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Royal Antwerp F.C.

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This is an old revision of this page, as edited by 84.184.76.82 (talk) at 19:46, 15 January 2008 (Current squad 2007/08: http://www.footballtransfers.info/transfers/alltrans_world.php). The present address (URL) is a permanent link to this revision, which may differ significantly from the current revision.

Royal Antwerp
Full nameRoyal Antwerp
Football Club
Nickname(s)Great Old
Founded1880
GroundBosuilstadion, Antwerp
Capacity16,649
ChairmanBelgium Eddy Wauters
ManagerEngland Warren Joyce
LeagueBelgian Second Division
2006-07Belgian Second Division, 4th

Royal Antwerp FC is a Belgian football club, from the city of Antwerp in Antwerp (province). Antwerp became the first football club to register to the Belgian Football Association and it received consequently the matricule number one. In 1900, most of the players left the club for the new Beerschot A.C. It is also the last Belgian team to play in a European cup final (namely the Cup Winners' Cup) in 1993, losing 3-1 to Parma A.C. at Wembley Stadium.

Royal Antwerp also have a long-term partnership with the English club Manchester United F.C., often taking their young players on loan so that their development can be aided with first team football, and young players who require European work-permits can benefit from Belgium's more relaxed laws.

History

The first years (1880--1901)

Founded in 1880 as Antwerp Cricket, Football & Lawn Tennis Club, the football club grew in prominence and the club's name became Antwerp Football Club in 1894. The next year, it was the first club to register to the brand new FA. It thus took part in the first Belgian championship and finished 2nd behind F.C. Liégeois.

Antwerp ended the following two championships in 3rd (of 6) and 5th (of 5) place but avoided relegation as the first division was expanded in 1898 (two leagues). However, the club finished last in its league again. The next year however, it won its league and played a test-match against Racing Club de Bruxelles in Leuven on April 8, 1900. An own goal by an Antwerp defender gave the title to the Brussels side.

Some time earlier, a previous Antwerp goalkeeper, Alfred Grisar, who was studying in England, had suggested to his father, a race course owner in Antwerp, that he create a sports club. The father agreed but died soon after so Alfred came back to Belgium to manage the club with some friends. He chose to take care of the football club that he named Beerschot. Grisar then asked the Antwerp F.C. players to play for his team and they agreed as the club had the best facilities in the city. Almost every player of Antwerp left the club after the 1-0 defeat to Racing Club.

Antwerp thus decided to withdraw from the league to build a new team in the second division. It was back at the top level in 1901.

The first titles (1901-1953)

While Beerschot was the leading team in the city, Antwerp was getting better and better in the 1920s. In 1925 it finished in second place 6 points behind Beerschot. Four seasons later the first championship was won by the matricule n°1 after a test-match against the rival Beerschot (2-0). The next year Antwerp F.C. finished one point away from the champion CS Brugeois. And in 1931 the players lifted the trophy for the second time.

The "Great Old" had definitely taken over the lead in Antwerp football and it confirmed its status in the next few years. But Beerschot came back and won two more titles in the late 1930s. During World War II, Antwerp brought the trophy back to the Bosuilstadion but the rivalry with the purple and white was still present.

The European years (1953--1975)

In national competitions

As with a number of other clubs, an English manager named Harry Game was hired in 1953. Antwerp won the Belgian Cup two years later against Waterschei Thor (4-0), the year of the 75th anniversary of the club. In spite of the domination of R.S.C. Anderlecht in the 1950s, the Red and White managed to win the championship for the fourth time in 1957. The season after, they finished 2nd with the same number of points as Standard Liège but Liège had fewer defeats and thus won according to the rules of the competition.

In European competitions

After winning the Belgian Cup in 1992 against K.V. Mechelen, Royal Antwerp Football Club played the European Cup Winner's Cup in the '92-'93 season. A glorious campaign lead the team to the Cup Winners Cup Final at Wembley on 13th May 1993 against Parma AC. The Final was lost 1-3, the Antwerp goal was scored by Cisse Severeyns.

Current squad 2007/08

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
1 GK Serbia SRB Predrag Ristović
2 DF Netherlands NED Roel van Hemert
3 DF Netherlands NED Ray Fränkel
5 DF England ENG Kirk Hilton
8 MF Belgium BEL Kevin Baert
9 FW Argentina ARG Luciano Olguín
10 FW Greece GRE Stavros Glouftsis
11 FW Nigeria NGA Peter Utaka
12 DF Nigeria NGA Bobsam Elejiko
14 MF Belgium BEL Spencer Verbiest
15 DF Belgium BEL Philippe Fostier
16 DF Ghana GHA Ransford Addo
17 MF Belgium BEL David Geeroms
18 FW Cameroon CMR Emmanuel Kenmogne
19 MF Togo TOG Souleymane Mamam
No. Pos. Nation Player
20 MF England ENG Sean Doherty
21 GK Belgium BEL Kevin Wauthy
22 MF Republic of Ireland IRL Richie Ryan
23 DF Republic of Ireland IRL Henry McStay
24 MF Serbia SRB Žarko Jeličić
31 GK Belgium BEL Jochem Tanghe
33 MF France FRA Marco Gbarssin
DF Northern Ireland NIR Craig Cathcart (on loan from Manchester United)
DF England ENG Michael Lea (on loan from Manchester United)
FW Belgium BEL Volkan Özen
FW Serbia SRB Darko Pivaljević
FW Belgium BEL Sacha Verveckken
DF Belgium BEL Bart De Corte
MF Belgium BEL Franky Pelgrims
DF Belgium BEL Matthias Trenson

Honours

  • Belgian First Division:
    • Winners (4): 1928-29, 1930-31, 1943-44, 1956-57
    • Runners-up (11): 1895-96, 1924-25, 1929-30, 1931-32, 1932-33, 1945-46, 1955-56, 1957-58, 1962-63, 1973-74, 1974-75
  • Belgian Cup:
    • Winners (2): 1954-55, 1991-92
    • Runners-up (1): 1974-75
  • Cup Winners' Cup:
    • Runners-up (1): 1992-93


References