2015–16 FC Basel season

The 2015-16 FC Basel season was the club's 123rd season and their 21st consecutive season in the top flight of Swiss football since their promotion in the 1993-94 season. Basel's 2015-16 Swiss Super League campaign began on July 19 at home against Vaduz. In addition to the Swiss Super League, Basel also participated in the season's Champions League, Europa League, and Swiss Cup.

FC Basel
2015–16 season
FC Basel Logo
OwnerFCB Holding AG
ChairmanBernhard Heusler
ManagerUrs Fischer
GroundSt. Jakob-Park, Basel, Switzerland
Super League1st
Swiss CupQuarter-finals
Champions LeaguePlay-off round
Europa LeagueRound of 16
Top goalscorerLeague: Marc Janko (16)
All: Marc Janko (21)
Highest home attendanceSwiss League:
33,360 vs. Young Boys
(25 October 2015)
Champions League:
18,200 vs. Lech Poznań
(5 August 2015)
Europa League:
22,550 vs. Fiorentina
(26 November 2015)
Lowest home attendanceSwiss League:
24,558 vs. Thun
(10 May 2016)
Champions League:
15,620 vs. Maccabi Tel Aviv
(19 August 2015)
Europa League:
17,275 vs. Belenenses
(22 October 2015)

Club edit

FC Basel Holding AG edit

FC Basel Holding AG is a holding company that owns 75% of FC Basel 1893 AG. The club itself owns the other 25%. FC Basel 1893 AG is responsible for all decisions that affect FC Basel as a club, including the operational business, youth department, and back office.

Club management edit

The FC Basel AGM took place on 27 April 2015 in Basel's congress center,[1] comprising

Chairman   Bernhard Heusler
Vice Chairman   Adrian Knup
Finances   Stephan Werthmüller
Sportdirector   Georg Heitz
Marketing   René Kamm
Director   Reto Baumgartner
Director   Dominik Donzé
Director   Benno Kaiser
Ground (capacity and dimensions) St. Jakob-Park (38,512[2]
(37,500 for international matches)[3] / 120x80 m)

Updated to match played 27 April 2015
Source: FCB Official Site

Team management edit

On June 18, 2015, Basel announced Urs Fischer's appointment as the first team head coach on a three-year contract. His assistants were Marco Walker and Markus Hoffmann. Furthermore, Massimo Colomba stayed on the team as the goalkeeping coach in addition to his position as the head of the FCB Youth System. Thomas Häberli was the coach of the youth team (U-21) until October. Due to poor results, he was asked to step back, after which Massimo Ceccaroni coached the team.

Position Staff
Manager   Urs Fischer (since 18 June 2015)
1 Assistant manager   Marco Walker
2 Assistant manager   Markus Hoffmann
Goalkeeper Coach   Massimo Colomba
Team Administration   Gustav Nussbaumer
Youth Team Coach   Thomas Häberli
  Massimo Ceccaroni (since October 2015)
Youth Team Co-Coach   Roland Heri

Last updated: 1 July 2015
Source: FCB Official Site

Overview edit

Off-season and pre-season edit

Team captain Marco Streller retired from professional football at the end of the 2014-15 season. Between 2000 and 2004 and from 2007 to 2015, Streller played 418 games for Basel, scoring 185 goals. Two hundred thirty-three of these games were in the Swiss Super League, 22 in the Swiss Cup, 70 in UEFA European competitions (Champions League, UEFA Cup Europa League, and UIC), and 93 were friendly games. He scored 111 goals in the domestic league, 9 in the domestic cup, 24 in European competitions, and the other 41 were scored during test games.[4]

In addition to Streller, another six first-team players departed at the end of the season: Derlis González to Dynamo Kyiv, Fabian Schär to 1899 Hoffenheim, Fabian Frei to Mainz 05, Serey Die to VfB Stuttgart, and Giovanni Sio to Rennes, while Arlind Ajeti's contract expired.

New arrivals included Michael Lang from Grasshopper, Daniel Høegh from Odense, Zdravko Kuzmanović from Internazionale, and Manuel Akanji from FC Winterthur. Marc Janko signed on a free transfer from Sydney FC, and Mirko Salvi returned from loan to FC Biel-Bienne.

Matías Delgado was named the new captain, and Marek Suchý was named vice-captain.

Mid-season break and Squad Changes edit

During the winter break, there were several changes in the squad. On January 14, 2014, Ivan Ivanov sustained a knee injury in a friendly match against Eintracht Braunschweig, causing him to miss the rest of the 2013-14 season, which extended into the 2014-15 season. On December 15, 2015, while recovering from injury, he was released from the club by mutual consent.[5] Zdravko Kuzmanović was sent on loan to Udinese.[6] Shkelzen Gashi, the previous season's top scorer, moved to the Colorado Rapids. Albian Ajet was transferred to FC Augsburg.[7] Yoichiro Kakitani was transferred to Cerezo Osaka.[8] One notable transfer was midfielder Mohamed Elneny's departure to English Premier League side Arsenal.[9]

Elneny's departure spurred further changes, signing three midfield players. On 8 December 2015, the club announced Andraž Šporar's arrival from Olimpija Ljubljana.[10] On 2 January 2016, the club announced the signing of Alexander Fransson from IFK Norrköping.[11] Lastly, on 12 January, Renato Steffen from Young Boys joined.[12] All three of these signings were four-and-a-half-year contracts.

The campaign edit

Domestic League edit

First half of season

Basel's 2015-16 Swiss Super League season began with a victory at home against Vaduz on 18 July. Basel started the season well, winning each of their first eight matches; scoring 22 goals, and conceding 7. They suffered their first defeat in Stade de Suisse 3-4 against Young Boys. After their first defeat in the domestic campaign, they won four of their next five games; with a draw against Zürich in Letzigrund, where the final score was 2-2. Basel suffered their first home defeat of the campaign at the beginning of November against GC. By the winter break, Basel led the league table with 43 points, 10 points ahead of the Grasshoppers, and 15 ahead of the Young Boys.

Second half of season

Basel started the second half of the season with three straight wins, a 3-0 against Luzern, 4-0 away against GC, and 5-1 at home against Vaduz. In the first 15 games of the second half of the season, they won 11 and drew 4. On matchday 31, 30 April, the home win against Sion gave Basel a 16-point lead in the league table with just five matches left to play. Basel ended the last part of the season with two defeats in their last three games. The domestic season concluded with Basel winning the championship, Young Boys in second, Luzern third, and Zürich suffering relegation.[13]

Conclusion

Basel's final point tally for the season was 83, which was 14 points more than young boys in second, and 29 more than Luzern in third. Basel won 26 games, drawing five, and losing five. They managed to score 88 league goals while conceding 38. Marc Janko was the team's top scorer with 16 goals in 20 outings, and he scored a hattrick during their 4-2 home victory against Zürich. Team captain Matías Delgado was the second-top goal scorer with 11 goals and had the most assists on the team with 12. Luca Zuffi made the most appearances, he played all 36 league games.

Swiss Cup edit

Basel's objective for the 2015-16 Swiss Cup was to win the cup. They finished second place in each of the previous three seasons: In 2013 against GC, in 2014 against Zürich, and in 2015 against Sion.

Meyrin (15 August 2015)

In the first round, Basel was drawn away against FC Meyrin, who at that time played in the 2. Liga Interregional, the fifth tier of Swiss football. The match was played in Stade des Arberes, with an attendance of 2,100 spectators. Around the 34th minute, Matías Delgado headed a ball to Albian Ajeti, who connected with the ball through a left-footed shot, making it 1-0. Shkëlzen Gashi's pass to Mohamed Elneny opened the midfielder up to make the score 2-0. Just 60 seconds later Elneny on the right passed inside to Ajeti, assisting him in scoring his second goal that evening, and making it 3-0. Another two minutes later, Philipp Degen's low cross came to Delgado who then added to Basel's three-goal lead. The match concluded with Basel winning 4-0 and advancing to the next round.[14]

YF Juventus (20 September 2015)

In round 2, Basel was drawn away against YF Juventus. Due to safety reasons, the match was played at St. Jakob-Park with an attendance of 4,606 spectators. It was a special game for Luca Zuffi as he played for Basel; his two brothers (Sandro and Nico) played for YF Juventus. 15 minutes into the match, Matías Delgado pushed a diagonal pass to the right, and Davide Callà connected with a right-footed shot to put Basel a goal up. Half an hour into the match Basel went up 2-0 with a cross from Callà on the right, which was complemented by Delgado's run to the far post to nod the ball home. Following a goal kick at 50 minutes, Nico Zuffi and Kakitani connected to make it 3-0. In the final actions of the match, Walter Samuel committed a foul. Samuel was given a yellow card, and YF Juventus were awarded a penalty by referee Alain Bieri. Mychell Ruan Da Silva Chagas converted the penalty kick, and the final score was 4-1 to Basel, advancing to the third round.[15]

