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Wikipedia

K.R.C. Genk

Koninklijke Racing Club Genk (Dutch pronunciation: [ˈkoːnɪŋkləkə ˈreːsɪŋ ˌklʏp ˈɣɛŋk]),[3] commonly known as KRC Genk, Racing Genk or simply Genk, is a Belgian professional football club based in the city of Genk in Belgian Limburg. Racing Genk plays in the Belgian Pro League and have won four championship titles; in 1998–99, in 2001–02, in 2010–11 and in 2018–19. They have also won five Belgian Cups, most recently in 2020–21. They qualified for the UEFA Champions League group stage in the 2002–03, 2011–12 and 2019–20.

KRC Genk
Full nameKoninklijke Racing Club Genk
Nickname(s)Blauw-Wit (Blue-White)
Racing
KRC
De Smurfen (The Smurfs)
Founded1988; 35 years ago (1988) after merging with KFC Winterslag
GroundLuminus Arena, Genk
Capacity23,718[1]
21,500 (UEFA matches)[2]
ChairmanPeter Croonen
ManagerWouter Vrancken
LeagueBelgian Pro League
2021–22Belgian Pro League, 6th of 18
WebsiteClub website
Current season

The club formed in 1988 by the merger of Waterschei Thor with KFC Winterslag, from which it took over the matricule number. It has been one of the most successful clubs in Belgium since the late 1990s and so they regularly qualify for European competitions. The club has been playing in the first division since the 1996–97 season. They play their home matches in the Cegeka Arena. Their main outfit is blue and white.

History

KFC Winterslag history (1923–1988)

The club FC Winterslag was founded in 1923 and that gave it the matricule number 322. On its 35th anniversary the club added the Royal prefix Koninklijke to their name to become KFC Winterslag. In 1972–73 Winterslag reached the second division and they eventually qualified for the 1974–75 Belgian First Division after finishing second in the second division final round. They had taken advantage of the increase in the number of first division clubs (from 16 to 20). The club ended the season in last place but won the second division right after.

KFC Winterslag reached the 5th place in 1981 which allowed them to play UEFA Cup matches, where it defeated Bryne FK from Norway and English Premier league giant Arsenal.[4] In the next round it was knocked out by Dundee United from Scotland. Two seasons later it was relegated to the second stage after a disappointing last place. That season Standard Liège won the championship on bribery in a match against the club of Waterschei Thor that would eventually merge with the matricule number 322. Following a spell of four seasons in the second division, Winterslag found its place again in the first division by winning the 1987 final round, one point ahead of Tongeren. It finished 15th on 18 but at the end of the season, the club merged with the neighbour club of Waterschei Thor which was playing in the second division since its relegation in 1986.

K Waterschei SV Thor Genk

K Waterschei SV Thor was created in 1919 as Waterschei's Sport Vereeniging Thor with Thor being the acronym of Tot Herstel Onzer Rechten (English: To recover our rights). It received matricule number n°533. The club enjoyed a spell in the first division in the late 1950s to the early 1960s and again from 1978 to 1986.

During the 1982–83 season, the match between Standard Liège and Waterschei had been fixed [fr] and Standard eventually won the championship. Waterschei won the Belgian Cup twice (1980 and 1982). The latter victory led to them reaching the semi-finals of the European Cup Winners Cup in the 1982–83 season. After defeating PSG in the quarter-finals, Waterschei lost the first leg of the semi-final 5–1 at Pittodrie Stadium, home of the eventual winners, Aberdeen A 1–0 victory in Waterschei, courtesy of Eddy Voordeckers, could not reverse the position.

After two seasons in the second division, K. Waterschei SV Thor Genk merged with KFC Winterslag in 1988 to form the current KRC Genk.

K.R.C. Genk (1988–present)

1990s and 2000s

The new club was named KRC Genk and as it kept the Winterslag ranking, it began in the first division but finished last. The next year Genk managed to win the final round in 2nd division and then played 4 seasons in the first division. In 1995 the club hired Aimé Anthuenis a coach and Racing finished second and skipped the final round as two first division teams merged (Seraing and Standard Liège). After an eighth place in 1997, the club had a good 1997–98 season with a cup win and a second place in the championship. In its first European season, Racing Genk eliminated successively Apolonia Fier and MSV Duisburg but it lost to Mallorca in the round of 16 after two draws (1–1 on aggregate) in the last Cup Winners' Cup ever. The season was ended well as Genk won its first Belgian championship in May, with manager Aimé Anthuenis then moving to Anderlecht.

