsp CIV Mohamed Diomande11 FW nbsp DEN Mads Hansen12 MF nbsp FRA Rocco Ascone13 GK nbsp DEN Andreas Hansen14 FW nbsp GHA Ibrahim Osman15 DF nbsp DEN Erik Marxen17 FW nbsp DEN Christian Rasmussen loan from Ajax 19 DF nbsp DEN Lucas Hey21 MF nbsp DEN Zidan Sertdemir No Pos Nation Player22 MF nbsp FIN Oliver Antman23 DF nbsp DEN Oliver Villadsen24 DF nbsp DEN Lucas Hogsberg25 GK nbsp FIN Carljohan Eriksson27 DF nbsp SWE Daniel Svensson29 MF nbsp CIV Mario Dorgeles30 DF nbsp DEN Jonas Jensen Abbew31 GK nbsp DEN Andreas Gulstorff32 FW nbsp USA Milan Iloski39 DF nbsp BFA Adamo Nagalo40 FW nbsp DEN Conrad Harder41 FW nbsp CIV Yannick Agnero42 DF nbsp DEN Kaare Barslund47 MF nbsp DEN Magnus Munck GK nbsp GHA Emmanuel Ogura MF nbsp FIN Leo WaltaOut on loan edit Note Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules Players may hold more than one non FIFA nationality No Pos Nation Player MF nbsp CIV Lasso Coulibaly at Randers until 30 June 2024 Retired numbers edit 26 nbsp Jonathan Richter 2005 09 6 Overall most appearances edit Rank Nationality Name Years Appearances 25 1 nbsp Thomas Andreasen 1999 07 2952 nbsp Soren Christensen 2005 14 2333 nbsp Jesper Hansen 2001 13 1794 nbsp Nicolai Stokholm 2008 14 1785 nbsp Henrik Kildentoft 2007 13 1556 nbsp Morten Karlsen 2005 09 1457 nbsp Patrick Mtiliga 2011 17 1388 nbsp Bajram Fetai 2007 10 1319 nbsp Michael Parkhurst 2009 12 12810 nbsp Tobias Mikkelsen 2009 13 2016 18 125 26 Overall top scorers edit Rank Nationality Name Years Goals 27 1 nbsp Martin Bernburg 2007 09 432 nbsp Emiliano Marcondes 2012 2017 383 nbsp Joshua John 2012 2016 30 nbsp Marcus Ingvartsen 2014 2017 305 nbsp Bajram Fetai 2007 10 29 nbsp Tommy Olsen 2003 06 297 nbsp Mads Junker 2004 06 288 nbsp Rawez Lawan 2009 13 219 nbsp Morten Nordstrand 2006 07 2012 2014 2010 nbsp Thomas Kristensen 2005 08 19 nbsp Tobias Mikkelsen 2009 2013 2016 18 19 28 Former players edit Denmark nbsp Martin Bernburg nbsp Andreas Bjelland nbsp Mikkel Damsgaard nbsp Anders Due nbsp Carsten Fredgaard nbsp Daniel Jensen nbsp Mathias Jensen nbsp Peter Vindahl Jensen nbsp Mads Junker nbsp Thomas Kristensen nbsp Kasper Lorentzen nbsp Tobias Mikkelsen nbsp Nicki Bille Nielsen nbsp Matti Lund Nielsen nbsp Danny Olsen nbsp Tommy Olsen nbsp Andreas Skov Olsen nbsp Nicklas Pedersen nbsp Stephan Petersen nbsp Thomas Rasmussen nbsp Michael Ribers nbsp Jonathan Richter nbsp Simon Richter nbsp Kris Stadsgaard nbsp Jeppe Tengbjerg nbsp Ulrich VinzentsNorway nbsp Andreas Schjelderup nbsp Lars Bohinen nbsp Ulrik Yttergard JenssenCanada nbsp Patrice Bernier nbsp Issey Nakajima Farran Costa Rica nbsp Bryan OviedoGhana nbsp Enoch Kofi Adu nbsp Ernest Nuamah nbsp Francis Dickoh nbsp Mohammed Kudus nbsp Kamaldeen SulemanaIvory Coast nbsp Simon AdingraJapan nbsp Yoshikatsu KawaguchiMacedonia nbsp Bajram Fetai nbsp Dzevdet SainovskiMalawi nbsp Joseph KamwendoSlovakia nbsp Stanislav LobotkaSweden nbsp Pierre Bengtsson nbsp Andreas Dahl nbsp Benjamin Kibebe nbsp Johnny Lundberg nbsp Marcus PodeSwitzerland nbsp Johan DjourouTurkey nbsp Emre MorUnited States nbsp Michael Parkhurst nbsp Heath Pearce Club captains edit Since 2001 seven players have held the position as club captain for Farum BK or FC Nordsjaelland The first recorded