Muttenz (28 October 2015)

In the third round, Basel played against local amateur team SV Muttenz, the first time that the two sides played against each other in a competitive match. At that time Muttenz played in the 2. Liga Interregional, the fifth tier of Swiss football. The match was played at the Margelacker, with a stadium record attendance of 5,800. Shkëlzen Gashi, set up Daniel Hoegh's 1-0 after 25 minutes. Gashi himself went on to score a hat-trick in the match, his goals came at the 35th, 62nd, and 72nd-minute mark. Immediately after the break, Muttenz responded by converting a penalty, awarded through Manuel Akanji's foul on Thomas Eggenberger. In the 75th minute, Albian Ajeti converted a penalty kick to make the final score 5-1, advancing to the quarterfinal.[16][17]

FC Sion (13 December 2015)

In the quarterfinal, Basel played away against FC Sion, the same team they lost to in the previous season's final. The match was played in the Stade Tourbillon with an attendance of 9,200 spectators. The match allowed Basel the opportunity to redeem their defeat in the previous season's final. Sion went 1-0 up in the 37th minute, from a goal by Pa Modou, and in the 66th minute, Ebenezer Assifuah added a second. In the 79th minute, Elneny converted a free kick to make it 2-1. In the 89th minute referee Stephan Klossner awarded Basel a penalty after a duel between Léo Lacroix and Breel Embolo, Marc Janko scored the penalty kick. In extra time, the score remained tied, leading to a penalty shootout. Reto Ziegler missed for Sion, but Birkir Bjarnason and Walter Samuel both missed for Basel. Sion advanced to the semi-final 4-3 on penalties.[18]

Conclusion

Sion were beaten 3-0 by FC Zürich in the semi-final. FC Zürich faced Lugano in the final, beating them 1-0, FC Zürich were crowned champions.

From the FCB's point of view, the domestic cup campaign was a disappointment due to not meeting the set goal. Additionally, It was their fifth defeat of the season, and their second season of getting knocked out by FC Sion in the domestic cup.

Champions League edit

Basel entered the season's Champions League in the third qualifying round. The draw for the third qualifying round was held on 17 July 2015, and Basel was drawn against the Polish site Lech Poznań.

Lech Poznań (29 July 2015)

The first leg was played in Poznan at the INEA Stadion with an attendance of 25,478 spectators. The home team had the first two proper chances of the game. Nevertheless, Basel took the lead in the 24th minute, and Michael Lang headed the ball home from a corner by Luca Zuffi. Just two minutes later, Poznań equalized with a header from Denis Thomalla. At the 66th-minute mark, Lech defender Tomasz Kędziora saw a red card as he brought down Bjarnason in the box. Basel was awarded a penalty; nevertheless, keeper Jasmin Burić saved Shkëlzen Gashi's penalty. Right around the 77th-minute mark, Marc Janko hammered a loose ball home to give Basel the lead. In the 2nd minute of injury time, Davide Callà scored a goal. The final score concluded with a 3–1 win for Basel in Poznan.

The second leg was played in Basel at St. Jakob-Park, on 5 August, with an attendance of 18,196. The 3-1 cushion from the first leg meant coach Urs Fischer's team could afford breathing space in the second leg. Most of the match was uneventful due to Basel's pragmatic approach to the match, and Poznan's inability to break them down. Nevertheless, Birkir Bjarnason's goal in the final minutes of the match gave Basel a 1-0 lead and sealed the victory. To conclude, Basel advanced to the next round with an aggregate score of 4-1 over two legs.

Maccabi Tel Aviv (19 August 2015)

The draw for the play-off round was held on 7 August 2015. Basel was drawn against Maccabi Tel Aviv. Both of the teams played each other twice in the 2013-14 season, once in the Champions League and after in the Europa League. Basel won on both occasions. The first leg of the tie was held at St. Jakob-Park with an attendance of 15,620 spectators. Basel started well, and was on top early. However, Marc Janko was injured in the 12th minute and was replaced by Shkëlzen Gashi. Maccabi Tel Aviv went 1-0 up in the 31st minute from Avi Rikan's free kick. In the final minutes of the first half, defender Tal Ben Haim fouled Delgado in the box. Basel was awarded a penalty, and Delgado converted to even things out at 1-1. At the 88th-minute mark, Breel Embolo put Basel in the lead by connecting with a pass from Elneny. Nevertheless, Maccabi was not done, six minutes into injury time Zahavi headed the ball home from Dor Micha's cross to make it 2-2. The final score in Basel concluded with a 2-2 draw.

Following the 2-2 draw at St. Jakob-Park, Basel needed a win away from home at the Bloomfield Stadium. The match was played on 19 August, with an attendance of 13,350 spectators. Early into the first half, Luca Zuffi's free kick put Basel up 1-0. However, Basel's lead did not last for too long. Nikola Mitrović's through ball found Eran Zahavi, Zahavi outran Walter Samuel, and his shot beat Tomáš Vaclík at the near post. Basel dominated for the rest of the match but failed to find the much-anticipated goal. The final aggregate score in Maccabi concluded with a 3-3 draw, Maccabi advanced due to an away goals advantage.

Conclusion

From Basel's point of view, the Champions League campaign was disappointing as they missed their first objective of the season which was to participate in the season's Champions League group stage. However, their hopes for European glory were not diminished, due to getting an entry into the seasons Europa league.

Europa League edit

Because Basel failed to qualify for the Champions League group stage, they dropped into the 2015-16 UEFA Europa League group stage. The draw was held on 28 August 2015 at the Grimaldi Forum in Monaco and Basel was drawn into Group I, together with Fiorentina, Lech Poznań, and Belenenses. The club's aim for the team was to remain in the competition over the winter break, preferably as group winner or otherwise in the second position, and thus advance to the knockout phase.

Fiorentina (17 September 2015)

Basel's first game on matchday 1 was played away at the Stadio Artemio Franchi in Florence with an attendance of 15,212 spectators. Fiorentina's new first-team manager was Basel's ex-manager, Paulo Sousa. Both teams started well, but the guests were quicker to deliver. Nikola Kalinić scored a goal in the fourth minute for Fiorentina, and despite being put under constant pressure by the visitors, they held on to the lead until well into the second half of the game. Fiorentina captain Gonzalo Rodríguez was sent off after 66 minutes. The Argentine saw the red card for his hard foul against Breel Embolo far away from his own goal, and therefore, his tackle was unnecessary. Following his dismissal, FCB took charge and succeeded in scoring the equalizer. Birkir Bjarnason beat home goalkeeper Luigi Sepe on 71 minutes with a low drive from 15 meters out. Eight minutes later, Mohamed Elneny sealed the fightback after a good build-up. His super-rising drive from outside the box completed the comeback success. With this 2-1 win, Basel extended their unbeaten run to five matches in Europe this term.[19]

Lech Poznań (1 October 2015)

Matchday 2 was the first home game in the Europa League group stage and was against Lech Poznań, who had been opponents in the Champions League qualifying earlier in the season. Lech's Swiss midfielder Darko Jevtić was signed from Basel after a successful loan spell. The then 22-year-old was born in Basel and came through the youth ranks at the Swiss club. This was his second visit to the St. Jakob-Park and his second appearance for Lech, he had played double the number of times here for Lech as he had for FCB. The match was played in front of 17,567 spectators. The first half passed without much action, but the home team dominated. Icelandic midfielder Birkir Bjarnason brought a long ball down with his chest at the edge of the penalty area, kept his balance under pressure, and then turned a good finish past keeper Maciej Gostomski to give the hosts the lead after 55 minutes. In the 90th minute, Luca Zuffi made a cross from the right, Marc Janko controlled the ball with his chest and laid off for the waiting Breel Embolo, who finished with a powerful low volley. The final score of 2-0 was a deserved result.[20]

Belenenses (22 October 2015)

