fbpx
Wikipedia

Viking FK

Viking Fotballklubb, commonly known as Viking or Viking Stavanger internationally, is a Norwegian football club from the city of Stavanger. The club was founded in 1899. It is one of the most successful clubs in Norwegian football, having won 8 Norwegian top division titles, most recently in 1991, and 6 domestic Norwegian Cup titles, most recently in 2019. The club has played more top-flight league games than any other club in Norway.[1] It has played in the top division since the league was established, except for the years 1966–67, 1987–88 and 2018.[2] Notable European successes include knocking English side Chelsea out of the UEFA Cup during the 2002–03 season, knocking out Sporting CP from the same tournament in 1999–2000, and qualifying for the group stages of the 2005–06 UEFA Cup.

Viking
Full nameViking Fotballklubb
Nickname(s)De mørkeblå (The dark blues)
Founded10 August 1899; 123 years ago (1899-08-10) (as Idrætsklubben Viking)
GroundViking Stadion, Stavanger
Capacity15,900
ChairStig H. Christiansen
Head coach(es)Bjarte Lunde Aarsheim
Morten Jensen
LeagueEliteserien
2022Eliteserien, 11th of 16
WebsiteClub website
Current season

History

Viking was founded in Stavanger in 1899 and played mainly local games in the early years. From the 1930s, the club established itself at the national level, playing in the 1933 cup final, which it lost to Mjøndalen. During the 1930s the club produced several of its best known players, most prominently Reidar Kvammen, who played in Norway's bronze medal winning 1936 olympic team. His brother Arthur Kvammen was also capped for Norway, while Bernhard Lund later went on to write the club anthem.

After the Second World War, Viking became a dominant side in the 1950s, beating Lillestrøm in the 1953 cup final and Sandefjord in the 1959 final, as well as winning the league title in 1957–58. Long-serving goalkeeper Sverre Andersen was the most prominent player in this generation, while Edgar Falch also earned several caps for Norway. Rolf and Kåre Bjørnsen, Asbjørn Skjærpe and Leif Nicolaysen were other prominent players, while a young Olav Nilsen began his remarkable Viking career in 1959. The club attendance record also stems from the semifinal of the 1959 cup, when 18,892 spectators saw Viking beat Odd 4–0.

While the 1960s was a somewhat quieter decade for Viking, the club returned to dominate Norwegian football in the 1970s. Viking won four straight league titles from 1972 to 1975, as well as the double in 1979. Innovative 1972 manager Kjell Schou-Andreassen has been credited for laying the foundation for the success, with his ideas on cooperative behaviour and his revolutionary use of pacey, attacking full backs Sigbjørn Slinning and Anbjørn Ekeland. However, the team had a new manager every year, with Sverre Andersen, Stuart Williams and Olav Nilsen leading them to the title in the subsequent years, and Tony Knapp managing the 1979 team. Midfielder Olav Nilsen was also a crucial player on the pitch in the first half of the decade, earning the nickname "Olav Viking", while fellow midfielder Svein Kvia was awarded the Norwegian Player of the Year title on several occasions. Arvid Knutsen, Reidar Goa, Hans Edgar Paulsen, Erik Johannessen, Inge Valen, Johannes Vold, Svein Hammerø, Gunnar Berland and Trygve Johannessen were other key players.

The 1980s started well for the club. Kjell Schou Andreassen returned to guide the club to the league title in 1982. They also finished runners-up in the league in 1981 and 1984, and in the cup in 1984, producing players such as Bjarne Berntsen, Per Henriksen, Erik Thorstvedt, Svein Fjælberg, Nils Ove Hellvik, Tonning Hammer, Isak Arne Refvik, Torbjørn Svendsen, Trygve Johannessen and Gary Goodchild. However, the mid-80s saw the club relegated to the Second Division, and 1987 was the club's worst season in recent memory as the club fell to 8th position in the Second Division, while local rivals Bryne won the cup and neighbouring minnows Vidar almost won promotion to the Tippeligaen.

Swedish manager Benny Lennartsson and players Kjell Jonevret and Per Holmberg arrived on large salaries to save the club. The gamble paid off when charismatic striker Alf Kåre Tveit secured a controversial penalty in the 95th minute against Vard in the final league game of the 1988 season. Arild Ravndal converted the spot kick to give Viking the victory and secure promotion, dubbed "the miracle in Haugesund". This signalled the start of a new era, and the club won the cup in 1989 and the league in 1991. Lars Gaute Bø, Roger Nilsen, Kent Christiansen, Egil Fjetland, Jan Fjetland, Trond Egil Soltvedt, Mike McCabe and Børre Meinseth were other key players in a young Viking team.

However, many of the young players from the 1991 league winning squad did not manage to live up to their expectations, and the club was almost relegated under new manager Arne Larsen Økland in 1992. Bjarne Berntsen took over as manager in mid-season and secured renewed Tippeligaen status. Viking FK almost knocked the world famous side FC Barcelona, the second sports team with 100 million Facebook followers,[3][4] out of the European Cup. While the club spent most of the 1990s challenging for Premier League medals, it did however never manage to challenge Rosenborg for the league championships. The 1990s was also the era of player exports in Norwegian football, and Viking made substantial earnings from the sales of striker Egil Østenstad to Southampton for £900,000 in 1996 and goalkeeper Thomas Myhre to Everton for £800,000 in 1997, among others. Gunnar Aase, Lars Gaute Bø, Magnus Svensson, Bjarte Aarsheim, Kenneth Storvik, Roger Nilsen and Ingve Bøe were other key players in this generation.

