FK Austria Wien

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Austria Wien
logo
Full name FK Austria MAGNA
Nickname(s) Die Veilchen (The Violets)
Founded March 12, 1911
Ground Horr Stadion,
Vienna, Austria
Capacity 11,800
Chairman Flag of Austria Wolfgang Katzian
Manager Flag of Austria Thomas Parits,
Georg Zellhofer
League Austrian Bundesliga
2005-06 1st
Team colours Team colours Team colours
Team colours
Team colours
 
Home colours
Team colours Team colours Team colours
Team colours
Team colours
 
Away colours

FK Austria Wien is an Austrian football club which plays in the capital, Vienna. They are the champions of the 2005/06 Austrian Bundesliga. In English, they are commonly referred to as Austria Vienna.

Contents

[edit] Stadium

FK Austria Wien play their home games at the Horr Stadion which has a total capcity of 11,800 seats.

[edit] History

[edit] Foundation to World War II

Austria Wien were founded in Vienna on March 12, 1911 as the Wiener Amateur Sportvereinigung by players and officials of the Vienna Cricket- and Football- Club taking violet and white as the new club's colours. The team claimed its first first championship title in 1924. Amateure changed their name to Austria in 1926 as the former amateurs had become professionals.

The 1930s, one of Austria’s most successful eras brought two Mitropa Cup titles, a predecessor of today’s UEFA Champions League (1933, 1936). During this time world class players like Matthias Sindelar wore the violet jersey.

After the Anschluss and throughout the period of Nazi domination of the country (1938–1945) most of the club’s officials and some players with Jewish heritage, had to flee or were murdered by the Nazi regime. Star player Sindelar died under unresolved circumstances on January 23, 1939 of carbon monoxide poisoning in his apartment. But contrary to long-held belief, Sindelar was not opposed to the Nazi regime – he even "Arianized" a coffee house by buying it from authorities for a very low price after its Jewish owners had been deported to a concentration camp. Even though the team did not have any success in this period, they managed a much more important victory in keeping the name "Austria" despite attempts by Nazi sports authorities to rename the club.

[edit] Post World War II

Post World War II a new successful era began with Austria winning national championship titles in 1949, 1950, 1953 and 1961 – 63 as well as 1969.

The 1960s marked the beginning of a golden period for FK Austria Wien, a run of 16 titles in 33 seasons between 1960 and 1993. The decade began with three titles in a row (1961, 1962 and 1963) and ended with two more (1969, 1970) under the management of Ernst Ocwirk. Stars of the 1960s included:

  • Horst Nemec, a fine centre-forward rated by some at the time as one of Europe's best
  • Ernst Fiala, another fine attacker and inspirational team leader
  • Johann Geyer, a cultured yet hard-working midfield schemer
  • Horst Hirnschrodt, who played mainly on the right flank

[edit] Glorious Era

The 1970s saw the beginning of another glorious era of the club as the Violets won 8 national championship titles between 1976 and 1986 (1976,1978-81,1984-86) and made it to the Final of the European Cup Winners Cup in 1978 (which was lost 0:4 to R.S.C. Anderlecht) and the semi finals of the European Champions Cup in 1979. Important players included the world famous Herbert "Schneckerl" Prohaska, Felix Gasselich, Tibor Nyilasi and Toni Polster.

[edit] 1990s

In the beginning of the 90s, FK Austria enjoyed its so far last successful era: three championship titles (1991-93), three cup titles (1990, 1992, 1994) as well as four Super cup titles ( Austrian national champion vs. Cup winner) (1991-94) were won.

[edit] New Millennium

After a period without any title, Austria Wien was taken over by Frank Stronach in 1999. He invested much money into the club, buying many top players and so they won the title again in 2003. Nowadays Austia Wien has a three times higher budget than the average clubs of the league. To this day Austria are known for their very fancy and creative style of playing football which on the downside has frequently led to unnecessary losses and makes the team somewhat unpredictable.

[edit] History in Europe

The 1930s, one of Austria’s most successful eras brought two Mitropa Cup titles, a predecessor of today’s UEFA Champions League (1933, 1936). During this time world class players like Matthias Sindelar wore the violet jersey.