The third game in the group stage was the home match against Belenenses. 17,275 fans were in the St. Jakob-Park on a cloudy evening. Basel took an early lead after 15 minutes, Matías Delgado delivered an inswinging corner kick toward the back post from the left and Michael Lang jumped highest to power his header into the goal from five meters out. Belenenses leveled after 27 minutes with their first chance. A long ball forward was headed clear by Marek Suchý, but it dropped to Luís Leal, who was 25 meters from the goal. He hammered a low volley into the bottom corner and the ball bounced high to evade the dive of Germano Vailati. During the extra time of the first half, Leal ran clear on the right flank, rushed into the penalty area, and played the ball beyond Vailati across the face of the goal to Kuca Miranda who had the simplest of finishes, tapping into the unguarded goal from just three meters. During the second half, Basel played forward non-stop, they created opportunities but were unable to score the equalizer. Up until this 1-2 defeat, Basel had been unbeaten this season, with nine games in the domestic league and six in Europe.[21]

Belenenses (5 November 2015)

The return game against Belenenses on matchday 4 was played in Estádio do Restelo with an attendance of 4,802 spectators two weeks after the home game. The referee was Tamás Bognár of the Hungarian Football Federation. Basel took early command; a first chance came from Breel Embolo nine minutes into the match, after good dribbling, he hit the post. Basel continued to dominate their opponents with good moves but did not create good goal-scoring opportunities. It was not until near halftime that their efforts were rewarded. In the 44th-minute, Embolo was fouled in the penalty area by Filipe Ferreira, and Marc Janko scored from the spot. The Austrian international striker missed the next first-class chance in the 52nd-minute solo in front of the well-parring keeper Hugo Ventura. Embolo himself scored the second goal after being played free by Luca Zuffi's long deep pass into the penalty box which was flicked on by Janko. With this 2-0 victory, Basel avenged their matchday-three loss. Basel took command of the table and left Belenenses on the brink of elimination.[22]

Fiorentina (26 November 2015)

Matchday 5 was Basel's third and last home match in the Europa League group stage was the return game against Fiorentina. Paulo Sousa returned to St. Jakob-Park, but this time to the visitors' bench. Basel's first-choice goalkeeper Tomáš Vaclík injured himself shortly before kick-off and the new head coach Urs Fischer was forced to replace him. Fischer chose Germano Vailati and left Mirko Salvi on the bench. Basel had a nervous start to the game and Federico Bernardeschi ended his run of 11 games without a goal with a first-half double. The first came at 23 minutes. Jean-Paul Boëtius was put under pressure by three players, he lost the ball and the guests quickly switched over and Bernardeschi shot home after a clever through pass to make it 1-0. The second came on 36 minutes, a bad goal-kick by keeper Vailati was won by Fiorentina's midfield, 3/4 quick passes, and Bernardeschi side-footed home to give Fiorentina a two-goal lead. After 26 minutes, Facundo Roncaglia was punished with a red card by referee Ivan Kružliak from the Slovak Football Association after slamming his elbow into Breel Embolo's face. Basel fought their way back into the game, with Marek Suchý cutting the gap in the 40th minute. After a corner Luca Zuffi played a cross into the box, Embolo's header was parried by Luigi Sepe, but Suchý pushed the rebound in. Fiorentina defended the 2-1 lead largely sovereign, despite the visual superiority of the home team. There was a certain logic behind the fact that the FCB equalized following a standard. Following a corner, Mohamed Elneny equalized, at 74 minutes, from long range. Basel recovered after being two down to make it a 2-2 draw. Basel fought back to hold ten-man Fiorentina and stand three points above them in the group table.[23]

Lech Poznań (10 December 2015)

Basel was certain to finish top of the group before matchday six. For their last match, they had to travel to the INEA Stadion in Poznań. Lech Poznań had already lost to Basel three times this season and only a win would have given them any chance of making it through Group I. Unable to play were four Basel defenders, Manuel Akanji, Philipp Degen, and Daniel Høegh due to injury and Marek Suchý was out suspended. Walter Samuel was nominated, playing this match, he made his 100th UEFA club competition appearance, a landmark evening for the veteran defender. Reserve goalkeeper Germano Vailati was again Basel's starter because of first-choice goalkeeper Tomáš Vaclík's injury. In the 44th minute, Vailati injured himself as he played a long pass forward. Therefore, before half-time third-choice goalkeeper Mirko Salvi was substituted in and made his professional debut for the club. Adonis Ajeti also made his debut for the club after coming on as a substitute at half-time to replace Michael Lang.[24] Jean-Paul Boëtius scored the only goal five minutes after half-time, it was his first goal for the Swiss champions. FCB owed the victory to Jean-Paul Boëtius, Taulant Xhaka, and reserve keeper Salvi. Boëtius, because the Dutchman scored the 1-0 in the 50th minute, Xhaka because of his remarkable preparation down the right wing, and Salvi because he prevented Lech from equalizing with a strong one-on-one action a quarter of an hour before the end of the game.[25]

Conclusion

Basel ended this stage as group winners and Fiorentina were runners-up and both advanced to the knockout phase which started in February 2016. As group winners, Basel was seeded, but Fiorentina was not. The draw for the round of 32 was held on 14 December 2015. Fiorentina was drawn against Tottenham Hotspur, but with a draw at home and a defeat at White Hart Lane, this meant they were eliminated.

From the FCB point of view, as group winners, their aim was positively achieved. Their next aim was to remain in the competition for at least another round or perhaps two. Basel was drawn against the French site Saint-Étienne. The first leg was played on 18 February at 19:00 and the return leg in the St. Jakob-Park was played on 25 February 2016 at 21:05.

Saint-Étienne (18 February 2016)

The first leg of the round of 32 was played in the Stade Geoffroy-Guichard with an attendance of 27,013 fans against Saint-Étienne, but without Basel supporters due to the high-security alert following the terror attacks in Paris two months earlier. Basel went behind early, but came back from being two goals down, but ended up losing the match. Moustapha Sall in the fifth minute, following a free kick from the right that was flicked on to the far post, headed the ball across the goal and it bounced from the post first along and then over the line. Then Kévin Monnet-Paquet in the 39th minute headed a corner over Basel keeper Tomáš Vaclík into the net, to put the hosts 2-0 in the lead. Walter Samuel started Basel's fight-back just before half-time in the 44th minute, becoming the second-oldest goal scorer in the UEFA Europa League at age 37 years and 332 days; he is surpassed only by Molde FK's Daniel Hestad, who scored at age 40 years and 98 days in this season's group stage. A free kick on Basel's right flank was chested down by Breel Embolo and Walter Samuel, in falling, kicked the ball right-footed into the net. Soon after the break in the 56th minute, Marc Janko, via a penalty, put Basel level, and the guests continually pressed for their third goal. However, after a long clearance defender, Jean-Christophe Bahebeck scored for the home team in the 79th minute, against the run of play, to make the final score 3-2 in favour of Saint-Étienne.[26]

Return match (25 February 2016)

The return game was played a week later in the St. Jakob-Park with an attendance of 20,976 fans. Basel had to win to qualify for the next round, which was very apparent as Basel played forwards immediately and levelled the aggregate score as midfielder Luca Zuffi curled in a 25-yard free-kick at the 15-minute mark. Saint-Étienne went close, but goalkeeper Tomáš Vaclík saved the shot from substitute Romain Hamouma. Both teams were later reduced to ten men: In the 82nd minute, Saint-Étienne midfielder Valentin Eysseric collected two quick yellow cards for a foul and then a clash with Renato Steffen, while Basel's 19-year-old attacker Breel Embolo followed him off the pitch, also for a second caution. Saint-Étienne thought they had won it when captain Moustapha Sall netted from close range with just one minute of regular time left to play, only for Luca Zuffi to crash the ball home in added time to level the tie at 4-4 and send Basel through on the away goals rule.[27]

Sevilla (10 March 2016)

In the round of 16 Basel was drawn against Europa League cup holders Sevilla. The first leg was played in the St. Jakob-Park with an attendance of 22,403 fans. Sevilla had not won a European away game all season and Basel's home fixture against them was one of the more sober kinds of games. At seven minutes, Renato Steffen sent a good cross from the right and Marc Janko jumped high to head Basel's first chance from an unmarked position just a little bit too wide. Sevilla dominated possession thereafter. Steven Nzonzi went quite close with a header in the early minutes. Éver Banega twice found Coke with free kicks but the Sevilla captain was unable to find the target from either position. After the halftime break, Basel's resolve returned. The home team dominated for the first 15 minutes. Birkir Bjarnason blazed a shot off target from a loose ball after a Renato Steffen shot had been blocked. The Icelandic midfielder then crossed a good ball across the goal from the right, but substitute Adama Traoré miscued his attempted conversion. Then they started to lose their concentration as the game continued, but three good saves from Basel goalkeeper Tomáš Vaclík kept the home team in contention, he was very awake and saved with his feet after Nzonzi was played in from the right. Then he kept out Kevin Gameiro's low drive, going to the ground once more to repel Yevhen Konoplyanka as time ticked away. Basel got back into the game and started to dominate by moving forward quicker. Sevilla's midfielder Nzonzi's dismissal near the end of the game, after collecting two yellow cards within a few minutes of each other, offered Basel hope for victory, but Sevilla held firm.[28]