Benny Lennartson returned in 2000 to take over from Dane Poul Erik Andreasen, and this resulted in two bronze medals, a cup title and a memorable European Cup victory over Chelsea. In 2003, Kjell Inge Olsen took over as manager, and the club finished fifth in the league.

At the beginning of the 2004 season, the club moved to its new stadium in Jåttåvågen, named Viking Stadion. At the same time, Englishman Roy Hodgson took over as manager. The club finished ninth in its first season in the new stadium and fifth in the 2005 campaign. Brede Hangeland, Egil Østenstad, Peter Kopteff and Frode Hansen were notable players in this period. At the end of the 2005 season, Roy Hodgson quit his job as Viking coach to take over as Finland manager, and he was replaced by Tom Prahl.

The 2006 season started poorly for Prahl's team and poor soon turned to terrible. With seven matches to go, the once so feared team were situated at the bottom of the table. Former Start coach Tom Nordlie was brought in on a three-month contract to replace Tom Prahl and save Viking from relegation. Under new leadership, Viking won three of the first four games, jumping to tenth place in the standings, but were then defeated twice in a row to once again fall into the relegation zone. Now lying second from the bottom, it looked like the best the club could hope for was making the play-off spot. The season finale proved to be extraordinary, however, as Viking crushed league runners-up Brann 5–0 [5] at home to pass both HamKam and Odd Grenland in the standings and ultimately retain their spot in the Tippeligaen. Tom Nordlie was considered the favorite for the manager role after the season, but he chose a move to Lillestrøm instead. On 22 November 2006, Viking appointed Uwe Rösler (who was replaced by Tom Nordlie in Lillestrøm just one week earlier) as their new manager.

Under Rösler, Viking returned as a top team, and claimed the 3rd spot on the table in 2007. However, the following seasons were less successful, with Viking ending on 6th place in 2008 and 10th in 2009. They were also surprisingly knocked out of the UEFA Cup by Finnish team FC Honka in 2008, and suffered an embarrassing loss against local rivals Bryne in the domestic cup in 2009. After not living up to the expectations two seasons in a row, Rösler resigned from his position as manager on 18 November 2009.

In early December 2009, after a period of massive speculation in local newspapers, Viking appointed Åge Hareide, former manager of the Norway national football team, as their new manager.[6] Failing to bring any titles to Stavanger, Hareide was sacked by the club on 9 June 2012.[7]

Kjell Jonevret signed as the club's new manager on 19 June 2012. Jonevret had previously had a spell at Viking during his playing career, from 1988 to 1990.[8] Jonevret spent over four years in charge of a team suffering from the club's increasing financial difficulties, achieving acceptable results despite the difficult financial premises. In August 2015, he renewed his contract until the end of the 2018 season.[9] However, after the 2016 season the club reached a mutual agreement with Jonevret to terminate his contract.[10]

On 24 November 2016, Englishman Ian Burchnall was announced as the club's new manager.[11] Despite Viking signing an inexperienced manager and having financial trouble, Norwegian media predicted Viking to finish mid-table ahead of the 2017 season.[12] However, it proved to be a difficult season for Burchnall, as the team struggled throughout the year, being in the relegation zone from start to finish. Two matches before the end of the 2017 season, Burchnall was fired from the job following the club's relegation to the 1. divisjon.[13] Assistant manager Bjarte Lunde Aarsheim took charge as head coach for the last two matches, achieving a win in Viking's last match in the league.[14]

On 19 December 2017, Bjarne Berntsen left his role as vice president of the Norwegian FA to take over the manager position at Viking. Berntsen has previously served as player, manager and director at the club.[15]

During the months of December 2017 and January 2018, Viking's financial difficulties reached a level where there was a real possibility that the club could go bankrupt. A statement from the club revealed that it would not be able to pay players and staff in February unless a solution was found. The financial situation was eventually resolved in a deal with Stavanger-based bank SR-Bank which allowed the club to refinance its debts. The bank also purchased parts of the stadium and the stadium naming rights.

On 11 November 2018 Viking secured promotion to Eliteserien by placing 1st in 1. divisjon, in a tight ending of the season where two points were the difference between 1st and 3rd place. Viking defeated Kongsvinger 3–1 in front of a packed Viking Stadion on the last day of the season to secure the 1. divisjon title and put the club back in the Eliteserien after just one season on the second tier of Norwegian football. The victory sparked a pitch invasion by the Viking fans. Pitch invasions are extremely uncommon in Norwegian football.

On 8 December 2019 Viking won the Norwegian Cup after a 1–0 victory over FK Haugesund. Goalscorer was Zlatko Tripić on a penalty kick.

On 26 November 2020, the club surprisingly decided to terminate Bjarne Berntsen's contract, even though he had taken the club from the second tier to Eliteserien on first attempt and achieved top half finishes in the following two seasons. Berntsen expressed great disappointment over the decision.[16] The club moved to a dual head coach model, with Morten Jensen and Bjarte Lunde Aarsheim jointly in charge of the team. Despite a lot of initial public scepticism about this decision, the duo coached the club to third position in the 2021 Eliteserien, qualifying for the 2022-23 UEFA Europa Conference League.

Crest and shirt

Period Kit manufacturer Shirt sponsor
1983–1988 Adidas[17] Sandnes Trelast[18]
1989–1992 SR-Bank[18]
1993–1998 Stavanger Energi[18]
1999–2010 Lyse[19]
2011– Diadora[20]

The original kit colours in 1899 were all white.[21] This turned out to be problematic at that time. To avoid colour bleeding from the red and yellow club badge when cleaning the white shirts, the badge had to be removed from each shirt prior to washing and then re-attached afterwards. The club therefore changed to dark blue, and is now nicknamed after the dark blue colour of their shirts.