Genk played in the UEFA Champions League in 1999–2000 but lost in the second qualifying round to Maribor. The season was salvaged by winning the Belgian Cup again, this time to Standard, but Genk ended the championship in 9th place. It finished 11th in the following season and lost in the UEFA Cup second round to Werder Bremen after a win against FC Zürich. After this poor spell, Genk managed to win the championship once more in the 2001–02 season. In 2002–03, they reached the Champions League group stages for the first time in their history. Although they came 4th, they impressed fans with draws against Real Madrid, Roma and AEK Athens.

In the 2006–07 season, Genk finished second to Anderlecht. The Limburgians had been ahead almost the entire season but were pipped at the post by Anderlecht after losing at Germinal Beerschot. The 2007–08 season was a disaster, as Genk failed to finish in the top half of the division, ending in a disappointing tenth place.

Three bad seasons followed. Genk finished the 2007–08 season on 45 points and in 10th spot in the league: their worst result in seven years. The 2008–09 season was poor for Genk as well, finishing 8th in the league. The season ended on a positive note with them winning the Belgian Cup, which gave them a ticket to the fourth Europa League qualifying round. The 2009–10 season started badly when they were knocked out of the Europa League by Lille. Things did not go well in the domestic league either. Manager Hein Vanhaezebrouck was fired in December and was replaced by Franky Vercauteren. Genk finished 11th, but Vercauteren managed to lead the club to European football by beating derby rival Sint-Truiden in the final of Play-offs II.

2010s

The 2010–11 season started well for KRC Genk when they beat Inter Turku with 1–5 in Finland. They progressed to the 4th qualifying round of the Europa League and drew the Portuguese club Porto. Genk lost both games against Porto, despite two good performances.

On 30 January 2010, KRC Genk announced that coach Franky Vercauteren signed a new contract that ran untl June 2013.

They only lost their first game of the season on the 20th matchday and started the Play-offs in second place. The club won the 2010–11 Belgian Pro League after drawing 1–1 with title challengers Standard Liége.[5] This was KRC Genk's third league win in its history and its supporters celebrated with a pitch invasion straight after the final whistle.

On 11 August, coach Frank Vercauteren confirmed he was leaving Genk and signed with Abu Dhabi club Al-Jazira. In the 3rd Qualifying Round of the 2011–12 UEFA Champions League KRC Genk beat FK Partizan over two legs and drew Maccabi Haifa in the play-off Round. Maccabi Haifa beat Genk 2–1 in the first leg in Israel, while the second leg was won by Genk with the same 2–1 score in Belgium. During the penalty shoot-out, goalkeeper László Köteles helped Genk to qualify by saving two penalties.[6] For the second time in its history, KRC Genk reached the group stages of the UEFA Champions League. They were drawn in Group E with Chelsea, Valencia and Bayer Leverkusen.

In late August 2011, Mario Been was announced as the new manager. The Champions League campaign was one with ups and downs. Genk managed to get a 1–1 result against both Chelsea and Bayer Leverkusen and a goalless draw against Valencia. Away from home, Genk lost all three games. The season in the Jupiler League was a difficult one, with Genk only just qualifying for the play-offs by finishing sixth in the regular competition. In the play-offs however, Genk started to play better and climbed up to third place. By finishing in third place, KRC Genk qualified for the third qualifying round of the Europa League.

The 2012–13 season started well for Genk by qualifying for the Europa League group stage after beating Aktobe and FC Luzern. In this group stage KRC Genk performed very well and ultimately won the group without a single defeat. Genk finished first with three points more than Basel and by doing so, qualified for the next round where they faced VfB Stuttgart. It was the first time in the club's history that they played European football after Christmas. Stuttgart got the better of Genk over the two games. In the league, Genk qualified for the play-offs and performed well until the title was out of reach; fifth place was the result. Genk ended their season on a positive note by winning the Belgian Cup. They defeated Cercle Brugge in the final, in front of 30,000 Genk fans.

In the 2016–2017 season, Genk participated in the UEFA Europa League; they started playing in the second qualifying round and qualified for the third qualifying round (on 21 July 2016)[7] and the play-off round (on 4 August 2016).[8] They won their group with 3 home victories over Athletic Bilbao, Rapid Wien and Sassuolo and after defeating Astra Giurgiu (2–2 and 1–0) in the 2nd round they drew KAA Gent from the domestic Belgian Pro League with 2 confusing games Gent-Genk, Genk-Gent and an impressive 2–5 away victory. Even when Genk got beaten in the quarter final against Celta de Vigo (3–2 and 1–1), it was Genk's most successful European season.