captain was Michael Elbaek All recorded captains to date have been of Danish nationality The captain to have lifted the most trophies for FCN is Nicolai Stokholm who won the Danish Cup on two occasions Stokholm is also the current and longest serving captain having taken over from Henrik Kildentoft when the former arrived at the club in 2009 Years Nationality Name 2002 nbsp Michael Elbaek2002 2004 nbsp Martin Birn2004 2005 nbsp Jacob Rasmussen2005 2006 nbsp Tommy Olsen2006 2008 nbsp Kim Christensen2008 2009 nbsp Henrik Kildentoft2009 2014 nbsp Nicolai Stokholm2014 2018 nbsp Patrick Mtiliga2018 nbsp Mathias Jensen2018 2019 nbsp Victor Nelsson2019 2020 nbsp Nicolai Larsen2020 nbsp Kian HansenStadium editNordsjaelland plays its home matches in Right to Dream Park which has a capacity of 10 100 attendances 9 800 seated The stadium is the first in Denmark with artificial turf Club officials editAs of 22 February 2023 29 30 AdministrationChairmen Trine Hesselund Hopp Moller Financial director Flemming Junggaard Skou Administration management Phil Radley Commercial director Hanne Rolighed Sporting director Jan Laursen Technical director Flemming Pedersen Club director Soren Kristensen Media officer Mette Andersen FCN academy leader Mikkel Hemmersam Coaching and medical staffManager Johannes Hoff Thorup Assistant manager Casper Rojkjaer Player coach Michael Essien Goalkeeping coach Magnus Pondus Hansen Trasitional coach Lasse Stensgaard Analyzers Thor Herdal amp Alan Arac Physiotherapists Joakim Dilling amp Jonas Petersen Doctor Jesper Petersen Head of Nutrition Bruno Cirillo Head of Physical Performance Casper Skovgaard Managerial history edit Main article List of F C Nordsjaelland managers Name Nationality From To HonoursChristian Andersen nbsp Denmark 1 July 2003 2004 Promotion to SuperligaJohnny Petersen nbsp Denmark 1 January 2005 30 June 2006Morten Wieghorst nbsp Denmark 1 July 2006 30 June 2011 2 Danish CupsKasper Hjulmand nbsp Denmark 1 July 2011 1 June 2014 1 Superliga Championshipolafur Kristjansson nbsp Iceland 1 June 2014 15 December 2015Kasper Hjulmand nbsp Denmark 1 January 2016 25 March 2019Flemming Pedersen nbsp Denmark 25 March 2019 7 January 2023Johannes Hoff Thorup nbsp Denmark 7 January 2023Key Served as caretaker manager Served as caretaker manager before being appointed permanently Honours editNational tournaments edit Danish SuperligaChampions 2011 12 Runners up 2 2012 13 2022 23 dd 1st DivisionRunners up 1 2001 02 dd Zealand SeriesRunners up 1996 dd Danish CupWinners 2009 10 2010 11 dd International tournaments edit Friendly tournaments edit La Manga CupWinners 2012 dd Season results editSeason 31 32 League performance Cup performance 33 Pos Pts Pld W D L GF GA GD1997 98 Denmark Series 1 3 8 20 14 6 2 6 22 27 5 Eliminated in First round by Virum Sorgenfri 0 31998 99 2nd Division 5 16 50 30 15 5 10 57 38 19 Eliminated in First round by Nakskov 2 31999 2000 Faxe Kondi Divisionen 8 16 42 30 12 6 12 48 58 10 Eliminated in First round by Roskilde 1 22000 01 Faxe Kondi Divisionen 5 16 50 30 15 5 10 62 48 14 Eliminated in Third round by Fremad A 1 22001 02 1st Division 2 16 66 30 20 6 4 69 33 36 Eliminated in Third round by Koge 2 42002 03 SAS Ligaen 3 12 51 33 16 3 14 