FC Admira Wacker Mödling

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Admira Wacker

Admira Wacker Modling.png
Full name
Fußballclub Admira Wacker Mödling
Nickname(s)
Admiraner
Südstädter
Founded
1905; 113 years ago (1905)
Ground
BSFZ-Arena,
Maria Enzersdorf
Capacity
10,600
Manager
Philip Thonhauser
Coach
Ernst Baumeister
League
Austrian Bundesliga
2017–18
Austrian Bundesliga, 5th
Website
Club website

















Home colours














Away colours



Current season

FC Admira Wacker Mödling, also known as simply Admira, is a football club from Mödling, Austria. The club was originally formed in 1905 as SK Admira Wien in the Austrian capital. Mergers in 1971 with SC Wacker Wien, in 1997 with VfB Mödling and in 2008 with SK Schwadorf led to its current name.


The club were promoted to the Austrian Bundesliga for the 2011–12 season after gaining promotion at the end of the 2010–11 First League season and finished 3rd in their first season.




Contents





  • 1 History

    • 1.1 SK Admira Vienna


    • 1.2 Post-War


    • 1.3 SC Wacker Vienna


    • 1.4 VfB Mödling


    • 1.5 1997 to 2011 Merger with VfB Mödling and Financial Trouble



  • 2 Honours


  • 3 European tournaments history


  • 4 Players

    • 4.1 Current squad



  • 5 Managers


  • 6 References


  • 7 External links




History




Historical chart of league performance of Admira Wacker and its predecessors



SK Admira Vienna


SK Admira Vienna was formed in the Vienna district of Jedlesee as a merger between two football clubs named Burschenschaft Einigkeit and Sportklub Vindobona in 1905. In 1919, Admira were promoted to the first tier of the Austrian league system for the first time in their history. The club soon became one of the more successful teams during the inter-war period, capturing seven Austrian national championship and three Austrian Cup titles. Several Admira players were also regulars in the Austrian national football team at this time.


After the Anschluss in 1938, Admira played for several seasons in the Gauliga Ostmark, one of the top-flight regional leagues created through the reorganization of German football under the Third Reich. Their win of the 1938–39 Gauliga Ostmark qualified them for the 1939 German football championship, in which Admira made their way to the final against Schalke 04, which was the dominant German football team of the era. They lost overwhelmingly by a score of 0–9. This effort marked the last major success for Vienna before the end of World War II.



Post-War


The post-war period led to a slow, but steady decline due to lack of funds to buy more competitive players. It eventually culminated into the first brief relegation from the top tier after forty years in 1960. The club underwent two name changes in that period, playing as ESV Admira Vienna after a merger with the railroad sports club ESV Vienna in 1953 before changing to ESV Admira-NÖ Energie Vienna in 1960 due to a sponsorship agreement with regional energy suppliers NEWAG/NIOGAS. Soon thereafter, Admira (or Admira Energie, as it was called in most media during the time) regained some of its earlier strength, winning the Austrian Cup in 1964 and the Double of league and cup titles in 1966.


The revelation of financial scandals within NEWAG/NIOGAS in the late 1960s led to an abrupt end of the steady flow of funds and brought the club onto the brink of administration, which would narrowly be avoided. Nevertheless, Admira began looking for a merger partner, and particularly targeted Austria Vienna. However, after the creation of Admira-Austria was declined twice, Admira eventually began talks with SC Wacker Vienna, which were successfully concluded in 1971.



SC Wacker Vienna


Wacker Vienna was formed in 1908 in the Vienna district of Meidling. The club reached the first tier of the Austrian league system for the first time in 1914. Being a mid-table side until the second half of the 1930s, Wacker became a top-team in the 1940s and 1950s, winning the double in 1947 and ending as league runners-up eight more times between 1940 and 1956.


During the last decade as an independent club it became a bona-fide yo-yo club, with eight straight relegations from or promotions to the Austrian top tier between 1961 and 1968. A fifth relegation in 1971, combined with financial and stadium problems, eventually led to a merger with Admira, forming FC Admira/Wacker Vienna.



VfB Mödling


VfB Mödling was formed on 17 June 1911 in the Lower Austrian town of Mödling. Since their foundation, Mödling were playing in the highest Lower Austrian league. With the introduction of an Austria-wide national league in 1949, the club was classified into the second tier. Playing most of its existence in second- and third-tier leagues since then, the club enjoyed three brief stints in the top division during the 1952–53 and 1987–88 seasons as well as between 1992 and 1995 before eventually merging with Admira/Wacker in 1997.



1997 to 2011 Merger with VfB Mödling and Financial Trouble


In 1997, after a financial crisis, VfB Mödling and Admira Wacker merged. In 2004 Iranian Majid Pishyar purchased the club. His stewardship of the club led to on-field and off-field difficulties. The club was relegated after the 2005–06 season. With further financial trouble, Pishyar sold the club to Richard Trenkwalder in 2008. Trenkwalder made a series of changes to the club, including changing the club's name to FC Trenkwalder Admira. His changes eventually paid off, with the club gaining promotion back to the Austrian first division following the 2010–11 season. (Majid Pishyar, meanwhile, notably also caused similar financial problems at a Swiss club, Servette, in the 2011–12 season.)



