FC Balzers

FC Balzers is a Liechtensteiner football team that plays in Balzers.

FC Balzers
Full nameFussballclub Balzers
Founded1 May 1932 (1 May 1932)
GroundSportplatz Rheinau
Balzers, Liechtenstein
Capacity2,000
ChairmanRobi Agnolazza
ManagerPatrick Winkler
League1. Liga Group 3
2018–192. Liga Interregional, Group 6, 1st (promoted)

Balzers play at Sportplatz Rheinau which is situated right next to the River Rhein next to the border with Switzerland where the town of Trübbach lies.

FC Balzers currently play in the Swiss 1st League, the fourth tier of Swiss football.

History

Formation and early years (1932–1970)

Founded in Balzers in 1932, FC Balzers was the first foreign team to join the Swiss Football Association and therefore is the oldest football team from Liechtenstein. On the 22nd of may 1932, the team played its first friendly match against FC Chur. In 1947, the team was promoted to the 3. Liga for the first time, after winning their league in the 1946/47 season. The team won its first Liechtenstein Cup in 1964, becoming the fourth team to win the competition after FC Triesen, FC Vaduz and FC Schaan.

Promotions and Liechtenstein Cup domination (1970–1992)

The club moved to the Sportplatz Rheinhau in 1970, where it has remained ever since. In the same year, the Liechtenstein Cup Final was hosted in Balzers for the first time, in which FC Vaduz beat FC Schaan 2-1. This was also the year in which Balzers were promoted to the 2. Liga for the first time, after overcoming a 2-0 half time deficit to win 3-2, in a match for promotion against FC Altstätten. In 1973, the club won its second Liechtenstein Cup after beating FC Ruggell 2-1 in the final. In 1975, the 1964-65 Bundesliga top goalscorer Rudolf Brunnenmeier joined Balzers, and the team was promoted to the 1. Liga for the first time at the end of the 1975/76 season. From 1978 to 1984, Balzers won the Liechtenstein Cup 5 out of a possible 6 times, only finishing as runners up in 1979-80. Between 1986 and 1992 the club was relegated down to the 2. Liga and then promoted back up to the 1. Liga several times, however the club still won the Liechtenstein Cup twice in this period - in 1988-89 and 1990-91.

First European matches (1992–2000)

In 1992, having been relegated to the 2. Liga, the club signed former Bundesliga professional Michael Nushöhr as a player-manager. The club beat FC Schaan 5-2 in the Liechtenstein Cup Final after extra time, which meant the club qualified for the qualifying round of the UEFA Cup Winners' Cup. Balzers faced Albanian champions KS Albpetrol at home in the first leg, and won 3-1 after a goal by Nushöhr and two goals by an 18 year old Mario Frick. The second leg finished 0-0, which meant that for the first time a club from Liechtenstein had reached the first round for the first time. The club were eliminated from the competition after losing 11-1 on aggregate against Bulgarian side CSKA Sofia. In 1997, Balzers won the Liechtenstein cup for the 11th time, beating Vaduz 3-2 in the final, with Mario Frick scoring twice in extra time after being 2-1 down. This granted the team entry to the qualifying round of the Cup Winners' Cup for the second time, however this time they did not progress any further, losing 5-1 on aggregate to Hungarian side BVSC Budapest.

Recent history (2000–Present)

In 2001, Balzers were promoted to the 2.Liga interregional, however were relegated after just one season. In 2005-06 the club played in the Liechtenstein Cup Final, having not won the competition for 9 years and having lost in the final 4 times since their last triumph. Balzers were trailing 2-1 to professionals and winners in the past 8 seasons Vaduz, but in the 90th minute Balzers were awarded a penalty. This was scored by club captain Marco Büchel, forcing the game into extra time. Despite this, Balzers still lost the match 4-2 after extra time. In 2007 former player and manager Michael Nushöhr returned to manage the club, and in 2010 Balzers were promoted back into the 1. Liga, after a 14 year absence. In 2011, Liechtenstein record goalscorer Mario Frick rejoined his former club, and in 2011 he became the club's manager after the departure of Nushöhr. He retired from playing in 2015, continuing his managerial role until 2017. In 2018 the club was relegated down to the 2. Liga Interregional however the next season they were promoted as league champions back to the 1. Liga[1]

Chart of FC Balzers table positions in the Swiss football league system

Reserve teams

FC Balzers 2

FC Balzers 2 is the reserve team of FC Balzers. They currently play in the 4. Liga[2] (eighth tier of the Swiss football league system), and also compete in the Liechtenstein Cup.

In the 2015-16 Liechtenstein Cup, they reached the semifinals (2 rounds further than the 1st team), losing 5-3 on penalties after a 2-2 draw against FC Schaan. In the 2002-03 Liechtenstein Cup they faced the FC Balzers 1st team in the quarter finals, with the 1st team winning 6-0

FC Balzers 3

FC Balzers 3 (also known as FC Balzers 2b) was the 3rd team of FC Balzers, however as of the 2019-20 season the team no longer exists. It last competed in the 4. Liga Group 3, finishing 9th out of 10 with just 16 points.[3] The team's final appearance in the Liechtenstein Cup was a 4-1 defeat against FC Ruggell 2.

Honours

FC Balzers's old logo
Winners (11): 1963–64, 1972–73, 1978–79, 1980–81, 1981–82, 1982–83, 1983–84, 1988–89, 1990–91, 1992–93, 1996–97
Runners-up (15): 1973–74, 1974–75, 1976, 1979–80, 1985–86, 1991–92, 1993–94, 1998–99, 1999–2000, 2002–03, 2003–04, 2005–06, 2007–08, 2012–13, 2017–18

European record

Season Competition Round Opponent Home Away Aggregate
1993–94 UEFA Cup Winners' Cup Qualifying round KS Albpetrol 3–1 0–0 3–1
First round CSKA Sofia 0–8 1–3 1–11
1997–98 UEFA Cup Winners' Cup Qualifying round BVSC Budapest 1–3 0–2 1–5

Current squad

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

No. Pos. Nation Player
2 MF   SUI Djordje Zarkovic
3 DF   SUI Aleksandar Žarković
4 DF  LIE Rafael Grünenfelder
6 DF  LIE Daniel Kaufmann
7 MF  LIE Marco Wolfinger
8 MF  LIE Pascal Koller
9 FW  KVX Enis Domuzeti
10 FW  AUT Felipe Dorta
11 MF  SRB Zivan Mitrovic
12 FW  LIE Phillipe Erne
13 MF   SUI Roman Hermann (captain)
14 MF  ANG Helmar Andrade
No. Pos. Nation Player
15 MF  LIE Michele Polverino
16 DF  LIE Seyhan Yildiz
17 DF   SUI Hamza Sljivar
18 MF  LIE Noah Frommelt
19 FW   SUI Raphael Auer
20 DF  LIE Martin Rechsteiner
21 DF   SUI Marin Stähli
22 GK   SUI Danilo Iozzo
23 MF   SUI Raphael Tinner
24 FW  LIE Ferhat Saglam (on loan from FC Vaduz)
25 MF  LIE Dany Ferreira
35 GK   SUI Oliver Klaus

Notable former players

Former chairmen

  • Robi Agnolazza
  • Stefan Wolfinger
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References

  1. "FC Balzers » Geschichte" (in German). Retrieved 2019-10-18.
  2. "FC Balzers » 2. Mannschaft" (in German). Retrieved 2019-10-22.
  3. "Ostschweizer Fussballverband - Meisterschaft / Cup". www.football.ch (in German). Retrieved 2019-10-22.
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