49 58 9 Eliminated in the Quarter finals by Viborg 2 52003 04 SAS Ligaen 9 12 32 33 7 11 15 35 59 24 Eliminated in Fifth round by Copenhagen 2 42004 05 SAS Ligaen 10 12 30 33 8 6 19 36 59 23 Eliminated in Fifth round by Fremad A 2 32005 06 SAS Ligaen 9 12 38 33 9 11 13 49 55 6 Eliminated in Fourth round by Viborg 0 32006 07 SAS Ligaen 5 12 57 33 16 9 8 67 39 28 Eliminated in Third round by OB 0 12007 08 SAS Ligaen 9 12 43 33 11 10 12 47 51 4 Eliminated in Third round by Vejle 1 22008 09 SAS Ligaen 8 12 35 33 9 8 16 44 53 9 Eliminated in the Quarter finals by AaB 1 22009 10 SAS Ligaen 7 12 43 33 12 7 14 40 41 1 Winner won the Final against Midtjylland 2 0 aet 2010 11 Superligaen 6 12 39 33 10 9 14 38 50 12 Winner won the Final against Midtjylland 3 22011 12 Superligaen 1 12 68 33 21 5 7 49 22 27 Eliminated in the Quarter finals by Copenhagen 0 22012 13 Superligaen 2 12 60 33 17 9 7 60 37 23 Eliminated in the Fourth round by Midtjylland 2 32013 14 Superligaen 6 12 46 33 13 7 13 38 44 6 Eliminated in the Semi finals by Copenhagen 1 22014 15 Superligaen 6 12 44 33 13 5 15 39 44 5 Eliminated in the Second round by SC Egedal 1 1 3 4 p 2015 16 Superligaen 9 12 38 33 11 5 17 35 51 16 Eliminated in the Second round by Naestved BK 0 12016 17 Superligaen 5 14 49 36 13 10 13 59 55 4 Eliminated in the Third round by Naestved BK 0 12017 18 Superligaen 3 14 59 36 17 8 11 76 58 18 Eliminated in the Fourth round by Hobro IK 1 1 3 4 p 2018 19 Superligaen 6 14 44 36 10 14 12 52 54 2 Eliminated in the Fourth round by Vendsyssel FF 0 12019 20 Superligaen 6 14 47 36 13 8 15 59 54 5 Eliminated in the Fourth round by Copenhagen 1 42020 21 Superligaen 5 12 43 32 11 10 11 51 51 0 Eliminated in the Third round by Hvidovre IF 0 22021 22 Superligaen 9 12 36 32 8 12 12 38 47 9 Eliminated in the Fourth round by OB 1 42022 23 Superligaen 2 12 55 32 15 10 7 50 35 15 Eliminated in the Semi finals by Copenhagen 6 7FC Nordsjaelland in European competition editMain article FC Nordsjaelland in European football FC Nordsjaelland s first competitive European match was on 14 August 2003 in the 2003 04 UEFA Cup beating Shirak F C 4 0 at home In total the club has participated in European competitions in seven different seasons reaching as far as the Group stage of the 2012 13 UEFA Champions League However as of August 2018 they have never qualified for the group stage after starting from a qualifying round 34 Fodbold Samarbejde Nordsjaelland edit nbsp Fodbold Samarbejde Nordsjaelland badge for clubs in the FSN network The Fodbold Samarbejde Nordsjaelland Football Cooperation North ZealandorFSN in short is a network of affiliated clubs headed by FC Nordsjaelland in which to highlight talent youth development cooperation and community in the North Zealand region Where clubs participating receive benefits from FCN such as loan moves friendlies tickets to games merchandise coach visits training camps and coaching courses In return FC Nordsjaelland get access to a large scouting network of youth players which has helped develop many young talent to become youth internationals who have gone on to play professionally in the Danish Superliga and beyond FSN has also played an important role in the attendance rise in Farum Park Affiliated