Genk won the 2018–19 Belgian First Division A for the fourth time in their history, hence they qualified for the 2019–20 UEFA Champions League after an eight-year absence.[9]

Genk started their 2019–20 UEFA Champions League campaign with a poor 6–2 loss against Austrian club Red Bull Salzburg. In the second match they drew 0–0 against Napoli, and in the third match they lost 1–4 against Liverpool.

Youth academy

Genk is well known for its outstanding youth academy. In 2003 they built their youth center next to their stadium and set up a youth program with Ronny Vangeneugden. There are further plans to build a boarding school and some synthetic pitches. In the past and now, many young players have found their way through the youth system. Some examples are Yannick Carrasco, Jelle Vossen, Dennis Praet, Steven Defour, Christian Benteke, Thibaut Courtois, Divock Origi, Timothy Castagne, Leandro Trossard and Kevin De Bruyne.

Their scouting is also highly regarded. Players such as Kalidou Koulibaly, Wilfred Ndidi, Leon Bailey, Sergej Milinković-Savić and Sander Berge all played for Genk.

Honours

Winners: 1998–99, 2001–02, 2010–11, 2018–19
Runners-up: 1997–98, 2006–07, 2020–21
Winners: 1975–76
Runners-up: 1986–87, 1995–96
Winners: 1987, 1990
Runners-up: 1974
Winners: 1997–98, 1999–2000, 2008–09, 2012–13, 2020–21
Runners-up: 2017–18
Winners: 2011, 2019
Runners-up: 1998, 1999, 2000, 2002, 2009, 2013, 2021

European record

Updated 31 August 2018.
Tournament Pld W D L GF GA GD Win%
Champions League / European Cup 22 5 8 9 20 41 −21 022.73
Europa League / UEFA Cup 60 34 12 14 117 80 +37 056.67
Cup Winners' Cup 6 3 3 0 16 3 +13 050.00
UEFA Intertoto Cup 10 5 2 3 19 13 +6 050.00
Total 98 47 25 26 172 137 +35 047.96

Summary of best results

From the quarter-finals upwards:

UEFA Cup/UEFA Europa League:

- Quarter-finalists in 2016–17

UEFA Intertoto Cup:

- Semi-finalists in 2003–04

UEFA club coefficient ranking

Genk got its highest ranking (44th) in the season 2016/17. [1]

Ranking in season 2021/22: Source: [2]

Rank Team Points
88   Molde FK 19.000
89   Luhansk 18.000
90   Genk 18.000
91   APOEL 18.000
92   FCSB 17.500

Players

Current squad

As of 31 August 2022[10]

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

No. Pos. Nation Player
23 DF   COL Daniel Muñoz
24 MF   BEL Luca Oyen
25 MF   ARG Matías Galarza
26 GK   BEL Maarten Vandevoordt
27 DF   BEL Matisse Didden
28 FW   GHA Joseph Paintsil
30 GK   BEL Vic Chambaere
34 MF   MAR Bilal El Khannous
35 FW   HUN András Németh
40 GK   BEL Tobe Leysen
41 GK   BEL Mike Penders
46 DF   COL Carlos Cuesta
55 DF   BEL Tuur Rommens
77 DF   ECU Ángelo Preciado

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
MF   SUI Bastien Toma (at Paços de Ferreira until 30 June 2023)

Other players under contract

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

No. Pos. Nation Player
DF   BEL Sébastien Dewaest
No. Pos. Nation Player
MF   CIV Eboue Kouassi

Jong Genk

As of 4 January, 2023

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

No. Pos. Nation Player
15 MF   BEL Jay-Dee Geusens
19 FW   BEL Sekou Diawara
20 FW   TAN Kelvin John
27 MF   BEL Matisse Didden
41 GK   BEL Mike Penders
51 GK   BEL Brent Stevens
52 DF   BEL Daan Dierckx (on loan from Parma)
53 DF   BEL Amine Et Taïbi
54 DF   BEL Lucas Beerten
55 DF   BEL Tuur Rommens (captain)
56 MF   BEL Maarten Swerts
57 MF   BEL Deniz Arabaci
No. Pos. Nation Player
58 MF   BEL Kamiel Van De Perre
59 FW   BEL Dario Cutillas Carpe
60 FW   BEL Mika Godts
61 GK   BEL Zenzo De Boeck
62 DF   BEL Sofiane Et Taïbi
63 DF   BEL Faissal Al Mazyani
64 DF   BEL Nolan Martens
65 DF   NED Sam De Grand
66 MF   BEL Lars Michiels
67 MF   BEL Raf Smekens
68 MF   BEL Thomas Claes
70 MF   GUI Ibrahima Bangoura
MF   ECU Alfred Caicedo

