Malmö FF

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Malmö Fotbollförening, also known simply as Malmö FF, is a football club based in Malmö, Sweden. The club is affiliated with the Skånes Fotbollförbund and plays its home games at the Swedbank Stadion. The club's colors, which are reflected in its crest and uniform, are sky blue and white. Formed on February 24, 1910, the club is the most successful in Swedish football in terms of total trophies won. Håkan Jeppsson is the current president, elected in 2010. With a net worth of 109.5 million Swedish crowns (approximately 12.4 million euros) it is the richest club in Sweden to date followed closely by IFK Göteborg, with an estimate of 101 million Swedish crowns (approximately 10.8 million euros).

The club is the highest category of Swedish football. The club first won the league in 1944. The club's main rivals are Helsingborgs and Göteborg. MFF Support is the official fan club of Malmö FF. The club has also been featured in the media, including the football documentaries Blådårar 1 and Blådårar 2.

History

Foundation and early years

Malmö IP, the first stadium in the club between 1910 and 1957.

The club emerged from a municipal initiative in 1905 to encourage young people in Malmö to play organized football. One of the youth teams, Bollklubben Idrott, also known simply as BK Idrott, was a precursor to Malmö FF. BK Idrott joined IFK Malmö's newly created football department in 1909, but soon abandoned it due to problems between the two clubs. On February 24, 1910, the 19 members of BK Idrott founded Malmö FF and the first president was Werner Mårtensson.

The club spent its first ten years in the local and regional divisions, as there was no national league competition, playing most of its matches in the city division called Malmömästerskapen. They also competed in regional competitions in Scania, and played matches against Danish teams. In 1916 Malmö FF reached the final of the Scania regional competition (Distriktsmästerskapen) for the first time, playing against rivals Helsingborgs IF but lost 3-4. The club defeated local rival IFK Malmö three times during the season, thus earning the unofficial – but highly desired – title of the best football club in Malmö. In 1917 they competed in the Svenska Mästerskapet for the first time, a cup tournament for the title of Swedish champions, but lost their first match of the second round 4-1 against IFK Malmö. The club continued to play in the Cup until 1922, reaching the quarter-finals in 1920, when they were eliminated by Landskrona Bois. The cup was eventually suspended and the title of Swedish champion was awarded to the winners of Allsvenskan which was created for the 1924-25 season.

In 1920 the Swedish Football Association invited Swedish football clubs to compete in official national competitions. Malmö FF earned a place in Division 2 Sydsvenska Serien. They won the division in the first season and were promoted to Svenska Serien Västra, the highest level of competition in Sweden at that time. However, they were relegated after a single season, and found themselves back in Sydsvenska Serien for almost a decade, until they again achieved promotion to Allsvenskan in 1931.

Early years and achievements in Allsvenskan

Malmö Template 1943–44

The club managed to reach the middle of the league table for two seasons, but was relegated in 1934 due to a sanction after violating amateur regulations. The club had paid its players a small sum of money for each match. Although against the rules, this was common back then; Malmö FF was the only club to show it in its accounting records. In addition to being relegated to the second division, the club suffered bans for the entire board of directors and twenty-six players. The version of events told by Malmö FF and the local press indicate that their local rivals IFK Malmö reported the violation to the Swedish Football Association. This belief has contributed to intense tensions between the two clubs.

Prawitz Öberg (Malmö FF) and Kurt Liander (AIK) in Råsunda (1956).

The club returned to the Allsvenskan in 1937 after two seasons in Division 2. In the same year Eric Persson was elected president after having been secretary since 1929, and held the position until 1974. Persson is considered by the officials of clubs and fans as the most important person in the club's history, when he returned to the professional club in the 1970s. Under his management, the club went from being titleless in 1937 to celebrating ten Swedish championships by the end of the 1974 season. In 1939, the club reached its highest position, third place in the Allsvenskan, nine points behind champions IF Elfsborg. Malmö FF's first Swedish league championship came in 1944, when the club won the penultimate game of the season against AIK in front of 36,000 spectators in Råsunda. The last game of the season was won 7-0 against Halmstad BK.

Over the next nine seasons, Malmö FF finished in the top three in the league. The club won the Swedish championship in 1949, 1950, 1951 and 1953, and were runners-up in 1946, 1948 and 1952. The club also won the Svenska Cupen in 1944, 1946, 1947, 1951 and 1953, and finished as runners-up in 1945. Between May 6, 1949 and June 1, 1951, the team was undefeated in 49 games, of which 23 were an uninterrupted winning streak.

