FC Tirol Innsbruck

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FC Tirol Milch Innsbruck
Founding coat of arms
Full name Football Club Tirol Milch Innsbruck
place Innsbruck , Tyrol
Founded 1993
Dissolved 2002
Club colors Green-black-red
Stadion Tivoli Stadium
Top league Bundesliga
1st level
successes Section Achievements
home
Template: Infobox historical football club / maintenance / NurHeim

FC Tirol Milch Innsbruck was an Austrian football club from the Tyrolean capital Innsbruck , which existed from 1993 until it went bankrupt in 2002. It was split off from Bundesliga club FC Wacker Innsbruck as a separate club.

history

1993-2002
season Place (particip.) Sp S. U N Gates Pt.
1st division
1993/94 K1 04. (10) 36 14th 11 11 48:33 39
Bundesliga
1994/95 K2 05. (10) 36 15th 10 11 61:44 40
1995/96 K3 03. (10) 36 18th 08th 10 64:40 62
1996/97 04. (10) 36 16 07th 13 49:40 55
1997/98 06. (10) 36 12 12 12 49:51 48
1998/99 06. (10) 36 15th 10 11 49:41 55
1999/2000 01. (10) 36 24 05 07th 54:30 77
2000/01 01. (10) 36 20th 08th 08th 63:31 68
2001/02 01. (10) 36 23 06th 07th 63:20 75
Legend
master
K11993/94: The 1st division was reduced by 2 clubs to 10 clubs. A double round trip is played.
K2 1994/95: The 1st division was renamed the Bundesliga.
K31995/96: Introduction of the three-point rule .

FC Tirol Innsbruck emerged from Bundesliga club FC Wacker Innsbruck . In the summer of 1993, the professional division of FC Wacker Innsbruck was spun off as a separate club and originally named FC Innsbruck Tirol , or with the involvement of the sponsor FC Innsbruck Capillaris Tirol . The city of Innsbruck insisted that the city name be mentioned first. Meanwhile, FC Wacker Innsbruck had to continue playing in the fourth-class regional league, while FC Tirol Innsbruck started in the Bundesliga in its first season thanks to the license takeover. In 1994 Klaus Mair, who was later arrested for embezzlement, took office as president. The club was renamed FC Tirol Innsbruck and Hans Krankl, a young but prominent coach, was hired. Mair invested more than 20 million schillings in a new team and fulfilled Hans Krankl practically every player wish. After Mair's arrest, the association faced dissolution and was saved, among other things, by the influence of well-known Tyrolean politicians.

After the new sponsor Tirol Milch joined in 1995, the club name was FC Tirol Milch Innsbruck . Jürgen Bodenseer took over the presidency for two years , followed in 1997 by Martin Kerscher. In the winter of 1998/99 , Kurt Jara was hired as the new trainer. With him, the club experienced another high-altitude flight and celebrated the championship titles in 2000 and 2001 . In autumn 2001 Jara left the Tyrolean and went to Hamburger SV . The work that Jara had done until then was continued by the new coach Joachim Löw and celebrated the last championship title in 2002 with FC Tirol Innsbruck . After the mountain of debt of the Tyroleans had accumulated more and more in recent years and could no longer be repaid through emergency sales of players, FC Tirol filed for bankruptcy in 2002 and subsequently dissolved after the Bundesliga license was withdrawn.

president

  • 1993–1994: Erwin Steinlechner
  • 1994: Günther Amann
  • 1994: Klaus Mair
  • 1994–1995: Erwin Steinlechner
  • 1995–1997: Jürgen Bodenseer
  • 1997–2001: Martin Kerscher
  • 2001–2002: Othmar Bruckmüller

Trainer

Joachim Löw

Known players

goal defense midfield attack

1996–2002: Stanislaw Tschertschessow
1997–2000: Heinz Weber
2001: Marc Ziegler
2001/02: Heinz Weber

1993–1996: Michael Baur
1993–1998: Michael Streiter
1993/94: Andrzej Lesiak
1993–2002: Robert Wazinger
1994–1995: Harald Cerny
1996/97: Rune Tangen
1997–2002: Michael Baur
1997–2002: Aleksander Knavs
1999– 2002: Walter Kogler
2000: Michael Streiter
2001: Marco Zwyssig
2001/02: Robert Ibertsberger
2002: Olof Persson

1993/94: Richard Kitzbichler
1993/94: Marcelo Carracedo
1993–1996: Thomas Silberberger
1993–2002: Roland Kirchler
1994: Manfred Schwabl
1996–2002: Markus beginning
1997–2002: Zoran Barisic
1998–2000: Stefan Köck
1995–1887: Jerzy Brzęczek
1995–1997: Richard Kitzbichler
1997–2002: Stephan Marasek
1998–2002: Alfred Hörtnagl
1998–2002: Markus Scharrer
2000–2002: Jerzy Brzęczek
2000–2002: Patrik Ježek
2000–2002: Jürgen Panis
2001/02: Robert Ibertsberger

1993/94: Christoph Westerthaler
1994–1995: Souleyman Sané
1996–2002: Wolfgang Mair
1997/98: Francis Severeyns
1998: Mathias Svensson
1998–2002: Václav Daněk
1999–2002: Radosław Gilewicz
1998/99: Karel Vácha
2000–2002: Edi Glieder
2002: Wilfried Sanou

titles and achievements

Note: FC Tirol Innsbruck also claimed the national titles of its predecessor clubs, which had acquired them with "their" license. These title wins are printed in italics.

  • 10 × Austrian champion : 1971, 1972, 1973, 1975, 1977, 1989, 1990 , 2000, 2001, 2002
  • 7 × Austrian Cup winners : 1970, 1973, 1975, 1978, 1979, 1989, 1993
  • 1 × Austrian Cup finalist: 2001
  • 2 × Supercup finalists : 2000, 2001
  • 1 × Tyrolean regional cup finalist: 1999 (FC ​​Tirol Innsbruck Amateure)

Top scorer

Trivia

Despite the modest success of FC Tirol at international level, many former players and coaches continued to develop successfully, including the German coach Joachim Löw , the Russian coach Stanislaw Tschertschessow and the Polish coach Jerzy Brzęczek , who were each head coach of the national teams of their countries of origin. Peter Stöger and Markus Anfang also became renowned trainers.

Current

  • After the bankruptcy of FC Tirol Innsbruck, a new football club was founded under the name FC Wacker Tirol .

Women's soccer

The women's division of FC Tirol, the FFC Tirol, was in a syndicate with the women's section of the Innsbruck AC from 1997 to 1999.

Web links

Commons : FC Tirol Innsbruck  - Collection of images, videos and audio files

Individual evidence

  1. 1998/99 season, 1st Bundesliga. In: noefv.at. Retrieved January 20, 2014 .
  2. 1998/99 season, 1st Bundesliga. In: noefv.at. Retrieved January 20, 2014 .
  3. 1998/99 season, 1st Bundesliga. In: noefv.at. Retrieved January 20, 2014 .
  4. 1998/99 season, 1st Bundesliga. In: noefv.at. Retrieved January 20, 2014 .
  5. Report to tirol.orf.at