Linköping FC explained

Clubname:Linköping FC
Fullname:Linköping Football Club
Nickname:LFC
Ground:Linköping Arena,
Linköping
Capacity:7,400
Chairman:Maria Hagström
Manager:Anders Jacobson
League:Damallsvenskan
Season:2023
Position:3rd
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Website:http://www.linkopingfc.com/

Linköping Football Club is an association football club from Linköping, Sweden. The club was established in 2003 when Kenty DFF women's football club decided to merge with the premier division ice hockey club Linköping HC under the new name Linköping FC. The club's goal was both to establish women's football as a sport in Linköping and eventually become one of the top four teams.

History

In 2004, Linköping FC finished their first year in the women's premier division (Damallsvenskan) in sixth place. The following two seasons the club reached its goal of finishing top four in the league with a fourth-place finish in 2005 and a third-place finish in 2006. The club also won Svenska Cupen ("The Swedish Cup") for the first time in 2006, defeating Umeå IK 3–2 in the cup final. They finished sixth in 2007 which was a failure for the club. In 2008 they led a long time through the series but still they finished second behind Swedish giants Umeå IK. Though, some consolation came when they won Svenska Cupen the same season, beating Umeå 1–0 in the final.

From 2004 to 2007 Linköping FC increased their annual turnover from 2,4 million SEK to 5,0 million SEK.[1] At the same time their average attendance dropped from 1,609 in the 2004 season to 997 in 2006.[1] In 2007, Frida Östberg left the team after two years. Later, the team signed Jessica Landström after her debut for the national team. In February, they signed Brazilian internationals Cristiane and Daniela.

Current squad

.[2]

Former players

For details of current and former players, see .

Achievements

Record in UEFA Women's Champions League

All results (away, home and aggregate) list Linköping's goal tally first.

CompetitionRoundClubAwayHomeAggregate
2009–201011–0
3–0
6–0
2–0 f 3–0 5–0
1–1 f 0–2 1–3
2010–20117–0 f 5–0 12–0
1–0 2–0 f 3–0
1–1 f 2–2 3–3 (agr)
2014–20151–2 f 3–0 4–2
0–3 5–0 f 5–3
1–1 0–1 f 1–2
2017–20181–0 f 3–0 4–0
1–1 f 3–0 4–1
0–2 f 3–5 3–7
2018–20196–1 f 4–0 10–1
2–3 0–2 f 2–5
2023–20240–3
f First leg.

References

Footnotes

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: LFCs Vision . 2007-04-18 . Linköpings Fotboll Club . sv . dead . https://web.archive.org/web/20060207172824/http://www.linkopingfc.com/lfc/vision.php . February 7, 2006 .
  2. Web site: A-Laget . Linköpings FC . 3 May 2023 . Swedish.
  3. News: SM-guld till Linköpings FC. Sveriges radio. sv. 1 November 2009. 2 November 2015.