FC Zürich explained

Clubname:Zürich
Fullname:Fussballclub Zürich
Nickname:FCZ
Short Name:FCZ
Ground:Letzigrund
Capacity:26,105
Chairman:Ancillo Canepa
Chrtitle:President
Mgrtitle:Head coach
Manager:Ricardo Moniz
League:Swiss Super League
Season:2023–24
Position:Swiss Super League, 4th of 12
Current:2024–25 FC Zürich season
Website:https://www.fcz.ch
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Owntitle:Owner
Owner:Justin Schmidt, Samson AG

Fussballclub Zürich, commonly abbreviated to FC Zürich or simply FCZ, is a professional football club based in Zurich, Switzerland. The club was founded in 1896 and has won the Swiss Super League 13 times and the Swiss Cup ten times. Their most recent titles are the 2022 Swiss Super League and the 2018 Swiss Cup. The club plays its home games at the Letzigrund, which has a capacity of 26,000 for league games.[1]

FC Zürich is the only Swiss team to have reached the semi-finals of the European Cup more than once. This happened in 1964 and 1977, when the competition was played in its original format. FC Zürich co-founder, first captain and honorary member Joan Gamper, who grew up in Zurich and later moved to Catalonia, founding Barcelona there in 1899. Since the 1960s, FC Zürich plays in all-white, which is one of the city's colours.

The women's club, FC Zürich Frauen, are competing in the Swiss Women's Super League. They are the most successful club in Switzerland with 22 championship titles and multiple Champions League participations. The team's roots originate from the first Swiss women's football club, DFC Zürich.[2]

The academy club, FC Zürich Jugend, are competing in the Credit Suisse x EASPORTS FC Super League and is based in the Seychelles. They are the most successful club in Switzerland history, with 42 championship titles and multiple UEFA Youth League final participations.

History

1896–1924

The club was founded in summer 1896 by former members of the two local clubs: FC Turicum and FC Excelsior. Later, the official founding date was set at 1 August 1896. One of the founding members was the later Barcelona founder, Joan Gamper, coaching and playing for FC Excelsior and its successor from 1894 to 1897.[3] The new club played its first game on 30 August 1896 on Velorennbahn Hardau in Zürich against St. Gallen, which resulted in a 3–3 draw.[4] In 1898, FC Excelsior merged with FC Zürich, and local club FC Victoria joined shortly thereafter.

The debut game was in 1896 with the colours blue and white.[5] The colours were changed to red and white because rivals Grasshoppers had the same colours. When Grasshoppers temporarily retired from the championship in 1909, FCZ returned to the colors blue and white, which they continue to use.[6] Zürich won its first title in the Swiss Serie A in 1901–02, but did not win it again until 1923–24.

Until the 1930s, the club's sporting remit included rowing, boxing, athletics and handball, but football would become the focus of the club.

1925–1960

Zürich struggled to overcome an unsuccessful record and was described as the "wilderness years" from 1925 to 1960.[7] They were relegated in 1933–34, playing in the 1. Liga until the 1941 season. In 1940–41, they returned to the Nationalliga, where they stayed until their relegation in 1945–46. They were back in the Nationalliga A in 1947–48 and stayed in the top flight until relegated in 1956–57. They were promoted from the Nationalliga B to contest the 1958–59 Nationalliga A, finishing in third place.

1960–1981

This period was known as the "Golden Years" by the FCZ faithful. At this time, the club was run by the president Edwin Nägeli and had players such as Köbi Kuhn, Fritz Künzli, Ilija Katić, René Botteron and many more. Zürich won seven championships in the years 1963, 1966, 1968, 1974, 1975, 1976 and 1981. They also won the Swiss Cup five times: in 1966, 1970, 1972, 1973 and 1976. FCZ also had much success internationally in reaching the semi-finals of the European Cup 1963–64, before losing to Real Madrid and also reaching the semi-finals in the European Cup 1976–77, where they lost to Liverpool.