The club badge is shaped like a flag, and remained relatively unchanged from the club's formation in 1899 until 2020. In January 2020, the club introduced a redesigned badge. The flag shape remained, but the font was changed. The oak tree stump graphics were also changed, the year of foundation (1899) was moved and the name of the home city (Stavanger) was made slightly smaller. The traditional red background of the badge was also replaced with a dark blue background matching the colour of the shirts. Two years later, the 2022 edition of the kit reintroduced the red badge background.

From 2011, Diadora is the technical sponsor. The Norwegian power company Lyse has been the club's main shirt sponsor since 1999.[19][18]

Stadium

Since the 2004 season, Viking Stadion has been Viking's home stadium. Previously, the club played at Stavanger Stadion, which had a capacity of 17,555. Stavanger Stadion had been the club's stadium since the club was founded in 1899.[22]

Attendances

The first season with Viking Stadion saw the average attendance increase from 6,712 in 2003 to 12,450 in 2004. The average attendance numbers have been around 10,000 since the stadium was inaugurated. The lowest average attendance came in 2017, when Viking finished in 16th place and were relegated from Eliteserien. In 2007, Viking had an average attendance of 15,842, which is the highest in Viking's history.[23] The official supporter club of Viking, is Vikinghordene (the Viking hordes).[24] Other supporter groups are F19 Stavanger, Viking Oslo and Blå Brigade 99.

Rivalries

Viking's biggest rivals both locally and historically are Brann, Bryne, Haugesund, Sandnes Ulf, Start and Rosenborg BK. The rivalries with Brann and Haugesund are often referred to as Vestlandsderbyet (the Western Norway derby). The rivalry with Start is commonly known as Sørvestlandsderbyet (the Southwestern Norway derby). Bryne, Haugesund and Sandnes Ulf are all located in Rogaland, the same county as Viking. Bryne and Sandnes Ulf are geographically the two closest rivals. Bryne is often considered Viking's biggest rival.[25] The 2003 season was the last season Bryne and Viking played against each other in the league, even though the clubs have met in the cup since then.[26]

Honours

Winners (8): 1957–58, 1972, 1973, 1974, 1975, 1979, 1982, 1991
Runners-up (2): 1981, 1984
Third place (9): 1968, 1971, 1978, 1994, 1996, 2000, 2001, 2007, 2021
Winners (3): 1967, 1988, 2018
Runners-up (1): 1966
Winners (6): 1953, 1959, 1979, 1989, 2001, 2019
Runners-up (5): 1933, 1947, 1974, 1984, 2000

Recent seasons

Last ten seasons[27]
Season League Cup Other League top goalscorer(s)
Division Pos Pld W D L GF GA GD Pts Att[23]
Competition Round Player Goals
2013 Tippeligaen 5th 30 12 10 8 41 36 +5 46 10,284 R3 Trond Olsen 9
2014 Tippeligaen 10th 30 8 12 10 42 42 0 36 10,014 QF Vidar Nisja 9
2015 Tippeligaen 5th 30 17 2 11 53 39 +14 53 10,272 SF Veton Berisha 11
2016 Tippeligaen 8th 30 12 7 11 33 35 −2 43 8,813 R3 Suleiman Abdullahi
Mathias Bringaker
Patrick Pedersen
5
2017 Eliteserien   16th 30 6 6 18 33 57 −24 24 7,380 R2 Samuel Adegbenro 6
2018 1. divisjon   1st 30 20 1 9 68 44 +24 61 7,900 R2 Tommy Høiland 21
2019 Eliteserien 5th 30 13 8 9 55 42 +13 47 8,933 W Kristian Thorstvedt 10
2020 Eliteserien 6th 30 12 8 10 54 52 +2 44 333 Cancelled Europa League Q2 Veton Berisha 16
2021 Eliteserien 3rd 30 17 6 7 60 47 +13 57 6,041 SF Veton Berisha 22
2022 Eliteserien 11th 30 9 8 13 48 54 −6 35 10,042 R4 Europa Conference League PO Veton Berisha 8

In European football

Overall record

As of 25 August 2022
Competition Played Won Drew Lost GF GA GD Win%
UEFA Cup / UEFA Europa League 51 20 12 19 69 63 +6 039.22
European Cup / Champions League 14 1 2 11 11 29 −18 007.14
European Cup Winners' Cup 2 0 0 2 0 5 −5 000.00
UEFA Europa Conference League 6 3 1 2 10 7 +3 050.00
Total 73 24 15 34 90 104 −14 032.88

Source: UEFA.com

Players

Current squad

As of 31 December 2022[28][29]

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

No. Pos. Nation Player
18 DF   NOR Sondre Bjørshol
19 MF   NOR Sondre Auklend
20 DF   NED Shayne Pattynama
21 MF   NOR Harald Nilsen Tangen
22 FW   NOR Daniel Karlsbakk
24 FW   GUI Maï Traoré
26 FW   NOR Simen Kvia-Egeskog
29 FW   NOR Sander Svendsen
30 GK   ISL Patrik Gunnarsson
33 DF   NOR Vebjørn Hagen
34 DF   NOR Kristoffer Forgaard Paulsen
35 FW   NOR Edvin Austbø
DF   SVN Jošt Urbančič
MF   NOR Lars Erik Sødal

Reserve team

Personnel

Technical staff

Position Staff
Head coaches   Bjarte Lunde Aarsheim
  Morten Jensen
Goalkeeping coach   Kurt Hegre
Physiotherapists   Halvard Øen Grova
  Kenneth Rosbach
  Petter Søndenå
Doctor   Øystein Dale
Chiropractor   Tarald Sørenes
Player developer   Rune Repvik
Analyst   Pål Fjelde
Mental coach   Frank Heggebø
Equipment manager   Stian Refvik

