FC Midtjylland

(Redirected from Midtjylland FC)

Football Club Midtjylland (Danish: [ˈmitjyˌlænˀ], "Central Jutland") is a Danish professional football club based in Herning and Ikast in Jutland. The club is the result of a merger between Ikast FS and Herning Fremad. Midtjylland competes in the Danish Superliga, which they have won three times, most recently in 2020.

Midtjylland
Full nameFootball Club Midtjylland
Nickname(s)Ulvene (The Wolves)
Hedens Drenge (The Boys of the Moor)
Short nameFCM
Founded2 February 1999; 25 years ago (1999-02-02)
GroundMCH Arena
Capacity12,148
OwnerAnders Holch Povlsen
ChairmanCliff Crown
ManagerThomas Thomasberg
LeagueDanish Superliga
2022–23Danish Superliga, 7th of 12
WebsiteClub website
Current season

Club history

Stadium of FC Midtjylland. MCH Arena

FC Midtjylland was founded by Johnny Rune, a carpenter and owner of a private business in the wood-supply industry, and Steen Hessel, an authorized Mercedes-Benz dealer.[1]

The two men wanted to unite the football clubs Ikast FS (founded 1935) and Herning Fremad (founded 1918) – clubs that for decades had been strong rivals, but had never played any significant role in Danish football. Ikast FS had some success in the late 1970s and '80s and made three Danish Cup final appearances, but had never been a top team in the Danish league. At least ten years had passed with the two clubs being unable to agree on a merger, but on 6 April 1999, a deal was finalised and announced at a press conference the next day.[2][3]

In 2000, Midtjylland were promoted to the top-flight Danish Superliga after a season in which the team had gathered more points than any other team in the history of the first division.

In July 2014, Matthew Benham (owner of English club Brentford) became the majority shareholder of Midtjylland's parent company FCM Holding.[4] In the 2014–15 season, they won the Danish football championship for the first time. Later on, they won two league titles in 2017–18 and 2019–20, then qualified to the 2020–21 UEFA Champions League group stage for the first time in their history.[5]

During a celebration of the inauguration of the club's new FCM House, Dream 99 on 15 August 2023, it was announced that HEARTLAND, holding company for the Danish clothing chain Bestseller, purchased Benham's shares and became majority owner of the club, as well as Portuguese side C.D. Mafra. It was also announced that FCM would embark with a women's football program in 2024.[6]

Scouting and developing

Midtjylland have built a reputation of finding and developing promising talents, and have a highly regarded youth academy.[7]

In July 2004, Midtjylland was the first Danish club to establish their own football academy, similar to that of French side Nantes.[8] The academy attracts players from throughout Denmark, as well as players from FC Ebedei, a partnering club in Nigeria. The club has developed a network of over 100 clubs located in the western part of Jutland.[9]

In 2008, Danish centre-back Simon Kjær, a talent of the academy, was sold to Palermo for a transfer fee of approximately DKK30 million (€4 million).[10] In 2010, Sune Kiilerich, another talent of the academy, was sold to Sampdoria, while Winston Reid, an academy product and New Zealand international, was sold to West Ham United for DKK32 million (€4.26 million).[11][12] In 2016, vice-captain Erik Sviatchenko was sold for £1.5 million to Celtic.[13]

Other notable sales of academy products include Pione Sisto to Celta Vigo, Rasmus Nissen to Ajax, Andreas Poulsen to Borussia Mönchengladbach and Mikkel Duelund to Dynamo Kyiv.

Stadium

In 2004, the team moved to a new stadium in Herning with a capacity of 11,432 spectators. Midtjylland was the first Danish club to sell the stadium naming rights to a sponsor, resulting in the name "SAS Arena" which has since been changed to MCH Arena. The stadium's opening match was on 27 March; it proved to be a success, with Midtjylland beating AB 6–0. Five of the goals were scored by Egyptian striker Mohamed Zidan.

On 22 June 2022, the club started an expansion of MCH Arena that will add a new hospitality lounge and 11 new VIP boxes. The expansion will increase the total capacity by 720 seats, taking the capacity from 11,432 to a total of 12,152. The expansion is believed to be finished in December 2023.

