SV Ried

SV Ried
Full name Sportvereinigung Ried von 1912
Founded 1912
Ground Keine Sorgen Arena, Ried im Innkreis
Ground Capacity 7,680
Chairman Johann Willminger
Manager Paul Gludovatz
League Austrian Bundesliga
2014–15 6th
Website Club home page

SV Ried is an Austrian association football club from Ried im Innkreis. The team plays its home matches at the 7,680 capacity Keine-Sorgen Arena. The club currently plays in the Bundesliga after winning promotion from the Erste Liga in the 2004–05 season. For sponsorship reasons, the name of the club is currently SV Josko Ried.

History

The club formed on 5 May 1912 as Sportvereinigung Ried, and played in the regional leagues of Upper Austria until 1991, when they ascended to the national leagues for the first time. SV Ried first achieved promotion to the highest level of Austrian football in 1995.

SV Ried gained their first major honour in 1998 when they won the Austrian Cup, beating Sturm Graz 3–1 in the final. In 2003, Ried were relegated, ending an eight-year spell in the top division. Two seasons later, Ried regained Bundesliga status, becoming champions of the Erste Liga on 23 May 2005 following a 3–2 victory over Kapfenberg. In the following season (2005–06) Ried achieved their highest league finish so far, fourth, in the Bundesliga. The year after they managed to improve once more finishing second and becoming vice-champion. After the first third of the season, the team seemed to battle against relegation and was stuck on the last place for five gameweeks. The club management however kept trusting in Helmut Kraft's coaching abilities, which would turn out to be the right decision after all. Twelve matches without a loss in the second third of the season and five wins out of the last five matches from gameweek 32–36 guaranteed the club's highest season finish on place 2 and a spot in the 1st round of the UEFA-Cup qualification.

Honours

1998, 2011
1998–99
2006–07
2006–07
2011–12
2004–05

Players

Current squad

As of 2 January 2016.

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

No. Position Player
1 Germany GK Thomas Gebauer
3 Austria DF Nico Antonitsch
4 Austria MF Marcel Ziegl
5 Austria DF Bernhard Janeczek
6 Germany MF Denis Streker
7 Spain FW Manuel Gavilán
8 Austria DF Gernot Trauner
9 Austria FW Daniel Sikorski
11 Austria DF Mathias Honsak
12 Austria DF Florian Hart
13 Austria MF Michael Brandner
14 Austria DF Thomas Bergmann
15 Austria DF Julian Baumgartner
16 Liechtenstein MF Michele Polverino
No. Position Player
17 Croatia DF Petar Filipović
18 Albania MF Albin Ramadani
19 Austria FW Thomas Fröschl
20 Austria MF Dieter Elsneg
21 Austria GK Markus Schöller
22 Austria FW Fabian Schubert
23 Austria MF Niklas Kölbl
24 Spain DF Alberto Prada
25 Austria MF Patrick Möschl
26 Austria FW Luca Mayr-Fälten
28 Austria DF Thomas Reifeltshammer
29 Austria FW Jakob Kreuzer
33 Austria FW Clemens Walch
34 Austria GK Reuf Duraković

Out on loan

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

No. Position Player

Retired numbers

27 Austria Sanel Kuljić, striker (2003–06)

Manager history

  • Austria Klaus Roitinger (1 July 1988 – 31 May 1999)
  • Austria Heinz Hochhauser (1 July 1999 – 31 May 2000)
  • Austria Helmut Kronjäger (1 July 2000 – 20 April 2001)
  • Austria Alfred Tatar (21 April 2001 – 21 March 2002)
  • Austria Gerhard Schweitzer (26 March 2002 – 13 May 2003)
  • Austria Klaus Roitinger (interim) (14 May 2003 – 31 May 2003)
  • Croatia Petar Segrt (1 July 2003 – 31 Dec 2003)
  • Poland Andrzej Lesiak (1 Jan 2004 – 30 June 2004)
  • Austria Heinz Hochhauser (1 July 2004 – 31 May 2006)
  • Austria Helmut Kraft (1 June 2006 – 22 Oct 2007)
  • Austria Thomas Weissenböck (22 Oct 2007 – 6 April 2008)

  • Austria Michael Angerschmid (interim) (9 April 2008 – 30 June 2008)
  • Austria Georg Zellhofer (8 May 2008 – 2 July 2008)
  • Austria Gerhard Schweitzer (interim) (2 July 2008 – 11 July 2008)
  • Austria Paul Gludovatz (11 July 2008 – 19 March 2012)
  • Austria Gerhard Schweitzer (interim) (20 March 2012 – 31 May 2012)
  • Austria Heinz Fuchsbichler (1 June 2012 – 6 Nov 2012)
  • Austria Gerhard Schweitzer (interim) (6 Nov 2012 – 9 Dec 2012)
  • Austria Michael Angerschmid (9 Dec 2012 – 31 May 2014)
  • Austria Oliver Glasner (1 June 2014 – 31 May 2015)
  • Iceland Helgi Kolviðsson (1 June 2015 – )

European Cup history

Q = Qualifying PO = Play-Off

Season Competition Round Country Club Home Away Aggregate
1996 UEFA Intertoto Cup Group 4 Poland Zagłębie Lubin 1–2
Denmark Silkeborg IF 0–3
Wales Conwy United 2–1
Belgium RSC Charleroi 1–3
1997 UEFA Intertoto Cup Group 12 Greece Iraklis Saloniki 3–1
Malta Floriana 2–1
Georgia (country) Merani-91 Tbilisi 1–3
Russia Torpedo Moskva 0–2
1998–99 UEFA Cup Winners' Cup 1 Hungary MTK Budapest 2–0 1–0 3–0
2 Israel Maccabi Haifa 2–1 1–4 3–5
2001 UEFA Intertoto Cup 1 Georgia (country) WIT Georgia 2–1 0–1 2–2
2006 UEFA Intertoto Cup 2 Georgia (country) Dinamo Tbilisi 3–1 1–0 4–1
3R Moldova Tiraspol 3–1 1–1 4–2
2006–07 UEFA Cup Q2 Switzerland Sion 0–0 0–1 0–1
2007–08 UEFA Cup Q1 Azerbaijan Neftchi Baku 3–1 1–2 4–3
Q2 Switzerland Sion 1–1 0–3 1–4
2011–12 Europa League Q3 Denmark Brøndby IF 2–0 2–4 4–4
PO Netherlands PSV 0–0 0–5 0–5

External links

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