Return match (17 March 2016)

The return game against Sevilla was played a week later on 17 March 2016 at the Ramón Sánchez Pizjuán Stadium with an attendance of 35,546 fans. The referee was Deniz Aytekin of the German Football Association and he reported a good pitch on the clear, but cool evening. Before the fixture, it was clear that FCB needed to perform exceptionally well, in order to qualify for the quarter-finals of the competition. It would have been the fourth time in the club's history that FCB would have reached this stage of the competition. Sevilla and Basel both started slowly into the game, they sparred with each other, but gently and very inconsequentially for the greater part of the first period. The Spaniards had the better of the half-chances. Then, on 35 minutes defender Adil Rami opened the scoring as he stooped himself at full length, to head a José Antonio Reyes corner, from the left, into the goal for the opener, the ball came off Tomáš Vaclík's left-hand post. Despite this, an away goal at that stage of the match would have put Basel in advantage and they nearly managed that goal, keeper David Soria doing superbly to push away Renato Steffen's glanced effort. However, things unraveled very quickly for head coach Urs Fischer's side and the match slipped out of Basel's reach within just two minutes at the end of the first half. Reyes danced through the Basel defense, drawing Vaclík and his defenders toward him before placing a ball through for Kevin Gameiro to nudge the ball into the unguarded goal from close range. The Frenchman had his second goal before Basel had time to digest the situation. Just one minute later Michael Krohn-Dehli advanced with a quick run and was the provider of the cross that found Gameiro. The striker's header came back off the underside of the crossbar, yet he instantly swung out a leg to force the rebound over the line, hitting the woodwork again on its way in, to make it 3-0 at half-time. Basel showed only small signs of a fightback. Luca Zuffi's effort from 25 yards out was still rising as it flew over the crossbar. Breel Embolo missed two chances late in the game as the Swiss side was dumped out of the competition. The result extended Sevilla's run of Europa League home wins to 11, the longest in the competition's history, and put a dent in Basel's impressive away record in Europe this season.[29]

Conclusion

Beating Athletic Bilbao in the quarter-final and Shakhtar Donetsk in the semi-final, Sevilla advanced to the Europa League final. The final was played in the sold-out St. Jakob-Park in Basel with an attendance of 38,500 spectators on 18 May 2016 and Sevilla beat Liverpool 3-1, to win the competition. It was a dream for the club and the fans, as they made it three Europa League victories in succession.[30]

From the FCB's point of view, after being group winners and beating Saint-Étienne in the round of 32, advancing to the round of 16 was very positive. After a goalless draw in the first leg, FCB failed in the return leg against the defending cup holders Sevilla, losing disappointedly 3-0 in the away game at the Ramón Sánchez Pizjuán Stadium. It would have been a dream for the FCB to have reached the competition's final in its stadium, but then that's what the competition is about at this level, dreams. On the whole, the team's European campaign was a successful adventure and the club's aims had been achieved.

Basel's goal scorers in the competition were: Birkir Bjarnason in 10 games, Breel Embolo in 8 games, Mohamed Elneny in 5 games, Marc Janko in 9 games, and Luca Zuffi in 10 games, each with 2 goals, and Jean-Paul Boëtius in 4 games, Michael Lang in 10 games, Walter Samuel in 6 games and Marek Suchý in 9 games, each with one goal.[31]

Players edit

First team squad edit

The following is the list of the Basel first-team squad. It also includes players that were in the squad the day the season started on 18 July but subsequently left the club after that date.

As of 27 August 2015[32]

Note: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.

No. Pos. Nation Player
1 GK   CZE Tomáš Vaclík
3 DF   CIV Adama Traoré
4 DF   SUI Philipp Degen
5 DF   SUI Michael Lang
6 DF   ARG Walter Samuel
7 MF   SUI Luca Zuffi
8 MF   ISL Birkir Bjarnason
9 FW   SVN Andraž Šporar
10 MF   ARG Matías Delgado (Captain)
11 MF   ALB Shkëlzen Gashi
14 FW   JPN Yoichiro Kakitani
15 MF   SWE Alexander Fransson
16 DF   SUI Manuel Akanji
17 DF   CZE Marek Suchý (vice-captain)
18 GK   SUI Germano Vailati
19 DF   SWE Behrang Safari
No. Pos. Nation Player
21 FW   AUT Marc Janko
22 MF   SRB Zdravko Kuzmanović
23 GK   SUI Mirko Salvi
24 MF   SUI Renato Steffen
26 DF   DEN Daniel Høegh
27 DF   ALB Naser Aliji
28 MF   SUI Robin Huser
30 MF   SUI Cedric Itten
33 MF   EGY Mohamed Elneny
34 MF   ALB Taulant Xhaka
36 FW   SUI Breel Embolo
38 FW   SUI Albian Ajeti
39 MF   SUI Davide Callà
40 GK   SUI Dario Thürkauf
41 DF   SUI Eray Cömert
42 DF   SUI Charles Pickel
77 FW   NED Jean-Paul Boëtius

Out on loan edit

19 MF   SUI Musa Araz (on loan at Winterthur until 30 June 2016)
20 MF   SRB Veljko Simić (on loan at Schaffhausen from 30 December 2015 until 30 June 2016)[33]
22 MF   SRB Zdravko Kuzmanović (on loan at Udinese until 30 June 2016)[6]
23 GK   SUI Mirko Salvi (on loan at Lugano from 7 January until 30 June 2016)[34]
24 FW   EGY Ahmed Hamoudi (on loan at Zamalek until 30 June 2016)
27 DF   ALB Naser Aliji (on loan at Vaduz from 1 July until 10 September 2015)
35 FW   PRK Pak Kwang-ryong (on loan at Biel-Bienne until 30 June 2016)

2015 summer transfers edit

In edit

5 DF   SUI Michael Lang (from Grasshopper Club Zürich Free Transfer)
8 MF   ISL Birkir Bjarnason (from Pescara)[35]
21 FW   AUT Marc Janko (from Sydney FC Free Transfer)
22 MF   SRB Zdravko Kuzmanović (from Internazionale)
26 DF   DEN Daniel Høegh (from Odense BK)
77 FW   NED Jean-Paul Boëtius (from Feyenoord)

Out edit

FW   PAR Derlis González (to Dynamo Kyiv)
DF   SUI Fabian Schär (to 1899 Hoffenheim)
MF   SUI Fabian Frei (to Mainz 05)
GK   SUI Pascal Albrecht (to St. Gallen II Free Transfer)
DF   ALB Arlind Ajeti (to Unattached)
DF   ARG Gastón Sauro (to Columbus Crew)
FW   IRL Giovanni Sio (to Rennes)[36]
FW   SUI Marco Streller (end of career)

2015-16 winter transfers edit

In edit

9 FW   SVN Andraž Šporar (from Olimpija Ljubljana)[10]
15 MF   SWE Alexander Fransson (from IFK Norrköping)[37]
24 MF   SUI Renato Steffen (from Young Boys)[12]

Out edit

11 FW   ALB Shkelzen Gashi (to Colorado Rapids)[38]
15 DF   BUL Ivan Ivanov (contract beended mutual agreement)[5]
38 FW   SUI Albian Ajeti (to FC Augsburg)[7]
14 FW   JPN Yoichiro Kakitani (to Cerezo Osaka)[8]
33 MF   EGY Mohamed Elneny (to Arsenal)[9]