Former players

Club officials

As of 1 July 2022
Position Staff
President   Peter Croonen
Vice-President   Mathieu Cilissen
Chief Executive Officer   Erik Gerits
Board Member   Herbert Houben
Manager   Wouter Vrancken
Assistant Manager   Domenico Olivieri
  Michel Ribeiro
First-Team Coach   Kevin Van Dessel
  Jan Wuytens
Goalkeeper Coach   Guy Martens
Fitness Coach   Glenn Vanryckeghem
Video Analyst   Peter Persoons
Club Doctor   Philip Thys
  Dr. Johan Jespers
Physiotherapist   Matthias Didden
  Martijn Smeets
  Erwin Kelchtermans
Medical department   Jan Theunis
Finance Director   Filip Aerden
Director of Marketing and Sales   Stephan Poelmans
Head of Youth Scouting   Jochen Janssen
Coordinator of talent management   Jos Daerden
Team Manager   Pierre Denier
Technical Director   Dimitri De Condé

Managers

References

  1. ^ Luminus Arena krcgenk.be (last check 30/03/2018)
  2. ^ https://www.uefa.com/MultimediaFiles/Download/StatDoc/competitions/UCL/01/67/63/78/1676378_DOWNLOAD.pdf[bare URL PDF]
  3. ^ Genk in isolation: [ˈɣɛŋk].
  4. ^ "Arsenal Humiliated in Europe On This Day". 3 November 1981.
  5. ^ "Genk pip Standard to Belgian title by Berend Scholten on UEFA.com". UEFA.com. 17 May 2011.
  6. ^ "Köteles shines as Genk defeat Haifa on penalties". UEFA. 23 August 2011.
  7. ^ Budućnost Podgorica–Genk 2–0; UEFA report.
  8. ^ Cork–Genk 1–2; UEFA report.
  9. ^ "KRC Genk kan Groep des Doods loten in Champions League". voetbalnieuws.be (in Dutch). 28 May 2019.
  10. ^ "1ste ploeg" (in Dutch). K.R.C. Genk.

External links

  • (in English and Dutch) KRC Genk Official Website
  • (in English) KRC Genk at UEFA.COM
  • KRC Genk at EUFO.DE
  • KRC Genk at Weltfussball.de
  • KRC Genk at Football Squads.co.uk
  • KRC Genk at National Football Teams.com
  • KRC Genk at Football Lineups.com
  • (in English) RC Genk XtraTime Fanpage

