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Racing FC Union Luxembourg

Racing Fussball Club Union Luxembourg (Luxembourgish: Racing Fussball Club Union Lëtzebuerg), usually abbreviated to Racing-Union, is a football club based in Luxembourg City in southern Luxembourg.

Racing FC
Full nameRacing Football Club Union
Lëtzebuerg
Founded12 May 2005
GroundStade Achille Hammerel,
Luxembourg City
Capacity5,814
ChairmanKarine Reuter
ManagerMarco Martino
LeagueLuxembourg National Division
2023–24National Division, 10th of 16
WebsiteClub website

The etymology of the name originates from Racing Club Luxembourg and Union Sportive Luxembourg, two successful historic clubs of the many that merged to create it. Other clubs that were merged throughout history to form the current club include CA Spora Luxembourg, Sporting Club Luxembourg, CS Alliance 01, FC Aris Bonnevoie, US Hollerich Bonnevoie and Jeunesse Sportive Verlorenkost.

History edit

Glorious Early Days edit

Racing Club Luxembourg was founded in 1907 and became the first official Champion of Luxembourg by winning the title in 1909–10. RC Luxembourg also won the first Cup in 1922. Along with Sporting Club Luxembourg and Union Sportive Hollerich, the three clubs of the capital dominated Luxembourgish football in its early days. The supremacy of the capital city's footballers was such that, for the first official match of Luxembourg's national team against France on 29 October 1911, the starting lineup was entirely composed of Racing, Sporting and Union players. The match finished 4–1 in France's favour.

First Mergers edit

The domination of the capital city's football clubs drew to a close at the end of the 1920s with the emergence of teams from the south of the country, such as CS Fola Esch and Red Boys Differdange. The decline of sporting success thus led to a phenomenon that was to have a profound impact on the footballing community in the commune, namely the propensity of clubs to engage in mergers.

The first big merger occurred in 1923 with the union of the two first Champions of Luxembourg: Racing & Sporting. The origins of Racing were on the Limpertsberg, where they had their pitch on what is today the location of the "Schueberfouer" before moving to the route d'Esch in 1912. It won the first Luxembourg Cup, beating Jeunesse Esch 2–0 in the final. Sporting, the club of the centre of Luxembourg City, had found a pitch on what is today the Winston Churchill Square in 1910 and had also signed off in glory by bringing home the 1919 Championship. In 1923, the two clubs united under the new name of CA Spora Luxembourg. The name "Spora" came from the first three letters of SPOrting and the first two of RAcing. This club would not only become one of the most successful, but also one of the largest sports clubs in the country with athletics, fencing, tennis and others.

Barely two years later, in 1925, the most successful of the clubs, Union Sportive Hollerich / Bonnevoie, merged with Jeunesse Sportive, from the Verlorenkost area of the city. Union desired this merger in order to be able to play on the much higher quality and better-situated pitch located in Verlorenkost. From this moment on the club became known as Union Sportive Luxembourg, playing their matches in Verlorenkost on what is today the site of Racing FC Union's home ground, Stade Achille Hammerel.

These two mergers would quickly be crowned by success: Union, whose team was full of Luxembourgish internationals, won its sixth title in 1927. Spora for its part had also begun a period of tremendous success, which up to the Second World War would see them winning seven championship titles as well as three cup wins.

CA Spora's Golden Age edit

The period from CA Spora's foundation up until the occupation of Luxembourg by the Nazis, as well as after 1945, was gilded by the "Blue-Yellows". On their magical pitch in the middle of a residential area of Luxembourg City, in permanent contact with its inhabitants and, above all, the youth, Spora experienced a near-explosive success. During this time it gained a reputation for organising large events of its home ground. From 1924 onwards, Spora organised a 3 Nations Cup during the Easter weekend. Two foreign teams would be invited, and this authentic competition ended up becoming much more important than a simple round of friendly matches. Over 25 editions the Luxembourgish crowd would be able to witness such illustrious teams as Austria Vienna with its wunderkind Mathias Sindelar, PSV Eindhoven, Slavia Prague, Young Fellows Zurich, Beerschot Antwerp, Lanerossi Vicenza and even the Brazilian AC Bangu. These matches lasted up until the day Spora moved to a new pitch on the Route d'Arlon to a Stadium that is today home of the Luxembourgish national team, the Stade Josy Barthel.