clubs edit As of 6 February 2013 35 Allerod FK Alsonderup IF Alholm Fodbold Olsted IF Olstykke FC Ballerup IF BFC Lundegarden Blistrup SI Brodeskov IF Blovstrod IF BSV Dalby IF Dragor BK Dollefjelde Musse IF Elite 3000 Espergaerde IF FA 2000 Farum BK Faxe Ladeplads IF FC Holte FC Jonstrup FIF Hillerod Frederikssund IK Frem Hellebaek G77 Gundsomagle Gilleleje FK Gorlose SI Grantoften IF Graested IF Gundsolille IF Gundsomagle 77 Gurre IK Hasle IF Horsholm Usserod IK Helsinge Fodbold Helsingor IF Hillerod GI Hornbaek IF Humlebaek BK Hundested IK IF Skjold Birkerod IS Skaevinge Jyllinge FC Jaegersborg BK Kalundborg GB Karlebo IF KBK Hillerod Kirke Hyllinge IF Kirke Vaerlose IF KFUM Roskilde Kr Vaerlose IF Lolland Falster Alliancen Lynge Uggelose IF Malov BK NB Bornholm Nordstevns GI Nodebo IF Niva Kokkedal FK Oppe Sundby IF ORI Fodbold Raklev GI Ramlose Fodbold Skovshoved IF Slangerup og Omegns IF Slangslunde Ganlose IF Snekkersten IF Store Lyngby IF Tikob IF Uvelse IF Vaerlose BK Vejby Tisvilde FodboldFootnotes and references edit Optakt FC Nordsjaelland Brondby IF in Danish Danish Superliga 23 June 2020 Archived from the original on 10 January 2021 Retrieved 16 September 2020 Kommentar Tigrene fra Farum skal pa jagt og det kan AGF lukrere pa in Danish Arhus Stiftstidende 17 June 2020 Archived from the original on 24 December 2020 Retrieved 16 September 2020 a b c FCN History FCN dk F C Nordsjaelland Archived from the original on 4 November 2018 Retrieved 10 August 2011 a b FCN Farum Park in Danish FCN dk F C Nordsjaelland Archived from the original on 11 July 2015 Retrieved 10 August 2011 a b EXCLUSIVE Right to Dream Academy owner Tom Vernon completes takeover of Danish giants Nordsjaelland soccernet com 15 December 2015 Archived from the original on 27 June 2021 Retrieved 18 December 2015 a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u Congratulations FC Nordsjaelland qosfc com Queen of the South F C Archived from the original on 17 November 2019 Retrieved 27 May 2012 Sibusiso Zuma lifts Danish Cup with Fc Nordsjaelland KickOff com 14 May 2010 Archived from the original on 28 August 2018 Retrieved 10 August 2011 Bruun Peter 2 June 2011 Season review Denmark UEFA Archived from the original on 28 August 2018 Retrieved 10 August 2011 Per Gunnar 18 July 2009 Nordsjaelland Groundhopping se Archived from the original on 30 December 2019 Retrieved 10 August 2011 a b c d e Birch Claus Den nordsjaellandske fodboldkronike 10 kapitel 1991 2006 in Danish Nordsjaellands Fodboldhistorie Archived from the original on 30 March 2012 Retrieved 10 August 2011 a b Blem Hans 19 June 2006 Dommens dag for Brixtofte Ekstra Bladet in Danish JP Politikens Hus Archived from the original on 22 May 2014 Retrieved 10 August 2011 a b c Exner Mikkel 6 March 2007 FC Nordsjaelland in Danish TotalBold dk Archived from the original on 7 March 2016 Retrieved 10 August 2011 Dom star fast Brixtofte to ar i faengsel in Danish DR Radio 8 February 2007 Archived from the original on 29 December 2016 Retrieved 10 August 2011 Baunsgaard Casper 6 June 2007 FC Nordsjaelland gar med flytteplaner in Danish Bold dk Archived from the original on 25 September 2012 Retrieved 14 August 2011 Horn Jakob 20 February 2009 Allan