genk, women, team, genk, ladies, confused, with, gent, koninklijke, racing, club, genk, dutch, pronunciation, ˈkoːnɪŋkləkə, ˈreːsɪŋ, ˌklʏp, ˈɣɛŋk, commonly, known, genk, racing, genk, simply, genk, belgian, professional, football, club, based, city, genk, belg. For the women s team see KRC Genk Ladies Not to be confused with K A A Gent Koninklijke Racing Club Genk Dutch pronunciation ˈkoːnɪŋkleke ˈreːsɪŋ ˌklʏp ˈɣɛŋk 3 commonly known as KRC Genk Racing Genk or simply Genk is a Belgian professional football club based in the city of Genk in Belgian Limburg Racing Genk plays in the Belgian Pro League and have won four championship titles in 1998 99 in 2001 02 in 2010 11 and in 2018 19 They have also won five Belgian Cups most recently in 2020 21 They qualified for the UEFA Champions League group stage in the 2002 03 2011 12 and 2019 20 KRC GenkFull nameKoninklijke Racing Club GenkNickname s Blauw Wit Blue White RacingKRCDe Smurfen The Smurfs Founded1988 35 years ago 1988 after merging with KFC WinterslagGroundLuminus Arena GenkCapacity23 718 1 21 500 UEFA matches 2 ChairmanPeter CroonenManagerWouter VranckenLeagueBelgian Pro League2021 22Belgian Pro League 6th of 18WebsiteClub websiteHome coloursAway coloursCurrent seasonThe club formed in 1988 by the merger of Waterschei Thor with KFC Winterslag from which it took over the matricule number It has been one of the most successful clubs in Belgium since the late 1990s and so they regularly qualify for European competitions The club has been playing in the first division since the 1996 97 season They play their home matches in the Cegeka Arena Their main outfit is blue and white Contents 1 History 1 1 KFC Winterslag history 1923 1988 1 2 K Waterschei SV Thor Genk 1 3 K R C Genk 1988 present 2 Youth academy 3 Honours 4 European record 4 1 Summary of best results 4 2 UEFA club coefficient ranking 5 Players 5 1 Current squad 5 2 Out on loan 5 3 Other players under contract 5 4 Jong Genk 5 5 Former players 6 Club officials 7 Managers 8 References 9 External linksHistory EditKFC Winterslag history 1923 1988 Edit The club FC Winterslag was founded in 1923 and that gave it the matricule number 322 On its 35th anniversary the club added the Royal prefix Koninklijke to their name to become KFC Winterslag In 1972 73 Winterslag reached the second division and they eventually qualified for the 1974 75 Belgian First Division after finishing second in the second division final round They had taken advantage of the increase in the number of first division clubs from 16 to 20 The club ended the season in last place but won the second division right after KFC Winterslag reached the 5th place in 1981 which allowed them to play UEFA Cup matches where it defeated Bryne FK from Norway and English Premier league giant Arsenal 4 In the next round it was knocked out by Dundee United from Scotland Two seasons later it was relegated to the second stage after a disappointing last place That season Standard Liege won the championship on bribery in a match against the club of Waterschei Thor that would eventually merge with the matricule number 322 Following a spell of four seasons in the second division Winterslag found its place again in the first division by winning the 1987 final round one point ahead of Tongeren It finished 15th on 18 but at the end of the season the club merged with the neighbour club of Waterschei Thor which was playing in the second division since its relegation in 1986 K Waterschei SV Thor Genk Edit Main article K Waterschei S V Thor Genk K Waterschei SV Thor was created in 1919 as Waterschei s Sport Vereeniging Thor with Thor being the acronym of Tot Herstel Onzer Rechten English To recover our rights It received matricule number n 533 The club enjoyed a spell in the first division in the late 1950s to the early 1960s and again from 1978 to 1986 During the 1982 83 season the match between Standard Liege and Waterschei had been fixed fr and Standard eventually won the championship Waterschei won the Belgian Cup twice 1980 and 1982 The latter victory led to them reaching the semi finals of the European Cup Winners Cup in the 1982 83 season After defeating PSG in the quarter finals Waterschei lost the first leg of the semi final 5 1 at Pittodrie Stadium home of the eventual winners Aberdeen A 1 0 victory in Waterschei courtesy of Eddy Voordeckers could not reverse the position After two seasons in the second division K Waterschei SV Thor Genk merged with KFC Winterslag in 1988 to form the current KRC Genk K R C Genk 1988 present Edit 1990s and 2000sThe new club was named KRC Genk and as it kept the Winterslag