B36 Tórshavn Explained

Clubname:B36 Tórshavn
Fullname:Bóltfelagið 1936
Nickname:B36
White Tigers
Hvítir
Ground:Gundadalur Stadium,
Tórshavn, Faroe Islands
Capacity:5,000
Chairman:Marita D. Magnussen
Manager:Magne Hoseth
League:Faroe Islands Premier League
Season:2023
Position:Faroe Islands Premier League, 4th of 10
Website:http://b36.fo/
Current:2023 B36 Tórshavn season
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B36 Tórshavn (Faroese: Bóltfelagið 1936 Tórshavn) is a Faroese football club based in the capital of Tórshavn, playing in the Faroe Islands Premier League, the top tier of Faroese football. B36 Tórshavn has always played its home games in Gundadalur.[1]

Today B36 Tórshavn is among the most successful football clubs in the Faroe Islands, having won the Faroe Islands Premier League 11 times, the Faroese Cup 6 times and the Faroese Super Cup once. The club also has a women's section, which is currently in the process of rebuilding. B36 Tórshavn is one of the biggest football clubs in the Faroe Islands, and is known for playing technical and positive football. In April 2024, F.C. Copenhagen announced their partnership with B36 Tórshavn.[2] [3]

History

Founding

B36 Tórshavn was officially founded on 28 March 1936, but had already been playing matches since 1935. The capital was growing, and there was a lot of interest in football. B36 was founded by young people who wanted to play football, but had no opportunity to play for the existing club, HB Tórshavn. The initiative was taken by an entrepreneur called Niels Ejdesgaard, who became the first chairman of the new football club. When B36 was founded, they battled with local rivals for the rights to the Gundadalur Stadium, although both teams used the venue and played a number of derby matches there during that initial season. The conflict was solved by the mayor of Tórshavn, who decided that the stadium was to be shared equally between the two clubs. In 1946 the club were celebrated as national champions for the first time, and in 1965 the club won its first national cup.

Hard times

In 1962, B36 Tórshavn celebrated its fifth national championship, but dark times were to follow. The club would wait 35 years for its next national championship. To make matters worse, rival team HB Tórshavn experienced a lot of success in the same period. In the middle of the 1980s, B36 Tórshavn was relegated twice from the best division. Then in 1987, Kristian á Neystabø took over as chairman and Kjartan Mohr as cashier. They took on the task of rebuilding the club, and succeeded in making a turnaround. The results improved, and the cup was won in 1991, although the National Championship was lost in the final match that same year. Then, in 1997, the club celebrated its first national championship in 35 years. Since then, B36 Tórshavn has been five-time champions, and have won the cup three times.

Local rivalry

In the last 20–25 years, the local rivalry with HB Tórshavn has increased, and now the two clubs are about equal in strength. In 2018, the teams fought a fierce cup final, which B36 Tórshavn won on penalties, after one of the most dramatic cup finals ever at The Faroe Islands. After two red cards in the end of the match, B36 Tórshavn was playing 9 against 11 from the stoppage time in the ordinary match and through all the extended time. In the 95th minute, B36 Tórshavn equalized to 2–2 with the last shot in the ordinary match from the youngster Hannes Agnarson, and went on to keep HB Tórshavn from scoring.[4] This 9 against 11 was a repetition of the previous years 2nd leg of the cup semi finals, where B36 Tórshavn also played with 9 men in all the extended time and about 20 minutes of the ordinary time. Despite being down with 2 men, B36 Tórshavn won the match 3–2, when club legend Róaldur Jacobsen scored from 72 meters in the last minute.[5]

Players sold abroad

Normally Faroese players who move abroad to play football are youngsters who join foreign clubs as academy players, but recently B36 Tórshavn has sold two senior players to norwegian football teams. In 2018 the Faroese international defender Odmar Færø was sold to Hamarkameratene, where he played one season. He then returned to Faroese league to play for KÍ Klaksvík. Likewise, the former Faroe Islands national under-21 football team player Meinhard Olsen was sold to Kristiansund BK in 2018. After a short spell with B36 in 2020 he again went abroad, and is now playing with Mjøndalen IF Fotball in Norway. In June 2019, he made his debut on the Faroe Islands national football team in a match against Spain.

