CS Grevenmacher

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Jump to navigation Jump to search

Template:Short description Template:Short descriptionScript error: No such module "Infobox".Template:Template otherScript error: No such module "Check for unknown parameters".

Club Sportif Grevenmacher is a football club, based in Grevenmacher (in eastern Luxembourg) currently playing in the Luxembourg 1. Division.

History

The club was founded in 1909 as 'Stade Mosellan' . The current name of the club, 'CS Grevenmacher' , was adopted in 1919.

During the Nazi occupation of the Second World War, the club was renamed 'FK Grevenmacher' , as part of Gauleiter Gustav Simon's policy of Germanisation. The club's name reverted to 'CS Grevenmacher' upon liberation in 1944.

1949–50 was the first season in which Grevenmacher played in the top league, the National Division. In 1950–51, the team reached the final of the Luxembourg Cup, but lost to SC Tétange in a replay.

In the 1990s, Grevenmacher established themselves as one of the perennial challengers for trophies. In 1993–94, CS Grevenmacher finished in second place in the National Division, qualifying for the UEFA Cup for the first time. The club's first piece of silverware came in the 1994–95 Luxembourg Cup; in Grevenmacher's fifth cup final, the club beat Jeunesse Esch 1–1, 3–2. Between 1991 and 1992 and 2013–14, when they managed an 8th-place finish out of 14, Grevenmacher never finished outside the top half of the table.[1]

In the 2002–03 season, the club won the National Division championship for the first time, and thus qualified for the UEFA Champions League. In the same year, Grevenmacher won the Luxembourg Cup, completing the Double.

In the 2015–16 season, Grevenmacher finished bottom of the table and were relegated to the Luxembourg Division of Honor for the first time since 1984–85.[1]

File:Stade Op Flohr1.jpg
Stade Op Flohr

Honours

European competition

CS Grevenmacher have qualified for UEFA European competition twelve times.

Qualifying round (1): 2003–04
Qualifying round (2): 1995–96, 1998–99
Qualifying round (6): 1994–95, 1996–97, 1997–98, 2000–01, 2001–02, 2002–03
Qualifying round (3): 2009–10, 2010–11, 2012–13

The club has never won a tie in European competition. However, the club has come close on four occasions:

  • In the 1995–96 Cup Winners' Cup, Grevenmacher beat KR Reykjavík 3–2 in the first (home) leg, but lost 2–0 in Iceland, going out by the narrow margin of 4–3 on aggregate.
  • In 2000–01, Grevenmacher lost their UEFA Cup first leg against HJK Helsinki 4–1. The club had to win the second leg 3–0 to progress (on away goals). Despite a determined fight-back at home, Grevenmacher won by only 2–0, and were eliminated.
  • In the UEFA Cup in 2002–03, Grevenmacher played Cyprus' Anorthosis Famagusta. Another heavy defeat away from home (3–0) saw Grevenmacher requiring a miracle in the second leg. Just as they had two years previously, the Luxembourgish team managed to win, but, again, by the insufficient margin of 2–0.
  • In the 2010–11 UEFA Europa League first qualifying round, Grevenmacher played Dundalk from the Republic of Ireland. Grevenmacher drew the first leg at home 3–3, but were narrowly defeated 2–1 in the away leg, to lose 5–4 on aggregate.
  • In the 2012–13 UEFA Europa League first qualifying round, Grevenmacher faced KF Tirana. A 0–0 draw in the first leg at home put the Luxembourg side in a strong position going into the second leg in Albania. However, they lost 2–0.

Grevenmacher has also drawn four games in Europe, against Dinamo Tbilisi in 1996–97 and FK Leotar in the 2003–04 Champions League. The other two draws came in UEFA Europa League home games against Dundalk in 2010–11 (3–3) and Albanian side KF Tirana in 2012–13 (0–0).

Overall, Grevenmacher's record in European competition reads, as of 8 July 2012:

P W D L GF GA GD
CS Grevenmacher 22 3 4 15 18 56 −38

Current squad

Template:Updated[2] <templatestyles src="Template:Football squad player/styles.css" /> 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 Template:Country data LUX Marc Pleimling
2 DF Template:Country data LUX Alex Famini
3 DF Template:Country data MAD Matis Rakotomahanina
4 DF Template:Country data GER Henrik Schömann
5 DF Template:Country data LUX Sven Becker
7 MF Template:Country data LUX Amar Rastoder
8 MF Template:Country data FRA Romain Contessa
9 DF Template:Country data LUX Pol Haas
10 MF Template:Country data LUX Bruno Miguel Martins Mina
11 FW Template:Country data LUX Marc-André Jücker
13 DF Template:Country data POR Marco Semedo
14 MF Template:Country data LUX Donat Ahmeti
No. Pos. Nation Player
17 FW Template:Country data LUX Yannick Lauer
18 MF Template:Country data GER Khalid Lahyani
19 DF Template:Country data FRA René Teitgen
20 DF Template:Country data LUX Brian Branquinho
21 GK Template:Country data LUX Eric Schoeben
22 MF Template:Country data GER Daniel Kurz
23 MF Template:Country data POR Jugue Pandim
24 MF Template:Country data FRA Hamza Mourchid
25 MF Template:Country data FRA Youri Coutin
28 FW Template:Country data LUX Glenn Useldinger
30 DF Template:Country data LUX Nelson Mendonca Ribeiro (on loan from FC Victoria Rosport)
32 GK Template:Country data BIH Ivan Tiric

Managers

References

Template:Reflist

External links

  1. a b Script error: No such module "citation/CS1".
  2. 1. Mannschaft, csg.lu, 1 March 2024