Supporters

Black Wolves is the official fanclub of FC Midtjylland.[14] It was founded in the beginning of August 1999, as the official fanclub of Ikast FS 1993 "Yellow Flames" changed their name at an extraordinary general meeting. Ultra Boys Midtjylland is the first unofficial faction in Midtjylland, established in 2007 and later renamed Ultras Midtjylland. In 2014, Midtjylland got its second unofficial faction, a youth faction called Midtjylland Ungdom. As of today, there are three unofficial factions: Zartow, Chaos Crew, and Midtjylland Ungdom. Collectively, all FC Midtjylland supporters go under the name of Hedens Drenge.

Hedens Drenge is currently Midtjylland's largest fan-based social media account, with a following of around 11,000 on Instagram and Facebook combined.

The club's main rival is Viborg FF. This rivalry is often referred to as The Battle of the Heath, The Battle of Hatred, and The Derby of Midtjylland. The derby is claimed to be the second biggest in Denmark behind that of FC København and Brøndby IF.

Recent history

SeasonLeaguePos.Pl.WDLGSGAPCupEurope
2008–09SL43316710554655Third round
2009–10SL63314514414147Finalist
2010–11SL433131010504249Finalist
2011–12SL33317795040581/16 FinalsUEFA Europa League Third Qualifying Round
2012–13SL633121110514747Quarter-finalsUEFA Europa League Playoff Round
2013–14SL33316710613855Fourth round
2014–15SL1332256643471Fourth roundUEFA Europa League Playoff Round
2015–16SL3331788573359Fourth roundUEFA Champions League Third Qualifying Round
UEFA Europa League Round of 32
2016–17SL43615912675354Semi-finalsUEFA Europa League Playoff Round
2017–18SL1362745803985Semi-finalsUEFA Europa League Playoff Round
2018–19SL2362187764371ChampionUEFA Champions League Second Qualifying Round
UEFA Europa League Playoff Round
2019–20SL1362646612982Third RoundUEFA Europa League Third Qualifying Round
2020–21SL2321868573360Semi-finalsUEFA Champions League Group Stage
2021–22SL2322057593365ChampionUEFA Champions League Second Qualifying Round
UEFA Europa League Group Stage
UEFA Europa Conference League Knockout Round
2022–23SL73213127553951Fourth roundUEFA Champions League Third Qualifying Round
UEFA Europa League Group Stage & Knockout Round

Honours

Players

Current squad

As of 1 February 2024[15][16]Note: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.

No.Pos. NationPlayer
20MF  DENValdemar Byskov
22DF  DENMads Bech Sørensen
24MF  DENOliver Sørensen
29DF  BRAPaulinho
35MF  BRACharles
37MF  BIHArmin Gigović (on loan from Rostov)
38FW  BRAMarrony
45FW  SLEAlhaji Kamara
50GK  AUTMartin Fraisl
55DF  DENVictor Bak Jensen
58FW  TURAral Şimşir
73DF  BRAJuninho
90GK  DENOscar Hedvall

Youth players in use 2023/24

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

No.Pos. NationPlayer
33MF  DENAkwasi Owusu
34DF  DENAdam Andersen
34MF  DENJonatan Lindekilde
40MF  DENChristian Jørgensen
55FW  DENJulius Voldby

Out on loan

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

No.Pos. NationPlayer
MF  ZAMEdward Chilufya (at Häcken until 30 June 2024)
FW  BRAJúnior Brumado (at Hansa Rostock until 30 June 2024)
FW  DENFrederik Heiselberg (at Horsens until 30 June 2024)
FW  DENAugust Priske (at FC Eindhoven until 30 June 2024)
FW  DENVictor Lind (at Vejle until 30 June 2024)

Youth team

See: FC Midtjylland Academy

Notable players

1990s
2000s
2010s
2020s

Personnel

Current technical staff

RoleName
Head coach Thomas Thomasberg
Assistant coach Niels Lodberg
Goalkeeping coach Lasse Heinze
Chief Analyst Sören Bjerg
Opponent Analyst Oliver Heil

