FC Dornbirn 1913

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FC Dornbirn 1913
logo
Logo until 2014
Basic data
Surname Dornbirn football club in 1913
Seat Dornbirn
founding March 12, 1913
Colours Red - white - black
president Arnold Peter Streitler
Website fc-dornbirn.at
First soccer team
Head coach Markus Mader
Venue Birkenwiese Stadium
Places 12,000
league 2nd league
2019/20 12th place
home
Away
The Birkenwiese stadium in Dornbirn

The FC Dornbirn 1913 is a football club from the city of Dornbirn in Vorarlberg , Austria . He has been playing in the 2nd division since the 2019/20 season . The club's home is the Birkenwiese stadium with a capacity of around 12,000 spectators. The name sponsor is currently the Dornbirner Mohrenbrauerei .

history

FC Dornbirn was launched on March 12, 1913 at a founding meeting in the Dornbirn Gasthaus zur Flur . The club colors were set with red-white-black and later changed to white-red. The city coat of arms of Dornbirn was used as the logo in the founding year.

In its long history, the club played three seasons in the state league and from 1974 to 1989 for many years in the 2nd division of the Austrian Bundesliga . A major national title has so far been denied to the people of Dornbirn, but the club was able to secure the title of Vorarlberg Champion ten times and win the Vorarlberg Cup six times.

In 1965, FC Dornbirn entered into a syndicate with SC Austria Lustenau , which, however, was resolved after a relatively unsuccessful season. In 1979 the merger with SC Schwarz-Weiß Bregenz took place . As the now IG Bregenz / Dornbirn , they played in the 2nd division of the Bundesliga for years and also created a unique curiosity in Austrian professional football. When the club had to relegate to Regionalliga West in the 1984/85 season due to a league reform, the second IG Bregenz / Dornbirn team, which consisted of pure amateurs, qualified for the 2nd division of the Bundesliga that same season. So - "reinforced" with some of their good amateur players - the combined Dornbirn / Bregenz football professionals were also able to compete in the second stage in the 1985/86 season . In 1987 the "interest group" was finally dissolved and the two traditional associations were re-established.

In 1988/89 Dornbirn was able to play again in the 2nd division, but had to relegate back to the regional league after the end of the season. From 2005/06 to 2008/09, FC Dornbirn played in the Regionalliga West, the third highest class in Austrian football. In the 2008/09 season, the fighting team reached the championship title in the Regionalliga West and rose to the first division . At the end of the 2008/09 season, the 1b team reached second place in the Vorarlberg regional class and thus secured promotion to the Vorarlbergliga , the highest division in the state, which is one of the four highest leagues in Austria.

However, Dornbirn had to relegate from the First League after a year; after a 1: 8 against Admira , the club was bottom of the table with two rounds to go. At this point in time, the Vorarlbergers had already been denied the license for a first division pitch in the second of three instances. Although FC Dornbirn would still have had a chance of relegation games to stay in the league when they were bottom of the table, because there was no relegation from the national to the first division ( Austria Kärnten was denied the first division license), the club decided not to go to the permanent neutral Arbitration court, the last instance in licensing issues, and returned to the Regionalliga West. On August 4, 2010, bankruptcy proceedings were opened against FC Dornbirn Spiel- und BetriebsgesmbH in response to a bankruptcy petition it had brought before the Feldkirch Regional Court. The club subsidiary was founded after the promotion to the first division and was responsible for the game operations of the professional team. According to the credit protection association of 1870, their debts amounted to around 277,000 euros.

In the 2009/10 season , around 230 football players were active in 18 youth teams at FC Dornbirn 1913. In addition, there were almost 70 players from the professional team as well as the amateur and senior team.

In the 2018/19 season they rose again to the second division after nine years.

Combat team

Coaching team

As of September 5, 2018

function Surname Date of birth nationality with the club
since
Last club
Trainer Markus Mader 05/19/1968 AustriaAustria 07/2017 FC Schwarzach
Assistant coach Klaus Stocker 01/20/1967 AustriaAustria 10/2017 Coach FC Krumbach
Goalkeeper coach Erwin Wawra 04/12/1952 AustriaAustria