ranking it began in the first division but finished last The next year Genk managed to win the final round in 2nd division and then played 4 seasons in the first division In 1995 the club hired Aime Anthuenis a coach and Racing finished second and skipped the final round as two first division teams merged Seraing and Standard Liege After an eighth place in 1997 the club had a good 1997 98 season with a cup win and a second place in the championship In its first European season Racing Genk eliminated successively Apolonia Fier and MSV Duisburg but it lost to Mallorca in the round of 16 after two draws 1 1 on aggregate in the last Cup Winners Cup ever The season was ended well as Genk won its first Belgian championship in May with manager Aime Anthuenis then moving to Anderlecht Genk played in the UEFA Champions League in 1999 2000 but lost in the second qualifying round to Maribor The season was salvaged by winning the Belgian Cup again this time to Standard but Genk ended the championship in 9th place It finished 11th in the following season and lost in the UEFA Cup second round to Werder Bremen after a win against FC Zurich After this poor spell Genk managed to win the championship once more in the 2001 02 season In 2002 03 they reached the Champions League group stages for the first time in their history Although they came 4th they impressed fans with draws against Real Madrid Roma and AEK Athens In the 2006 07 season Genk finished second to Anderlecht The Limburgians had been ahead almost the entire season but were pipped at the post by Anderlecht after losing at Germinal Beerschot The 2007 08 season was a disaster as Genk failed to finish in the top half of the division ending in a disappointing tenth place Three bad seasons followed Genk finished the 2007 08 season on 45 points and in 10th spot in the league their worst result in seven years The 2008 09 season was poor for Genk as well finishing 8th in the league The season ended on a positive note with them winning the Belgian Cup which gave them a ticket to the fourth Europa League qualifying round The 2009 10 season started badly when they were knocked out of the Europa League by Lille Things did not go well in the domestic league either Manager Hein Vanhaezebrouck was fired in December and was replaced by Franky Vercauteren Genk finished 11th but Vercauteren managed to lead the club to European football by beating derby rival Sint Truiden in the final of Play offs II 2010sThe 2010 11 season started well for KRC Genk when they beat Inter Turku with 1 5 in Finland They progressed to the 4th qualifying round of the Europa League and drew the Portuguese club Porto Genk lost both games against Porto despite two good performances On 30 January 2010 KRC Genk announced that coach Franky Vercauteren signed a new contract that ran untl June 2013 They only lost their first game of the season on the 20th matchday and started the Play offs in second place The club won the 2010 11 Belgian Pro League after drawing 1 1 with title challengers Standard Liege 5 This was KRC Genk s third league win in its history and its supporters celebrated with a pitch invasion straight after the final whistle On 11 August coach Frank Vercauteren confirmed he was leaving Genk and signed with Abu Dhabi club Al Jazira In the 3rd Qualifying Round of the 2011 12 UEFA Champions League KRC Genk beat FK Partizan over two legs and drew Maccabi Haifa in the play off Round Maccabi Haifa beat Genk 2 1 in the first leg in Israel while the second leg was won by Genk with the same 2 1 score in Belgium During the penalty shoot out goalkeeper Laszlo Koteles helped Genk to qualify by saving two penalties 6 For the second time in its history KRC Genk reached the group stages of the UEFA Champions League They were drawn in Group E with Chelsea Valencia and Bayer Leverkusen In late August 2011 Mario Been was announced as the new manager The Champions League campaign was one with ups and downs Genk managed to get a 1 1 result against both Chelsea and Bayer Leverkusen and a goalless draw against Valencia Away from home Genk lost all three games The season in the Jupiler League was a difficult one with Genk only just qualifying for the play offs by finishing sixth in the regular competition In the play offs however Genk started to play better and climbed up to third place By finishing in third place KRC Genk qualified for the third qualifying round of the Europa League The 2012 13 season started well for Genk by qualifying for the Europa League group stage after beating Aktobe and FC Luzern In this group stage KRC Genk performed very