In 2022 Martin Agnarsson was sold to the danish Superliga team Viborg FF, after the teams had met in UEFA Europa Conference League. Martin is currently a regular player on Faroe Islands national under-21 football team. In November 2022 he had his debut on the Faroe Islands national football team in a friendly against Kosovo.

International players

B36 Tórshavn regularly delivers players to Faroese National Team. Most recently, Andrass Johansen, Hannes Agnarsson, Jann Benjaminsen and Magnus Egilsson were called up for the matches against Liechtenstein and Denmark. A current player on The Faroese U21 National Team is Gutti Dahl Olsen.

Last year Taufee Skandari made his debut for Afghanistan. This was the first time ever, that a non-Faroese player in the Faroese league has been selected to a national team. He had his debut in a match against Kyrgyzstan in the 2023 CAFA Nations Cup.

Former international players in the current team are: Andrias Eriksen and Eli Nielsen.

Andrias Eriksen, Eli Nielsen, Hannes Agnarsson, Benjamin Heinesen, Andrass Johansen, Jann Benjaminsen, Símun Sólheim and Silas Eyðsteinsson have all played on The Faroese U21 National Team.

European competitions

Clubs in the Faroe Islands first took part in European competitions in 1992, after the Faroe Islands Football Association became a member of UEFA in 1990. B36 was drawn against Avenir Beggen in the Cup Winners Cup qualifying round in 1992. They came close, but didn't make it through to the first round after a 1–0 loss and a 1–1 draw at home.

In 2005/06, the team reached the second round in the UEFA Cup after defeating ÍBV Vestmannaeyar of Iceland 3–2 on aggregate. In the second round, they narrowly lost to Danish Superliga-club FC Midtjylland 1–2 in the away leg and drew 2–2 at home. The team reached the second qualifying round of the UEFA Champions League in 2006/07 after defeating Birkirkara FC of Malta 5–2 on aggregate and were eliminated in second qualifying round of the UEFA Champions League, losing both matches to Fenerbahçe 4–0 and 5–0.

In the 2018–19 UEFA Europa League, B36 reached the second qualifying round, after defeating St Joseph's, Gibraltar on penalties in the preliminary round, after 2–2 on aggregate. The team also made it through the first qualifying round by defeating OFK Titograd from Montenegro after a 0–0 draw at home and a 2–1 victory away. In the second round, B36 Tórshavn was up against Beşiktaş Istanbul. That opposition was too strong, and the matches ended 0–2 and 0–6.

The campaign in 2020–21 Europa League was the most successful European campaign ever, where B36 became the first Faroese team to get through three rounds in an UEFA club competition. This was the year of the pandemic, so the qualifying matches in were played with one single match each round. The victories were won against St Joseph's, Gibraltar (away), Levadia Tallinn aet. at home and The New Saints after penalties at home. The opposition in the third round became a bit to strong. B36 played away, and lost 1-3 against CSKA Sofia.

In the 2022–23 Conference League B36 became the first Faroese team ever, who managed to turn a defeat away into a win on aggregate. They lost 0-2 to Borac Banja Luka, but managed to win 3-1 aet. at home and 4-3 after penalties. The campaign ended in third round, where the danish team Viborg were the opponents.

In the 2023–24 Conference League, B36 made it to the third qualifying round after victories against Paide Linnameeskond from Estonia and Haverfordwest County from Wales. In the third round the opposition from the Croat team Rijeka proved to be to strong, and B36 lost both matches.

Current squad

Out on loan

Honours

UEFA club competition record

Fully up to date as of match played 18 July 2024

Overview

CompetitionMatchesWDLGFGA
UEFA Champions League
UEFA Cup / UEFA Europa League
European Cup Winners' Cup
UEFA Europa Conference League
UEFA Intertoto Cup
TOTAL

Matches

In the 2020–21 season B36 became the first Faroese team to get through three rounds of a UEFA club competition.[6] [7]