Union's Renaissance and the Rise of Aris edit

The 1961 Championship title would be the last for CA Spora for a while. Before completely disappearing from the peak of Luxembourgish football, they did manage to snag two cup wins in 1965 and 1966, under the auspices of their player-coach Vic Nurenberg. The former professional scored a hattrick against Real Madrid for his team OGC Nice in the 1960 Champions League.

Other clubs from the capital city were ready to take the reins of success off of Spora. In total, Luxembourg City would be able to celebrate winning silverware a staggering 15 times during the period 1959–72. The main source of this success was Union Sportive Luxembourg, who had all but disappeared after their victory in the 1927 Championship. They resurfaced and took home two championship titles (1962 & 1971) and five cup wins (1959, 1963, 1964, 1969, 1970) in twelve years. Players such as Johny Léonard, three-time top goal scorer in the national league before joining FC Metz, and Nico Braun became emblematic of this period. Before embarking on his professional career, for example, Nico Braun scored 25 goals in 22 matches of the 1970/71 Championship which his club dominated without losing even one match.

The 60s saw the arrival of another club, Aris Bonnevoie. In 1963/64, Aris and all of Bonnevoie had huge celebrations when in its 5th season of top-flight football it clinched the title. The club from the most populous area of the city edged out its cousins from the Verlorenkost, Union. It was the first trophy of its existence, dating back to 1922, and it was celebrated at the Parc des Sports, nowadays called Stade Camille Polfer which serves as the training grounds for Racing FC Union.

Winning the titles of 1966 and 1972, Aris also managed to win the Cup in 1967, again edging out the Union from Verlorenkost. However, these would prove to be the last successes of this upstart club. It would never again find the same level of success it had in the 60s and early 70s, and after years of sporting decline, it merged with CS Hollerich in 2001. With the decline of the early 70s, it would be a dozen of years before any club from the capital would be able to celebrate a title once more.

A Deceptive Turn of the Century edit

The late '80s and the '90s yielded successes for Union, although the team faced struggles in the beginning of the 1980s They lost their most promising talent and top goal scorer in the national leaguer with 26 goals at the age of 20, Robby Langers, and were forced to rely on the most loyal of loyal players for their team. Their fortunes soon changed, and with the wins of the Luxembourg Cup in '86, '89 and '91, they were able to bring a new dynamic into the team. This allowed them to win the Championship three years in a row – 1990, 91 and 92. Union would be the last team from the Capital to win a title in the 20th Century, with its Cup win in 1996. It would be the last title for a Luxembourg City team for over 20 years.

Spora, Aris or Union then fell into financial and sporting difficulties. Having lived for years above its means, with expensive transfers and excessive wages, as well as neglect of youth development, Aris was forced to merge with CS Hollerich in 2001 to create CS Alliance 01. Union and Spora were also experiencing difficulties, with low attendance at their respective grounds and quickly accumulating debt. The merger that had created Alliance 01 had been a political botch-job that had left the new club without any fan base nor resources. In 2005 it was thus decided, upon great pressure from the Mayor and the councillors of the City of Luxembourg, to merge Alliance with Spora and Union. Racing FC Union was thus born out of troubled times, the politics behind the scenes having destroyed a lot of the trust and support the clubs had had amongst the general population.

A Bright Future Ahead edit

The merger of 2005 left a large vacuum of power and responsibility. Politicians thought they had found the ideal solution when the President of the French first flight team ESTAC Troyes, Daniel Masoni, became the President of Racing FC Union. However, the team was relegated from the top level in 2014, and Masoni was ousted from leadership.

The situation did improve upon the return of a Luxembourgish president, in the form of former FC Rodange 91 President Karine Reuter, and the fortunes of the club began to change. With a widely instituted reform programme, a deep renewal process was launched. A preliminary climax of this process was reached when Racing won the 2017–18 Luxembourg Cup. Racing had two players sent off with yellow-reds and played over 45 minutes with 9 men. After extra-time, they clinched the win on penalties, with Julien Jahier scoring the winner in his last match for the club.