Young club players in the 1960s.

The club finished as runners-up in the Allsvenskan twice more, in 1956 and 1957. The following year the club left Malmö IP for Malmö Stadion, which had been built for the 1958 FIFA World Cup and hosted the club for the next 50 years. In 1964 the club hired Spanish coach Antonio Durán, which was the first of a series of changes that led to the most successful era in the club's history. Young talents such as Lars Granström and Bo Larsson emerged during the 1960s and would prove to be crucial members of the success that would come in the 1970s. The club finished second in 1964, but went on to win their sixth Swedish championship in 1965, when Bo Larsson scored 28 goals to finish as the league's top scorer. Malmö FF once again won the Allsvenskan in 1967, after a less successful year in 1966. The club's young players, as well as the talents acquired in the clubs of neighboring Scania in 1967, became a team that always finished among the top three in the Allsvenskan.

Golden age in the 1970s

A photograph of an older man with a boy sitting in his lap. The older man, to the left, is bald, wearing glasses and wearing a dark brown business suit with a white shirt and a red tie underneath. The boy is blonde and wears a light blue football shirt and white shorts, with a leather football in his left hand. Several other boys can be seen with similar outfits in the background.
Eric Persson (left, next to his nephew) was president of the Malmö FF for 38 years, from 1937 to 1975. He was one of the most successful in winning under his mandate ten Allsvenskan and eight Svenska Cupen.

After Allsvenskan runners-up in the last two years of the 1960s, Malmö FF began the most successful decade in its history with a Swedish championship in 1970. The club won the Allsvenskan in 1970, 1971, 1974, 1975 and 1977, as well as the Svenska Cupen in 1976 and 1978. The 1977 Allsvenskan victory meant that the club qualified for the 1978-79 European Cup and, after eliminating AS Monaco, Dinamo Kiev, Wisla Krakow and Austria Vienna, reached the final of the competition, in which both were making their debut, which was played at the Olympiastadion in Munich against the English team Nottingham Forest. British forward Trevor Francis scored the only goal of the game, 1-0, and Forest won the first European title in its history. However, the 1979 European runners-up is the greatest success in Malmö FF's history. The team received the Svenska Dagbladet Gold Medal the same year, awarded for the most important sporting achievement of the year in Sweden, for its achievements in the European Cup. That same year they competed in the intercontinental final; their rival Olimpia of Paraguay, in a close match the Guaraníes won with an aggregate of 3 to 1 in round-trip matches, the last one played in this format.

Much of the success during the 1970s was due to the new tactics and training methods brought to the club by Englishman Bob Houghton, who managed the club between 1974 and 1980. Eric Persson was succeeded as president in 1974 by Hans Cavalli-Björkman. The team had quiet stints with Keith Blunt and Tord Grip as coaches in the 1980s, until Roy Hodgson took over in 1985. The British coach led the team to two Swedish championships in 1986 and 1988, and the club won the Allsvenskan five consecutive years between 1985 and 1989. At the same time, the championship was decided by play-offs between the best teams after the end of the regular season — this arrangement was from 1982 to 1992. The club reached the play-off final four times between 1986 and 1989, but only managed to win the final twice. Apart from the Swedish Allsvenskan championships, the club won Svenska Cupen in 1984, 1986 and 1989.

Apart from finishing as runners-up in the Allsvenskan in 1996, the team did not stand out in the 1990s, failing to win any Allsvenskan or Svenska Cupen throughout the decade. Hans Cavalli-Björkman was succeeded as president by Bengt Madsen in 1999, and former player Hasse Borg was hired as sporting director. These operational changes, as well as the emergence of young talents such as Zlatan Ibrahimović, led to the club becoming stronger and becoming the protagonist of the championship. Ibrahimović rose to prominence and became an important player in the club's campaign. He was later transferred to Ajax in 2001, before playing for several European clubs.

2000s to present

The return to prominence in the Allsvenskan was the successful start of the 2000s, under the management of Tom Prahl, when the club finished in the top three for three consecutive seasons. In 2004 they won the Allsvenskan, the club's 15th league title. In 2005, Malmö FF reached the final qualifying round for the UEFA Champions League, but were defeated by FC Thun. The arrival of a successful sponsor and a series of player sales made Malmö FF the richest club in Sweden, an honor it maintains to this day. The club moved from Malmö Stadion to Swedbank Stadion in 2009, a stadium built entirely for the practice of football and located next to the old stadium.