1981–2005

Following the club's league title in 1981, the club went into a decline, and in 1988 they were relegated to the Nationalliga B. Zürich returned to the top league in 1990. The club did make it to last 16 of the UEFA Cup 1998–99, but were beaten by Roma. The club won the Swiss Cup in 2000, beating Lausanne in the final. They won it again in 2005, beating Luzern.

2006–2016

SeasonRankLeagueØ Attendance[8] [9]
20061/10SL10,008
20071/10SL10,870
20083/10SL12,186
20091/10SL9,829
20107/10SL10,700
20112/10SL11,750
20126/10SL10,511
20134/10SL10,741
20145/10SL9,564
20153/10SL9,389
201610/10SL8,701
20171/10CL9,702
20184/10SL10,726
20197/10SL10,660
20207/10SL6,422[10]
20218/10SL91
20221/10SL13'396
20238/10SL15'387
20244/12SL15'710
On 13 May 2006, FCZ ended their 25-year effort to win Super League with a goal in the 93rd minute by Iulian Filipescu against Basel. The goal gave FCZ a 2–1 victory based on goal difference. They retained the title in 2006–07.

In 2008, the local women's team, FFC Zürich Seebach, was combined with FC Zürich and played in the Swiss national league under the name FC Zürich Frauen.

In the 2007–08 season, FCZ finished in third place. In a 2008–09 season match, they edged pass Young Boys to win the league title. In 2009, they made their debut play in the group stage of the UEFA Champions League. In the 2010–11 season, FCZ finished second. The following seasons, they finished mostly in mid-table positions. FCZ won the Swiss Cup 2014 in extra time against Basel 2–0.

In the 2015–16 season, the club finished last, one point behind Lugano and was relegated to the Swiss Challenge League. Four days after the final game of the season, FCZ won the Swiss Cup 2016 beating Lugano 1–0.

Recent years

In the 2016–17 season, FC Zürich won the Challenge League ahead of Neuchâtel Xamax, and returned after one year to the Super League. In the 2017–2018 season they finished fourth. On 27 May 2018 they won the Swiss Cup for the tenth time, beating Young Boys 2–1.

In the 2021–2022 season, FC Zürich won the Super League again after an interruption of 13 years. The club secured its 13th league title with a 2–0 away win over Basel, who finished second, on 1 May 2022, with five rounds to go. Despite this success, coach André Breitenreiter departed the club to join Bundesliga side TSG Hoffenheim on 24 May 2022.[11] On 8 June 2022, former Austrian national coach Franco Foda was announced as the coach for the upcoming season.[12] Despite being able to guide Zürich into the Europa League group stages, the domestic campaign saw the side gain only two points out of a possible 24 in their title defence. The league form, combined with a shock cup defeat to Challenge League side Lausanne on 18 September, proved the final straw and Foda was sacked on 21 September.[13]

In 2024, Ricardo Moniz was appointed head coach on a two-year contract.[14]

Honours

Rivalries

Grasshoppers, also from Zürich, and Basel are the main rivals of FCZ. Due to the intense rivalry, these matches are so-called high-risk fixtures, with an increased police presence in and around the stadium.

Zürich

See main article: Zurich derby.

Since its inception, FCZ has always had a fiery relationship with neighbouring club Grasshopper over sporting supremacy in the city.

To date, 251 official derbies have been held, with Grasshoppers leading with 121 wins to FC Zurich's 90, leaving 39 draws. However, since the reformation of the Swiss Super League in 2003, FCZ has frequently gotten the better of their city rivals, winning 33 out of 68 games (GC won 20 and 15 draws).