Current squad edit

As of 10 February 2024.[1]

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

No. Pos. Nation Player
1 GK   LUX Luca d'Orlando
5 DF   FRA Joachim Amijekori
6 DF   LUX Denis Ahmetxhekaj
7 MF   FRA Eldin Rastoder
8 MF   LUX Adrian Ahmetxhekaj
10 MF   LUX Farid Ikene
11 MF   LUX Eliot Gashi
14 MF   NGA Israel Jerry
15 DF   CRO Kresimir Glamuzina
16 GK   LUX Hugo Do Rego
17 FW   LUX Yonni Rocha Fonseca
19 MF   FRA Dinan Amiri
No. Pos. Nation Player
20 DF   FRA Fabien Fonrose
22 FW   GER Andreas Buch
25 DF   LUX Lenny Correia
34 DF   TUR Fatih Eren
44 DF   LUX Delvin Skenderović
47 DF   NED Aston José Da Silva
49 MF   LUX Kevin Kerger
50 GK   BEL Kenan Ndenge
72 MF   LUX Loris Tinelli
77 MF   BEL Lohan Dewalque
98 MF   LUX Luca Duriatti

Coaching staff edit

  •   Iliès Haddadji (director)
  •   Marco Martino (head coach)
  •   Massimo Martino (assistant coach)
  •   Kella Abdeljalil (Goalkeeper Coach)
  •   Vivian Reydel (Head of Academy)
  •   Jacques Muller (Chief Scout)

European competition edit

Record by competition edit

Competition Played W D L GF GA
UEFA Cup / Europa League 4 0 1 3 1 12
UEFA Europa Conference League 4 0 0 4 3 13
Overall 8 0 1 7 4 25

Matches edit

Season Competition Round Opponent Home Away Aggregate
2008–09 UEFA Cup 1QR   Kalmar FF 0–3 1–7 1–10
2018–19 UEFA Europa League 1QR   Viitorul Constanța 0−2 0–0 0–2
2021–22 UEFA Europa Conference League 1QR   Breiðablik 2−3 0–2 2–5
2022–23 UEFA Europa Conference League 2QR   Čukarički 1–4 0–4 1–8

Emblematic players edit

Former Academy Players edit

Managers edit

  •   Jacques Muller (1 July 2005 - 13 Apr 2007)
  •   Alvaro Cruz (1 July 2007 - 22 Sept 2008)
  •   Sebastien Allieri (22 Oct 2008 - 4 Mar 2012)
  •   Claude Origer (5 Mar 2012 - 24 Feb 2014)
  •   Pascal Lebrun (10 Mar 2014 - 18 Dec 2014)
  •   Fabien Matagne (4 Jan 2015 - 17 Mar 2016)
  •   Samy Smaili (1 July 2005 - 13 Apr 2017)
  •   Patrick Grettnich (15 May 2017 - 20 Aug 2019)
  •   Régis Brouard (21 Aug 2019 - 30 Jan 2021)
  •   Jeff Saibene (21 Jun 2021 - 25 May 2022)
  •   Fahrudin Kuduzovic (5 Jun 2022 - 28 April 2023)
  •   Marco Martino (1 July 2023 - present)

Honours edit

Racing FC Union edit

  • National Division
    • Runners-up (1): 2007–08
  • Luxembourg Cup
  • Division of Honour
    • Runners-up (1): 2014–15

As CA Spora Luxembourg edit

  • National Division
    • Winners (11): 1924–25, 1927–28, 1928–29, 1933–34, 1934–35, 1935–36, 1937–38, 1948–49, 1955–56, 1960–61, 1988–89
    • Runners-up (10): 1923–24, 1925–26, 1929–30, 1930–31, 1932–33, 1944–45, 1951–52, 1958–59, 1966–67, 1987–88
  • Luxembourg Cup
    • Winners (8): 1927–28, 1931–32, 1939–40, 1949–50, 1956–57, 1964–65, 1965–66, 1979–80
    • Runners-up (8): 1924–25, 1928–29, 1929–30, 1930–31, 1933–34, 1944–45, 1962–63, 1986–87

As Racing Club Luxembourg edit

As Sporting Club Luxembourg edit

  • National Division
    • Winners (2): 1910–11, 1918–19
    • Runners-up (3): 1911–12, 1913–14, 1915–16