The Malmö FF in the group phase of the UEFA Europa League 2011/12 to the FC Metalist Járkov.

In 2009, Madsen announced that he was resigning as president, and was replaced by Håkan Jeppsson at the beginning of the following year. In 2010 the club celebrated its 100th anniversary with many celebration events at the start of the season. On the day of the club's 100th anniversary in 2010, the Swedish football magazine Offside declared Malmö FF the biggest football club in Swedish history. The season became a great success as The club won the Allsvenskan for the 19th time and became Swedish champions for the 16th time. Unlike in 2004, these successes were achieved without any major transfers before the season, and with a team consisting mainly of young players. The club remains one of the dominant football clubs in Sweden. At the end of the 2012 Allsvenskan season the club was still leading the maratontabellen. Malmö FF is the historical dominant in Swedish football, having won the league and the Cup more times than any other team. He also has the most points on the Swedish marathon table. Since 2016, the club also has more victories in the Swedish championship than its rival IFK Göteborg. In the 2015/2016 season they lost 8-0 against Real Madrid

Uniform and shield

The club is known by its nickname Di blåe ("the blues") and Himmelsblått ("the sky blues" or "celestial"). This is due to the club's colors, sky blue and white. The players wear light blue shirts, white pants and light blue socks. The away colors are red and white striped shirts, black pants and red socks. For its part, various uniforms were used for European competition matches, such as the all-white kit introduced in the 1950s or the black kit with sky blue and gold edges used in 2005.

Classical uniform of the Malmö FF.

The club's colors have not always been sky blue. The club's predecessor BK Idrott wore blue and white striped shirts and white pants, and this uniform was still used in the first six months of 1910 after Malmö FF was founded. This was later changed to red and white striped shirts and black shorts to symbolize that Malmö FF was a new club. In fact, they have used a very similar uniform in their second kit, for historical reasons. The present light blue kit was introduced in 1920. Since 2010 a small Skåne flag appears on the back of the shirt just below the collar.

The Malmö FF emblem consists of a shield with two wide vertical light blue stripes on the sides, and a white vertical one in the center. Below the shield is written "Malmö FF" in sky blue letters with a sky blue star below the text. In the upper area of the shield is a horizontal white part through the three vertical stripes. The abbreviation of the club name "MFF" is written in sky blue letters in this field. At the top of the shield are five white extensions similar to five towers. The current crest made its debut on the shirt in the 1940s. There were other crests before this, but they were never featured on the shirt. While the first emblem was black and white, the second was red and white, in accordance with the main colors of the club between 1910 and 1920.

In modern times a gold star has been added to the shield. This is a feature used only on the badges on the players' jerseys. The star is used to symbolize that the club has won more than ten national titles. The full club name and the light blue star under the shield do not appear in the original shield logo, they were added later, when the club's president, Eric Persson, discovered that abroad people had problems identifying which city they were from. the club proceeded just by looking at its shield. For the club's 100th anniversary in 2010, the years 1910 and 2010 were featured on each side of the emblem in a light blue ribbon behind the crest. In 2011 the club introduced a new all-white away kit to be used as an alternative uniform. in European competitions, as well as the Allsvenskan.

Fans and rivalries

Malmö FF fans in a game at Swedbank Stadion. The red and yellow flags are the flag of Escania.

Malmö FF is well known for its large local fan base. The club has several fan clubs, of which the largest is the official MFF Support fan club, founded in 1992. MFF Support is described as "an idealistic and non-political working association against violence and racism. The current president of MFF Support is Magnus Ericsson.

There are also several small independent hobby groups. The most prominent of these is Supras Malmö, which was founded in 2003 by a coalition of small ultra and fan groups. The name "Supras" It is derived from the English words supporters ("fans") and ultras, and this last word indicates that the group is inspired by fan culture with roots in the Mediterranean. Supras Malmö is the most visible group in the main stand at Swedbank Stadion, marking their presence with banners, flags and choreography. Another group with similar objectives is Rex Scania. MFF Tifosi 96 (MT96) is a network of supporters who create tifos for special occasions and important matches. The average attendance for the club's matches in the 2012 season was 14,799 spectators, the best attendance in the 2012 Allsvenskan.

