IK Sirius Fotboll

This article is about IK Sirius' football section. For the bandy section, see IK Sirius.
IK Sirius
Full name Idrottsklubben Sirius
Nickname(s) Blåsvart (blue-black)
Founded 1907 (1907)
Ground Studenternas IP, Uppsala
Ground Capacity 6,300
Chairman Ove Sjöblom
Head coach Kim Bergstrand
League Superettan
2015 Superettan, 3rd

IK Sirius is a Swedish football club located in Uppsala. The club is affiliated to the Upplands Fotbollförbund.[1]

History

A chart showing the progress of IK Sirius through the swedish football league system. The different shades of gray represent league divisions.

Early success

The club was formed in 1907, with its first success coming in 1924 when they reached the Svenska Mästerskapet final (not to be confused with Svenska Serien, which never acquired an official status of deciding the Swedish Champions). In the final, they were trounced 5–0 by Fässbergs IF.

The Allsvenskan years

The club spent the next forty years in lower division anonymity, before favourable economic circumstances enabled them to gain promotion to Allsvenskan in 1968, although they were relegated after just one season. The club's high point was arguably in the years 1973–1974, when the club again gained promotion to the highest league and its squad contained a number of high-profile players, such as Roland Grip, then a member of the Swedish national team.

Obscurity and comeback

After the club's relegation from Allsvenskan in 1974, the club played in the second division until they plummeted to fourth division level following a couple of hard years in the beginning of the 1980s. The 1990s were mostly spent at a second tier level, i.e. the old Division 1, corresponding to the modern Superettan. The club then played the first five years of the 21st century in Division 2, before returning to Division 1 in 2006 (although still playing at a third tier level).

With new manager Magnus Pehrsson and prodigal son and goal-getter Olle Kullinger (starting his career with IF VP and later also having played with Enköpings SK, Halmstads BK and IF Brommapojkarna in Superettan and Allsvenskan) bearing the captaincy, the club finished the season in second place, which meant they had to qualify in order to gain promotion to Superettan. IK Sirius played the first leg at home against Väsby United on 25 October. Due to some seriously poor defending, Väsby were able to go 1–0 up just before the half-time break. Sirius recovered slightly in the second period, and were able to equalise in the 83rd minute. In the second leg, in front of about 1000 travelling fans, Sirius were completely dominant but also rather wasteful with their chances. They managed, however to break the deadlock in the 73rd minute, Olle Kullinger managing to knock a rebound past the Väsby keeper. With the aggregate score of 2–1, Sirius celebrated their 100th anniversary in the Superettan, much to the delight of their fans.

The first spell in Superettan

Magnus Pehrsson resigned as manager and Pär Millqvist was appointed and brought in Gary Sundgren as his assistant manager. After a strong first half of the season the club finished 7th in Superettan 2007. The team struggled through most of the 2008-season but finally finished 12:th and avoided relegation. Millqvist and Sundgren was sacked after the first six games and youth-team coaches Johan Mattsson and Andreas Brännström led the team for the rest of the season.

In preparation for the 2009 season they appointed Jens T Andersson from Väsby and AIK as new manager. Like the season before they struggled in the bottom of the league and with just five games left to play of the season Jens T Andersson resigned as manager due to the lack of good results. Assistant coach Andreas Brännström was once again hired as new head manager but this time he could not save the team from degradation.

In 2010 IK Sirius played in the third tier Division 1 Norra and finished 2nd in the table 5 points behind rivals Västerås SK and as a result they went through to the Superettan play-offs, where they went head-to-head with Jönköpings Södra. After a 0–1 defeat at home they lost the away game with 3–0 and faced another season in Division 1 Norra.

2011 the team was voted by all the managers of the league as favourites to win but failed to live up to the expectations. They finished 3rd in Division 1 Norra, just 2 points from finishing first and goal-difference kept them from the second spot which leads to Superettan play-offs. As a result, coach Andreas Brännström and his assistant Antonio Andric was forced to leave the club after the season.

Recent years

On 17 November the club announced that the ex-Brommapojkarna manager Kim Bergstrand had been appointed as the new head coach.

In 2012 the team were once again the favourites to win the Division 1 Norra, and led the league by five points with three games left. A 0–1 home defeat to Vasalund and a 1–0 away win at Enköping set the team up for an all-decisive match against second-placed Östersunds FK. Sirius needed a draw to win the league, but lost at home 0–1 and ended up third, also behind BK Forward.

The 2013 season began with an unexpected success in the Swedish Cup, as Sirius defeated reigning Swedish champions IF Elfsborg to win their group and advance to the quarterfinals, where they were knocked out away to Öster, 1–2. The team had been bolstered by the signing of several experienced players, including former Djurgården, Molde and Sweden midfielder Johan Arneng. This time all the pieces fell into place as the team won the Division 1 Norra handily, securing promotion to Superettan with five games still in hand, and ending the season undefeated.

The 2014 season again began with Cup success, as Allsvenskan teams Djurgården and Halmstad were dispatched in the group stages, setting up a quarterfinal with IFK Gothenburg. At Ullevi Stadium, Moses Ogbu's 29th-minute header gave Sirius the win. In front of a sold-out Studenternas, Sirius faced Elfsborg in the semifinal. This time, Elfsborg got their revenge for last year's defeat, winning 4–1.