Last updated: 31 December 2022
Source: [28]

Administrative staff

Position Staff
Chairman   Stig H. Christiansen
CEO   Eirik Bjørnø
Sporting director   Erik Nevland

Last updated: 6 August 2021
Source: [30][31]

Managerial history

References

  1. ^ "Maratontabell". www.nifs.no (in Norwegian). Norsk & Internasjonal Fotballstatistikk. Retrieved 13 December 2017.
  2. ^ a b c "Viking Fotballklubb". www.snl.no (in Norwegian). Store norske leksikon. 4 July 2017. Retrieved 12 December 2017.
  3. ^ "Barcelona took desperate measures beat to Real Madrid on Facebook - but lost". 2 April 2017.
  4. ^ "UNDER CONSTRUCTION | Fan Page List".
  5. ^ Viking FK – S.K. Brann : 5–0 Match report from Scorespro.com
  6. ^ Hareide ny Viking-Trener February 20, 2012, at the Wayback Machine
  7. ^ Haugen, Eivind A. (9 June 2012). "- Jeg har ingenting å klage på". dagbladet.no (in Norwegian). Dagbladet. Retrieved 9 June 2012.
  8. ^ Priésner, Jakob (19 June 2012). "Jonevret har signert". aftenbladet.no (in Norwegian). Stavanger Aftenblad. Archived from the original on 9 December 2012. Retrieved 30 June 2012.
  9. ^ "Jonevret forlenger med Viking". aftenbladet.no (in Norwegian). Stavanger Aftenblad. 3 August 2015. Retrieved 28 November 2016.
  10. ^ "Jonevret ferdig i Viking". tv2.no (in Norwegian). TV 2 (Norway). 14 November 2016. Retrieved 28 November 2016.
  11. ^ "Burchnall presentert som ny Viking-trener". tv2.no (in Norwegian). TV 2 (Norway). 24 November 2016. Retrieved 28 November 2016.
  12. ^ "10 norske medier: Slik ender Eliteserien". www.vg.no (in Norwegian). VG. 3 April 2017. Retrieved 12 December 2017.
  13. ^ "Burchnall har fått sparken i Viking". www.aftenbladet.no (in Norwegian). Stavanger Aftenblad. 9 November 2017. Retrieved 12 December 2017.
  14. ^ "Aarsheim: – Fikk igjen vist at vi kan vinne kamper". www.aftenbladet.no (in Norwegian). Stavanger Aftenblad. 26 November 2017. Retrieved 12 December 2017.
  15. ^ "Bjarne Berntsen ny hovedtrener i Viking". www.vg.no (in Norwegian). VG. 18 December 2017. Retrieved 18 December 2017.
  16. ^ "Bjarne Berntsen har fått sparken i Viking". www.nrk.no (in Norwegian). NRK. 26 November 2020. Retrieved 25 April 2022.
  17. ^ "Slutt med Adidas i Viking". www.nrk.no (in Norwegian). NRK. 29 September 2010. Retrieved 7 August 2018.
  18. ^ a b c d "Mens vi venter på den nye Viking-drakten". www.adressa.no (in Norwegian). Adresseavisen. 12 March 2015. Retrieved 7 August 2018.
  19. ^ a b "Lyse". www.viking-fk.no (in Norwegian). Retrieved 7 August 2018.
  20. ^ "Viking går over til Diadora". www.aftenposten.no (in Norwegian). Aftenposten. 29 September 2010. Retrieved 7 August 2018.
  21. ^ Historien – Viking Fotball August 6, 2009, at the Wayback Machine
  22. ^ . eliteserien.no (in Norwegian). Archived from the original on 23 December 2017. Retrieved 22 December 2017.
  23. ^ a b "Tilskuertall Viking". NIFS (in Norwegian). Retrieved 1 November 2022.
  24. ^ "Vikinghordene". viking-fk.no (in Norwegian). Retrieved 22 December 2017.
  25. ^ "Viking ute av cupen". www.nrk.no (in Norwegian). NRK. 5 May 2018. Retrieved 10 February 2019.
  26. ^ "Viking-treneren sjokkert over Bryne-fansen". www.vg.no (in Norwegian). VG. 29 May 2013. Retrieved 10 February 2019.
  27. ^ "Viking FK". NIFS (in Norwegian). Retrieved 1 November 2022.
  28. ^ a b "A-laget" [First team squad]. Viking FK (in Norwegian).
  29. ^ "Viking Menn Senior A - Spillere". Norwegian Football Federation (in Norwegian).
  30. ^ "Viking Fotball AS". Proff (in Norwegian). Retrieved 6 August 2021.
  31. ^ Nilssen, Stig (5 August 2021). "Erik Nevland er ansatt som sportssjef i Viking". Stavanger Aftenblad (in Norwegian). Retrieved 6 August 2021.

