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Revision as of 08:00, 21 August 2020

FC Inter Turku
Logo of FC Inter Turku
Full nameFootball Club International Turku
Nickname(s)Sinimustat ('Black and Blues')
Founded1990; 34 years ago (1990)
GroundVeritas Stadion
Kupittaa, Turku
Capacity9,372
ChairmanStefan Håkans
ManagerJosé Riveiro[1]
LeagueVeikkausliiga
20192nd
Websitehttps://fcinter.fi/
Veritas Stadion

Football Club International Turku, commonly referred to as Inter Turku and colloquially known as Inter, is a professional football club based in Turku, Finland, that competes in the Veikkausliiga, the top flight of Finnish Football. Founded in 1990 by Stefan Håkans, the club has a rivalry with Turun Palloseura.

Inter have won one League title, two Finnish Cups, and one League Cup. They play their home league matches at Veritas Stadion, with a capacity of 9,372 seats for most matches.

History

FC Inter was founded in 1990 by Stefan Håkans, the managing director of the towage and salvage company Alfons Håkans, allegedly after his 11-year-old son could not fit into any of the other youth teams in Turku. The club started out as a youth team, but in 1992 a senior squad was founded and it entered the Finnish league system at the fourth level (Third Division). The following year, the club assumed the place of the financially troubled local club Turun Toverit in the Second Division. Manager Timo Sinkkonen invested in new players, and eventually the club finished first and was promoted to the First Division (Ykkönen).

In 1995, Inter finished first in the Ykkönen and was promoted, as well as reaching the semi-final stage in the Finnish Cup. The squad was strengthened with new players, and in 1996, as both of Turku's better teams were now playing in the Veikkausliiga, the club's attendance records were broken with 8,200 spectators in the local derby between TPS and Inter.

In 1997, the club were relegated after finishing last in the Veikkausliiga, but achieved promotion again the following season. New foreign players were bought to strengthen the squad, such as Richard Teberio and Fernando della Sala. Since then the club has consistently finished between 7th and 4th in the league, and maintained a steady inflow of foreign players as well as young starlets from its own youth academy.

During the 2006 season Inter sacked their manager Kari Virtanen and hired new coach, Dutchman Rene van Eck. After the season van Eck returned to Switzerland to coach FC Wohlen, and another Dutchman Job Dragtsma took over.

In 2008 Inter led the league since early season and clinched their first Finnish championship title after winning against FF Jaro in their final game.

European cup history

Season Competition Round Club Home Away Aggregate
2005 UEFA Intertoto Cup 1R Iceland ÍA 0–0 4–0 4–0
2R Croatia NK Varteks 2–2 3–4 5–6
2009–10 UEFA Champions League 2Q Moldova Sheriff 0–1 0–1 0–2
2010–11 UEFA Europa League 3Q Belgium Genk 1–5 2–3 3–8
2012–13 UEFA Europa League 2Q Netherlands Twente 0–5 1–1 1–6
2013–14 UEFA Europa League 1Q Faroe Islands Víkingur Gøta 0–1 1–1 1–2
2019–20 UEFA Europa League 1Q Denmark Brøndby 2–0 1–4 3–4
2020–21 UEFA Europa League 1Q Hungary Honvéd

