Ølstykke Fodbold Club Danish pronunciation: [ˈølstøkə]; also known as Ølstykke FC or ØFC) is an association football club based in the town of Ølstykke on Zealand, Denmark. The men's team competes in the Series 1, the sixth tier of the Danish football league system and the second tier of the regional DBU Zealand competitions.

Ølstykke FC
Full nameØlstykke Fodbold Club
Short nameØFC
Founded18 May 1918; 105 years ago (1918-05-18)
GroundØlstykke Stadium,
Ølstykke
Capacity3,000 (400 seats)
ChairmanMichael Hansen
ManagerChristoffer Støvring
Nicklas Engslev Hansen
LeagueSeries 1
2019–20Series 2, Group 2, 1st (promoted)

The club was founded on 18 May 1918 as Ølstykke Idrætsforening, as the club also had a basketball department. In 1986, the name was changed to Ølstykke FC as the club wanted to focus solely on football.

History edit

Formation and rise through the divisions edit

Ølstykke Idrætsforening (Ø.I.F.) was founded as a sports association on 18 May 1918 with Aksel Larsen as the club's first chairman, and over the years had both association football and basketball as its main departments. The club joined the Zealand FA in 1938.[1] In September 1986, the sports association was dissolved, but already in January 1986, the football department was formed as an independent association under the new name Ølstykke Fodbold Club 1918 (ØFC) at a general board meeting.[2] On 11 January 1986, Ølstykke Idræts Union was established at the founding general meeting and was to function as an umbrella organization for all sports associations in Ølstykke and a mouthpiece for, among others, Ølstykke Municipality.[2] The board had a year before expressed a desire to focus solely on football and channel future funds and income to the club's first team under the project Resultater for alle pengene ("Results for all the money"). The first team experienced a series of successive promotions, starting from the local DBU Zealand Series 1 in 1981, to the Denmark Series in 1986 and finally advancing to the then third best Danish football series, 3rd Division East, in the 1988 season.[2][3]

The club had previously flirted with the idea of becoming the first non-professional club in the Danish Superliga, the highest tier of the Danish football league system, which was said in half-serious half-joking fashion, and was to signal that the club's management had no intentions of running a professional football organization despite a promotion.[4] This stance changed at the beginning of 1996, when permission was granted to introduce professional football, including a new Aktieselskab (a holding company of sorts) with its own separate management, with the aim of ensuring greater continuity in the first-team squad.[4] The club's first team played in the second tier for a number of seasons, with the team's best result being a 5th place (only one spot and three points from promotion to the Superliga), which happened in the spring season of 1995 in the former Kvalifikationsligaen.[5] The club's best result in the Danish Cup is reaching the semi-finals two seasons in a row, the 1989–90 season and the 1990–91 season.[6][7] Former first team coaches for the club's first team include Michael Schäfer (1996–1998), Benny Johansen (2002–2004), Michele Guarini (2004–2006) and Clement Cliford (2008).

Plans of Egedal mergers edit

At the beginning of the 2000s, a youth collaboration was formed for the age groups U16, U17 and U19 between Ølstykke FC and nearby football clubs Stenløse Boldklub and Slagslunde-Ganløse Idrætsforening under the common team name "Team Egedal".[8][9]

The first team which was represented in the higher tiers was renamed FC Egedal on 1 July 2009, and a new logo was created alongside a new green and white uniform, with plans of functioning as a professional superstructure of its parent club after an approval was granted by the Danish Football Union (DBU).[10][11] Prior to this, the club board had failed in an attempt to buy out neighbour club Stenløse Boldklub to establish a broad elite superstructure between the two clubs.[11][12][13][9] Italian head coach, Giuseppe Favasuli, who took over as head coach in Ølstykke in May 2008, was scheduled to continue as the first head coach of the elite club's senior team in the Danish 2nd Division West.[14] However, all plans were abandoned shortly after, at the end of July of the same year, due to major financial problems in the professional company behind the elite team.[15][16] As a consequence of its filing for bankruptcy in the DBU, the first team was forcibly relegated down two divisions before the start of the new season, and had to start the 2009–10 season in the highest regional division of the DBU Zealand, the Zealand Series.