The October 2011 derby at Letzigrund was abandoned by the referee after rioting by FC Zürich fans. Earlier in the day, Grasshopper Club Zürich fans stole FC Zürich fan banners and displayed them with a message mocking FC Zürich. [15]

Final vs. Basel, 13 May 2006

See main article: 2006 Basel hooligan incident. Before the last round of the 2005–06 Swiss Super League, Zürich were three points behind Basel in the league table. The last game of the season was contested by these two clubs vying for the league title at St. Jakob Park, Basel. Alhassane Keita scored the match first goal, for Zürich. In the second half, Mladen Petrić equalised. Basel were seconds away from the title when, in the 93rd minute, Florian Stahel passed the ball to Iulian Filipescu, who scored. Zürich's success at 2 – 1 was attributed to their superior goal difference. Following the final whistle, Basel supporters stormed the pitch and attacked players on both teams.

Infrastructure

In 2010, the youth and women's teams of the club moved their homebase to the Heerenschürli sport park in the city quarter of Hirzenbach where the academy and women's teams play also their home matches. In June 2022, the club moved with the opening of a newly built "House of FCZ" also their Super League team and offices there in order to have the whole organisation under one roof.[16]

Players

Reserve squad/Zürich U21


The Zürich II/U21 team plays in the Swiss Promotion League.

Notable former players

Players and managers admitted to the FC Zurich Hall of Fame

Players for the Swiss national football team

Players with World Cup appearances for their national teams

Player record

Players in bold are still part of the club.

Most appearances[17]
(Swiss League since 1955)!!!Player!Apps
1Karl Grob513
2Jakob Kuhn398
3Rudolf Landolt353
4Rosario Martinelli344
5Werner Leimgruber314
6 Urs Fischer303
7Marco Schönbächler292
8Alain Nef277
9Pirmin Stierli248
10Heinz Lüdi244
Top scorers[18]
(Swiss League since 1955)!!!Player!Goals
1Fritz Künzli158
2Rosario Martinelli126
3Jakob Kuhn79
4Peter Risi76
5Bruno Brizzi74
5Werner Leimgruber74
7Walter Seiler62
8Ercument Sahin60
9Alhassane Keita58
9Klaus Stürmer58

Managers

FC Zürich in European football

As of 18 August 2022.