As Union Luxembourg edit

  • National Division
    • Winners (6): 1926–27, 1961–62, 1970–71, 1989–90, 1990–91, 1991–92
    • Runners-up (9): 1921–22, 1947–48, 1962–63, 1963–64, 1964–65, 1965–66, 1972–73, 1992–93, 1997–98
  • Luxembourg Cup
    • Winners (10): 1946–47, 1958–59, 1962–63, 1963–64, 1968–69, 1969–70, 1985–86, 1988–89, 1990–91, 1995–96
    • Runners-up (10): 1922–23, 1925–26, 1932–33, 1936–37, 1960–61, 1961–62, 1966–67, 1977–78, 1982–83, 1996–97

As US Hollerich Bonnevoie edit

  • National Division
    • Winners (5): 1911–12, 1913–14, 1914–15, 1915–16, 1916–17
    • Runners-up (2): 1909–10, 1917–18

As FC Aris Bonnevoie edit

  • National Division
    • Winners (3): 1963–64, 1965–66, 1971–72
    • Runners-up (1): 1970–71
  • Luxembourg Cup
    • Winners (1): 1966–67
    • Runners-up (5): 1963–64, 1967–68, 1971–72, 1975–76, 1978–79

External links edit

  • Official website – Racing FC Union Luxembourg (in French)

References edit

  1. ^ "Racing FC Union Luxembourg 1 (Senior M) - Saison 2023/24". Racing FC. Retrieved 1 October 2023.

