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FC Thun





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Fussballclub Thun 1898 is a Swiss football team from the Bernese Oberland town of Thun. In German, "Thun" is the word for a type of fish, the tuna fish. The club plays in the Swiss Challenge League, the second tier of the Swiss football league system, following relegation from the Swiss Super League in the 2019–20 season. The club plays at the Stockhorn Arena which accommodates a total of 10,000 supporters, both seated and standing. The club's colours are red and white.

Thun

Full name

Fussballclub Thun 1898

Founded

1898; 126 years ago (1898)

Ground

Stockhorn Arena

Capacity

10,000

Chairman

Andres Gerber

Manager

Mauro Lustrinelli

League

Swiss Challenge League

2023–24

Swiss Challenge League, 2nd of 10

Website

Club website

Home colours

Away colours

Current season

The biggest achievements in the club's history are two second-place finishes in the Swiss Cup (1955 and 2019), as well as reaching the group stages of the 2005–06 UEFA Champions League.

History

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Participation certificate of the FC Thun, issued 20. July 1936
 
Chart of FC Thun table positions in the Swiss football league system

Until 1995

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FC Thun was founded on 1 May 1898. The club played in the second Swiss division, the Nationalliga B (now known as Swiss Challenge League) from 1946 to 1950 and in the 1953–54 season. At the end of the 1953–54 season, the team finished in second place only behind FC Lugano and was promoted to the first division, the Nationalliga A (now known as the Swiss Super League), for the first time in the club's history. However, the club finished the 1954–55 season in second to last place and was relegated back to the second division after playing just one season in the top flight. In 1955, Thun reached the final of the Swiss Cup, which was lost 1–3 to La Chaux-de-Fonds.

From 1955 to 1970, Thun continuously played in the Nationalliga B, before being relegated to the Swiss 1. Liga, back then the third tier of the Swiss football league system, at the end of the 1969–70 season.

From third division to Champions League

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In 1995, Andy Egli became the manager of Thun. Two years later, at the end of the 1996–97 season, Thun regained promotion to the Nationalliga B for the first time since 1970. Under manager Georges Bregy, the club took part in the 1999–2000 Nationalliga A/B playoff games, but could not secure promotion to the first league and remained in the Nationalliga B. From July 2001 to December 2004 the team was coached by Hanspeter Latour. Under his management, Thun was promoted to the Nationalliga A after 47 years of absence from the Swiss top flight at the end of the 2001–02 season. After Latour left Thun to coach Grasshopper Club Zürich, Urs Schönenberger was appointed as the new head coach.

Thun finished the 2004–05 season in second place only behind FC Basel and thus became runners-up of the Swiss championship, which was rebranded from Nationalliga A to Swiss Super League by then. This constituted the best league result in the history of the club and also secured the club a place in the qualifying rounds for the Champions League. By beating Dynamo Kyiv (3–2 on aggregate) and Malmö FF (4–0 on aggregate) in the qualifying rounds, FC Thun reached the group stages of the 2005–06 Champions League. They were drawn in Group B alongside European giants Arsenal, Ajax and Sparta Prague. They started their campaign on 14 September 2005 away at Arsenal, where after equalising through Nelson Ferreira, they narrowly lost 2–1 after Dennis Bergkamp scored in the match's final seconds. On 27 September they hosted the Czech champions Sparta Prague at home, the Stadion Wankdorf in Bern, where all the club's European home matches were held, as the Lachen Stadium does not meet Uefa's prerequisites for Champions League venues.[citation needed] Thun's 1–0 victory thanks to Selver Hodžić's 80th-minute winner propelled them into second place in the group. Following a loss to Ajax on 2 November, they lost 1–0 at home to Arsenal and with Ajax beating Sparta Prague, FC Thun exited the Champions League. However, Thun drew 0–0 with Sparta Prague in their last group match, securing third place in the group and thus qualifying for the UEFA Cup Round of 32.