External links

  • Official website

Supporter sites

  • Vikinghordene – Official supporter club

viking, this, article, about, section, women, section, kvinner, viking, fotballklubb, commonly, known, viking, viking, stavanger, internationally, norwegian, football, club, from, city, stavanger, club, founded, 1899, most, successful, clubs, norwegian, footba. This article is about Viking FK s men s section For the women s section see Viking FK Kvinner Viking Fotballklubb commonly known as Viking or Viking Stavanger internationally is a Norwegian football club from the city of Stavanger The club was founded in 1899 It is one of the most successful clubs in Norwegian football having won 8 Norwegian top division titles most recently in 1991 and 6 domestic Norwegian Cup titles most recently in 2019 The club has played more top flight league games than any other club in Norway 1 It has played in the top division since the league was established except for the years 1966 67 1987 88 and 2018 2 Notable European successes include knocking English side Chelsea out of the UEFA Cup during the 2002 03 season knocking out Sporting CP from the same tournament in 1999 2000 and qualifying for the group stages of the 2005 06 UEFA Cup VikingFull nameViking FotballklubbNickname s De morkebla The dark blues Founded10 August 1899 123 years ago 1899 08 10 as Idraetsklubben Viking GroundViking Stadion StavangerCapacity15 900ChairStig H ChristiansenHead coach es Bjarte Lunde AarsheimMorten JensenLeagueEliteserien2022Eliteserien 11th of 16WebsiteClub websiteHome coloursAway coloursCurrent season Contents 1 History 2 Crest and shirt 3 Stadium 3 1 Attendances 4 Rivalries 5 Honours 6 Recent seasons 7 In European football 7 1 Overall record 8 Players 8 1 Current squad 8 2 Reserve team 9 Personnel 9 1 Technical staff 9 2 Administrative staff 10 Managerial history 11 References 12 External links 12 1 Supporter sitesHistory EditViking was founded in Stavanger in 1899 and played mainly local games in the early years From the 1930s the club established itself at the national level playing in the 1933 cup final which it lost to Mjondalen During the 1930s the club produced several of its best known players most prominently Reidar Kvammen who played in Norway s bronze medal winning 1936 olympic team His brother Arthur Kvammen was also capped for Norway while Bernhard Lund later went on to write the club anthem After the Second World War Viking became a dominant side in the 1950s beating Lillestrom in the 1953 cup final and Sandefjord in the 1959 final as well as winning the league title in 1957 58 Long serving goalkeeper Sverre Andersen was the most prominent player in this generation while Edgar Falch also earned several caps for Norway Rolf and Kare Bjornsen Asbjorn Skjaerpe and Leif Nicolaysen were other prominent players while a young Olav Nilsen began his remarkable Viking career in 1959 The club attendance record also stems from the semifinal of the 1959 cup when 18 892 spectators saw Viking beat Odd 4 0 While the 1960s was a somewhat quieter decade for Viking the club returned to dominate Norwegian football in the 1970s Viking won four straight league titles from 1972 to 1975 as well as the double in 1979 Innovative 1972 manager Kjell Schou Andreassen has been credited for laying the foundation for the success with his ideas on cooperative behaviour and his revolutionary use of pacey attacking full backs Sigbjorn Slinning and Anbjorn Ekeland However the team had a new manager every year with Sverre Andersen Stuart Williams and Olav Nilsen leading them to the title in the subsequent years and Tony Knapp managing the 1979 team Midfielder Olav Nilsen was also a crucial player on the pitch in the first half of the decade earning the nickname Olav Viking while fellow midfielder Svein Kvia was awarded the Norwegian Player of the Year title on several occasions Arvid Knutsen Reidar Goa Hans Edgar Paulsen Erik Johannessen Inge Valen Johannes Vold Svein Hammero Gunnar Berland and Trygve Johannessen were other key players The 1980s started well for the club Kjell Schou Andreassen returned to guide the club to the league title in 1982 They also finished runners up in the league in 1981 and 1984 and in the cup in 1984 producing players such as Bjarne Berntsen Per Henriksen Erik Thorstvedt Svein Fjaelberg Nils Ove Hellvik Tonning Hammer Isak Arne Refvik Torbjorn Svendsen Trygve Johannessen and Gary Goodchild However the mid 80s saw the club relegated to the Second Division and 1987 was the club s worst season in recent memory as the club fell to 8th position in the Second Division while local rivals Bryne won the cup and neighbouring minnows Vidar almost won promotion to the Tippeligaen Swedish manager Benny Lennartsson and players Kjell Jonevret and Per Holmberg arrived on large salaries to save the club The gamble paid off when charismatic striker Alf Kare Tveit secured a controversial penalty in the 95th minute against Vard in the final league game of the 1988 season Arild Ravndal converted the spot kick to give Viking the victory and secure promotion dubbed the miracle in Haugesund This signalled the start of a new era and the club won the cup in 1989 and the league in 1991 Lars Gaute Bo Roger Nilsen Kent Christiansen Egil Fjetland Jan Fjetland Trond Egil Soltvedt Mike McCabe and Borre Meinseth were other key players in a young Viking team However many of the young players from the 1991 league winning squad did not manage to live up to their expectations and the club was almost relegated under new manager Arne Larsen Okland in 1992 Bjarne Berntsen took over as manager in mid season and secured renewed Tippeligaen