FC Pinzgau Saalfelden

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
FC Pinzgau Saalfelden
Full nameFußballclub Pinzgau Saalfelden
Founded23 May 2007; 16 years ago (23 May 2007)
Ground1508 Saalfelden Arena[1]
Capacity1,500
ChairmanSiegfried Kainz
Christian Herzog
Herbert Bründlinger
TrainerMarkus Fürstaller
LeagueAustrian Regionalliga Salzburg

FC Pinzgau Saalfelden is an Austrian football club from Saalfelden in the federal state of Salzburg. The club currently plays in the Austrian Regionalliga Salzburg which is the third tier of Austrian football, and has played there since the 2014–15 season.

History[edit]

FC Pinzgau Saalfelden was founded on 23 May 2007 after the merger of the town's football clubs 1. Saalfeldner SK (founded in 1947) and ESV Saalfelden (founded in 1952), although the two clubs had previous partnered as SG Saalfelden from 2004 to 2007.[2]

The club was acquired in 2018 by a group of American investors. It has since been used for player development by various Major League Soccer teams, who loan out young players for short stints.[3]

Players[edit]

Current squad[edit]

As of 1 July 2022[4]

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 Austria AUT Kilian Schröcker
2 FW Croatia CRO Moritz Eder
7 GK Croatia CRO Arnold Benedek
8 MF Austria AUT David Rathgeb
10 MF Austria AUT Philipp Zehentmayr
11 FW Austria AUT Lukas Moosmann
13 DF Germany GER Alessandro Ziege
14 FW Hungary HUN Tamás Tandari
16 MF Austria AUT Niklas Mühlbacher
17 DF Ghana GHA Felix Adjei
No. Pos. Nation Player
18 MF Austria AUT Benjamin Hutter
19 MF Austria AUT Semir Gvozdjar
20 MF Brazil BRA João Pedro
21 MF Austria AUT Micheal Noggler
23 MF Austria AUT Daniel Hutter
24 MF Austria AUT Hasan Ibrahimi
26 MF Brazil BRA Gabriel Francisco
27 DF Austria AUT Denis Kahrimanović
33 GK Austria AUT Dominik Moser

Notable former players[edit]

Honours[edit]

Other websites[edit]

References[edit]

  1. ^ "SaalfeldenArena, das Stadion des FC Pinzgau".
  2. ^ "Sommer-Transfers FC Pinzgau Saalfelden". Archived from the original on 2019-07-31. Retrieved 2019-07-31.
  3. ^ Pentz, Matt (December 31, 2019). "FC Pinzgau Saalfelden: The Austrian third-division club aiming to become America's team". The Athletic. Retrieved May 9, 2023.
  4. ^ "Team 2020-21". FC Pingzau. Retrieved 16 August 2020.[permanent dead link]