Due to geographical proximity, there are minor rivalries with Trelleborgs FF and Landskrona BoIS, both located in Skåne. The club's main rivals are Helsingborgs IF, IFK Göteborg and IFK Malmö. The rivalry between Malmö FF and Helsingborgs IF has existed since Malmö FF was promoted to the Allsvenskan in the 1930s, and is mainly geographical, as both teams are from Skåne, in southern Sweden. The rivalry with IFK Göteborg is more related to strictly sporting matters in their fight for the title, since the two are the most successful clubs in the history of Swedish football and are the only two Swedish clubs to have reached the finals of European competition: IFK Göteborg in the UEFA Cup in 1982 and 1987 and Malmö FF in the European Cup in 1979.

The rivalry with IFK Malmö is both geographical and historical. The two teams are based in the same city and used to play in the same stadium in the 20th century. The alleged actions of IFK Malmö board members in 1933, revealing infringements of Malmö FF's amateur football rules to the Swedish Football Federation, also contributed to increasing tensions between the two clubs. The IFK Malmö have not played in the Allsvenskan since 1962, so matches between the two teams are rare.

Hymn

The Anthem of Malmö FF is Åh Vi Älskar Malmö FF

Lyrics:

Åh saw älskar Malmö FF

Ja vi brinner för vårt lag

Under himmelsblåa skyar

Blir vi starkare och bättre för var dag

Åh saw älskar Malmö FF

Bortom tid och bortom rum

Genom stadens gröna parker

Malmös hjärtan och själar står i blom

If Sveriges is enough

Stolt och stark

Och när stormen river

Ger vi allt

Ända sedan gamla dagar

Under våran ljusblå fana

står vi upp

For himmelsblått

Heja Malmö

Åh saw älskar Malmö FF

Ja vi brinner för vårt lag

Under himmelsblåa skyar

Blir vi starkare och bättre för var dag

If Sveriges is enough

Stolt och stark

Och när stormen river

Ger vi allt

Ända sedan gamla dagar

Under våran ljusblå fana

står vi upp

For himmelsblått

Heja Malmö

Stadium

Malmö FF's first stadium was Malmö IP, which was shared with its eternal rival IFK Malmö. The team played here from the club's founding in 1910, until 1958. The stadium still exists today, although with a smaller capacity, and is now used by the LdB FC Malmö women's team, which was formerly the Malmö women's section. FF. The capacity in 2012 was 7,600 spectators, but attendance was generally much higher when Malmö FF played there. For the last season in 1957, the average attendance was 15,500 spectators. The club's largest attendance at Malmö IP was 22,436 in a match against Helsingborgs IF on 1 June 1956. The stadium is still considered a vital part of the club's history, as it was here that the club was founded. founded, played its first 47 seasons and won five Swedish championships.

After FIFA awarded Sweden the 1958 World Cup, a new stadium was built in Malmö, which was simply called Malmö Stadion. Malmö FF played its first season at the stadium in 1958. The first time the club won the Swedish championship at the stadium was in 1965. In 1992 a new level of stands was added to the stadium. The club enjoyed the most successful era in his history at this venue, winning ten of the sixteen Swedish championships while he played there. The stadium originally had a capacity of 30,000 spectators, but this was reduced to 27,500 due to changes in safety regulations. The club's largest attendance at the stadium was 29,328 fans, again against Helsingborgs IF on 24 September 1967.

After the 2004 Allsvenskan victory, plans were made to build a new stadium. In July 2005, Malmö FF announced designs for the future Swedbank Stadion, which would have 18,000 seated and 6,000 standing spectators. The stadium has a seated capacity of 21,000 spectators for international and European matches. Construction began in 2007 and was completed in 2009. The new stadium is located next to Malmö Stadion. Although there was still small construction around the stadium at that time, the stadium was inaugurated on April 13, 2009 with the first home game of the 2009 season against Örgryte IS; Malmö FF footballer Labinot Harbuzi scored the opening goal in the 61st minute. The first Swedish championship that the club won at the stadium came in 2010, when they beat Mjällby AIF, on November 7 in the last game of the season., 2-0. Attendance for this match set the stadium attendance record with 24,148 spectators. The Swedbank Stadion is a category 4 stadium according to UEFA standards.

Panorama of the Swedbank Stadion from the Carlsberg rostrum.