status Viking FK almost knocked the world famous side FC Barcelona the second sports team with 100 million Facebook followers 3 4 out of the European Cup While the club spent most of the 1990s challenging for Premier League medals it did however never manage to challenge Rosenborg for the league championships The 1990s was also the era of player exports in Norwegian football and Viking made substantial earnings from the sales of striker Egil Ostenstad to Southampton for 900 000 in 1996 and goalkeeper Thomas Myhre to Everton for 800 000 in 1997 among others Gunnar Aase Lars Gaute Bo Magnus Svensson Bjarte Aarsheim Kenneth Storvik Roger Nilsen and Ingve Boe were other key players in this generation Benny Lennartson returned in 2000 to take over from Dane Poul Erik Andreasen and this resulted in two bronze medals a cup title and a memorable European Cup victory over Chelsea In 2003 Kjell Inge Olsen took over as manager and the club finished fifth in the league At the beginning of the 2004 season the club moved to its new stadium in Jattavagen named Viking Stadion At the same time Englishman Roy Hodgson took over as manager The club finished ninth in its first season in the new stadium and fifth in the 2005 campaign Brede Hangeland Egil Ostenstad Peter Kopteff and Frode Hansen were notable players in this period At the end of the 2005 season Roy Hodgson quit his job as Viking coach to take over as Finland manager and he was replaced by Tom Prahl The 2006 season started poorly for Prahl s team and poor soon turned to terrible With seven matches to go the once so feared team were situated at the bottom of the table Former Start coach Tom Nordlie was brought in on a three month contract to replace Tom Prahl and save Viking from relegation Under new leadership Viking won three of the first four games jumping to tenth place in the standings but were then defeated twice in a row to once again fall into the relegation zone Now lying second from the bottom it looked like the best the club could hope for was making the play off spot The season finale proved to be extraordinary however as Viking crushed league runners up Brann 5 0 5 at home to pass both HamKam and Odd Grenland in the standings and ultimately retain their spot in the Tippeligaen Tom Nordlie was considered the favorite for the manager role after the season but he chose a move to Lillestrom instead On 22 November 2006 Viking appointed Uwe Rosler who was replaced by Tom Nordlie in Lillestrom just one week earlier as their new manager Under Rosler Viking returned as a top team and claimed the 3rd spot on the table in 2007 However the following seasons were less successful with Viking ending on 6th place in 2008 and 10th in 2009 They were also surprisingly knocked out of the UEFA Cup by Finnish team FC Honka in 2008 and suffered an embarrassing loss against local rivals Bryne in the domestic cup in 2009 After not living up to the expectations two seasons in a row Rosler resigned from his position as manager on 18 November 2009 In early December 2009 after a period of massive speculation in local newspapers Viking appointed Age Hareide former manager of the Norway national football team as their new manager 6 Failing to bring any titles to Stavanger Hareide was sacked by the club on 9 June 2012 7 Kjell Jonevret signed as the club s new manager on 19 June 2012 Jonevret had previously had a spell at Viking during his playing career from 1988 to 1990 8 Jonevret spent over four years in charge of a team suffering from the club s increasing financial difficulties achieving acceptable results despite the difficult financial premises In August 2015 he renewed his contract until the end of the 2018 season 9 However after the 2016 season the club reached a mutual agreement with Jonevret to terminate his contract 10 On 24 November 2016 Englishman Ian Burchnall was announced as the club s new manager 11 Despite Viking signing an inexperienced manager and having financial trouble Norwegian media predicted Viking to finish mid table ahead of the 2017 season 12 However it proved to be a difficult season for Burchnall as the team struggled throughout the year being in the relegation zone from start to finish Two matches before the end of the 2017 season Burchnall was fired from the job following the club s relegation to the 1 divisjon 13 Assistant manager Bjarte Lunde Aarsheim took charge as head coach for the last two matches achieving a win in Viking s last match in the league 14 On 19 December 2017 Bjarne Berntsen left his role as vice president of the Norwegian FA to take over the manager position at Viking Berntsen has previously served as player manager and director at the club 15 During the months of December 2017 and January 2018 Viking s financial difficulties reached a level where there was a real possibility that the club could go bankrupt A statement from the club revealed that it would not be able to pay players and staff in February unless a solution was found The financial situation was eventually resolved in a deal with Stavanger based bank SR Bank which allowed the club to refinance its debts The bank also purchased parts of the stadium and the stadium naming rights On 11 November 2018 Viking secured promotion to Eliteserien by placing 1st in 1 divisjon in a tight ending of the season where two points were the difference between 1st and 3rd place Viking defeated Kongsvinger 3 1 in front of a packed Viking Stadion on the last day of the season to secure the 1 divisjon title and put the club back in the Eliteserien after just one season on the second tier of Norwegian football The victory sparked a pitch invasion by the