Results and fixtures edit

Kickoff times are in CET

Legend edit

  Win   Draw   Loss   Postponed

Friendly matches edit

Pre-season edit

27 June 2015 Pre-season Basel   4 – 1   SC Austria Lustenau Sportanlage Waldäcker, Herzogenbuchsee
14:30 Delgado   3' (1:0)
Delgado   11' (2:0)
Araz   37' (3:0)
Traoré   69' (4:1)
FCB summary   40' (3:1) Wiessmeier Attendance: 1,000
Referee:   Michael Brunner
Note: 100 years jubilee FC Herzogenbuchsee
3 July 2015 (2015-07-03) Pre-season Basel   1 – 2   1860 München Isarau Stadium Geretsried (Germany)
20:00 Kakitani   5' FCB summary   31' (o.g.) Vaclík
  34' Hain
Attendance: 1,800
Referee:   Florian Kornblum (TSV Chieming)
9 July 2015 (2015-07-09) Pre-season Basel   1 – 3   Shakhtar Donetsk Stade du Christ-Roi, Lens (Switzerland)
19:00 Janko   5' FCB summary   33', 70' Hladkyy
  85' Marlos
Attendance: 1,200
Referee:   Stephan Klossner
11 July 2015 (2015-07-11) Pre-season PSV   2 – 3   Basel Stadion FC Solothurn, Solothurn (Switzerland)
17:00 Bergwijn   37'
Hendrix   78'
Narsingh   81'
FCB summary   23' (pen.) Gashi
  45+2' Embolo
  90+3' Callà
Attendance: 1,950
Referee:   Adrien Jaccottet (Basel)
15 July 2015 (2015-07-15) Pre-season Basel   2 – 1   Bayer Leverkusen St. Jakob-Park, Basel
20:00 Embolo   23'
Al. Ajeti   52'
Kuzmanović   69'
Al. Ajeti   84'
FCB summary   15' Bender
  21' Bellarabi
  69' Stafylidis
Attendance: 13,224
Referee:   Stephan Klossner

Winter break edit

9 January 2016 Winter break Basel   3 – 2   FC Biel Youth Campus Basel, Münchenstein
14:30 Delgado   33' (1:0)
Itten   50' (2:0)
Itten   64' (3:1)
FCB summary   52' (2:1) Kololli
  55' (2:2) Kilezi
Attendance: 500
Referee:   Adrien Jaccottet (Basel)
16 January 2016 Training camp Basel   0 – 2   FC Augsburg Marbella Football Center, San Pedro de Alcántara
16:00 FCB summary   6' (0:1) Hong
  78' (0:2) Morávek
Attendance: 150
Referee:  
21 January 2016 Training camp Basel   1 – 1   SC Freiburg Marbella Football Center, San Pedro de Alcántara
16:00 Höhn   44' (o.g. 1:0) FCB summary   57' (1:1) Grifo Attendance: 75
Referee:   Juan Pedro Guarnido Peters
29 January 2016 Winter break Austria Wien   3 – 1   Basel Generali Arena, Vienna
18:00 Kayode   5' (1:0)
Grünwald   45' (2:1)
Gorgon   61' (3:1)
FCB summary   36' (1:1) Janko
  66' Xhaka
Attendance: 2,200
Referee:   Vladimir Lukenic
2 February 2016 Winter break Basel   4 – 2   Xamax Youth Campus Basel, Münchenstein
16:00 Steffen   4' (1:1)
Delgado   32' (pen. 2:1)
Delgado   54' (3:2)
Delgado   61' (4:2)
FCB summary   1' (0:1) Doudin
  34' (pen. 2:2) Doudin
Attendance: 500
Referee:   Adrien Jaccottet (Basel)

Swiss Super League edit

First half of season edit

19 July 2015 Round 1 Basel 2 – 0 Vaduz St. Jakob-Park, Basel
13:45 Delgado   10' (pen. 1:0)
Elneny   74'
Kakitani   80' (2:0)
Traoré   85'
FCB summary Attendance: 27,066
Referee:   Sandro Schärer
25 July 2015 Round 2 Grasshopper Club 2 – 3 Basel Letzigrund, Zürich
20:00 Dabour   30' (1:1)
Caio   32' (2:1)
Caio   90+1'
FCB summary   17' Kuzmanović
  21' (0:1) Gashi
  38' (2:2) Janko
  68' (2:3) Lang
  80' Janko
  84' Xhaka
  88' Elneny
Attendance: 9.600
Referee:   Alain Bieri (Solothurn)
1 August 2015 Round 3 Basel 3 – 0 Sion St. Jakob-Park, Basel
15:00 Delgado   27' (1:0)
Xhaka   45+1'
Traoré   69' (2:0)
Lacroix   89' (o.g. 3:1)
FCB summary
Summary
  25' Follonier
  34' Salatić
  45+1' Jagne
  67' Zverotić
  90+3' Lacroix
Attendance: 27,792
Referee:   Sascha Amhof
8 August 2015 Round 4 Luzern 1 – 3 Basel Swissporarena, Luzern
20:00 Lezcano   3' (1:0)
Sarr   50'
Jantscher   78'
FCB summary
[1]
  27' (1:1) Embolo
  29' Bjarnason
  33' (1:2) Embolo
  43' Safari
  53' Degen
  76' Callà
  78' Embolo
  90' (1:3) Delgado
Attendance: 14,748
Referee:   Sandro Schärer
12 August 2015 Round 5 Basel 3 – 1 Thun St. Jakob-Park, Basel
19:45 Janko   4' (1:0)
Lang   29'
Bjarnason   37'
Janko   49' (2:1)
Janko   55'
Gashi   78' (pen. 3:1)
Traoré   90'
FCB summary
[2]
  29' (pen. 1:1) Frontino
  52' Reinmann
  78' Schindelholz
  84' Bürki
Attendance: 27,034
Referee:   Alain Bieri
22 August 2015 Round 6 Lugano 1 – 3 Basel Cornaredo, Lugano
17:45 Piccinocchi   9' (1:0)
Urbano   35'
Sabbatini   49'
FCB summary   11' (pen. 1:1) Callà
  42' (1:2) Elneny
  48' (1:3) Callà
  62' Boëtius
  75' P. Degen
Attendance: 6,500
Referee:   Sandro Schärer
30 August 2015 Round 7 Basel 3 – 1 Zürich St. Jakob-Park, Basel
16:00 Lang   5' (1:0)
Gashi   71' (2:1)
Janko   85' (pen. 3:1)
FCB summary   38' (1:1) Kecojević
  41' Cabral
  53' Schneuwly
  84' Nef
Attendance: 30,579
Referee:   Nikolaj Hänni
12 September 2015 Round 8 Basel 2 – 1 St. Gallen St. Jakob-Park, Basel
20:00 Delgado   2' (pen. 1:0)
Suchý   42'
Janko   82' (2:0)
Xhaka   90+3'
FCB summary   18' Mutch
  40' Gelmi
  88' (2:1) Aratore
Attendance: 27,736
Referee:   Sascha Amhof
22 September 2015 Round 9 Young Boys 4 – 3 Basel Stade de Suisse, Bern
20:30 Sulejmani   5' (1:0)
Sulejmani   45' (2:1)
Gerndt   65' (3:1)
Gerndt   81' (4:2)
Mvogo   86'
Lecjaks   15'   89'
Steffen   90'
Vilotić   90+1'
FCB summary   17' Aliji
  23' (1:1) Embolo
  54' Kuzmanović
  74' (3:2) Suchý
  76' Xhaka
  90+1' (4:3) Janko
  after finish' Xhaka
Attendance: 19,409
Referee:   Stephan Klossner
26 September 2015 Round 10 Basel 3 – 1 Lugano St. Jakob-Park, Basel
20:00 Zuffi   39' (1:0)
Zuffi   57' (2:0)
Kuzmanović   81'
Bjarnason   84' (3:0)
FCB summary   90+4' (3:1) Čulina Attendance: 26,083
Referee:   Sébastien Pache
3 October 2015 Round 11 Zürich 2 – 2 Basel Letzigrund, Zürich
16:00 Gavranović   35' (1:0)
Sadiku   90+3' (2:2)
FCB summary   49' Lang
  52' (1:1) Janko
  81' Kuzmanović
  84' (1:2) Al. Ajeti
  90+4' Samuel
Attendance: 10,467
Referee:   Alain Bieri (Solothurn)
18 October 2015 Round 12 Sion 0 – 2 Basel Stade Tourbillon, Sion
13:45 Kouassi   28'
Assifuah   90+1'
FCB summary
Summary
  5' (0:1) Janko
  56' Manuel Akanji
  67'Elneny
  79'Gashi
  89' (0:2) Janko
  90+1' Vaclík
Attendance: 10,700
Referee:   Sandro Schärer
25 October 2015 Round 13 Basel 1 – 0 Young Boys St. Jakob-Park, Basel
16:00 Embolo   17'
Embolo   31' (1:0)
Safari   59'
Janko   85'
FCB summary
Summary
  30' Zakaria
  53' Vilotić
  26'   67' Wüthrich
  75' Bertone
Attendance: 33,360
Referee:   Alain Bieri
31 October 2015 Round 14 Vaduz 1 – 2 Basel Rheinpark Stadion, Vaduz
20:00 Avdijaj   2' (1:0)
Caballero   61'
FCB summary
Summary
  6' (1:1) Bjarnason
  20' Suchý
  67' Aliji
  80' (1:2) Janko
  84' Janko
Attendance: 4,897
Referee:   Lukas Fähndrich
8 November 2015 Round 15 Basel 2 – 3 Grasshopper St. Jakob-Park, Basel
16:00 Boëtius   27'
Callà   62' (1:2)
Embolo   74' (2:2)
FCB summary   8' Källström
  15' Bauer
  19' (0:1) Källström
  25' (o.g. 0:2) Suchý
  52' Pnishi
  65' Barthe
  80' (2:3) Dabour
  90' Dabour
Attendance: 31,669
Referee:   Sascha Amhof
22 November 2015 Round 16 St. Gallen 2 – 1 Basel AFG Arena, St. Gallen
13:45 Tafer   38' (1:1)
Tafer   68' (2:1)
Tréand   79'
Everton   88'
FCB summary   5' (0:1) Janko Attendance: 15,740
Referee:   Harald Lechner
29 November 2015 Round 17 Basel 3 – 0 Luzern St. Jakob-Park, Basel
13:45 Bjarnason   7' (1:0)
Bjarnason   25'
Callà   26' (2:0)
Elneny   32' (3:0)
Elneny   84'
Zuffi   90+2'
FCB summary   1' Lezcano
  30' Affolter
  58' Basha
  84' Lustenberger
  90' Freuler
Attendance: 29,691
Referee:   Stephan Klossner
6 December 2015 Round 18 Thun 0 – 2 Basel Stockhorn Arena, Thun
16:00 FCB summary   5' Samuel
  55' Xhaka
  67' (0:1) Janko
  70' (0:2) Janko
Attendance: 7,156
Referee:   Fedayi San

