Ringkøbing IF

Ringkøbing IF
Ringkøbing IF logo
Full nameRingkøbing Idrætsforening
Founded29 March 1900
GroundGreen Arena, Ringkøbing
Capacity1,200
ChairmanAndreas Leidesdorff
ManagerJens Nielsen (caretaker)
LeagueDenmark Series (V)
2021–22Denmark Series – Group 4, 3rd of 10

Ringkøbing Idrætsforening (Danish pronunciation: [ˈʁeŋˌkʰøˀpe̝ŋ]) is an association football club based in the town of Ringkøbing, West Jutland, Denmark, that competes in the Denmark Series, the fifth tier of the Danish football league system. Founded in 1900, it is shortly known as 'RIF' and affiliated to the DBU Jutland, the regional body of football in Jutland. The team plays its home matches at Green Arena, where it has been based since 1999.[1][2]

The club's history includes numerous promotions and relegations, and some spells of sustained success. It was perhaps most prominent between in the Interwar period when it was a regional powerhouse, winning Jutland championships in the A-series (third regional tier) in 1920 and 1935.[3]

History

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Ringkøbing IF was relatively successful in the first decades after its foundation in 1900. In 1935, the club won the Jutland championships in the A-tier, after beating Ølgod (5–3), Holstebro BK (4–3) and finally Vejle Boldklub (3–1) in the finals.[3] The latter was played at Herning Stadion on 4 June, and the result meant that Ringkøbing promoted to the JBU Mellemrækken, the second regional division at that time.[4]

After some decades of struggles, Ringkøbing IF promoted to Series 1, the second highest regional tier in 1960, after a 6–2 win over league table rivals Grønbjerg IF.[3] Some years later, however, the club would suffer relegation to the lower tiers.

Some time would pass before Ringkøbing would reach the second regional tier again. Only in 1985 would the club reach Series 1 again, after finishing second in the Series 2 group.[3]

In the 2011–12 season, Ringkøbing IF secured promotion to the Danish 2nd Division, the third tier of Danish football, in the last round of competition by winning 2–4 away over local rivals Holstebro BK.[5] This was the first time in club history that they reached the divisions; the three highest national leagues of Denmark.[5]

Players

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As of 29 April 2020.[6]

Current squad

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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 Denmark DEN Mads Vestergaard Petersen (captain)
2 DF Cameroon CMR Jules Youmeni
3 DF Denmark DEN Anders Vestergaard Larsen
6 FW Iceland ISL Ragnar Leósson
7 FW Denmark DEN Lennard Lauridsen
8 MF Denmark DEN Klaus Moesgaard
9 FW Denmark DEN Martin Egelund
10 MF Denmark DEN Jacob Getachew Andersen
11 FW Denmark DEN Mark Asp Rasmussen (on loan from Horsens)
12 DF Denmark DEN Jeppe Solgaard
12 DF Nigeria NGA Sunday Odeh (on loan from Midtjylland U19)
13 DF Denmark DEN Andreas Jespersen
14 MF Denmark DEN Kasper Møller Thomsen
15 GK Denmark DEN Simon Brogaard Petersen
No. Pos. Nation Player
16 MF Denmark DEN Mikkel Kjeldstrup
16 MF Denmark DEN Mikkel Petersen
20 FW Denmark DEN Kasper Nissen
21 FW Denmark DEN Lauge Olesen
22 DF Denmark DEN Mikkel Koustrup
25 MF Nigeria NGA Victor Dawa (on loan from Midtjylland U19)
26 DF Denmark DEN Nikolaj Pape Sørensen
27 FW Denmark DEN Dennis Juelsgård
29 MF Denmark DEN Magnus Merrild
30 FW Denmark DEN Elliott Baliti
31 MF Denmark DEN Mads Overgaard
32 GK Denmark DEN Aksel Teglgaard
77 MF Democratic Republic of the Congo COD Gloire Rutikanga (on loan from Midtjylland)

Former players

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Backroom staff

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Club officials

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Position Staff
Chairman Andreas Leidesdorff
Secretary Torben Dahl
Board of Directors Peder Sørensen
Anders Agger
Jesper Jensen

Source: Ringkøbing IF | Bestyrelse

Position Name
Head coach Nicolai Wael
Assistant coach Allan Mikkelsen
Goalkeeping Coach Brian Andersen
Team leader Ivan Thesbjerg
Team leader Poul Jensen

Source: Ringkøbing IF | Elite | Spilletruppen og trænere

References

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  1. ^ "Ringkøbing Kommune Lokalplan NR. 01.099" (PDF). dokument.plandata.dk. Ringkøbing-Skjern Municipality. Retrieved 29 April 2020.
  2. ^ Lauridsen, Lars (23 June 2009). "Så kom græsset". tvmidtvest.dk. TV Midtvest. Retrieved 29 April 2020.
  3. ^ a b c d Sand, Kristian (18 April 2019). "Gamle Dage Ekstra: Højdepunkter i Ringkøbing IFs historie". dbrs.dk. Dagbladet Ringkøbing-Skjern. Retrieved 22 April 2020.
  4. ^ "DBU Jyllands historie". dbu.dk. Danish Football Union. Retrieved 29 April 2020.
  5. ^ a b Blond, Mikael (24 June 2012). "Ringkøbing klar til første divisions-eventyr". bold.dk. Retrieved 29 April 2020.
  6. ^ "Vejgaard trup". 2-division.dk. Retrieved 29 April 2020.
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