Viking fans Pitch invasions are extremely uncommon in Norwegian football On 8 December 2019 Viking won the Norwegian Cup after a 1 0 victory over FK Haugesund Goalscorer was Zlatko Tripic on a penalty kick On 26 November 2020 the club surprisingly decided to terminate Bjarne Berntsen s contract even though he had taken the club from the second tier to Eliteserien on first attempt and achieved top half finishes in the following two seasons Berntsen expressed great disappointment over the decision 16 The club moved to a dual head coach model with Morten Jensen and Bjarte Lunde Aarsheim jointly in charge of the team Despite a lot of initial public scepticism about this decision the duo coached the club to third position in the 2021 Eliteserien qualifying for the 2022 23 UEFA Europa Conference League Crest and shirt EditPeriod Kit manufacturer Shirt sponsor1983 1988 Adidas 17 Sandnes Trelast 18 1989 1992 SR Bank 18 1993 1998 Stavanger Energi 18 1999 2010 Lyse 19 2011 Diadora 20 The original kit colours in 1899 were all white 21 This turned out to be problematic at that time To avoid colour bleeding from the red and yellow club badge when cleaning the white shirts the badge had to be removed from each shirt prior to washing and then re attached afterwards The club therefore changed to dark blue and is now nicknamed after the dark blue colour of their shirts The club badge is shaped like a flag and remained relatively unchanged from the club s formation in 1899 until 2020 In January 2020 the club introduced a redesigned badge The flag shape remained but the font was changed The oak tree stump graphics were also changed the year of foundation 1899 was moved and the name of the home city Stavanger was made slightly smaller The traditional red background of the badge was also replaced with a dark blue background matching the colour of the shirts Two years later the 2022 edition of the kit reintroduced the red badge background From 2011 Diadora is the technical sponsor The Norwegian power company Lyse has been the club s main shirt sponsor since 1999 19 18 Stadium EditMain articles Stavanger Stadion and Viking Stadion Since the 2004 season Viking Stadion has been Viking s home stadium Previously the club played at Stavanger Stadion which had a capacity of 17 555 Stavanger Stadion had been the club s stadium since the club was founded in 1899 22 Attendances Edit See also Viking Stadion Attendance The first season with Viking Stadion saw the average attendance increase from 6 712 in 2003 to 12 450 in 2004 The average attendance numbers have been around 10 000 since the stadium was inaugurated The lowest average attendance came in 2017 when Viking finished in 16th place and were relegated from Eliteserien In 2007 Viking had an average attendance of 15 842 which is the highest in Viking s history 23 The official supporter club of Viking is Vikinghordene the Viking hordes 24 Other supporter groups are F19 Stavanger Viking Oslo and Bla Brigade 99 Rivalries EditViking s biggest rivals both locally and historically are Brann Bryne Haugesund Sandnes Ulf Start and Rosenborg BK The rivalries with Brann and Haugesund are often referred to as Vestlandsderbyet the Western Norway derby The rivalry with Start is commonly known as Sorvestlandsderbyet the Southwestern Norway derby Bryne Haugesund and Sandnes Ulf are all located in Rogaland the same county as Viking Bryne and Sandnes Ulf are geographically the two closest rivals Bryne is often considered Viking s biggest rival 25 The 2003 season was the last season Bryne and Viking played against each other in the league even though the clubs have met in the cup since then 26 Honours EditEliteserien 2 Winners 8 1957 58 1972 1973 1974 1975 1979 1982 1991 Runners up 2 1981 1984 Third place 9 1968 1971 1978 1994 1996 2000 2001 2007 2021 dd 1 divisjonWinners 3 1967 1988 2018 Runners up 1 1966 dd Norwegian Cup 2 Winners 6 1953 1959 1979 1989 2001 2019 Runners up 5 1933 1947 1974 1984 2000 dd Recent seasons EditMain article List of Viking FK seasons Last ten seasons 27 Season League Cup Other League top goalscorer s Division Pos Pld W D L GF GA GD Pts Att 23 Competition Round Player Goals2013 Tippeligaen 5th 30 12 10 8 41 36 5 46 10 284 R3 Trond Olsen 92014 Tippeligaen 10th 30 8 12 10 42 42 0 36 10 014 QF Vidar Nisja 92015 Tippeligaen 5th 30 17 2 11 53 39 14 53 10 272 SF Veton Berisha 112016 Tippeligaen 8th 30 12 7 11 33 35 2 43 8 813 R3 Suleiman AbdullahiMathias BringakerPatrick Pedersen 52017 Eliteserien 16th 30 6 6 18 33 57 24 24 7 380 R2 Samuel Adegbenro 62018 1 divisjon 1st 30 20 1 9 68 44 24 61 7 900 R2 Tommy Hoiland 212019 Eliteserien 5th 30 13 8 9 55 42 13 47 8 933 W Kristian Thorstvedt 102020 Eliteserien 6th 30 12 8 10 54 52 2 44 333 Cancelled Europa League Q2 Veton Berisha 162021 Eliteserien 3rd 30 17 6 7 60 47 13 57 6 041 SF Veton Berisha 222022 Eliteserien 11th 30 9 8 13 48 54 6 35 10 042 R4 Europa Conference League PO Veton Berisha 8In European football EditMain article Viking FK in European football Overall record Edit As of 25 August 2022Competition Played Won Drew Lost GF GA GD Win UEFA Cup UEFA Europa League 51 20 12 19 69 63 6 0 39 22European Cup Champions League 14 1 2 11 11 29 18 00 7 14European Cup Winners Cup 2 0 0 2 0 5 5 00 0 00UEFA Europa Conference League 6 3 1 2 10 7 3 0 50 00Total 73 24 15 34 90 104 14 0 32 88Source UEFA comPlayers EditCurrent squad Edit As of 31 December 2022 28 29 Note Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules Players may hold more than one non FIFA nationality No Pos Nation Player1 GK NOR Arild Ostbo2 DF NOR Herman Haugen3 DF NOR Viljar Vevatne vice captain 4 DF SVN David Brekalo5 DF SEN Djibril