Second half of season edit

7 February 2016 Round 19 Basel 3 – 0 Luzern St. Jakob-Park, Basel
16:00 Safari   43'
Bjarnason   50' (1:0)
Delgado   72' (2:0)
Steffen   85' (3:0)
Steffen   90+1'
FCB summary   67' Jantscher
  82' Lustenberger
  90+2' Rogulj
Attendance: 25,821
Referee:   Sandro Schärer
14 February 2016 Round 20 Grasshopper Club 0 – 4 Basel Letzigrund, Zürich
16:00 Bašić   25'
Lüthi   34'
FCB summary   12' (0:1) Lang
  20' (0:2) Suchý
  31' Janko
  54' (0:3) Lang
  70' Delgado
  90+3' (0:4) Zuffi
Attendance: 9,500
Referee:   Alain Bieri (Solothurn)
21 February 2016 Round 21 Basel 5 – 1 Vaduz St. Jakob-Park, Basel
13:45 Embolo   42'
Lang   51' (1:1)
Fransson   57' (2:1)
Zuffi   66' (3:1)
Bjarnason   73' (4:1)
Bjarnason   87' (5:1)
FCB summary   8' (0:1) Bühler
  36' Muntwiler
  65' Untersee
Attendance: 25,195
Referee:   Pascal Erlachner
28 February 2016 Round 22 Thun 1 – 1 Basel Stockhorn Arena, Thun
13:45 Munsy   5' (1:0) FCB summary   21' Akanji
  44' (1:1) Steffen
Attendance: 6,807
Referee:   Alain Bieri (Solothurn)
6 March 2016 Round 23 Lugano P – P Basel Cornaredo, Lugano
13:45 (Postponed)
13 March 2016 Round 24 Basel 4 – 2 St. Gallen St. Jakob-Park, Basel
13:45 Janko   5' (1:0)
Janko   49' (2:2)
Janko   54' (3:2)
Suchý   50'
Steffen   90+2 4:2'
FCB summary   12' (1:1) Salli
  22' (1:2) Angha
  33' Aratore
Attendance: 27,305
Referee:   Fedayi San
20 March 2016 Round 25 Sion 0 – 1 Basel Stade Tourbillon, Sion
16:00 Zverotić   20'
Rüfli   83'
FCB summary   35' Janko
  67' (pen. 0:1) Delgado
Attendance: 10,000
Referee:   Nikolaj Hänni
3 April 2016 Round 26 Basel 2 – 0 Young Boys St. Jakob-Park, Basel
16:00 Embolo   46' (1:0)
Janko   71'
Steffen   90+4 2:0'
FCB summary   87' Florent Hadergjonaj Attendance: 31,642
Referee:   Stephan Klossner
10 April 2016 Round 27 Basel 2 – 2 Zürich St. Jakob-Park, Basel
13:45 Suchý   14'
Embolo   65'
Safari   76'
Delgado   83' (pen. 1:2)
Bjarnason   85' (2:2)
FCB summary   60' Buff
  61' (0:1) Kerzhakov
  70' (0:2) Bua
  73' Brunner
  82' Nef
  90+3' Koch
Attendance: 31,257
Referee:   Fedayi San (Gebenstorf)
13 April 2016 Round 23 Lugano 1 – 4 Basel Cornaredo, Lugano
18:30 Veseli   22'
Rey   40'
Čulina   47' (1:4)
Urbano   54'
FCB summary   10' (0:1) Bjarnason
  13' (0:2) Samuel
  22' (pen. 0:3) Delgado
  44' (0:4) Itten
Attendance: 3,085
Referee:   Lukas Fähndrich
17 April 2016 Round 28 St. Gallen 0 – 7 Basel AFG Arena, St. Gallen
16:00 Gaudino   49' FCB summary   29' (0:1) Steffen
  47' (o.g. 0:2) Angha
  56' Steffen
  62' (o.g. 0:3) Gaudino
  64' (0:4) Callà
  67' (0:5) Steffen
  72' (0:6) Embolo
  76'Itten
  78' (0:7) Steffen
Attendance: 14,876
Referee:   Pascal Erlachner
20 April 2016 Round 29 Basel 3 – 0 Lugano St. Jakob-Park, Basel
19:45 Suchý   38'
Embolo   44' (1:0)
Embolo   56' (2:0)
Boëtius   90+1 3:0'
FCB summary   52' Datković
  73' Veseli
Attendance: 24,938
Referee:   Sandro Schärer
24 April 2016 Round 30 Vaduz 0 – 0 Basel Rheinpark Stadion, Vaduz
16:00 FCB summary   22' Itten
  62' Suchý
Attendance: 5,543
Referee:   Stephan Klossner
30 April 2016 Round 31 Basel 2 – 1 Sion St. Jakob-Park, Basel
20:00 Delgado   24' (pen. 1:0)
Steffen   30'
Bjarnason   67' (2:0)
Embolo   85'
FCB summary   11' Salatić
  87' Carlitos
  90+2' (2:1) Salatić
Attendance: 32,244
Referee:   Alain Bieri (Solothurn)
7 May 2016 Round 32 Zürich 2 – 3 Basel Letzigrund, Zürich
20:00 Koch   16' (1:1)
Buff   60' (2:2)
Vinícius   69'
Nef   76'
FCB summary   10' (0:1) Delgado
  55' (1:2) Callà
  58' Aliji
  88' (pen. 2:3) Embolo
Attendance: 9.636
Referee:   Nikolaj Hänni (Gams SG)
Note: Super League debut for Eray Cümart
10 May 2016 Round 33 Basel 1 – 1 Thun St. Jakob-Park, Basel
19:45 Bjarnason   81' (1:1)
Suchý   84'
FCB summary   43' (0:1) Schirinzi
  46' Wieser
  86' Joss
Attendance: 24,558
Referee:   Sébastien Pache
16 May 2016 Round 34 Luzern 4 – 0 Basel Swissporarena, Luzern
16:00 Schneuwly   7' (1:0)
Jantscher   10' (2:0)
Hyka   48' (3:0)
Affolter   56'
Haas   60' (4:0)
FCB summary   79' Steffen
  85' Aliji
Attendance: 16,500
Referee:   Sandro Schärer
21 May 2016 Round 35 Young Boys 2 – 3 Basel Stade de Suisse, Bern
16:00 Lecjaks   25'
Von Bergen   58'
Nuzzolo   80'
Hadergjonaj   86'
Hoarau   90+1'
FCB summary   10' (0:1) Delgado
  16' Delgado
  31' (0:2) Boëtius
  44' (0:3) Boëtius
  45' Callà
Attendance: 21,721
Referee:   Fedayi San (Gebenstorf)
25 May 2016 Round 36 Basel 0 – 1 Grasshopper St. Jakob-Park, Basel
20:30 Boëtius   77' FCB summary   41' (o.g. 0:1) Traoré
  51' Bašić
  52' Dabour
  52' Källström
  80' Kamberi
Attendance: 30,682
Referee:   Stephan Klossner