Management

RoleName
Director of Football Svend Graversen
Sporting Director Kristian Bach Bak
Head of academy coaching Jan Knudsen

Coaches

FC Midtjylland in European competition

FC Midtjylland's first competitive European match was on 9 August 2001 in the 2001–02 UEFA Cup, playing Northern Ireland's Glentoran to a 1–1 draw in the first leg of the Qualifying Round before ultimately advancing to the First Round where they were eliminated by Sporting CP. In 2016 Midtjylland reached the Round of 32 of the 2015–16 UEFA Europa League, where they achieved a 2–1 home victory over Manchester United but would end up losing 6–3 on aggregate following the second leg.

SeasonCompetitionRoundClubHomeAwayAggregate
2001–02UEFA CupQR Glentoran1–14–05–1
1R Sporting CP0–32–32–6
2002–03UEFA CupQR Pobeda3–00–23–2
1R Varaždin1–01–12–1
2R Anderlecht0–31–31–6
2005–06UEFA Cup1Q B36 Tórshavn2–12–24–3
1R CSKA Moscow1–31–32–6
2007–08UEFA Cup1Q Keflavík ÍF2–12–34–4 (a)
2Q Haka5–22–17–3
1R Lokomotiv Moscow1–30–21–5
2008–09UEFA Cup1Q Bangor City4–06–110–1
2Q Manchester City0–1 (a.e.t.)1–01–1 (2–4 p)
2011–12UEFA Europa League2Q The New Saints5–23–18–3
3Q Vitória de Guimarães0–01–21–2
2012–13UEFA Europa LeaguePO Young Boys0–32–02–3
2014–15UEFA Europa LeaguePO Panathinaikos1–21–42–6
2015–16UEFA Champions League2Q Lincoln Red Imps1–02–03–0
3Q APOEL1–21–02–2 (a)
UEFA Europa LeaguePO Southampton1–01–12–1
Group D Napoli1–40–52nd
Club Brugge1–13–1
Legia Warsaw1–00–1
R32 Manchester United2–11–53–6
2016–17UEFA Europa League1Q Sūduva Marijampolė1–01–02–0
2Q Vaduz3–02–25–2
3Q Videoton1–1 (a.e.t)1–02–1
PO Osmanlıspor0–10–20–3
2017–18UEFA Europa League1Q Derry City6–14–110–2
2Q Ferencváros3–14–27–3
3Q Arka Gdynia2–12–34–4 (a)
PO Apollon Limassol1–12–33–4
2018–19UEFA Champions League2Q Astana0–01–21–2
UEFA Europa League3Q The New Saints3–12–05–1
PO Malmö FF0–22–22–4
2019–20UEFA Europa League3Q Rangers2–41–33–7
2020–21UEFA Champions League2Q Ludogorets Razgrad1–0
3Q Young Boys3–0
PO Slavia Prague4–10–04–1
Group D Atalanta0–41–14th
Liverpool1–10–2
Ajax1–21–3
2021–22UEFA Champions League2Q Celtic1–12–13–2
3Q PSV Eindhoven0–30–10–4
UEFA Europa LeagueGroup F Braga1–33–23rd
Red Star Belgrade1–11–0
Ludogorets Razgrad1–10–0
UEFA Europa Conference LeagueKPO PAOK1–01–22–2 (3–5 p)
2022–23UEFA Champions League2Q AEK Larnaca1–11–1 (a.e.t.)2–2 (4–3 p)
3Q Benfica1–31–42–7
UEFA Europa LeagueGroup F Lazio5–11−22nd
Feyenoord2−22−2
Sturm Graz2−00–1
KPO Sporting CP0–41–11–5
2023–24UEFA Europa Conference League2Q Progrès Niederkorn2−01–2 (a.e.t.)3–2
3Q Omonia5−10–15–2
PO Legia Warsaw3–31–1 (a.e.t.)4–4 (5–6 p)

UEFA club coefficient ranking

As of 26 July 2023[17]
RankTeamPoints
58 Monaco24.000
59 Galatasaray23.500
60 Midtjylland23.000
61 Partizan23.000
62 Leicester23.000

References

External links