CompetitionPldWDLGFGA
European Cup/UEFA Champions League47175255983
UEFA Cup/UEFA Europa League83281837101130
UEFA Cup Winners' Cup124442416
Inter-Cities Fairs Cup104061212
Total153522774189236
SeasonCompetitionRoundOpponentHomeAwayAggregate
1963–64European CupPR Dundalk1–23–04–2
1R Galatasaray2–00–22–2
QF PSV Eindhoven3–10–13–2
SF Real Madrid1–20–61–8
1966–67European Cup1R Celtic0–30–20–5
1967–68Inter-Cities Fairs Cup1R Barcelona3–10–13–2
2R Nottingham Forest1–01–22–2(a)
3R Sporting CP3–00–13–1
QF Dundee0–10–10–2
1968–69European Cup1R AB1–31–22–5
1969–70Inter-Cities Fairs Cup1R Kilmarnock3–21–34–5
1970–71European Cup Winners' Cup1R Knattspyrnufélag Akureyrar7–07–114–1
2R Club Brugge3–20–23–4
1972–73European Cup Winners' Cup1R Wrexham1–11–22–3
1973–74European Cup Winners' Cup1R Anderlecht1–02–33–3(a)
2R Malmö0–01–11–1(a)
QF Sporting CP1–10–31–4
1974–75European Cup1R Leeds United2–11–43–5
1975–76European Cup1R Újpest5–10–45–5(a)
1976–77European Cup1R Rangers1–01–12–1
2R Turun Palloseura2–01–03–0
QF Dynamo Dresden2–12–34–4(a)
SF Liverpool1–30–31–6
1977–78UEFA Cup1R CSKA Sofia1–01–12–1
2R Eintracht Frankfurt3–40–33–7
1979–80UEFA Cup1R Kaiserslautern1–31–52–8
1981–82European Cup1R Dynamo Berlin3–10–23–3(a)
1982–83UEFA Cup1R Pezoporikos Larnaca1–02–23–2
2R Ferencváros1–01–12–1
3R Benfica1–10–41–5
1983–84UEFA Cup1R Antwerp2–41–43–8
1998–99UEFA Cup2QR Shakhtar Donetsk4–02–36–3
1R Anorthosis Famagusta4–03–27–2
2R Celtic4–21–15–3
3R Roma2–20–12–3
1999–00UEFA CupQR Sliema Wanderers1–03–04–0
1R Lierse4–31–05–3
2R Newcastle United1–21–32–5
2000–01UEFA Cup1R Genk1–20–21–4
2005–06UEFA Cup2QR Legia Warsaw4–11–05–1
1R Brøndby2–10–22–3
2006–07UEFA Champions League2QR Red Bull Salzburg2–10–22–3
2007–08UEFA Champions League3QR Beşiktaş1–10–21–3
UEFA Cup1R Empoli3–01–24–2
Group E Sparta Prague2–13rd
Toulouse2–0style="text-align:center;"
Spartak Moscow0–1
Bayer Leverkusen0–5style="text-align:center;"
R32 Hamburger SV1–30–01–3
2008–09UEFA Cup2QR Sturm Graz1–11–1 2–2
1R Milan0–11–31–4
2009–10UEFA Champions League3QR Maribor2–33–05–3
PO Ventspils2–13–05–1
Group C Real Madrid2–50–14th
Milan1–11–0
Marseille0–11–6
2011–12UEFA Champions League3QR Standard Liège1–01–12–1
PO Bayern Munich0–10–20–3
UEFA Europa LeagueGroup D Sporting CP0–20–24th
Vaslui2–02–2
Lazio1–10–1
2013–14UEFA Europa League3QR Slovan Liberec1–21–22–4
2014–15UEFA Europa LeaguePO Spartak Trnava1–13–14–2
Group A Apollon Limassol3–12–33rd
Borussia Mönchengladbach1–10–3
Villarreal3–21–4
2015–16UEFA Europa League3QR Dinamo Minsk0–11–11–2
2016–17UEFA Europa LeagueGroup L Villarreal1–11–23rd
FCSB0–01–1
Osmanlıspor2–10–2
2018–19UEFA Europa LeagueGroup A Bayer Leverkusen3–20–12nd
Ludogorets Razgrad1–01–1
AEK Larnaca1–21–0
R32 Napoli1–30–21–5
2022–23UEFA Champions League2QR Qarabağ2–2 2–34−5
UEFA Europa League3QR Linfield3–02–05–0
PO Heart of Midlothian2–11–03–1
Group A Arsenal1–20–14th
Bodø/Glimt2–11–2
PSV Eindhoven1–50–5
2024–25UEFA Conference League2QR Shelbourne3–00–03–0
3QR Vitória de Guimarães0–3