Honours


  • Austrian Champions: 9
Admira Vienna (8): 1927, 1928, 1932, 1934, 1936, 1937, 1939, 1966

Wacker Vienna (1): 1947

  • Austrian Cup: 6
Admira Vienna (5): 1928, 1932, 1934, 1964, 1966

Wacker Vienna (1): 1947

  • Austrian Supercup: 1
Admira / Wacker Vienna (1): 1989
  • German vice-Champions: 1939 (Admira Vienna)

  • Mitropa Cup Finalist: 2

Admira Vienna (1): 1934

Wacker Vienna (1): 1951


European tournaments history



























































































































































Season
Competition
Round
Club
Home
Away
Aggregate

1964–65

European Cup Winners' Cup

1R

Poland Legia Warsaw
1–3
0–1

1–4

1966–67

European Cup

1R

Socialist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia Vojvodina
0–1
0–0

0–1

1973–74

UEFA Cup

1R

Italy Internazionale
1–0
1–2

2–2

2R

Germany Fortuna Düsseldorf
2–1
0–3

2–4

1982–83

UEFA Cup

1R

Czechoslovakia Bohemians Praha
1–2
0–5

1–7

1987–88

UEFA Cup

1R

Finland TPS Turku
0–2
1–0

1–2

1989–90

European Cup Winners' Cup

1R

Cyprus AEL Limassol
3–0
0–1

3–1

2R

Hungary Ferencváros
1–0
1–0

2–0

QF

Belgium Anderlecht
1–1
0–2

1–3

1990–91

UEFA Cup

1R

Denmark Velje BK
3–0
1–0

4–0

2R

Switzerland FC Luzern
1–1
1–0

2–1

3R

Italy Bologna
3–0
0–3

3–3[a]

1992–93

European Cup Winners' Cup

1R

Wales Cardiff City
2–0
1–1

3–2

2R

Belgium Royal Antwerp
2–4
4–3[b]
6–7

1993–94

UEFA Cup

1R

Ukraine Dnipro Dnipropetrovsk
2–3
0–1

2–4

1994–95

UEFA Cup

1R

Poland Górnik Zabrze
5–2
1–1

6–3

2R

France Cannes
1–1
4–2

5–3

3R

Italy Juventus
1–3
1–2

2–5

2012–13

UEFA Europa League

2Q

Lithuania Žalgiris Vilnius
5–1
1–1

6–2

3Q

Czech Republic Sparta Prague
0–2
2–2

2–4

2016–17

UEFA Europa League

1Q

Slovakia Spartak Myjava
1–1
3–2

4–3

2Q

Azerbaijan Kapaz
1–0
2–0

3–0

3Q

Czech Republic Slovan Liberec
1–2
0–2

1–4

2018–19

UEFA Europa League

2Q

Bulgaria CSKA Sofia
1–3
0–3

1–6
Notes


  1. ^ Admira lost on a penalty shootout 5–6.


  2. ^ The tie went to extra time.




Players



Current squad


As of 21 July, 2018

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


































































No.

Position
Player
1

Austria

GK

Andreas Leitner
2

Austria

DF

Fabio Strauss
3

Serbia

DF

Miloš Spasić
4

Austria

DF

Sebastian Bauer
5

Germany

DF

Bjarne Thoelke
7

Austria

FW

Dominik Starkl
8

Austria

DF

Stephan Zwierschitz
9

Austria

FW

Sasa Kalajdzic
10

Austria

MF

Daniel Toth
11

Turkey

FW

Sinan Bakış
12

Austria

DF

Lukas Malicsek
13

Finland

MF

Pyry Soiri
14

Denmark

MF

Morten Hjulmand
16

Austria

FW

Patrick Schmidt






























































No.

Position
Player
19

Austria

MF

Wilhelm Vorsager
20

Austria

MF

Marco Kadlec
22

Austria

MF

Marcus Maier
23

Austria

DF

Pascal Petlach
24

Austria

MF

Marco Hausjell
25

Austria

MF

Dominik Puster
26

Austria

DF

Jonathan Scherzer
27

Austria

DF

Emanuel Aiwu
28

Austria

GK

Marcel Köstenbauer
29

Austria

GK

Manuel Kuttin
37

Austria

MF

Marco Sahanek
44

Croatia

FW

Marin Jakoliš
99

Austria

MF

Florian Fischerauer


Ghana

FW

Seth Paintsil


Managers









References




  1. ^ http://www.fupa.net/berichte/knaller-zieht-sich-zurueck-lederer-uebernimmt-277044.html




External links





  • Official website (in German)










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