Doing Goals

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Archive for March, 2010

Malmö FF: Club Profile

Monday, March 8th, 2010

The 1979 European Cup is best remembered for Brian Clough’s Nottingham Forest defying all expectations and winning Europe’s highest honour. In a competition that included the likes of Liverpool, Real Madrid and Juventus, to this day it seems unthinkable that it should be won by a club as unfashionable as Nottingham Forest. But what many people fail to appreciate is that the achievements of Malmö FF, their opponents in the final at Munich, were just as if not more remarkable.

Clough at least had the luxury of being able to make £1 million singings from all four corners of the British Isles. At the time Malmö FF was a semi-professional club consisting predominately of locally recruited players. By the time they reached the final the squad was so depleted by injuries that they were forced to field two 19 year-olds in the starting eleven, and could only muster four substitutes. By all accounts it was a match where Forest did all the attacking and Malmö had no other choice than to defend gallatantly. In the end they lost 1-0. Yet no other Swedish club has every progressed so far in Europe’s premier club competition, and it is an achievement that Malmö remain proud of today.

As mentioned in previous posts, Malmö FF make up the big three of Swedish football along side IFK Göteborg and AIK. They’ve won a stack of titles, the most recent being 2004. They have a huge following and the Malmö klacken always makes for an impressive sea of light blue and white, interrupted with the bright red and yellow of the Skåne flag. Malmö Support, their main supporter group, is quite possibly the biggest single supporter group in Sweden. Currently they have 2800 members, and once had membership as high as 5800 in 2004.

As with the city of Malmö itself, the club and support base have a more multinational and cosmopolitan make-up. An article in the Göteborg Posten’s season guide published yesterday pointed out that nine of MFF players are of “invandrarbakgrund” (migrant background), more than any other Allsvenskan club, leading the GP to dub them the most intergrated club in the Allsvenskan. It is no coincidence that the first ever black player to play for Sweden (Jean-Paul Vondenburg in 1990) and the first Muslim (Yksel Osmanovski in 1998) both played for Malmö FF. Malmö Support have also made anti-racism a core value of their organisation. As far as I’ve seen, with the exception of clubs built from migrant communities, MFF are the only Swedish club that has translated their website into Balkan languages.

Malmö, once famous for its shipyards, is proud of its working class origins. Much like Liverpool FC, another strong and historically successful club from a traditional working class city, today the club is a financial powerhouse. Malmö FF were the first Swedish club to go fully professional, and are the only club that owns their own stadium. Some of Sweden’s best players, most notably Zlatan Ibrahimović, have started their careers at MFF and selling them on has boosted the club’s finances significantly.

Why Might I have Heard of Them?

The 1979 European Cup would have been the peak of Malmö FF’s international fame.

Any players, past or present, I might know?

Malmö FF have produced some of Sweden’s best players. The most recent stars to wear the Sky-Blue are Zlatan Ibrahimović, Daniel Majstorović, Markus Rosenburg, Behrang Safari and Ola Toivonen.

Of their current players Daniel Andersson is a former Swedish international, while Daniel Larsson and Guillermo Molins are starting to break into the squad now. Nigerian international Edward Ofere has been linked to clubs abroad, and has lived here long enough he could potentially play for Sweden if Lars Lagerbäck decides there is no room for him in the Nigerian team. Manager Roland Nilsson used to play for Sheffield Wednesday and Coventry, and even managed Coventry for a while.

Colours and kit: Light blue and white. Light blue shirts with white shorts.  (Think Manchester City or Lazio.)

Nicknames: Himmelsblått (The Sky Blues)

Home Ground: Swedbank Stadion

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Helsingborg IF: Club Profile

Monday, March 8th, 2010

The first thing that strikes me about Helsingborg is that there seems to be something about the club that entices loyalty from its players. Like all Swedish clubs they’ve lost a lot of players to the rest of Europe, but with HIF they nearly always come back. The prime example is Henrik Larsson, who first left the Reds in 1993, and after a distinguished career with Feyenoord, Celtic and Barcelona, he returned in 2006. He’d arguably won the 2006 Champions League Final single-handedly for Barcelona and could have continued playing there, but he instead choose to return to this boyhood club. In 2007 he spent 10 weeks on loan at Manchester United, and again could have made the move permanent if he really wanted. But again he turned down the chance to earn exceedingly more money to fulfil a pledge to play for Helsingborg IF.

Henke isn’t alone. This winter both Mattias Lindström and Erik Edman have returned, and join Marcus Lantz and Christoffer Andersson as former youth players who initially left for Europe but got drawn back. Lindström played for Gais last season, and in my view was easily our best player (even more important than league leading goal scorer Wanderson) but as he stressed to all the Gaisare when he left, Helsingborg is his hometown and HIF have always been his club.

As the club state on the English version of their website (in classic Swenglish): “The history has a great part in the commitment. There have been years with great success, but also with setbacks, but no indifference. HIF stirs the feelings. If you are travelling the country and mention that you are from Helsingborg – yes, then HIF come up immediately.”

Of late the Helsingborg youth academy has produced an impressive array of talented youngsters, including Rasmus Jönsson, Pär Hansson and Joel Ekstrand. However the most exciting is Sebastian Carlsen who is currently on load at Inter Milan and could potentially become a full time signing next summer. Based on current trends, he’ll be back at the Milk Cow before the decade’s end.

As one of the more populated regions of Sweden, Skåne has a number of football clubs and thus Skåne derbies are common. But the biggest and most significant is that between Helsingborg IF and Malmö FF. These are the two biggest clubs in the region, and it is common for both to be amongst the title contenders each season. It’s a fierce rivalry, equally to anything in Stockholm or Göteborg.

Why Might I have Heard of Them?

In 2000 Helsingborg produced a huge upset by defeated Inter Milan to qualify for the Champions League Group Stages. No Swedish club has qualified since.  In 2007/08, they qualified for the last 32 of the UEFA Cup before being knocked out by PSV Eindhoven.

Any players, past or present, I might know?

By far the best known Helsingborg player is Henrik Larsson, whose photo is still stuck all over the club’s website despite retiring last season. His number 17 shirt has been retired with him. Kenyan international McDonald Mariga, who currently plays for Inter Milan, played for Helsingborg until 2008. Swedish international Erik Edman, who returns to the club this season, recently played for Tottenham and Wigan.

Colours and kit: Red shirts with blue shorts.

Nicknames: Di röe (the Reds), Mjölkkossan (the Milk Cow)

Home Ground: Olympia

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