racing, union, luxembourg, this, article, needs, additional, citations, verification, please, help, improve, this, article, adding, citations, reliable, sources, unsourced, material, challenged, removed, find, sources, news, newspapers, books, scholar, jstor, . This article needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Racing FC Union Luxembourg news newspapers books scholar JSTOR March 2020 Learn how and when to remove this message Racing Fussball Club Union Luxembourg Luxembourgish Racing Fussball Club Union Letzebuerg usually abbreviated to Racing Union is a football club based in Luxembourg City in southern Luxembourg Racing FCFull nameRacing Football Club UnionLetzebuergFounded12 May 2005GroundStade Achille Hammerel Luxembourg CityCapacity5 814ChairmanKarine ReuterManagerMarco MartinoLeagueLuxembourg National Division2023 24National Division 10th of 16WebsiteClub websiteHome coloursAway colours The etymology of the name originates from Racing Club Luxembourg and Union Sportive Luxembourg two successful historic clubs of the many that merged to create it Other clubs that were merged throughout history to form the current club include CA Spora Luxembourg Sporting Club Luxembourg CS Alliance 01 FC Aris Bonnevoie US Hollerich Bonnevoie and Jeunesse Sportive Verlorenkost Contents 1 History 1 1 Glorious Early Days 1 2 First Mergers 1 3 CA Spora s Golden Age 1 4 Union s Renaissance and the Rise of Aris 1 5 A Deceptive Turn of the Century 1 6 A Bright Future Ahead 2 Current squad 2 1 Coaching staff 3 European competition 3 1 Record by competition 3 2 Matches 4 Emblematic players 4 1 Former Academy Players 5 Managers 6 Honours 6 1 Racing FC Union 6 2 As CA Spora Luxembourg 6 3 As Racing Club Luxembourg 6 4 As Sporting Club Luxembourg 6 5 As Union Luxembourg 6 6 As US Hollerich Bonnevoie 6 7 As FC Aris Bonnevoie 7 External links 8 ReferencesHistory editGlorious Early Days edit Racing Club Luxembourg was founded in 1907 and became the first official Champion of Luxembourg by winning the title in 1909 10 RC Luxembourg also won the first Cup in 1922 Along with Sporting Club Luxembourg and Union Sportive Hollerich the three clubs of the capital dominated Luxembourgish football in its early days The supremacy of the capital city s footballers was such that for the first official match of Luxembourg s national team against France on 29 October 1911 the starting lineup was entirely composed of Racing Sporting and Union players The match finished 4 1 in France s favour First Mergers edit The domination of the capital city s football clubs drew to a close at the end of the 1920s with the emergence of teams from the south of the country such as CS Fola Esch and Red Boys Differdange The decline of sporting success thus led to a phenomenon that was to have a profound impact on the footballing community in the commune namely the propensity of clubs to engage in mergers The first big merger occurred in 1923 with the union of the two first Champions of Luxembourg Racing amp Sporting The origins of Racing were on the Limpertsberg where they had their pitch on what is today the location of the Schueberfouer before moving to the route d Esch in 1912 It won the first Luxembourg Cup beating Jeunesse Esch 2 0 in the final Sporting the club of the centre of Luxembourg City had found a pitch on what is today the Winston Churchill Square in 1910 and had also signed off in glory by bringing home the 1919 Championship In 1923 the two clubs united under the new name of CA Spora Luxembourg The name Spora came from the first three letters of SPOrting and the first two of RAcing This club would not only become one of the most successful but also one of the largest sports clubs in the country with athletics fencing tennis and others Barely two years later in 1925 the most successful of the clubs Union Sportive Hollerich Bonnevoie merged with Jeunesse Sportive from the Verlorenkost area of the city Union desired this merger in order to be able to play on the much higher quality and better situated pitch located in Verlorenkost From this moment on the club became known as Union Sportive Luxembourg playing their matches in Verlorenkost on what is today the site of Racing FC Union s home ground Stade Achille Hammerel These two mergers would quickly be crowned by success Union whose team was full of Luxembourgish internationals won its sixth title in 1927 Spora for its part had also begun a period of tremendous success which up to the Second World War would see them winning seven championship titles as well as three cup wins CA Spora s Golden Age edit The period from CA Spora s foundation up until the occupation of Luxembourg by the Nazis as well as after 1945 was gilded by the Blue Yellows On their magical pitch in the middle of a residential area of Luxembourg City in permanent contact with its inhabitants and above all the youth Spora experienced a near explosive success During this time it gained a reputation for organising large events of its home ground From 1924 onwards Spora organised a 3 Nations Cup during the Easter weekend Two foreign teams would be invited and this authentic