K Pedersen solgte FCN til sig selv in Danish Bold dk Archived from the original on 25 September 2012 Retrieved 14 August 2011 Horn Jakob 5 March 2009 Kurator FCN kostede en halv million in Danish Bold dk Archived from the original on 25 September 2012 Retrieved 14 August 2011 Horn Jakob 21 April 2009 Kurator Allan K gav 35 millioner for lidt in Danish Bold dk Archived from the original on 27 December 2016 Retrieved 14 August 2011 Houlind Soren 12 January 2011 FCN ejer i landsretten in Danish Bold dk Archived from the original on 25 September 2012 Retrieved 14 August 2011 FC Nordsjaelland vandt pokaltitlen Ritzau in Danish TV 2 Sport 13 May 2010 Archived from the original on 18 March 2012 Retrieved 11 August 2011 Helmin Jesper 31 October 2011 Beckmann Har ikke grebet chancen in Danish Bold dk Archived from the original on 12 October 2016 Retrieved 3 November 2011 Helmin Jesper 3 November 2011 Hansen stolt af landsholdsplads in Danish Bold dk Archived from the original on 23 September 2015 Retrieved 3 November 2011 Blond Mikael 6 November 2011 19 arig FCN komet afloser Kjaer in Danish Bold dk Archived from the original on 23 September 2015 Retrieved 6 November 2011 Spillere Arkiv FC Nordsjaelland Archived from the original on 17 November 2020 Retrieved 8 September 2021 DANMARKSTURNERINGEN 2022 23 SUPERLIGAEN KLUBSIDER Archived from the original on 22 May 2019 Retrieved 12 July 2018 FCN Hall of Fame in Danish FCN dk F C Nordsjaelland Archived from the original on 16 July 2015 Retrieved 10 August 2011 FCN Tobias Mikkelsen FC Nordsjaelland in Danish FCN dk F C Nordsjaelland Archived from the original on 2 July 2017 Retrieved 13 May 2016 FCN Tidligere spillere in Danish FCN dk F C Nordsjaelland Archived from the original on 28 January 2012 Retrieved 10 August 2011 FCN Tobias Mikkelsen FC Nordsjaelland in Danish FCN dk F C Nordsjaelland Archived from the original on 2 July 2017 Retrieved 20 July 2016 FCN Stab in Danish FCN dk F C Nordsjaelland Archived from the original on 22 February 2023 Retrieved 22 February 2023 FCN Administrationen in Danish FCN dk F C Nordsjaelland Archived from the original on 22 February 2023 Retrieved 22 February 2023 Haslund Henrik Haslund Christian Jorgensen Palle Danmarksturneringen in Danish Haslund info Archived from the original on 28 September 2011 Retrieved 10 August 2011 Danmarksturneringen 1997 98 slutstillingen in Danish DanskFodbold com DBU s Officielle Statistikere Archived from the original on 14 October 2020 Retrieved 12 August 2011 Haslund Henrik Haslund Christian Jorgensen Palle Pokalturneringen in Danish Haslund info Archived from the original on 20 October 2007 Retrieved 10 August 2011 Nordsjaelland Profile UEFA Archived from the original on 23 March 2019 Retrieved 22 August 2018 FCN Medlemsklubber in Danish FCN dk F C Nordsjaelland Archived from the original on 26 September 2011 Retrieved 14 August 2011 External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to FC Nordsjaelland Official website in Danish F C Nordsjaelland at UEFA in English Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title FC Nordsjaelland amp oldid 1194725704, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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