SeasonCompetitionRoundOpponentHomeAwayAggregate
1992–93European Cup Winners' CupQR Avenir Beggen1–10–11–2
1997UEFA Intertoto CupGroup 5 Genk0–5bgcolor=#ffdddd rowspan=4 style="text-align:center;"5th
Stabæk0–5
Dynamo Moskva0–1style="text-align:center;"
Panachaiki2–4
1998–99UEFA Champions League1Q Beitar Jerusalem0–11–41–5
1999–2000UEFA CupQR Ankaragücü0–10–10–2
2000–01UEFA CupQR AB0–10–80–9
2002–03UEFA Champions League1Q Torpedo Kutaisi0–12–52–6
2004–05UEFA Cup1Q Liepājas Metalurgs1–31–82–11
2005–06UEFA Cup1Q ÍBV2–11–13–2
2Q Midtjylland2–21–23–4
2006–07UEFA Champions League1Q Birkirkara2–23–05–2
2Q Fenerbahçe0–50–40–9
2007–08UEFA Cup1Q Ekranas1–32–33–6
2008–09UEFA Cup1Q Brøndby0–20–10–3
2009–10UEFA Europa League1Q Olimpi Rustavi0–20–20–4
2012–13UEFA Champions League1Q Linfield0–00–00–0 (3–4 p)
2014–15UEFA Europa League1Q Linfield1–21–12–3
2015–16UEFA Champions League1Q The New Saints1–21–42–6
2016–17UEFA Champions League1Q Valletta2–10–12–2 (a)
2017–18UEFA Europa League1Q Nõmme Kalju1–21–22–4
2018–19UEFA Europa LeaguePR St Joseph's1–11–12–2, 4–2 (p)
1Q OFK Titograd0–02–12–1
2Q Beşiktaş0–20–60–8
2019–20UEFA Europa League1Q Crusaders2–30–22–5
2020–21UEFA Europa LeaguePR St Joseph's2–1
1Q FCI Levadia4–3
2Q The New Saints2–2 (5–4 p)
3Q CSKA Sofia1–3
2022–23UEFA Europa Conference League1Q Borac Banja Luka3–1 0–23–3 (4–3 p)
2Q Tre Fiori1–00–01–0
3Q Viborg1–20–31–5
2023–24UEFA Europa Conference League1Q Paide Linnameeskond0–02–0 2–0
2Q Haverfordwest County2–1 1–1 3–2
3Q Rijeka1–30–21–5
2024–25UEFA Conference League1Q Auda0–10–20–3
Notes

Managers

Notable former players

Notes and References

  1. Web site: About football turf . 26 June 2019 . 8 June 2019 . https://web.archive.org/web/20190608222139/https://football-technology.fifa.com/en/media-tiles/about-football-turf/ . live .
  2. Web site: 2024-04-14 . B36 Tórshavn bliver ny samarbejdsklub . 2024-04-09 . F.C. København . da.
  3. Web site: 2024-04-09 . FCK indgår samarbejde med færøsk traditionsklub . 2024-04-09 . bold.dk . da.
  4. Web site: Cup Final 2018. https://ghostarchive.org/varchive/youtube/20211221/xYJVJlL9rpw . 2021-12-21 . live. . 25 August 2018 .
  5. Web site: Cup Semi Final 2017 (highlights). 26 May 2017. 24 June 2019. 27 July 2023. https://web.archive.org/web/20230727103800/https://vimeo.com/219096970. live.
  6. Web site: B36 hevur skrivað fótbóltssøgu. KVF. Solby Christiansdóttir. fo. 16 September 2020. 16 September 2020. 26 September 2020. https://web.archive.org/web/20200926171805/https://kvf.fo/greinar/2020/09/16/b36-skrivar-fotboltssogu. live.
  7. Web site: B36 skrivar føroyska søgu í Europa. in.fo. Jóannes Hansen. fo. 16 September 2020. 16 September 2020. 29 October 2020. https://web.archive.org/web/20201029074253/https://www.in.fo/itrottur/sport-detail/news/b36-skrivar-foeroyska-soegu-i-europa/. live.
  8. "Petur á Barnaheiminum"
  9. "Petur á Barnaheiminum"
  10. Web site: Spain – Faroes (11'th October 1997) . 25 June 2019 . 27 July 2021 . https://web.archive.org/web/20210727114914/https://www.faroesoccer.com/match.php?matchID=11566&pid= . live .