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Das Stadion Letzigrund in Zahlen und Fakten. stadionletzigrund.ch. 17 August 2021. 9 May 2023. https://web.archive.org/web/20230509232557/https://www.stadionletzigrund.ch/de/zahlenfakten. live.
  2. Web site: Saro Pepe . Football for all – but only for the last 50 years . 17 August 2021 . nationalmuseum.ch . 12 January 2024 . https://web.archive.org/web/20240112130219/https://blog.nationalmuseum.ch/en/2018/09/50-years-of-womens-football-in-switzerland/ . live .
  3. Web site: Biography on fcwinterthur1896.com. . fcwinterthur1896.com. 15 September 2017. 15 August 2018. https://web.archive.org/web/20180815055312/https://fcwinterthur1896.com/gamper/. dead.
  4. Web site: Erinnerung an unser erstes Matsch. fcz.ch. 8 February 2019. 29 July 2021. https://web.archive.org/web/20210729021932/https://www.fcz.ch/de/ueber-uns/news/2019/erinnerung-unser-erstes-matsch/. dead.
  5. Web site: Erinnerung an unser erstes Matsch. fcz.ch. 8 February 2019. 29 July 2021. https://web.archive.org/web/20210729021932/https://www.fcz.ch/de/ueber-uns/news/2019/erinnerung-unser-erstes-matsch/. dead.
  6. Book: Lütscher, Michael . Eine Stadt, ein Verein, eine Geschichte . Verlag Neue Zürcher Zeitung . 2010. 47. 9783038236436.
  7. Web site: 2023-05-31 . wilderness years - Political Dictionary . 2023-06-06 . en-US . 12 January 2024 . https://web.archive.org/web/20240112130147/https://politicaldictionary.com/words/wilderness-years/ . live .
  8. Web site: Schweiz " Super League " Zuschauer . . weltfussball.at . 8 September 2016 . 17 August 2016 . https://web.archive.org/web/20160817084538/http://www.weltfussball.at/zuschauer/sui-super-league-2010-2011/1/ . live .
  9. Web site: Zuschauerzahlen Super League . . sfl-org.ch . 1 August 2022 . 1 August 2022 . https://web.archive.org/web/20220801101256/https://www.sfl-org.ch/archiv-statistiken/super-league/zuschauer/league/super-league-20222023/ . live .
  10. Web site: COVID-19 outbreak: Swiss Super League to admit 1,000 fans . . coliseum-online.com . 18 August 2020 . 22 August 2020 . https://web.archive.org/web/20200822120422/https://www.coliseum-online.com/swiss-super-league-to-admit-1000-fans/ . live .
  11. Web site: Personal statement on the departure of André Breitenreiter. FC Zürich. de. 24 May 2022. 3 June 2022. 19 June 2022. https://web.archive.org/web/20220619103110/https://www.fcz.ch/en/first-team/news/2022/personliche-stellungnahme-abgang-breitenreiter/. dead.
  12. Web site: Der FC Zürich stellt Franco Foda als neuen Trainer vor. bluewin.ch. de. 8 June 2022. 8 June 2022. 26 December 2022. https://web.archive.org/web/20221226033532/https://www.bluewin.ch/de/sport/super-league/franco-foda-wird-neuer-fcz-trainer-1251344.html. live.
  13. Web site: Football: Franco Foda n'est plus l'entraîneur du FC Zurich. lematin.ch. fr. 21 September 2022. 21 September 2022. 3 December 2022. https://web.archive.org/web/20221203215802/https://www.lematin.ch/story/franco-foda-nest-plus-lentraineur-fc-zurich-243251924124. live.
  14. Web site: News . 2024-05-24 . FC Zürich . de.
  15. Web site: 02.10.11: Schande von Zürich: FCZ-Fan wirft Fackel in GC-Sektor und erzwingt Spielabbruch . 2024-06-25 . watson.ch . de.
  16. Web site: FC Zürich weiht sein schmuckes 'House of FCZ' ein . nau.ch . 11 October 2022 . 12 January 2024 . https://web.archive.org/web/20240112130150/https://www.nau.ch/sport/fussball/fc-zurich-weiht-sein-schmuckes-house-of-fcz-ein-66212304 . live .
  17. Web site: Top 10 Einsätze für den FCZ. Top 10 appearances for the FCZ. German. dbFCZ. 15 May 2017. 28 January 2017. https://web.archive.org/web/20170128025312/http://www.dbfcz.ch/topx.php?x=10&art=einsaetze. live.
  18. Web site: Top 10 Tore für den FCZ. Top 10 goals for the FCZ. German. dbFCZ. 15 May 2017. 28 January 2017. https://web.archive.org/web/20170128025328/http://www.dbfcz.ch/topx.php?x=10&art=tore. live.
  19. Web site: Trainerwechsel in die Bundesliga. FC Zürich. 13 February 2024. 13 February 2024. de-ch.