League table edit

Pos Team Pld W D L GF GA GD Pts Qualification or relegation
1 Basel (C) 36 26 5 5 88 38 +50 83 Qualification for the Champions League group stage
2 Young Boys 36 20 9 7 78 47 +31 69 Qualification for the Champions League third qualifying round
3 Luzern 36 15 9 12 59 50 +9 54 Qualification for the Europa League third qualifying round
4 Grasshopper 36 15 8 13 65 56 +9 53 Qualification for the Europa League second qualifying round
5 Sion 36 14 8 14 52 49 +3 50
Source: Swiss Super League, Soccerway
Rules for classification: 1) Points; 2) Goal difference; 3) Goals scored; 4) Head-to-head points 5) Draw.[39]
(C) Champions

Swiss Cup edit

15 August 2015 Round 1 Meyrin (GE) 0 - 4 Basel Stade des Arberes, Meyrin
18:00 CET Matteo Rezzonico   56'
Fitim Rugovaj   75'
FCB summary
ASF/SFV summary
Soccerway summary
  34' (0:1) Al. Ajeti
  58' (0:2) Elneny
  59' (0:3) Al. Ajeti
  60' (0:4) Delgado
Attendance: 2,100
Referee:   Lukas Fähndrich
20 September 2015 Round 2 YF Juventus 1 - 4 Basel St. Jakob-Park, Basel
14:00 Da Silva Chagdas   45'
Nicolas Huber   52'
Da Silva Chagdas   85' (pen. 1:4)
FCB summary
ASF/SFV summary
  15' (0:1) Callà
  30' (0:2) Delgado
  50' (0:3) Delgado
  85' Samuel
  80' (0:4) Callà
Attendance: 4,606
Referee:   Alain Bieri (Solothurn)
28 October 2015 Round 3 SV Muttenz 1 - 5 Basel Sportplatz Margelacker, Muttenz
19:30 Manuel Jenny   48' (pen. 1:2)
Manuel Jenny   64'
FCB summary
FCB report
ASF/SFV summary
  25' (0:1) Høegh
  35' (0:2) Gashi
  46' Høegh
  62' (1:3) Gashi
  64' Gashi
  72' (1:4) Gashi
  75' (pen. 1:5) Al. Ajeti
Attendance: 5,800 (stadium record)
Referee:   Sascha Amhof
13 December 2015 Quarterfinal Sion 2 - 2 (a.e.t.)
(4–3 p)
FC Basel Stade de Tourbillon, Sion
15:30 Pa Modou   37'
Salatić   55'
Assifuah   66'
Kouassi   69'
Adão   84'
Lacroix   113'
Fernandes   116'
FCB summary
ASF/SFV summary
  32' Delgado
  50' Lang
  54' Samuel
  78' Bjarnason
  79' Elneny
  89' (pen.) Janko
  90+1' Elneny
  96' Safari
  120' Janko
Attendance: 9,200
Referee:   Stephan Klossner
Penalties
Bia  
Ziegler  
Salatić  
Carlitos  
Pa Modou  
  Elneny
  Janko
  Bjarnason
  Samuel
  Callà

UEFA Champions League edit

Third qualifying round edit

The draw for the third qualifying round was held on 17 July 2015. The first leg was played on 29 July, and the second leg on 5 August 2015.

29 July 2015 First leg Lech Poznań   1 – 3   Basel INEA Stadion, Poznań
20:45 Thomalla   36'
Thomalla   49'
Kędziora   66'
Linetty   69'
Kádár   82'
FCB summary
UEFA summary
  34' Lang
  77' Janko
  90+2' Callà
  90+3' T. Xhaka
Attendance: 28,000
Referee: Anthony Taylor (England)
5 August 2015 Second leg Basel   1 – 0
(4 – 1 agg.)
  Lech Poznań St. Jakob-Park, Basel
20:15 Suchý   44'
Lang   55'
Callà   80'
Bjarnason   90+1'
FCB summary
UEFA summary
  44' Linetty
  56' Kamiński
  86' Douglas
Attendance: 18,196
Referee:   Ruddy Buquet

Basel won 4-1 on aggregate.

Play-off round edit

The draw was held on 7 August 2015.[40][41]

19 August 2015 First leg Basel   2 – 2   Maccabi Tel Aviv St. Jakob-Park, Basel
20:45 CET Elneny   19'
Delgado   39' (pen.), 1:1'
Suchý   60'
Embolo   88' (2:1)
FCB summary
UEFA summary
  31' (0:1) Zahavi
  70' Igiebor
  77' Alberman
  90+6' (2:2) Zahavi
Attendance: 15,620
Referee: Willie Collum (Scotland)
25 August 2015 Second leg Maccabi Tel Aviv   1 – 1
(a 3 – 3 agg.)
  Basel Bloomfield Stadium, Tel Aviv
20:45 CET Zahavi   24'
Rikan   62'
FCB summary
UEFA summary
  11' Zuffi
  49' Safari
  74' Zuffi
  84' T. Xhaka
  85' Suchý
Attendance: 13,350
Referee: Damir Skomina (Slovenia)

Maccabi Tel Aviv won on away goals rule.

UEFA Europa League edit

Group stage edit

The draw was held on 28 August 2015, at the Grimaldi Forum in Monaco and Basel was drawn into Group I.

Pos Team Pld W D L GF GA GD Pts Qualification BSL FIO LCH BEL
1   Basel 6 4 1 1 10 5 +5 13 Advance to knockout phase 2–2 2–0 1–2
2   Fiorentina 6 3 1 2 11 6 +5 10 1–2 1–2 1–0
3   Lech Poznań 6 1 2 3 2 6 −4 5 0–1 0–2 0–0
4   Belenenses 6 1 2 3 2 8 −6 5 0–2 0–4 0–0
Source: Soccerway
Rules for classification: Group stage tiebreakers
17 September 2015 Round 1 Fiorentina   1 – 2   Basel Stadio Artemio Franchi, Florence
21:05 Kalinić   4' (1:0)
Roncaglia   35'
Rodríguez   65'
FCB summary
UEFA summary
  34' Xhaka
  56' Suchý
  71' (1:1) Bjarnason
  79' (1:2) Elneny
  83' Janko
Attendance: 15,212
Referee:   Michael Oliver
1 October 2015 Round 2 Basel   2 – 0   Lech Poznań St. Jakob-Park, Basel
19:00 Samuel   41'
Bjarnason   55' (1:0)
Embolo   90' (2:0)
FCB summary
UEFA summary
  42'   59' Linetty Attendance: 17,567
Referee:   Ognjen Valjić
22 October 2015 Round 3 Basel   1 – 2   Belenenses St. Jakob-Park, Basel
19:00 Lang   15' (1:0)
Suchý   73'
FCB summary
UEFA summary
  27' (1:1) Leal
  34' Ferreira
  45+1' (1:2) Kuca
  87' Leal
Attendance: 17,275[42]
Referee:   Simon Lee Evans (Wales)
5 November 2015 Round 4 Belenenses   0 – 2   Basel Estádio do Restelo, Lisbon
21:05 Silva   65'
Pinto   66'
Caeiro   70'
FCB summary
UEFA summary
  45+1' (pen. 0:1) Janko
  60' Elneny
  64' (0:2) Embolo
  66' Janko
  89' Lang
Attendance: 4,802
Referee:   Tamás Bognár (Hungary)
26 November 2015 Round 5 Basel   2 – 2   Fiorentina St. Jakob-Park, Basel
19:00 Safari   26'
Bjarnason   29'
Suchý   40' (1:2)
Janko   45+1'
Suchý   65'
Elneny   74' (2:2)
Zuffi   78'
FCB summary
UEFA summary
  23' (0:1) Bernardeschi
  36' (0:2) Bernardeschi
  26' Roncaglia
  45+1' Rodríguez
  45+3' Badelj
  75' Valero
Attendance: 22,550
Referee:   Ivan Kružliak (Slovakia)
10 December 2015 Round 6 Lech Poznań   0 – 1   Basel INEA Stadion, Poznań
21:05 FCB summary
UEFA summary
  50' (0:1) Boëtius Attendance: 10,457
Referee:   Bobby Madden (Scotland)
Note: Fair game, no yellow cards

Knockout phase edit

Round of 32 edit

The draw for the round of 32 was held on 14 December 2015. The first leg was played on 18 February, and the second on 25 February 2016.