Despite his success, coach Urs Schönenberger was regarded as a controversial figure by the club management because of his uncompromising nature and communication style.[1] Just three days prior to their Uefa Cup tie against Hamburger SV, on 13 February 2006, Thun sacked Schönenberger, who had guided them to the Champions' League group stages and replaced him with Heinz Peischl. In the first leg, Thun managed a surprise 1–0 over Hamburg at the Stade de Suisse. However, Hamburg was too strong at their home, the Volksparkstadion, and managed to overturn the deficit, winning the second leg 2–0 (2–1 on aggregate).

Between first and second division

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FC Thun finished the 2007–08 season in last place and was subsequently relegated to the second division. Two years later, the club won the 2009–10 Swiss Challenge League and was promoted back to the Super League under head coach Murat Yakin. Yakin led the team to a fifth-place finish in the following season but left Thun to assume the role as head coach of FC Luzern before the start of the 2011–12 season. Under the new coach Bernard Challandes, the team played in the qualifying rounds of the 2011–12 Europa League. After winning against Albanian side KF Vllaznia Shkodër (2–1 on aggregate) and advancing against Italian club US Palermo because of the away goals rule (3–3 on aggregate), Thun lost 1–5 on aggregate to Stoke City in the final play-off round and thus missed qualification for the group stages.[2]

Urs Fischer took over management of the team in January 2013 and lead FC Thun to a fifth-place finish in the 2012–13 season. In the qualifying rounds of the 2013–14 Europa League, Thun won against Georgian team Chikhura Sachkhere (5–1 on aggregate), Swedish side BK Häcken (3–1 on aggregate) as well as FK Partizan from Serbia (3–1 on aggregate) and thus qualified for the group stages of the competition. They were drawn in Group G against Rapid Wien, KRC Genk and Dynamo Kyiv. In their group, the team won only one out of the six fixtures (1–0 against Rapid Wien) and lost the other five games, finishing last in the group and dropping out of the competition.

In 2019, FC Thun reached the final of the Swiss Cup for the second time in the club's history. They lost the game 1–2 against FC Basel.[3]

In November 2019, PMG, Chien Lee and The Seelig Group invested in the club and became the co-owners of FC Thun football club.[4]

Thun finished the 2019–20 season in second to last place and had to face the runners-up team of the 2019–20 Challenge League, FC Vaduz, in the relegation play-offs. After losing 0–2 in the first leg played away in Rheinpark Stadion, the 4–3 victory in the second leg was not enough to win on aggregate, which meant that FC Thun was relegated to the Swiss Challenge League.[5] In the following season, the club reached second place in the Challenge League and qualified for the promotion play-offs, but lost 4–6 on aggregate against FC Sion and remained in the second division.[6] Thun finished the 2023-24 season second place but lost against GCZ in the relegation battle.

Current squad

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As of 16 July, 2024[7]

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

  SUI

Nino Ziswiler

4

DF

  ESP

Genís Montolio

5

DF

  GER

Dominik Franke

6

MF

  SUI

Leonardo Bertone

7

MF

  SUI

Miguel Castroman

8

MF

  SUI

Vasilije Janjičić

9

FW

  FRA

Hermann Tebily

10

FW

  FRA

Ihsan Sacko

11

FW

  SUI

Tresor Samba

14

DF

  SUI

Erik Wyssen

16

MF

  SUI

Justin Roth

17

DF

  SUI

Ashvin Balaruban

19

DF

  SUI

Jan Bamert

No.

Pos.