The 2014 Superettan season began well for Sirius, with a 5–1 win away to former Allsvenskan outfit Syrianska. Two somewhat surprising home defeats to Huskvarna and Varberg followed, and the team settled into a habit of playing well away but struggling at home. In the end, however, Sirius enjoyed a successful return to Superettan, finishing in sixth place, after a season that included wins against both the two directly-promoted teams, Hammarby and GIF Sundsvall.

Season-to-season

Season Level League Pos
1993 Tier 2 Division 1 Norra 11th
1994 Tier 2 Division 1 Norra 9th
1995 Tier 2 Division 1 Norra 11th
1996 Tier 2 Division 1 Norra 12th (R)
1997 Tier 3 Division 2 Östra Svealand 1st (P)
1998 Tier 2 Division 1 Norra 7th
1999 Tier 2 Division 1 Norra 13th (R)
2000 Tier 3 Division 2 Östra Svealand 3rd
2001 Tier 3 Division 2 Östra Svealand 2nd
2002 Tier 3 Division 2 Östra Svealand 7th
2003 Tier 3 Division 2 Norrland 6th
2004 Tier 3 Division 2 Östra Svealand 10th (R)
2005 Tier 3 Division 2 Norra Svealand 2nd (P)
2006[lower-alpha 1] Tier 3 Division 1 Norra 2nd (P)
2007 Tier 2 Superettan 7th
2008 Tier 2 Superettan 12th
2009 Tier 2 Superettan 15th (R)
2010 Tier 3 Division 1 Norra 2nd
2011 Tier 3 Division 1 Norra 3rd
2012 Tier 3 Division 1 Norra 3rd
2013 Tier 3 Division 1 Norra 1st (P)
2014 Tier 2 Superettan 6th
2015 Tier 2 Superettan 3rd
  1. League restructuring in 2006 resulted in a new division being created at Tier 3 and subsequent divisions dropping a level.[2]

Players

First-team squad

As of 9 March, 2016[3]

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

No. Position Player
1 Sweden GK Benny Lekström
3 Sweden DF Karl Larson
4 Sweden DF Oscar Pehrsson
5 Venezuela MF Paul Torres
6 United States DF Patrick Hopkins
7 Sweden MF Niklas Busch Thor (captain)
8 Sweden MF Kim Skoglund
9 Sweden FW Ante Björkebaum
10 Bosnia and Herzegovina FW Dragan Kapcevic
11 Sweden MF Alexander Nilsson
13 Sweden DF Kujtim Bala
No. Position Player
14 Sweden FW Ian Sirelius
15 Sweden DF Gustav Thörn
16 Sweden MF Johan Andersson
17 Ghana MF Kingsley Sarfo
18 Sweden MF Nicklas Maripuu
19 Sweden MF Christer Gustafsson
21 Sweden MF Andreas Eriksson
22 Sweden FW Daniel Ahonen
24 Sweden MF Karvan Ahmadi
27 Sweden DF Alexander Hedman
30 Sweden GK Lukas Jonsson

Current youth players with first-team experience

As of 3 March 2016[upper-alpha 1]

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

No. Position Player
Sweden MF Josef Jalil
Sweden MF Kyria Kambusi
Sweden MF Sherko Faiqi
Sweden MF Leopold Tato Ekenberg

For season transfers, see transfers winter 2014–15.

Notable players

The following players are either listed on the official IK Sirius website[4] or have represented their national team.

Sigge Parling on the right side of Brazilian footballer Pelé during the 1958 FIFA World Cup Final.

Management

Technical staff

As of 16 November 2013
Name Role
Sweden Kim Bergstrand Head Coach
Sweden Thomas Lagerlöf Assistant Coach
Sweden Mirza Jelecak Assistant Coach

Attendances

In recent seasons IK Sirius FK have had the following average attendances:

IK Sirius home stadium Studenternas IP.
Season Average Attendance Division / Section Level
2005 626 Div 2 Norra Svealand Tier 3
2006 964 Div 1 Norra Tier 3
2007 3,332 Superettan Tier 2
2008 1,851 Superettan Tier 2
2009 1,498 Superettan Tier 2
2010 1,166 Div 1 Norra Tier 3
2011 1,164 Div 1 Norra Tier 3
2012 1,721 Div 1 Norra Tier 3
2013 1,773 Div 1 Norra Tier 3
2014 1,779 Superettan Tier 2
2015 1,786 Superettan Tier 2

* Attendances are provided in the Publikliga sections of the Svenska Fotbollförbundet website. [5]

Honours

Cup

League

Footnotes

  1. Current youth players who at least have sat on the bench in a competitive match.

References

  1. "Kontaktuppgifter och tävlingar – Upplands Fotbollförbund – Svenskfotboll.se". Retrieved 2011-01-13.
  2. "GAIS – Lagfacta – IK Sirius". Retrieved 05.09.2010. Check date values in: |access-date= (help)
  3. "A-laget" (in Swedish). IK Sirius Fotboll. Retrieved 16 November 2013.
  4. "Kultspelarna – siriuspublikens egna favoriter". Retrieved 2013-11-09.
  5. "Kontaktuppgifter och tävlingar – Svenska Fotbollförbundet – svenskfotboll.se". Retrieved 2010-12-09.

External links

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the Tuesday, March 22, 2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.