well and ultimately won the group without a single defeat Genk finished first with three points more than Basel and by doing so qualified for the next round where they faced VfB Stuttgart It was the first time in the club s history that they played European football after Christmas Stuttgart got the better of Genk over the two games In the league Genk qualified for the play offs and performed well until the title was out of reach fifth place was the result Genk ended their season on a positive note by winning the Belgian Cup They defeated Cercle Brugge in the final in front of 30 000 Genk fans In the 2016 2017 season Genk participated in the UEFA Europa League they started playing in the second qualifying round and qualified for the third qualifying round on 21 July 2016 7 and the play off round on 4 August 2016 8 They won their group with 3 home victories over Athletic Bilbao Rapid Wien and Sassuolo and after defeating Astra Giurgiu 2 2 and 1 0 in the 2nd round they drew KAA Gent from the domestic Belgian Pro League with 2 confusing games Gent Genk Genk Gent and an impressive 2 5 away victory Even when Genk got beaten in the quarter final against Celta de Vigo 3 2 and 1 1 it was Genk s most successful European season Genk won the 2018 19 Belgian First Division A for the fourth time in their history hence they qualified for the 2019 20 UEFA Champions League after an eight year absence 9 Genk started their 2019 20 UEFA Champions League campaign with a poor 6 2 loss against Austrian club Red Bull Salzburg In the second match they drew 0 0 against Napoli and in the third match they lost 1 4 against Liverpool Youth academy EditGenk is well known for its outstanding youth academy In 2003 they built their youth center next to their stadium and set up a youth program with Ronny Vangeneugden There are further plans to build a boarding school and some synthetic pitches In the past and now many young players have found their way through the youth system Some examples are Yannick Carrasco Jelle Vossen Dennis Praet Steven Defour Christian Benteke Thibaut Courtois Divock Origi Timothy Castagne Leandro Trossard and Kevin De Bruyne Their scouting is also highly regarded Players such as Kalidou Koulibaly Wilfred Ndidi Leon Bailey Sergej Milinkovic Savic and Sander Berge all played for Genk Honours EditBelgian First Division Winners 1998 99 2001 02 2010 11 2018 19 Runners up 1997 98 2006 07 2020 21 dd Belgian Second Division Winners 1975 76 Runners up 1986 87 1995 96 dd Belgian Second Division Final Round Winners 1987 1990 Runners up 1974 dd Belgian Cup Winners 1997 98 1999 2000 2008 09 2012 13 2020 21 Runners up 2017 18 dd Belgian Super CupWinners 2011 2019 Runners up 1998 1999 2000 2002 2009 2013 2021 dd European record EditSee also K R C Genk in European football Updated 31 August 2018 Tournament Pld W D L GF GA GD Win Champions League European Cup 22 5 8 9 20 41 21 0 22 73Europa League UEFA Cup 60 34 12 14 117 80 37 0 56 67Cup Winners Cup 6 3 3 0 16 3 13 0 50 00UEFA Intertoto Cup 10 5 2 3 19 13 6 0 50 00Total 98 47 25 26 172 137 35 0 47 96Summary of best results Edit From the quarter finals upwards UEFA Cup UEFA Europa League Quarter finalists in 2016 17UEFA Intertoto Cup Semi finalists in 2003 04UEFA club coefficient ranking Edit Genk got its highest ranking 44th in the season 2016 17 1 Ranking in season 2021 22 Source 2 Rank Team Points88 Molde FK 19 00089 Luhansk 18 00090 Genk 18 00091 APOEL 18 00092 FCSB 17 500Players EditCurrent squad Edit As of 31 August 2022 10 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 USA Mark McKenzie3 DF ESP Mujaid Sadick4 MF CIV Aziz Ouattara Mohammed5 DF MEX Gerardo Arteaga7 FW TAN Mbwana Samatta on loan from Fenerbahce 8 MF BEL Bryan Heynen captain 10 MF ARG Nicolas Castro11 MF BEL Mike Tresor Ndayishimiye14 MF NGA Yira Sor15 MF BEL Jay Dee Geusens17 MF SVK Patrik Hrosovsky18 FW NGA Paul Onuachu20 FW TAN Kelvin John22 DF DEN Rasmus Carstensen No Pos Nation Player23 DF COL Daniel Munoz24 MF BEL Luca Oyen25 MF ARG Matias Galarza26 GK BEL Maarten Vandevoordt27 DF BEL Matisse Didden28 FW GHA Joseph Paintsil30 GK BEL Vic Chambaere34 MF MAR Bilal El Khannous35 FW HUN Andras Nemeth40 GK BEL Tobe Leysen41 GK BEL Mike Penders46 DF COL Carlos Cuesta55 DF BEL Tuur Rommens77 DF ECU Angelo PreciadoOut 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 SUI Bastien Toma at Pacos de Ferreira until 30 June 2023 Other players under contract 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 DF BEL Sebastien Dewaest No Pos Nation Player MF CIV Eboue KouassiJong Genk Edit As of 4 January 2023Note Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules Players may hold more than one non FIFA nationality No Pos Nation Player15 MF BEL Jay Dee Geusens19 FW BEL Sekou Diawara20 FW TAN Kelvin John27 MF BEL Matisse Didden41 GK BEL Mike Penders51 GK BEL Brent Stevens52 DF BEL Daan Dierckx on loan from Parma 53 DF BEL Amine Et Taibi54 DF BEL Lucas Beerten55 DF BEL Tuur Rommens captain 56 MF BEL Maarten Swerts57 MF BEL Deniz Arabaci No Pos Nation Player58 MF BEL Kamiel Van De Perre59 FW BEL Dario Cutillas Carpe60 FW BEL Mika Godts61 GK BEL Zenzo De Boeck62 DF BEL Sofiane Et Taibi63 DF BEL Faissal Al Mazyani64 DF BEL Nolan Martens65 DF NED Sam De Grand66 MF BEL Lars Michiels67 MF BEL Raf Smekens68 MF BEL Thomas Claes70 MF GUI Ibrahima Bangoura MF ECU Alfred CaicedoFormer players Edit Africa DR Congo Neeskens KebanoGambia Omar ColleyGuinea Souleymane OulareIvory Coast Didier ZokoraNigeria Wilfred NdidiSenegal Kalidou Koulibaly Kara MbodjSouth Africa Anele NgcongcaTanzania Mbwana SamattaAsia Australia Mathew Ryan Danny VukovicEurope Belgium Luc Nilis Denis Dasoul Christian Kabasele Jelle Vossen Branko Strupar Pierre Denier Pieter Gerkens Timothy Castagne Sebastien Pocognoli Christian Benteke Steven Defour Leandro Trossard Kevin De Bruyne Thibaut Courtois Divock Origi Koen Casteels Thomas BuffelBosnia and Herzegovina Mirsad Beslija Suvad Katana Ismet Mulavdic Bojan Nastic Tino Sven SusicDenmark Joakim MaehleIsrael Elyaniv BardaNetherlands Jean Paul Boetius Sandy WalshNorway Sander BergeRomania Ianis HagiSerbia Sergej Milinkovic SavicSlovakia Adam NemecSpain Alejandro Pozuelo Jose NaranjoTurkey Sinan Bolat Enes UnalUkraine Ruslan MalinovskyiNorth and Central America Jamaica Leon BaileyClub officials EditAs of 1 July 2022Position StaffPresident Peter CroonenVice President Mathieu CilissenChief Executive Officer Erik GeritsBoard Member Herbert HoubenManager Wouter VranckenAssistant Manager Domenico Olivieri Michel RibeiroFirst Team Coach Kevin Van Dessel Jan WuytensGoalkeeper Coach Guy MartensFitness Coach Glenn VanryckeghemVideo Analyst Peter PersoonsClub Doctor Philip Thys Dr Johan JespersPhysiotherapist Matthias Didden Martijn Smeets Erwin KelchtermansMedical department Jan TheunisFinance Director Filip AerdenDirector of Marketing and Sales Stephan PoelmansHead of Youth Scouting Jochen JanssenCoordinator of talent management Jos DaerdenTeam Manager Pierre DenierTechnical Director Dimitri De CondeManagers Edit Ernst Kunnecke July 1988 Nov 88 Joseph Vliers 1988 89 Rene Desaeyere 1989 Paul Theunis 1990 91 Pier Janssen 1991 93 Luka Peruzovic 1993 94 Norbert Beuls 1994 Aime Anthuenis 1996 99 Jos Heyligen 1999 2000 Johan Boskamp 31 Jan 2000 31 Dec 2000 Sef Vergoossen 1 July 2001 6 April 2004 Rene Vandereycken 17 May 2004 3 June 2005 Hugo Broos 13 June 2005 23 Feb 2008 Ronny Van Geneugden 17 Feb 2008 5 March 2009 Pierre Denier interim 6 March 2009 30 June 2009 Hein Vanhaezebrouck 1 July 2009 29 Nov 2009 Franky Vercauteren 3 Dec 2009 17 Aug 2011 Pierre Denier interim 18 Aug 2011 29 Aug 2011 Mario Been 30 Aug 2011 24 Feb 2014 Emilio Ferrera 24 Feb 2014 29 July 2014 Alex McLeish 22 Aug 2014 2015 Peter Maes 2015 26 Dec 2016 Albert Stuivenberg 27 Dec 2016 10 Dec 2017 Philippe Clement 18 Dec 2017 24 May 2019 Felice Mazzu 3 June 2019 12 Nov 2019 Hannes Wolf 19 Nov 2019 15 Sep 2020 Domenico Olivieri interim 15 Sep 2020 24 Sep 2020 Jess Thorup 24 Sep 2020 2 Nov 2020 John van den Brom 8 Nov 2020 6 Dec 2021 Bernd Storck 8 Dec 2021 22 May 2022 Wouter Vrancken 28 May 2022 Present References Edit Luminus Arena krcgenk be last check 30 03 2018 https www uefa com MultimediaFiles Download StatDoc competitions UCL 01 67 63 78 1676378 DOWNLOAD pdf bare URL PDF Genk in isolation ˈɣɛŋk Arsenal Humiliated in Europe On This Day 3 November 1981 Genk pip Standard to Belgian title by Berend Scholten on UEFA com UEFA com 17 May 2011 Koteles shines as Genk defeat Haifa on penalties UEFA 23 August 2011 Buducnost Podgorica Genk 2 0 UEFA report Cork Genk 1 2 UEFA report KRC Genk kan Groep des Doods loten in Champions League voetbalnieuws be in Dutch 28 May 2019 1ste ploeg in Dutch K R C Genk External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to K R C Genk in English and Dutch KRC Genk Official Website in English KRC Genk at UEFA COM KRC Genk at EUFO DE KRC Genk at Weltfussball de KRC Genk at Football Squads co uk KRC Genk at National Football Teams com KRC Genk at Football Lineups com in English RC Genk XtraTime Fanpage Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title K R C Genk amp oldid 1134742558, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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