This article is about the women's football team. For the football club, see IFK Göteborg. For the parent organisation and its other clubs, see IFK Göteborg (sports club).
Football club in Gothenburg, Sweden
Football club
IFK Göteborg
Full name
Idrottsföreningen Kamraterna Göteborg (officially IFK Göteborg Fotboll)
Nickname(s)
Blåvitt (Blue-white)
Änglarna (The Angels)
Kamraterna (The Comrades)
Short name
IFK
Founded
4 October 1904; 120 years ago (1904-10-04) (club) 18 November 2019; 5 years ago (2019-11-18) (women's senior team)
IFK Göteborg fielded a women's team in the late 1910s, and the first women's match in Gothenburg was played between IFK Göteborg and a combination team in 1918, even though it was more of a frivolous exhibition match than anything else.[1] Plans to merge with Jitex BK to establish a women's team were set in motion in the 1970s, but never materialised.[2] Activities and teams for girls were finally added to the IFK Göteborg Academy programme in 2007,[3] and at an extra general meeting of IFK Göteborg in 2019, the club members voted to create a senior women's team,[4] which administratively remains part of the academy.[5]
The team started the 2020 season on the lowest level of the league pyramid with a long-term ambition of reaching the highest league, Damallsvenskan, within seven years, a previous cooperation with the senior team of Kopparbergs/Göteborg FC was ended as of this.[4][5] The squad was mainly composed of players from the under-15 team of 2019.[5] The extra general meeting also decided that the team would create its own organisation within the IFK Göteborg alliance organisation at latest on 1 January 2022.[4]
The first competitive match of the team was played on 24 June 2020 against Ösets BK, the 6–0 victory was live-streamed by the regional newspaper Göteborgs-Posten.[6] The run-up to the match was covered in an article in the well-respected Swedish football magazine Offside, written by a journalist playing for Ösets BK.[7] As most players were relatively young, the team also competed in a youth league, as well as in the under-17 national championships.[8] The team won their under-15 league twice in a row the previous years,[5] and the immediate goal for 2020 was to advance to Division 3,[8] a goal the team managed to meet by finishing second in the league, clinching a promotion spot.[9] No major changes to the squad were planned for the 2021 season,[9] and the original decision to split the women's team from the organisation by 2022 was undone by a counter-decision taken at the 2021 annual general meeting.[10]
The 2021 season in Division 3 did not prove to be a major challenge as the team steamrolled through the league with a 66–4 goal difference, but the promotion play-offs against local rivals Örgryte IS were more dramatic.[11] The first leg ended in a 4–4 draw as IFK scored three late goals to equalise, and at home in the second leg IFK Göteborg found themselves down 1–3 some 10 minutes into the second half. But the team again managed to both reduce and equalise, scoring the vital—due to the away goal rule being used—third goal in the 86th minute, securing promotion to Division 2 for the 2022 season.[11]
Stadiums
The home ground of the team was originally Prioritet Serneke Arena,[8] a multi-sport complex in the district of Kviberg which includes a full-size indoor football pitch with an attendance capacity of around 3,000.[12] Planning for the 2021 season included moving to the outdoor stadium Valhalla IP,[9] and the home game of the promotion play-offs at the end of the season was played at Valhalla IP in front of a record crowd of 2,027.[11] The official switch to Valhalla as home ground did not happen until the start of the 2022 season.[13]
Note: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules; some limited exceptions apply. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.
Note: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules; some limited exceptions apply. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.
Andersson, Torbjörn (2002). Kung fotboll: den svenska fotbollens kulturhistoria från 1800-talets slut till 1950 (in Swedish). Eslöv: Symposion. ISBN91-7139-565-2.
Andersson, Torbjörn (2011). "Spela fotboll bondjävlar!": en studie i svensk klubbkultur och lokal identitet från 1950 till 2000-talets början (in Swedish). Vol. 1. Stockholm: Symposion. ISBN978-91-7139-868-0.
Arbman Hansing, Sanna (2020). "Möte med framtiden". Offside (in Swedish). No. 4. Offside Press. Retrieved 3 September 2020.
Josephson, Åke; Jönsson, Ingemar, eds. (2014). IFK Göteborg 2004–2014: nu fortsätter vi att berätta historien (in Swedish). Göteborg: IFK Göteborg. ISBN978-91-637-6596-4.