Current squad

Status: August 14, 2020

Back
number
Surname Date of birth nationality with the club
since
Last club
goalkeeper
01 Lucas Bundschuh 04/09/1996 AustriaAustria 07/2019 1. FC Sonthofen
23 Maximilian Lang 11/01/1996 AustriaAustria 07/2017 FC Dornbirn 1913 II
defense
03 Andreas Malin January 31, 1994 LiechtensteinLiechtenstein 07/2016 UPS Eschen-Mauren
11 Florian Prirsch 09/11/1998 AustriaAustria 07/2018 SCR Altach II
14th Marcel Krnjic 11/08/2002 AustriaAustria 06/2020 AKA Vorarlberg
15th Timo Friedrich 01/16/1998 AustriaAustria 07/2019 SC Austria Lustenau
20th Lukas Allgäuer 07/12/1994 AustriaAustria 07/2015 SCR Altach II
25th Leonardo Zottele 04/16/1999 AustriaAustria 01/2020 SCR Altach (loan)
Mario Jokic 09/10/1990 CroatiaCroatia 08/2020 FC Memmingen
Adem Draganovic 08/29/2000 AustriaAustria 08/2020 without a club (previously FC Wil U-21)
midfield
09 Tom zimmer different 09/22/1998 GermanyGermany 08/2020 VfR Garching
10 Franco Joppi 01/23/1989 AustriaAustria 07/2014 FC Diepoldsau
16 Martin Krizic 12/29/2003 AustriaAustria 06/2020 FC Dornbirn 1913 youth
21st Christoph Domig 01/20/1992 AustriaAustria 07/2013 SCR Altach
22nd Felix Gurschler 02/25/1998 AustriaAustria 07/2016 FC Dornbirn 1913 II
24 Lars Nussbaumer 01/31/2001 AustriaAustria 08/2020 SCR Altach (loan)
28 Aaron Kircher 10/18/1991 AustriaAustria 07/2014 First Vienna FC
attack
07th Egzon Shabani 11/26/1991 North MacedoniaNorth Macedonia 07/2019 FC Rapperswil-Jona
08th Lukas Fridrikas 12/30/1997 AustriaAustria 01/2018 SC Wiener Neustadt
12 Edin Ibrišimović 03/10/2000 Bosnia and HerzegovinaBosnia and Herzegovina 07/2018 FC Dornbirn 1913 II
17th Maurice Mathis 05/09/1999 AustriaAustria 07/2019 VfV 06 Hildesheim
19th Lukas Katnik 07/31/1989 AustriaAustria 08/2020 SC Austria Lustenau
32 Deniz Mujić 08/07/1990 AustriaAustria 01/2019 FC Gossau

Transfers

Status: August 14, 2020

Access: Departures:
Summer 2020

successes

  • 2 × Regionalliga West champions: 2009, 2019
  • 10 × Vorarlberg champions: 1955, 1960, 1963, 1970, 1974, 1975, 1983, 1985, 1988, 1997, 2004
  • 11 × Vorarlberger Cup winners : 1933, 1937, 1952, 1959, 1982, 2011, 2012, 2014, 2015, 2016, 2019 and 1 × as IG Dornbirn / Bregenz 1981
  • 3 × Vorarlberg Cup finalists : 1949, 1958, 1997
  • 3 × first division seasons in the national league : 1960/61, 1963/64, 1969/70
  • 14 × second division seasons: 1974–1981, 1983–1986, 1988/89, 2009/10

Known players

A selection of well-known players: Karl Mai (1962/63), Johann Buzek (1969/70), Friedrich Rafreider , Fahrudin Jusufi (1972), Bruno Sohm , Dietmar Albrich , Viktor Sinn , Josef Saxenhammer , Hans Taschler , Martin Gisinger , Bernhard Gunz , Heinz Ferdinand Heinisch , Wolfgang Kaufmann, Hans Wohlgenannt , Johann Thurnher, Fritz Vogel

Women's soccer

In the Regionalliga West, the women's team from Dornbirn rose in 1997 and again in the next season . Since 2018, a women's team has only been set up again to play the women's Vorarlberg League.

Web links

Individual evidence

  1. FC Dornbirn waived complaint to arbitration. In: Small newspaper online. May 26, 2010; Archived from the original on May 28, 2010 ; Retrieved May 29, 2010 .
  2. a b FC Dornbirn professional department bankruptcy proceedings. In: orf.at. August 4, 2010, accessed August 12, 2010 .
  3. Goal achieved, Dornbirn is second class vn.at, on May 17, 2019, accessed on May 18, 2019
  4. a b FC Dornbirn: FC Dornbirn - squad (accessed on August 4, 2016)
  5. Transfermarkt.at: Transfers 2020/21 (accessed on August 2, 2020)
  6. FC Dornbirn, season 2018/19, KM-FR, squad. In: fussballoesterreich.at. Retrieved August 26, 2019 .