Players

Current roster

Malmö FF Template of the Season 2022-23
Players Technical equipment
N.oNac.Pos.NameAgeUlt team.
Porteros
1 Bandera de Suecia0BY Melker Ellborg20 yearsBandera de Suecia quarry
27 Bandera de Suecia0BY Johan Dahlin37 yearsBandera de Dinamarca FC Midtjylland
30 Bandera de Malí0BY Ismael Diawara28 yearsBandera de Suecia Degerfors IF
39 Bandera de Suecia0BY Viktor Andersson19 yearsBandera de Suecia quarry
Defense
3 Bandera de Dinamarca1DEF Jonas Knudsen31 yearsBandera de Inglaterra Ipswich Town F. C.
4 Bandera de Finlandia1DEF Niklas Moisander38 yearsBandera de Alemania Werder Bremen
13 Bandera de Suecia1DEF Martin Olsson35 yearsBandera de Suecia BK Häcken
14 Bandera de Suecia1DEF Felix Beijmo25 yearsBandera de Alemania Werder Bremen
21 Bandera de Bosnia y Herzegovina1DEF Dennis Hadžikadunić25 yearsBandera de Rusia FK Rostov
23 Bandera de República Checa1DEF Matej Chalus25 yearsBandera de República Checa Slovan Liberec
24 Bandera de Dinamarca1DEF Lasse Nielsen35 yearsBandera de Bélgica K. A. A. Ghent
Midfielders
5 Bandera de Dinamarca2MED Søren Rieks36 yearsBandera de Suecia IFK Göteborg
6 Bandera de Suecia2MED Oscar Lewicki31 yearsBandera de Suecia BK Häcken
7 Bandera de Suecia2MED Erdal Rakip27 yearsBandera de Portugal S. L. Benfica
8 Bandera de Perú2MED Sergio Peña28 yearsBandera de los Países Bajos Emmen
10 Bandera de Dinamarca2MED Anders Christiansen Capitán33 yearsBandera de Bélgica K. A. A. Ghent
20 Bandera de Suecia2MED Moustafa Zeidan25 yearsBandera de Suecia IK Sirius
22 Bandera de Suecia2MED Adi Nalić25 yearsBandera de Suecia Landskrona BoIS
25 Bandera de Malí2MED Mahamé Siby27 yearsBandera de Francia RC Strasbourg
31 Bandera de Suecia2MED Hugo Larsson19 yearsBandera de Suecia quarry
40 Bandera de Ghana2MED Emmanuel Lomotey25 yearsBandera de Francia Amiens SC
Delanteros
9 Bandera de Suecia3OF THE Isaac Kiese Thelin31 yearsBandera de Bélgica R. S. C. Anderlecht
11 Bandera de Suecia3OF THE Ola Toivonen37 yearsBandera de Australia Melbourne Victory F. C.
15 Bandera de Suecia3OF THE Joseph Ceesay25 yearsBandera de Polonia Lechia Gdańsk
18 Bandera de Estados Unidos3OF THE Romain Gall28 yearsBandera de Suecia GIF Sundsvall
32 Bandera de Noruega3OF THE Jo Inge Berget33 yearsBandera de Estados Unidos New York City F. C.
33 Bandera de Sierra Leona3OF THE Mohamed Buya Turay28 yearsBandera de la República Popular China Henan Songshan Longmen
36 Bandera de Kosovo3OF THE Patriot Sejdiu23 yearsBandera de Suecia quarry
Coach(s)
Bandera de Noruega Age Hareide

Legend
  • Pos.: Position
  • Nac.: Nationality of sport
  • Capitán Captain
  • Lesionado Mission
  • BY / ARQ: Guardameta
  • DEF: Defense
  • MED / VOL: Camper
  • OF THE: Delantero

Updated on November 3, 2022

Official web template

Bibs removed

  • 12 - Bandera de Suecia MFF Support

Historical players

A photograph of a man with dark hair wearing a yellow football shirt, blue shorts and a dark blue captains armband on his arm, the man is looking away from the camera.
Zlatan Ibrahimović began his career at Malmö FF. He played 40 league games and scored 18 club goals between 1999 and 2001.

