Ranheim Fotball
Ranheim | ||||
Basic data | ||||
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Surname | Ranheim Fotball | |||
Seat | Trondheim | |||
founding | February 17, 1901 | |||
Colours | Blue White | |||
president | Geir Mæland | |||
Website | ranheimfotball.no | |||
First soccer team | ||||
Head coach | Svein Maalen | |||
Venue | EXTRA arena | |||
Places | 3,000 | |||
league | OBOS leagues | |||
2019 | 16th place, Elite Series | |||
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Ranheim IL fotball Topp (RIL) , known as Ranheim Fotball, is a Norwegian football club from the Ranheim district of Trondheim .
Ranheim Fotball is the football department of the so-called Allianz-Sportverein (Norwegian Allianseidrettslag ) Ranheim Idrettslag (abbreviated Ranheim IL ).
Ranheim IL was founded on February 17, 1901. On February 4, 2010, the football department was spun off as a separate unit under the name Ranheim Fotball.
history
Ranheim was originally a district of the rural commune Strinda. In 1964, Strinda was dissolved as a commune and Ranheim was incorporated into the city of Trondheim. These facts have a certain significance for the history and the success of the club.
In the pre-war period, the clubs within and outside the city limits of Trondheim belonged to different district associations. From 1923 to 1937, when the county leagues formed the highest league level in Norway, Ranheim was champion of Sør-Trøndelag fifteen times in a row . Although Trondheim was also part of the Sør-Trøndelag political region, the city's football clubs were organized in a separate county association. So there were two district champions in the Sør-Trøndelag region, one for the city of Trondheim and one for the rest of the region. If the city limits had been the same back then as they are today and Ranheim had had to face the Trondheim clubs at the district championship, the fifteen-fold success would certainly have been difficult to achieve.
From the 1920s to the late 1950s Ranheim was one of the most important football clubs in the Trøndelag region . After the league reform in 1937, in which the regional leagues were replaced by a nationwide league system, the club shuttled over the years between the highest and the second-highest division. At the end of the 1950s, however, he sank into the lower leagues and after the league reform in 1963, in which the league pyramid was radically slimmed down, the club was usually found in the fourth-highest division.
A turning point was initiated in 2004 with the promotion to the 2nd Divisjon (third highest division). At that time Rosenborg , the dominant team in the region, was looking for a cooperation partner. It was felt that the third division, in which Rosenborg's second team played, did not have the necessary level to promote the talents who were not yet allowed to play in the first team. Since the second team was not allowed to move up to the second highest league, the alternative was to let these players play in another team in the city. At that time, apart from Ranheim, the three clubs Kollstad, Byåsen and Strindheim played in the third division, but none in the desired second. Rosenborg now wanted to promote one of the clubs so that he could move up to the second highest division and establish himself there. A lively competition for the favor of the first division team arose among the third division clubs. Ranheim then won the race and the project started in November 2006. Finally, in 2009, they were promoted to the second highest division.
In the following years, relegation was not endangered in any season. On the contrary, Ranheim played for promotion almost every year. In 2017 the time had come. After four relegation games , Ranheim won the last promotion place and was in the top division, called Eliteserien , from 2018 . At the end of the season, the class was held in 7th place and coach Svein Maalen was named coach of the year for this surprise success. In the following season Ranheim could not avert relegation as bottom of the table.
Soccer team successes
League until 1937 (league games only at district level)
- 15 times district master (Sør-Trøndelag) (1923, 1924, 1925, 1926, 1927, 1928, 1929, 1930, 1931, 1932, 1933, 1934, 1935, 1936, 1937)
League 1937-1948 (8 parallel leagues in 11 seasons - top division)
League 1948–1962 (2 parallel leagues - top division)
- 6th place ( 1954/55 )
League after 1963 (single-track first division)
- 7th place ( 2018 )
Cup
Placements of the football team in the league - from 1949
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Squad of the 2020 season
As of August 13, 2020
No. | Nat. | Surname | |||
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goal | |||||
1 | Even Barli | ||||
12 | Magnus Rønnekleiv Lenes | ||||
Defense | |||||
3 | Daniel Kvande | ||||
4th | Martin Lundal | ||||
5 | Øyvind Alseth | ||||
13 | Robert Williams | ||||
14th | Torbjørn Lysaker Heggem | ||||
15th | Erik Tønne | ||||
Sondre blades Langås | |||||
midfield | |||||
6th | Magnus Blakstad | ||||
7th | Mads Reginiussen | ||||
8th | Magnus Stamnestrø | ||||
10 | Vegard Erlien | ||||
11 | Eirik Valla Dønnem | ||||
17th | Sondre Sørløkk | ||||
21st | Jacob Tromsdal | ||||
22nd | Sivert Solli | ||||
23 | Adrià Mateo López | ||||
Storm | |||||
9 | Michael Karlsen | ||||
18th | Ivar Sollie Rønning | ||||
19th | Ruben Kristensen Alte | ||||
20th | Ole Sæter |
Individual evidence
- ↑ Marius Dahl: Ingen trodde laget hans hadde en sjanse i Eliteserien: Søndag ble Maalen Karet til "Årets trener". In: aftenposten.no. Aftenposten , November 25, 2018, accessed August 13, 2020 (Norwegian).
- ↑ Ranheim Fotball - squad. In: ranheimfotball.no. Retrieved August 13, 2020 (Norwegian).