[edit] Major championships

Domestic competitions:
Austrian Championship [23]: 1924,1926,1949,1950,1953,1961,1962,1963,1969,1970,1976,1978,1979,1980,1981,1984,1985, 1986,1991,1992,1993,2003,2006

Austrian Cup [25]: 1921,1924,1925,1926,1933,1935,1936,1948,1949,1960,1962,1963,1967,1971,1974,1977,1980,1982,1986,1990,1992,1994,2003,2005,2006

Austrian Super Cup [6]: 1990,1991,1992,1993,2003,2004

Wiener Cup [2]: 1948,1949

European competitions:
Mitropa Cup [2]: 1933, 1936

[edit] Players

[edit] Current squad

All information was established according to the official website: www.fk-austria.at.

As of January 2007, 2007

No. Position Player
1 Flag of Hungary GK Szabolcs Sáfár
2 Flag of Austria DF Andreas Ulmer
3 Flag of Argentina DF Fernando Ariel Troyansky
4 Flag of Czech Republic FW David Lafata
5 Flag of Croatia DF Mario Tokić
6 Flag of Austria DF Andreas Schicker
7 Flag of Austria FW Roman Wallner
8 Flag of Poland MF Arkadiusz Radomski
9 Flag of Austria FW Wolfgang Mair
10 Flag of Czech Republic MF Štěpán Vachoušek
11 Flag of Austria FW Johannes Aigner
13 Flag of Austria GK Bartolomej Kuru
14 Flag of Austria MF Andreas Lasnik
15 Flag of France MF Jocelyn Blanchard
16 Flag of Austria DF Ronald Gercaliu
No. Position Player
17 Flag of Austria FW Thomas Pichlmann
18 Flag of Austria DF Florian Metz
19 Flag of Czech Republic FW Václav Svěrkoš
20 Flag of Austria MF Christian Schragner
21 Flag of Austria MF Markus Kiesenebner
22 Flag of Austria DF Johannes Ertl
23 Flag of Austria MF Gerd Wimmer
24 Flag of Austria DF Franz Schiemer
25 Flag of Austria MF Philipp Netzer
26 Flag of Brazil MF Maicon dos Santos
27 Flag of Netherlands GK Jelle Ten Rouwelaar
28 Flag of Austria DF Michael Madl
29 Flag of Austria MF Christoph Saurer
30 Flag of Slovenia MF Milenko Ačimovič
31 Flag of Austria DF Joachim Standfest

[edit] Notable players

[edit] External links

UEFA Cup 2006-07
v  d  e

Quarter-Finals
Flag of Netherlands AZ | Flag of Germany Bayer Leverkusen | Flag of Portugal Benfica | Flag of Spain Espanyol | Flag of Spain Osasuna | Flag of Spain Sevilla |
Flag of England Tottenham Hotspur | Flag of Germany Werder Bremen

Eliminated in Round of 16
Braga | Celta Vigo | Lens | Maccabi Haifa | Newcastle United | Paris Saint-Germain | Rangers | Shakhtar Donetsk |

Eliminated in Round of 32
AEK | Ajax | Blackburn Rovers | Bordeaux | CSKA Moscow | Dinamo Bucharest | Fenerbahçe 
Feyenoord (expelled) | Hapoel Tel Aviv | Livorno | Nancy | Panathinaikos | Parma | Spartak Moscow | Steaua | Zulte-Waregem
Eliminated in Group Stage
Austria Wien | Auxerre | Basel | Beşiktaş | Club Brugge | Eintracht Frankfurt | Grasshoppers | Heerenveen | Liberec | Mladá Boleslav | Odense | Palermo | Partizan | Rapid Bucureşti | Sparta Prague | Wisła
Eliminated in First Round
Achna | Artmedia | Atromitos | Åtvidaberg | Brøndby | Chievo | Chornomorets | CSKA Sofia | Derry City | Dinamo Zagreb | Groningen | Hearts | Hertha Berlin | Iraklis | Kayserispor | Legia | Levadia | Litex | Lokomotiv Moscow | Lokomotiv Sofia | Marseille | Molde | Nacional da Madeira | Pasching | Rabotnički | Randers | Red Star | Rubin | Ružomberok | Salzburg | Schalke | Sion | Slavia Prague | Standard Liège | Start | Trabzonspor | Vitória Setúbal | West Ham United | Xanthi | Zaporizhzhya


 
T-Mobile Bundesliga, 2006-07
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