In 2011, the club eventually merged with the neighboring club Stenløse Boldklub and became SC Egedal.[17] In 2015, Stenløse left the merger, and Ølstykke FC was re-established in Series 3, one of the bottom tiers of Danish football.

Honours edit

Season-by-season results edit

Season Pos Pts Pld W D L GF GA GD
05-06: Viasat Sport Divisionen (pending) #11/16 19 15 5 4 6 18 20 −2
04-05: Viasat Sport Divisionen #13/16 30 30 8 6 16 39 68 −29
03-04: 1. Division #7/16 43 30 13 4 13 59 53 +6
02-03: 1. Division #8/16 41 30 11 8 11 65 61 +4
01-02: 2. Division #2/16 59 30 18 5 7 60 32 +28
00-01: Faxe Kondi Divisionen #15/16 30 30 8 6 16 38 76 −38
99-00: Faxe Kondi Divisionen #10/16 36 30 9 9 12 42 60 −18
98–99: 2. Division #3/16 51 30 13 9 8 72 52 +20

Green denotes promotion, red denotes relegation.

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ See. "Sjællandsk Fodbold Gennem Tiderne" — volume 1 and 2, Edited by Axel Alstrup, Østergaards Forlag — Odense, 1954, pages 579-581.
  2. ^ a b c Jørgen F. Nielsen (2004). "Fodbold i Ølstykke - ØIF/ØFC 1972-2003 / ØFC Krønikken". Ølstykke Fodbold Club. pp. 107 (Oversigt over 1. holdets placering i rækkerne gennem 25 år).
  3. ^ Henrik Haslund. "Dansk klubfodbold - Danmarksturneringen i fodbold - Oversigt for Ølstykke FC". www.haslund.info. Retrieved 2 September 2009. Archived
  4. ^ a b "ØFC's historie". Ølstykke Fodbold Club. 2008. Retrieved 2 September 2009. Archived
  5. ^ Henrik Haslund. "Danmarksturneringen 1994/1995 - Kvalifikationsligaen (forår)". www.haslund.info. Retrieved 2 September 2009. Archived
  6. ^ Henrik Haslund. "DBUs Landspokalturnering 1989/90 - Deltagere". www.haslund.info. Retrieved 2 September 2009. Archived
  7. ^ Henrik Haslund. "DBUs Landspokalturnering 1990/91 - Deltagere". www.haslund.info. Retrieved 2 September 2009. Archived
  8. ^ Team Egedal styregruppen. "Team Egedal et klubsamarbejde i talentudvikling". Ølstykke Fodbold Club. Retrieved 2 September 2009. Archived
  9. ^ a b Jesper Helmin (27 December 2008). "Stenløse afviser FC Egedal". bold.dk. Retrieved 2 September 2009. Archived
  10. ^ Søren Houlind (9 May 2009). "DBU godkender FC Egedal". bold.dk. Retrieved 2 September 2009. Archived
  11. ^ a b Bestyrelsesformand Peter Nørris Dalsgaard (30 July 2009). "FC Egedal trækker sig fra dansk topfodbold". Ølstykke Fodbold A/S. Retrieved 2 September 2009. Archived
  12. ^ Pierre Vendelboe (12 September 2008). "Ølstykke: Samarbejde den eneste vej". bold.dk. Retrieved 2 September 2009. Archived
  13. ^ Jesper Helmin (18 December 2008). "FC Egedal ser dagens lys". bold.dk. Retrieved 2 September 2009. Archived
  14. ^ Jepser Helmin (6 August 2009). "Vemodigt farvel i Ølstykke". bold.dk. Retrieved 2 September 2009. Archived
  15. ^ Forhenværende bestyrelsesformand Peter Nørris Dalsgaard (9 August 2009). "Efterskrift om Ølstykke Fodbold A/S". Ølstykke Fodbold A/S. Retrieved 2 September 2009. Archived
  16. ^ Jesper Helmin (3 August 2009). "FC Egedal i nye problemer". bold.dk. Retrieved 2 September 2009. Archived
  17. ^ Kenneth Tanzer (11 February 2011). "Fodboldklubber lægges sammen". lokalavisen.dk. Lokalavisen. Retrieved 23 July 2020.

External links edit