List criteria

  • Player with more than 500 games with the club.
  • Winner of the Guldbollen Prize, a prize recognized by UEFA.
  • Player who has been chosen among the top 11 players of the official Sydsvenskan team.
Name Years Parties Goles Guldbollen UEFA Award Sydsvenskan
Bandera de Suecia Erik Nilsson 1934-1953 600 4 1950
Bandera de Suecia Helge Bengtsson 1934-1951 501 3
Bandera de Suecia Prawitz Öberg 1952-1965 515 103 1962
Bandera de Suecia Ingvar Svahn 1957-1968
1970
414 161 1967
Bandera de Suecia Bo Larsson 1962-1966
1969-1979
546 289 1965
1973
Yes.
Bandera de Suecia Krister Kristensson 1963–1979 626 16 Yes.
Bandera de Suecia Roy Andersson 1968-1983 624 49 1977 Yes.
Bandera de Suecia Roland Andersson 1968-1974
1977-1983
564 13
Bandera de Suecia Jan Möller 1971-1980
1984-1988
591 1 1979 Yes.
Bandera de Suecia Ingemar Erlandsson 1976-1987 473 46 Yes.
Bandera de Suecia Magnus Andersson 1975-1988 568 28
Bandera de Suecia Robert Prytz 1977-1982
1993–1995
262 57 1986 Yes.
Bandera de Suecia Torbjörn Persson 1980-1995 574 39
Bandera de Suecia Jonnie Fedel 1984–2001 588 1
Bandera de Suecia Jonas Thern 1985-1987
1988-1989
160 30 1989 Yes.
Bandera de Suecia Martin Dahlin 1987–1991 176 83 1993 Yes.
Bandera de Suecia Stefan Schwarz 1987–1991 103 7 1999 Yes.
Bandera de Suecia Patrik Andersson 1989-1992
2004-2005
184 24 1995
2001
Year equipment
2001
Yes.
Bandera de Suecia Zlatan Ibrahimović 1999–2001 69 16 2005
2007–2008-2009-2010-2011-2012-2013-2014-2015-2016
Year equipment
2007
2009-2013-2014
Yes.
Bandera de Finlandia Jari Litmanen 2005-2007 18 6 UEFA Gold Player
Markus Rosenberg 2014- 78 34

Management

Updated as of February 18, 2013

Name Post
Bandera de Suecia Håkan Jeppsson Chairman
Bandera de Suecia Per Nilsson Manager Director
Bandera de Suecia Pontus Hansson Secretary
Bandera de Suecia Per Ågren Sports Director

Coaches

Allan Kuhn was the coach of the Malmö FF in 2016.

The following is a list of coaches who won at least one title with the club.

Name Years Allsvenskan Svenska Cupen
Bandera de Suecia Sven Nilsson 1944
1945-1946
1950
1943–44
1949-50
1944
1946
Bandera de Hungría Kálmán Konrád 1947–1949 1948-49 1947
Bandera de Gales Bert Turner 1951–1954 1950–51
1952–53
1951
1953
Bandera de España Antonio Durán 1964-1971 1965
1967
1970
1971
1967
Bandera de Suecia Karl-Erik Hult 1972-1973 1972–73
Bandera de Inglaterra Bob Houghton 1974-1980
1990-1992
1974
1975
1977
1973-74
1974–75
1977-78
1979–80
Bandera de Suecia Tord Grip 1983-1984 1983-84
Bandera de Inglaterra Roy Hodgson 1985-1989 1985
1986
1987
1988
1989
1985–86
1988-89
Bandera de Suecia Tom Prahl 2002-2005 2004
Bandera de Suecia Roland Nilsson 2008-2011 2010
Bandera de Suecia Rikard Norling 2011-2013 2013 2013
Bandera de Noruega Age Hariede 2014-2015 2014 2014
Bandera de Dinamarca Allan Kuhn 2016 2016
Bandera de Suecia Magnus Pehrsson 2017-2018 2017

Palmarés

National TournamentsBandera de SueciaTitles Subcamponatos
Allsvenskan (22/15)1944 1949 1950 1951 1953 1965 1967 1970 1971 1975 1977 1986 1988 2004 2013 2014 2016 2017 2020, 20211946 1948 1952 1956 1957 1964 1968 1969 1976 1978 1980 1983 1987, 1989, 1996 2002 2019
Sweden Cup (15/6)1944, 1946, 1947, 1951, 1953, 1967, 1973, 1974, 1975, 1978, 1980, 1984, 1986, 1989, 20221945, 1970/1971, 1995/1996, 2016, 2018, 2020
Sweden Super Cup (2/1)2013 and 20142011
Superettan (0/1)2000
International Tournaments Titles Subcamponatos
Intercontinental Cup (0/1)1979
European Cup (0/1)1979

International participation in UEFA competitions

By competition

Note: In bold active competitions.

Competition Temp.PJPGPEPGFGCDif.Points Titles Subtitles
European Cup / UEFA Champions League189132223797140-43.305-1
UEFA Cup / EUFA European League178034153112297+25117--
Intercontinental Cup1200213-20-1
EUFA European Recoup5189453518+1731--
UEFA Intertote Cup1200214-30--
Total42193754177256262-626602
Updated at Season 2021-22.
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