Season to season

Season Level Division Section Administration Position Movements
1992 Tier 4 III divisioona (Third Division) SPL Turku 5th
1993 Tier 3 II divisioona (Second Division) West Group Finnish FA (Suomen Pallolitto) 2nd Promoted
1994 Tier 2 Ykkönen (First Division) Finnish FA (Suomen Palloliitto) 3rd
1995 Tier 2 Ykkönen (First Division) Finnish FA (Suomen Palloliitto) 1st Promoted
1996 Tier 1 Veikkausliiga (Premier League) Finnish FA (Suomen Palloliitto) 5th Upper Group – 6th
1997 Tier 1 Veikkausliiga (Premier League) Finnish FA (Suomen Palloliitto) 7th Third round – 10th – Relegated
1998 Tier 2 Ykkönen (First Division) South Group Finnish FA (Suomen Palloliitto) 2nd Upper Group – 3rd – Promoted
1999 Tier 1 Veikkausliiga (Premier League) Finnish FA (Suomen Palloliitto) 3rd Upper Group – 5th
2000 Tier 1 Veikkausliiga (Premier League) Finnish FA (Suomen Palloliitto) 7th
2001 Tier 1 Veikkausliiga (Premier League) Finnish FA (Suomen Palloliitto) 5th
2002 Tier 1 Veikkausliiga (Premier League) Finnish FA (Suomen Palloliitto) 5th
2003 Tier 1 Veikkausliiga (Premier League) Finnish FA (Suomen Palloliitto) 7th
2004 Tier 1 Veikkausliiga (Premier League) Finnish FA (Suomen Palloliitto) 4th
2005 Tier 1 Veikkausliiga (Premier League) Finnish FA (Suomen Palloliitto) 5th
2006 Tier 1 Veikkausliiga (Premier League) Finnish FA (Suomen Palloliitto) 10th
2007 Tier 1 Veikkausliiga (Premier League) Finnish FA (Suomen Palloliitto) 9th
2008 Tier 1 Veikkausliiga (Premier League) Finnish FA (Suomen Palloliitto) 1st Champions
2009 Tier 1 Veikkausliiga (Premier League) Finnish FA (Suomen Palloliitto) 5th
2010 Tier 1 Veikkausliiga (Premier League) Finnish FA (Suomen Palloliitto) 6th
2011 Tier 1 Veikkausliiga (Premier League) Finnish FA (Suomen Palloliitto) 2nd
2012 Tier 1 Veikkausliiga (Premier League) Finnish FA (Suomen Palloliitto) 2nd
2013 Tier 1 Veikkausliiga (Premier League) Finnish FA (Suomen Palloliitto) 9th
2014 Tier 1 Veikkausliiga (Premier League) Finnish FA (Suomen Palloliitto) 10th
2015 Tier 1 Veikkausliiga (Premier League) Finnish FA (Suomen Palloliitto) 4th
2016 Tier 1 Veikkausliiga (Premier League) Finnish FA (Suomen Palloliitto) 11th
2017 Tier 1 Veikkausliiga (Premier League) Finnish FA (Suomen Palloliitto) 9th
2018 Tier 1 Veikkausliiga (Premier League) Finnish FA (Suomen Palloliitto) 7th
2019 Tier 1 Veikkausliiga (Premier League) Finnish FA (Suomen Palloliitto) 2nd

Current squad

As of 14 July 2020

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

No. Pos. Nation Player
2 DF Finland FIN Jesper Engström
3 DF Finland FIN Juuso Hämäläinen
4 DF Netherlands NED Rick Ketting
5 DF Finland FIN Noah Nurmi (on loan from Esbjerg)
6 MF Ghana GHA Anthony Annan
8 MF Spain ESP Álvaro Muñiz
9 FW Brazil BRA Liliu
11 MF Finland FIN Kevin Kouassivi-Benissan (on loan from HJK)
12 GK Finland FIN Henrik Moisander
13 GK Finland FIN Aati Marttinen
No. Pos. Nation Player
14 MF Finland FIN Elias Mastokangas
15 FW Finland FIN Timo Furuholm (captain)
16 FW Japan JPN Taiki Kagayama
19 MF Finland FIN Aleksi Paananen
21 MF Finland FIN Matias Ojala
22 DF Finland FIN Arttu Hoskonen
25 DF Finland FIN Martti Haukioja
26 DF England ENG Connor Ruane
27 MF Finland FIN Jan Heinonen
28 MF Finland FIN Roope Kantola

Out on loan

As of 10 February 2020

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

No. Pos. Nation Player
9 FW Finland FIN Benjamin Källman (at Haugesund until end of season)

Management

As of 20 February 2020.

Name Role
Spain José Riveiro Manager
Spain Sergio Almenara Coach
Spain Michel Bellver Fitness Coach
Finland Jani Meriläinen First Team Administrator, Goalkeeping Coach
Finland Erol Ates Talent Coach
England David Moore Kit Manager
Finland Ville Peltonen Physiotherapist

Honours

Winners: 2008
Runners-up: 2019
Winners (2): 2009, 2017–18
Winners: 2008
  • Most goals scored: Tero Forss (74 goals, 1993–01)
  • Most matches played: Petri Lehtonen (227 matches, 1993–03)

Past managers

References