competition ended up becoming much more important than a simple round of friendly matches Over 25 editions the Luxembourgish crowd would be able to witness such illustrious teams as Austria Vienna with its wunderkind Mathias Sindelar PSV Eindhoven Slavia Prague Young Fellows Zurich Beerschot Antwerp Lanerossi Vicenza and even the Brazilian AC Bangu These matches lasted up until the day Spora moved to a new pitch on the Route d Arlon to a Stadium that is today home of the Luxembourgish national team the Stade Josy Barthel Union s Renaissance and the Rise of Aris edit The 1961 Championship title would be the last for CA Spora for a while Before completely disappearing from the peak of Luxembourgish football they did manage to snag two cup wins in 1965 and 1966 under the auspices of their player coach Vic Nurenberg The former professional scored a hattrick against Real Madrid for his team OGC Nice in the 1960 Champions League Other clubs from the capital city were ready to take the reins of success off of Spora In total Luxembourg City would be able to celebrate winning silverware a staggering 15 times during the period 1959 72 The main source of this success was Union Sportive Luxembourg who had all but disappeared after their victory in the 1927 Championship They resurfaced and took home two championship titles 1962 amp 1971 and five cup wins 1959 1963 1964 1969 1970 in twelve years Players such as Johny Leonard three time top goal scorer in the national league before joining FC Metz and Nico Braun became emblematic of this period Before embarking on his professional career for example Nico Braun scored 25 goals in 22 matches of the 1970 71 Championship which his club dominated without losing even one match The 60s saw the arrival of another club Aris Bonnevoie In 1963 64 Aris and all of Bonnevoie had huge celebrations when in its 5th season of top flight football it clinched the title The club from the most populous area of the city edged out its cousins from the Verlorenkost Union It was the first trophy of its existence dating back to 1922 and it was celebrated at the Parc des Sports nowadays called Stade Camille Polfer which serves as the training grounds for Racing FC Union Winning the titles of 1966 and 1972 Aris also managed to win the Cup in 1967 again edging out the Union from Verlorenkost However these would prove to be the last successes of this upstart club It would never again find the same level of success it had in the 60s and early 70s and after years of sporting decline it merged with CS Hollerich in 2001 With the decline of the early 70s it would be a dozen of years before any club from the capital would be able to celebrate a title once more A Deceptive Turn of the Century edit The late 80s and the 90s yielded successes for Union although the team faced struggles in the beginning of the 1980s They lost their most promising talent and top goal scorer in the national leaguer with 26 goals at the age of 20 Robby Langers and were forced to rely on the most loyal of loyal players for their team Their fortunes soon changed and with the wins of the Luxembourg Cup in 86 89 and 91 they were able to bring a new dynamic into the team This allowed them to win the Championship three years in a row 1990 91 and 92 Union would be the last team from the Capital to win a title in the 20th Century with its Cup win in 1996 It would be the last title for a Luxembourg City team for over 20 years Spora Aris or Union then fell into financial and sporting difficulties Having lived for years above its means with expensive transfers and excessive wages as well as neglect of youth development Aris was forced to merge with CS Hollerich in 2001 to create CS Alliance 01 Union and Spora were also experiencing difficulties with low attendance at their respective grounds and quickly accumulating debt The merger that had created Alliance 01 had been a political botch job that had left the new club without any fan base nor resources In 2005 it was thus decided upon great pressure from the Mayor and the councillors of the City of Luxembourg to merge Alliance with Spora and Union Racing FC Union was thus born out of troubled times the politics behind the scenes having destroyed a lot of the trust and support the clubs had had amongst the general population A Bright Future Ahead edit The merger of 2005 left a large vacuum of power and responsibility Politicians thought they had found the ideal solution when the President of the French first flight team ESTAC Troyes Daniel Masoni became the President of Racing FC Union However the team was relegated from the top level in 2014 and Masoni was ousted from leadership The situation did improve upon the return of a Luxembourgish president in the form of former FC Rodange 91 President Karine Reuter and the fortunes of the club began to change With a widely instituted reform programme a deep renewal process was launched A preliminary climax of this process was reached when Racing won the 2017 18 Luxembourg Cup Racing had two players sent off with yellow reds and played over 45 minutes with 9 men After extra time they clinched the win on penalties