SFK 2000

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SFK 2000
Full name ŽNK SFK 2000 Sarajevo
Founded 2000
Ground Koševo II
Manager Samira Hurem
League Bosnian women's football championship
2012–13 1st

SFK 2000 is a women's football club from Sarajevo, Bosnia and Herzegovina. They play in the highest level of women's football in Bosnia and Herzegovina, the Bosnian women's football championship. The club was established in June 2000, the name was chosen from the men's football club which shut down in the meantime.[1]

In short time the team reached the 1st place in the Bosnian League, which it still holds today. They participated in the UEFA Women's Cup from 2003 onwards but never reached the final rounds. In the 2009–10 UEFA Women's Champions League, when the competition was rebranded and reorganized, they started in the round of 32 but lost to Russia's Zvezda 2005 Perm 8–0 on aggregate. The next two years they had to go through the qualifying phase, failing both times, but in 2012–13 UEFA Women's Champions League they managed to get through the qualifying phase, which was hosted in Sarajevo, in a group where two clubs played the round of 32 of the previous season of women's champions league.

Honours

  • Bosnian women's football championship (11): 2003 to 2013
  • Bosnian Women's Cup (10)[2] : ?, 2004, 2006 to 2013

Current squad

As of 23 August 2012, according to UEFA's website.
Note: Flags indicate national team as has been defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.

No. Position Player
1 Bosnia and Herzegovina GK Almina Hodžić
2 Bosnia and Herzegovina FW Anđela Šešlija
3 Bosnia and Herzegovina FW Nikolina Dijaković
4 Bosnia and Herzegovina MF Almira Spahić
5 Bosnia and Herzegovina DF Jelena Hršum
6 Bosnia and Herzegovina MF Amela Fetahović
7 Serbia MF Ivana Ivanović
8 Bosnia and Herzegovina DF Amira Spahić
9 Bosnia and Herzegovina DF Mersiha Ašćerić
10 Bosnia and Herzegovina MF Ivana Vlajić
11 Bosnia and Herzegovina FW Alisa Spahić
12 Bosnia and Herzegovina GK Merima Pašalić
No. Position Player
14 Bosnia and Herzegovina MF Alma Jašarević
15 Bosnia and Herzegovina DF Azra Hamzić
16 Bosnia and Herzegovina FW Azra Numanović
17 Bosnia and Herzegovina DF Amela Kršo
18 Bosnia and Herzegovina FW Monika Kuliš
19 Bosnia and Herzegovina DF Melisa Hasanbegović
22 Bosnia and Herzegovina FW Selma Kapetanović
23 Bosnia and Herzegovina MF Aida Hadžić
United States FW Jelena Vrcelj
Bosnia and Herzegovina DF Belma Orhan
Bosnia and Herzegovina DF Mirnesa Fetahović
Bosnia and Herzegovina DF Almina Hajro
Bosnia and Herzegovina FW Aida Džemidžić

UEFA competitions record

Season Competition Stage Result Opponent
2003–04 Women's Cup Qualifying Stage 0–3 Croatia ZNK Osijek
2–1 Wales Cardiff City
2–3 Kazakhstan Temir Zholy
2004–05 Women's Cup Qualifying Stage 0–4 Switzerland Zuchwil
0–2 Greece Aegina
5–0 Cyprus PAOK Ledra
2005–06 Women's Cup Qualifying Stage 0–3 Russia Lada Togliatti
1–0 Slovenia Krka Novo Mesto
1–0 Slovakia PVFA Bratislava
2006–07 Women's Cup Qualifying Stage 0–1 Italy Fiammamonza
1–1 Lithuania Gintra Universitetas
1–0 Belarus Universitet Vitebsk
2007–08 Women's Cup Qualifying Stage 2–1 Republic of Macedonia Skiponjat
2–0 Slovakia Slovan Duslo Sala
0–7 France Olympique Lyon
2008–09 Women's Cup Qualifying Stage 0–0 Republic of Ireland Galway United
2–3 Switzerland Zürich
1–2 Belarus Universitet Vitebsk
2009–10 Champions League Round of 32 0–3 H, 0–5 A Russia Zvezda Perm
2010–11 Champions League Qualifying Stage 1–6 Cyprus Apollon Limassol
1–3 Israel ASA Tel Aviv
0–1 Sweden Umeå
2011–12 Champions League Qualifying Stage 1–3 Romania Olimpia Cluj
4–1 Turkey Ataşehir
2–1 Lithuania Gintra Universitetas
2012–13 Champions League Qualifying Stage 4–0 Republic of Ireland Peamount United
1–0 Wales Cardiff
1–1 Israel ASA Tel Aviv
Round of 32 0–3 H, 3–0 A Czech Republic Sparta Praha
2013–14 Champions League Qualifying Stage 3-0 Wales Cardiff
1-2 Turkey Konak
2-3 Bulgaria Sofia

References

  1. "Žene čuvaju obraz bh. nogometa". scsport.ba. Retrieved 20 December 2011. 
  2. "SFK 2000 wins tenth cup" (in Bosnian). scsport.ba. 8 May 2013. Retrieved 12 May 2013. 

External links


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