Nation

Player

21

DF

  SUI

Uros Vasic

23

DF

  SUI

Marco Bürki

24

GK

  SUI

Niklas Steffen

30

GK

  SUI

Jan Eicher

33

FW

  SUI

Marc Gutbub

34

DF

  SUI

Nicola Sutter

36

MF

  SUI

Enis Asani

37

DF

  SUI

Lucien Dähler

46

FW

  SUI

Hélios Sessolo

47

MF

  SUI

Fabio Fehr

64

GK

  SUI

Dario Wälti

74

FW

  MKD

Elmin Rastoder

77

MF

  SUI

Franz-Ethan Meichtry

78

MF

  SUI

Valmir Matoshi

European record

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Season

Competition

Round

Club

Home

Away

Aggregate

2005–06

UEFA Champions League

Q2

  Dynamo Kyiv

1–0

2–2

3–2

Q3

  Malmö FF

3–0

1–0

4–0

Group B

  Arsenal

0–1

1–2

3rd

  Sparta Praha

1–0

0–0

  Ajax

2–4

0–2

UEFA Cup

R32

  Hamburger SV

1–0

0–2

1–2

2011–12

UEFA Europa League

Q2

  Vllaznia

2–1

0–0

2–1

Q3

  Palermo

1–1

2–2

3–3

PO

  Stoke City

0–1

1–4

1–5

2013–14

UEFA Europa League

Q2

  Chikhura Sachkhere

2–0

3–1

5–1

Q3

  Häcken

1–0

2–1

3–1

PO

  Partizan

3–0

0–1

3–1

Group G

  Dynamo Kyiv

0–2

0–3

4th

  Genk

0–1

1–2

  Rapid Wien

1–0

1–2

2015–16

UEFA Europa League

Q2

  Hapoel Be'er Sheva

2–1

1–1

3–2

Q3

  Vaduz

0–0

2–2

2–2 (a.)

PO

  Sparta Praha

3–3

1–3

4–6

2019–20

UEFA Europa League

Q3

  FC Spartak Moscow

2–3

1–2

3–5

Former coaches

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  • Hans Luder (1946–48)
  •   Hans Pulver (1948–49)
  •   Jimmy Townley (1949–50)
  • Hans Luder (1953–54)
  • Hans Luder/  Hermann Czischek (1954–56)
  •   Hermann Czischek (1956–58)
  •   Alfred "Coppi" Beck (1958–62)
  • Hermann Jucker (1962–63)
  •   Matthias Rossbach (1963–67)
  •   Heinz Schneiter (1967–69)
  •   Lothar Weise (1969–70)
  •   Miroslav Patak (1971–72)
  • Fridolin Hofer (1972–73)
  •   René Raboud (1973–74)
  •   Hanspeter Latour (1978–83)
  • Otto Messerli (1984–86)
  •   Martin Trümpler (1986–90)
  • Willi Kaufmann (1990–92)
  • Honours

    edit

    References

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    1. ^ "Der ewig Kompromisslose" (in German). NZZ Online (nzz.ch). 19 February 2006. Archived from the original on 8 December 2023. Retrieved 12 November 2022.
  • ^ "Stoke 4-1 FC Thun". bbc.com. 25 August 2011. Archived from the original on 12 November 2022. Retrieved 12 November 2022.
  • ^ "Basel holt 13. Cupsieg" (in German). srf.ch. 19 May 2019. Archived from the original on 12 November 2022. Retrieved 12 November 2022.
  • ^ "Strategic partnership between FC Thun Bernese Oberland and the Pacific Media Group (PMG)" (in German). fcthun.ch. 26 November 2019. Archived from the original on 13 January 2020. Retrieved 12 November 2022.
  • ^ "Spätes Aufbäumen reicht nicht: Thun scheitert an Vaduz und steigt ab" (in German). kicker.de. 11 August 2020. Archived from the original on 12 November 2022. Retrieved 12 November 2022.
  • ^ "Sion unterliegt Thun, bleibt aber erstklassig" (in German). srf.ch. 30 May 2021. Archived from the original on 12 November 2022. Retrieved 12 November 2022.
  • ^ "FC Thun Berner Oberland – Kader". fcthun.ch. Archived from the original on 12 November 2022. Retrieved 2 September 2022.
  • ^ "Thun coach takes players' advice and quits". uk.reuters.com. 20 November 2012. Archived from the original on 6 March 2016.
  • edit

    Retrieved from "https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=FC_Thun&oldid=1234845191"
     



    Last edited on 16 July 2024, at 12:27  





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    This page was last edited on 16 July 2024, at 12:27 (UTC).

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