with Julien Jahier scoring the winner in his last match for the club Current squad editAs of 10 February 2024 1 Note Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules Players may hold more than one non FIFA nationality No Pos Nation Player 1 GK nbsp LUX Luca d Orlando 5 DF nbsp FRA Joachim Amijekori 6 DF nbsp LUX Denis Ahmetxhekaj 7 MF nbsp FRA Eldin Rastoder 8 MF nbsp LUX Adrian Ahmetxhekaj 10 MF nbsp LUX Farid Ikene 11 MF nbsp LUX Eliot Gashi 14 MF nbsp NGA Israel Jerry 15 DF nbsp CRO Kresimir Glamuzina 16 GK nbsp LUX Hugo Do Rego 17 FW nbsp LUX Yonni Rocha Fonseca 19 MF nbsp FRA Dinan Amiri No Pos Nation Player 20 DF nbsp FRA Fabien Fonrose 22 FW nbsp GER Andreas Buch 25 DF nbsp LUX Lenny Correia 34 DF nbsp TUR Fatih Eren 44 DF nbsp LUX Delvin Skenderovic 47 DF nbsp NED Aston Jose Da Silva 49 MF nbsp LUX Kevin Kerger 50 GK nbsp BEL Kenan Ndenge 72 MF nbsp LUX Loris Tinelli 77 MF nbsp BEL Lohan Dewalque 98 MF nbsp LUX Luca Duriatti Coaching staff edit nbsp Ilies Haddadji director nbsp Marco Martino head coach nbsp Massimo Martino assistant coach nbsp Kella Abdeljalil Goalkeeper Coach nbsp Vivian Reydel Head of Academy nbsp Jacques Muller Chief Scout European competition editRecord by competition edit Competition Played W D L GF GA UEFA Cup Europa League 4 0 1 3 1 12 UEFA Europa Conference League 4 0 0 4 3 13 Overall 8 0 1 7 4 25 Matches edit Season Competition Round Opponent Home Away Aggregate 2008 09 UEFA Cup 1QR nbsp Kalmar FF 0 3 1 7 1 10 2018 19 UEFA Europa League 1QR nbsp Viitorul Constanța 0 2 0 0 0 2 2021 22 UEFA Europa Conference League 1QR nbsp Breidablik 2 3 0 2 2 5 2022 23 UEFA Europa Conference League 2QR nbsp Cukaricki 1 4 0 4 1 8Emblematic players edit nbsp Alphonse Weicker nbsp Jemmy Becker nbsp Zenon Bernard nbsp Francois Lang nbsp Jos Faber nbsp Albert Elter nbsp Emile Kuborn nbsp Jos Michaux nbsp Jean Walin nbsp Henri Schwartz nbsp Ady Hubert nbsp Robert Ries nbsp Will Schutz nbsp Michel Ungeheuer nbsp Victor Kauth nbsp Josef Fruhwirth nbsp Leon Letsch nbsp Fernand Brosius nbsp Jempy Fiedler nbsp Victor Nurenberg nbsp Guy Bernardin nbsp Johny Leonard nbsp Paul Hoscheit nbsp Jeannot Reiter nbsp Nico Braun nbsp Laurent Schonckert nbsp Claude Grimberger nbsp John Van Rijswijck nbsp Marc Birsens nbsp Gerard Jeitz nbsp Laurent Deville nbsp Frank Deville nbsp Carlo Weis nbsp Robby Langers nbsp Tom Schnell nbsp Jonathan Hennetier dit le Goeland nbsp Pape Ibra M Boup nbsp Daniel Da Mota Former Academy Players edit nbsp Ryan Klapp nbsp Antonio Luisi nbsp Kiki Martins nbsp Dwayn Holter nbsp Dirk Carlson nbsp Danel Sinani nbsp Florik Shala nbsp Florian Bohnert nbsp Jan Ostrowski nbsp Ryan Johansson nbsp Dylan Kuete Nsidjine nbsp Stefan Ingi Sigurdarson nbsp Atli Hrafn Andrason nbsp Leandro BarreiroManagers edit nbsp Jacques Muller 1 July 2005 13 Apr 2007 nbsp Alvaro Cruz 1 July 2007 22 Sept 2008 nbsp Sebastien Allieri 22 Oct 2008 4 Mar 2012 nbsp Claude Origer 5 Mar 2012 24 Feb 2014 nbsp Pascal Lebrun 10 Mar 2014 18 Dec 2014 nbsp Fabien Matagne 4 Jan 2015 17 Mar 2016 nbsp Samy Smaili 1 July 2005 13 Apr 2017 nbsp Patrick Grettnich 15 May 2017 20 Aug 2019 nbsp Regis Brouard 21 Aug 2019 30 Jan 2021 nbsp Jeff Saibene 21 Jun 2021 25 May 2022 nbsp Fahrudin Kuduzovic 5 Jun 2022 28 April 2023 nbsp Marco Martino 1 July 2023 present Honours editRacing FC Union edit National Division Runners up 1 2007 08 Luxembourg Cup Winners 2 2017 18 2021 22 Division of Honour Runners up 1 2014 15 As CA Spora Luxembourg edit National Division Winners 11 1924 25 1927 28 1928 29 1933 34 1934 35 1935 36 1937 38 1948 49 1955 56 1960 61 1988 89 Runners up 10 1923 24 1925 26 1929 30 1930 31 1932 33 1944 45 1951 52 1958 59 1966 67 1987 88 Luxembourg Cup Winners 8 1927 28 1931 32 1939 40 1949 50 1956 57 1964 65 1965 66 1979 80 Runners up 8 1924 25 1928 29 1929 30 1930 31 1933 34 1944 45 1962 63 1986 87 As Racing Club Luxembourg edit National Division Winners 1 1909 10 Luxembourg Cup Winners 1 1921 22 As Sporting Club Luxembourg edit National Division Winners 2 1910 11 1918 19 Runners up 3 1911 12 1913 14 1915 16 As Union Luxembourg edit National Division Winners 6 1926 27 1961 62 1970 71 1989 90 1990 91 1991 92 Runners up 9 1921 22 1947 48 1962 63 1963 64 1964 65 1965 66 1972 73 1992 93 1997 98 Luxembourg Cup Winners 10 1946 47 1958 59 1962 63 1963 64 1968 69 1969 70 1985 86 1988 89 1990 91 1995 96 Runners up 10 1922 23 1925 26 1932 33 1936 37 1960 61 1961 62 1966 67 1977 78 1982 83 1996 97 As US Hollerich Bonnevoie edit National Division Winners 5 1911 12 1913 14 1914 15 1915 16 1916 17 Runners up 2 1909 10 1917 18 As FC Aris Bonnevoie edit National Division Winners 3 1963 64 1965 66 1971 72 Runners up 1 1970 71 Luxembourg Cup Winners 1 1966 67 Runners up 5 1963 64 1967 68 1971 72 1975 76 1978 79External links editOfficial website Racing FC Union Luxembourg in French References edit Racing FC Union Luxembourg 1 Senior M Saison 2023 24 Racing FC Retrieved 1 October 2023 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Racing FC Union Luxembourg amp oldid 1225790016, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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