Diop6 MF AUS Gianni Stensness7 MF NOR Fredrik Torsteinbo8 MF NOR Markus Solbakken9 FW SWE Kevin Kabran10 MF NOR Zlatko Tripic captain 11 MF NOR Yann Erik de Lanlay13 GK NOR Magnus Rugland Ree15 FW NOR Niklas Sandberg16 MF NOR Kristoffer Lokberg No Pos Nation Player18 DF NOR Sondre Bjorshol19 MF NOR Sondre Auklend20 DF NED Shayne Pattynama21 MF NOR Harald Nilsen Tangen22 FW NOR Daniel Karlsbakk24 FW GUI Mai Traore26 FW NOR Simen Kvia Egeskog29 FW NOR Sander Svendsen30 GK ISL Patrik Gunnarsson33 DF NOR Vebjorn Hagen34 DF NOR Kristoffer Forgaard Paulsen35 FW NOR Edvin Austbo DF SVN Jost Urbancic MF NOR Lars Erik SodalReserve team Edit Main article Viking FK 2Personnel EditTechnical staff Edit Position StaffHead coaches Bjarte Lunde Aarsheim Morten JensenGoalkeeping coach Kurt HegrePhysiotherapists Halvard Oen Grova Kenneth Rosbach Petter SondenaDoctor Oystein DaleChiropractor Tarald SorenesPlayer developer Rune RepvikAnalyst Pal FjeldeMental coach Frank HeggeboEquipment manager Stian RefvikLast updated 31 December 2022Source 28 Administrative staff Edit Position StaffChairman Stig H ChristiansenCEO Eirik BjornoSporting director Erik NevlandLast updated 6 August 2021Source 30 31 Managerial history Edit Reinhard Andersen 1946 Sophus Jensen 1947 49 Frantz Gutkas 1950 Gunnar Stensland 1951 52 Georg Monsen 1953 54 William Danielsen 1955 Georg Monsen 1956 57 William Danielsen 1958 59 Sverre Andersen 1960 Svend Aage Jespersen 1961 Georg Monsen 1962 63 Reidar Kvammen 1964 Georg Monsen 1965 Sverre Andersen 1966 70 Kjell Schou Andreassen 1971 72 Sverre Andersen 1973 Stuart Williams 1974 Olav Nilsen 1975 Arvid Knutsen 1976 Svein Kvia 1977 Tony Knapp 1978 1981 Kjell Schou Andreassen 1982 Andreas Morisbak 1983 Keith Blunt 1984 Svein Kvia 1984 Bill Foulkes 1985 Sverre Andersen 1985 Svein Kvia 1986 87 Kjell Schou Andreassen 1987 Benny Lennartsson 1988 91 Arne Larsen Okland 1992 Bjarne Berntsen 1992 95 Poul Erik Andreasen 1996 99 Benny Lennartsson 2000 02 Kjell Inge Olsen 2003 04 Bjarne Berntsen interim 2004 Roy Hodgson 2004 05 Tom Prahl 2006 Tom Nordlie 2006 Uwe Rosler 2007 09 Age Hareide 2010 12 Kjell Jonevret 2012 16 Ian Burchnall 2017 Bjarte Lunde Aarsheim interim 2017 Bjarne Berntsen 2018 20 Bjarte Lunde Aarsheim amp Morten Jensen 2021 References Edit Maratontabell www nifs no in Norwegian Norsk amp Internasjonal Fotballstatistikk Retrieved 13 December 2017 a b c Viking Fotballklubb www snl no in Norwegian Store norske leksikon 4 July 2017 Retrieved 12 December 2017 Barcelona took desperate measures beat to Real Madrid on Facebook but lost 2 April 2017 UNDER CONSTRUCTION Fan Page List Viking FK S K Brann 5 0 Match report from Scorespro com Hareide ny Viking Trener Archived February 20 2012 at the Wayback Machine Haugen Eivind A 9 June 2012 Jeg har ingenting a klage pa dagbladet no in Norwegian Dagbladet Retrieved 9 June 2012 Priesner Jakob 19 June 2012 Jonevret har signert aftenbladet no in Norwegian Stavanger Aftenblad Archived from the original on 9 December 2012 Retrieved 30 June 2012 Jonevret forlenger med Viking aftenbladet no in Norwegian Stavanger Aftenblad 3 August 2015 Retrieved 28 November 2016 Jonevret ferdig i Viking tv2 no in Norwegian TV 2 Norway 14 November 2016 Retrieved 28 November 2016 Burchnall presentert som ny Viking trener tv2 no in Norwegian TV 2 Norway 24 November 2016 Retrieved 28 November 2016 10 norske medier Slik ender Eliteserien www vg no in Norwegian VG 3 April 2017 Retrieved 12 December 2017 Burchnall har fatt sparken i Viking www aftenbladet no in Norwegian Stavanger Aftenblad 9 November 2017 Retrieved 12 December 2017 Aarsheim Fikk igjen vist at vi kan vinne kamper www aftenbladet no in Norwegian Stavanger Aftenblad 26 November 2017 Retrieved 12 December 2017 Bjarne Berntsen ny hovedtrener i Viking www vg no in Norwegian VG 18 December 2017 Retrieved 18 December 2017 Bjarne Berntsen har fatt sparken i Viking www nrk no in Norwegian NRK 26 November 2020 Retrieved 25 April 2022 Slutt med Adidas i Viking www nrk no in Norwegian NRK 29 September 2010 Retrieved 7 August 2018 a b c d Mens vi venter pa den nye Viking drakten www adressa no in Norwegian Adresseavisen 12 March 2015 Retrieved 7 August 2018 a b Lyse www viking fk no in Norwegian Retrieved 7 August 2018 Viking gar over til Diadora www aftenposten no in Norwegian Aftenposten 29 September 2010 Retrieved 7 August 2018 Historien Viking Fotball Archived August 6 2009 at the Wayback Machine Viking Stadion eliteserien no in Norwegian Archived from the original on 23 December 2017 Retrieved 22 December 2017 a b Tilskuertall Viking NIFS in Norwegian Retrieved 1 November 2022 Vikinghordene viking fk no in Norwegian Retrieved 22 December 2017 Viking ute av cupen www nrk no in Norwegian NRK 5 May 2018 Retrieved 10 February 2019 Viking treneren sjokkert over Bryne fansen www vg no in Norwegian VG 29 May 2013 Retrieved 10 February 2019 Viking FK NIFS in Norwegian Retrieved 1 November 2022 a b A laget First team squad Viking FK in Norwegian Viking Menn Senior A Spillere Norwegian Football Federation in Norwegian Viking Fotball AS Proff in Norwegian Retrieved 6 August 2021 Nilssen Stig 5 August 2021 Erik Nevland er ansatt som sportssjef i Viking Stavanger Aftenblad in Norwegian Retrieved 6 August 2021 External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Viking FK Official websiteSupporter sites Edit Vikinghordene Official supporter club Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Viking FK amp oldid 1131585004, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

article

, read, download, free, free download, mp3, video, mp4, 3gp, jpg, jpeg, gif, png, picture, music, song, movie, book, game, games.