Stjarnan men's football

This is an old revision of this page, as edited by EchidnaLives (talk | contribs) at 11:21, 12 October 2022 (Undid revision 1115626921 by POPerbestur (talk) Unreferenced Material). The present address (URL) is a permanent link to this revision, which may differ significantly from the current revision.

The Stjarnan men's football team is the men's football department of the Ungmennafélagið Stjarnan multi-sport club. It is based in Garðabær, Iceland, and currently plays in the Úrvalsdeild karla, the top-tier men's football league in Iceland.

Stjarnan
Full nameUngmennafélag Stjarnan
Founded1960; 64 years ago (1960)
GroundSamsung völlurinn
Garðabær, Iceland
Capacity1,298
ChairmanJóhann Ingimundarson
Head CoachÁgúst Gylfason
LeagueÚrvalsdeild
20203rd of 12
Websitehttp://stjarnan.is/knattspyrnudeild/

History

The association was founded in 1960. The men's division played in 1997 in the first Icelandic League (then Landsbankadeild) and managed the 2006 promotion to the second highest Icelandic league. In 2008 men's reached the summit and thus to play in Úrvalsdeild since 2009.

The club gained worldwide fame when their elaborate goal celebrations, including highly choreographed depictions of landing a fish, diving, a human toilet, a human bicycle, and a Rambo shooting spree, were published widely across the Internet and football television shows.[1]

On October 4, 2014, Stjarnan won their first ever Úrvalsdeild karla title. Stjarnan went through the season unbeaten in the league and equalled the point record of 52 points.[2]

In the 2014–15 Europa League, they reached the play-off rounds after beating Scottish club Motherwell and Polish team Lech Poznań, before Italian giants Inter Milan denied them a place in the group stages.

On 18 April 2019, Stjarnan won the Super Cup for the second time in its history, beating Valur 6-5 in penalties.[3]

Current squad

As of 15 May 2022

Note: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.

No. Pos. Nation Player
1 GK   ISL Haraldur Björnsson
2 DF   ISL Brynjar Gauti Guðjónsson
4 DF   ISL Óli Valur Ómarsson
6 DF   ISL Sindri Þór Ingimarsson
7 MF   ISL Einar Karl Ingvarsson
8 MF   ISL Jóhann Árni Gunnarsson
9 DF   ISL Daníel Laxdal
10 MF   ISL Hilmar Árni Halldórsson
11 MF   ISL Daníel Finns Matthíasson
14 MF   ISL Ísak Andri Sigurgeirsson
15 DF   ISL Þórarinn Ingi Valdimarsson
No. Pos. Nation Player
17 FW   ISL Ólafur Karl Finsen
18 MF   ISL Guðmundur Baldvin Nökkvason
19 MF   ISL Eggert Aron Guðmundsson
21 DF   ISL Elís Rafn Björnsson
22 FW   ISL Emil Atlason
23 MF   ISL Óskar Örn Hauksson
24 DF   ISL Björn Berg Bryde
29 FW   ISL Adolf Daði Birgisson
33 GK   ISL Viktor Reynir Oddgeirsson
99 MF   DEN Oliver Haurits

Managers

  •   Ólafur Þór Guðbjörnsson (interim) (1 Jan 2010 – 31 Dec 2010)
  •   Bjarni Jóhannsson (1 Jan 2010 – 31 Dec 2012)
  •   Logi Ólafsson (1 Jan 2013 – 16 Oct 2013)
  •   Rúnar Páll Sigmundsson (1 Jan 2014 – 6 May 2021)
  •   Þorvaldur Örlygsson (6 May 2021 – )

Honours

Úrvalsdeild karla

1. deild karla

Icelandic Cup

Icelandic Super Cup

  • Champions: 2015, 2019

European record

Season Competition Round Opponent Home Away Aggregate
2014–15 UEFA Europa League 1Q   Bangor City 4–0 4–0 8–0  
2Q   Motherwell 3–2 (aet) 2–2 5–4  
3Q   Lech Poznań 1–0 0–0 1–0  
PO   Inter Milan 0–3 0–6 0–9  
2015–16 UEFA Champions League 2Q   Celtic 1–4 0–2 1–6  
2017–18 UEFA Europa League 1Q   Shamrock Rovers 0–1 0–1 0–2  
2018–19 UEFA Europa League 1Q   Nõmme Kalju 3–0 0–1 3–1  
2Q   Copenhagen 0–2 0–5 0–7  
2019–20 UEFA Europa League 1Q   FCI Levadia 2–1 2–3 4–4 (a)  
2Q   Espanyol 1–3 0–4 1–7  
2021–22 UEFA Europa Conference League 1Q   Bohemians 1–1 0–3 1–4  
Notes
  • 1Q: First qualifying round
  • 2Q: Second qualifying round
  • 3Q: Third qualifying round
  • PO: Play-off round

References

  1. ^ Lorna Blount (28 July 2010). "Is This The Best Goal Celebration Ever?". Sky News.
  2. ^ "Stjarnan Íslandsmeistari í fyrsta sinn". Morgunblaðið. Retrieved 6 November 2014.
  3. ^ Ástrós Ýr Eggertsdóttir (18 April 2019). "Stjarnan Mestari meistaranna eftir vítaspyrnukeppni". Vísir.is (in Icelandic). Retrieved 18 April 2019.