18 February 2016 First Leg Saint-Étienne   3 – 2   Basel Saint-Étienne, France
19:00 Sall   9' (1:0)
Monnet-Paquet   39' (2:0)
Tannane   60'
Pajot   72'
Bahebeck   77' (3:2)
FCB summary
UEFA summary
  25' Steffen
  44' (2:1) Samuel
  56' (pen. 2:2) Janko
  60' Xhaka
  74' Samuel
  88' Janko
Stadium: Stade Geoffroy-Guichard
Attendance: 27,013
Referee:   Tasos Sidiropoulos (Greece)
25 February 2016 Second leg Basel   2 – 1   Saint-Étienne St. Jakob-Park, Basel
21:05 Zuffi   15' (1:0)
Embolo   55'   84'
Zuffi   90+2' (2:1)
FCB summary
UEFA summary
  31' Tannane
  63' Pogba
  82'   82' Eysseric
  90' Sall
Attendance: 20,976
Referee:   Danny Makkelie (Netherlands)

4-4 on aggregate. Basel won on away goals.

Round of 16 edit

The draw was held on 26 February 2016. The first leg was played on 10 March, and the second leg played on 17 March 2016.

10 March 2016 (2016-03-10) Round Basel   0 – 0   Sevilla St. Jakob-Park, Basel
19:00 Samuel   8'
Steffen   90'
FCB summary
UEFA summary
  37' Banega
  41' Cristóforo
  85' Trémoulinas
  75'   87' Nzonzi
Attendance: 22,403
Referee:   Anthony Taylor (England)
17 March 2016 (2016-03-17) Sevilla   3 – 0   Basel Ramón Sánchez Pizjuán, Seville
21:05 Kolodziejczak   7'
Rami   35' (1:0)
Gameiro   44' (2:0)
Gameiro   45' (3:0)
FCB summary
UEFA summary
  39' Steffen
  90+4' Embolo
Attendance: 35,546[43]
Referee:   Deniz Aytekin (Germany)

Sevilla won 3-0 on aggregate.

See also edit

References edit

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  2. ^ "The largest stadium in Switzerland". FC Basel 1893. 2015. Archived from the original on 2015-05-11. Retrieved 2015-07-01.
  3. ^ AFC Ajax. Club Honours UEFA
  4. ^ Verein "Basler Fussballarchiv" (2015). "FCB-Statistik". Verein "Basler Fussballarchiv". Retrieved 2021-11-16.
  5. ^ a b "FCB und Ivanov loesen Vertrag vorzeitig auf". FC Basel 1893. 2015. Retrieved 2015-12-14.
  6. ^ a b FC Basel 1893 (2016). "Zdravko Kuzmanovic leihweise zu Udinese Calcio". FC Basel 1893. Retrieved 2016-01-21.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: numeric names: authors list (link)
  7. ^ a b "Albian Ajeti zu Augsburg". FC Basel 1893. 2016. Archived from the original on January 16, 2016. Retrieved 2016-01-08.
  8. ^ a b "Yoichiro Kakitani kehrt zurueck nach Japan". FC Basel 1893. 2015. Archived from the original on January 16, 2016. Retrieved 2015-12-30.
  9. ^ a b FC Basel 1893 (2016). "Elneny: Ich werde für immer FCB-Fan bleiben". FC Basel 1893. Archived from the original on 2016-01-16. Retrieved 2016-01-14.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: numeric names: authors list (link) (in German)
  10. ^ a b FC Basel 1893 (2015). "FCB verpflichtet den Slowenen Andraz Sporar". FC Basel 1893. Archived from the original on 2020-03-02. Retrieved 2015-12-08.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: numeric names: authors list (link)
  11. ^ "Alexander Fransson wechselt zum FC Basel 1893". fcb.ch. FC Basel 1893. 2 January 2016. Archived from the original on 2 January 2016. Retrieved 2 January 2016.
  12. ^ a b FC Basel 1893 (2016). "Renato Steffen wechselt zum FC Basel 1893". FC Basel 1893. Retrieved 2016-01-12.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: numeric names: authors list (link)
  13. ^ Erik Garin, Karel Stokkermans (2016). "Switzerland 2015/2016". Rec.Sport.Soccer Statistics Foundation. Retrieved 2021-11-16.
  14. ^ FC Basel 1893. "Der FCB nimmt die Erste Hürde im Cup ohne probleme". FCB took the first hurdle in the cup without any problems. FC Basel 1893 AG. Retrieved 2021-11-16.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: numeric names: authors list (link)
  15. ^ FC Basel 1893 (20 September 2015). "Auswärtssieg für den FCB im Joggeli". Away win for FCB in Joggeli. FC Basel 1893 AG. Retrieved 2021-11-16.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: numeric names: authors list (link)
  16. ^ Wirz, Sebastian (28 October 2015). "Schützenfest für Basel, Dorffest für Muttenz". Goal festival for Basel, village festival for Muttenz. tageswoche.ch Basel. Retrieved 2021-11-16.
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  18. ^ Verein "Basler Fussballarchiv" (13 December 2015). "FC Sion - FC Basel 4:3 n.P. (2:2, 2:2, 1:0)". Verein "Basler Fussballarchiv". Retrieved 2021-11-16.
  19. ^ uefa.com (17 September 2015). "Basel earn comeback success at Fiorentina". uefa.com. Retrieved 2021-11-16.
  20. ^ uefa.com (1 October 2015). "Basel get the better of Lech for a third time". uefa.com. Retrieved 2021-11-16.
  21. ^ uefa.com (22 October 2015). "Belenenses hit back to spoil Basel's home run". uefa.com. Retrieved 2021-11-16.
  22. ^ uefa.com (5 November 2015). "Basel take command to leave Belenenses on brink". uefa.com. Retrieved 2021-11-16.
  23. ^ uefa.com (26 November 2015). "Basel fight back to hold ten-man Fiorentina". uefa.com. Retrieved 2021-11-16.
  24. ^ "Lech Poznań vs. Basel - 10 December 2015 - Soccerway". int.soccerway.com.
  25. ^ uefa.com (10 December 2015). "Samuel reaches century as Basel beat Lech". uefa.com. Retrieved 2021-11-16.
  26. ^ uefa.com (18 February 2016). "St-Étienne prevail despite Basel comeback". uefa.com. Retrieved 2021-11-16.
  27. ^ uefa.com (25 February 2016). "Basel snatch last-16 spot from St-Étienne's grasp". uefa.com. Retrieved 2016-02-25.
  28. ^ Marti, Caspar (10 March 2016). "Goalless first leg fixture between FCB and Sevilla". FC Basel 1893 AG. Retrieved 2021-11-16.
  29. ^ FC Basel 1893 (17 March 2016). "FC-Basel 1893 lose 0–3 to a strong Sevilla FC". FC Basel 1893 AG. Retrieved 2021-11-16.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: numeric names: authors list (link)
  30. ^ uefa.com (18 May 2016). "Sevilla make it three in row at Liverpool's expense". uefa.com. Retrieved 2021-11-16.
  31. ^ Verein "Basler Fussballarchiv". "Statistic UEFA Europa League". Verein "Basler Fussballarchiv". Retrieved 2021-11-16.
  32. ^ "Das Kader – Spielerportraits" [The Team – Player Portraits]. FC Basel 1893 (in German). fcb.ch. Archived from the original on 25 July 2016. Retrieved 1 July 2015.
  33. ^ FC Basel 1893 (2015). "Simic leihweise zum FC Schaffhausen". FC Basel 1893. Retrieved 2015-12-30.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: numeric names: authors list (link)
  34. ^ "Mirko Salvi leihweise zum FC Lugano". FC Basel 1893. 2015. Retrieved 2016-01-07.
  35. ^ Marti, Caspar (2015). "Birkir Bjarnason wechselt zum FC Basel 1893". FC Basel 1893. Archived from the original on 2016-03-04. Retrieved 2015-07-08.
  36. ^ "Giovanni Sio, nouvel attaquant Rouge et Noir !". www.staderennais.com. 2015. Retrieved 2015-06-29.
  37. ^ FC Basel 1893 (2015). "Alexander Fransson wechselt zum FC Basel 1893". FC Basel 1893. Archived from the original on 2016-01-02. Retrieved 2015-12-30.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: numeric names: authors list (link)
  38. ^ FC Basel 1893 (2016). "Gashi wechselt in die USA zu den Colorado Rapids". FC Basel 1893. Retrieved 2016-02-01.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: numeric names: authors list (link)
  39. ^ "Super League 2015/2016 - Season rules". Scoresway. Retrieved 19 July 2015.
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  41. ^ "UEFA Champions League play-off draw made". UEFA.com. Union of European Football Associations. 7 August 2015. Retrieved 7 August 2015.
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  43. ^ "Sevilla v Basel". Soccerway. Retrieved 18 March 2016.

Sources edit

External links edit