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SC Kriens

Coordinates: 47°1′47.41″N 8°17′16.07″E / 47.0298361°N 8.2877972°E / 47.0298361; 8.2877972
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(Redirected from Stadion Kleinfeld)
SC Kriens
Full nameSport Club Kriens
Founded1944; 80 years ago (1944)
GroundStadion Kleinfeld,
Kriens, Switzerland
Capacity5,360 (540 seated)
ChairmanPeter Glur
ManagerSven Lüscher
LeagueSwiss Promotion League
2021–22Swiss Challenge League, 10th of 10 (relegated)

SC Kriens is a football club based in Kriens, Switzerland, that currently competing in the Swiss Promotion League. The club uses Stadion Kleinfeld as home ground, and form a local rivalry with Lucerne.

SC Kriens women's team has been participating in the Nationalliga A since 2008.

History

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Chart of SC Kriens table positions in the Swiss football league system

The first club to be formed in Kriens was created in 1920 as Fussball Club Kriens, albeit folding in 1926, and succeeded by Rasensportclub Kriens between 1931 and 1939. The team as it exists today was founded on 14 June 1944. They initially played in Lucerne, before being granted a meadow at a site now named Kleinfeld in 1949, where they have played since.[1]

Their first years were unremarkable, but support from the local municipality, a new stadium, and the introduction of several junior teams helped them to promotion to the 2. Liga in 1958. By 1975 the team challenged for promotion to the Nationalliga B under Paul Wolfisberg, who later managed FC Lucerne and the Swiss national team, before succeeding a year later in the 1975–76 season.[2] As Wolfisberg left the team in 1978 and the core of homegrown players began to age, they fought against relegation, which became reality in 1981. They spent another single season in the second division in 1986–87, before achieving a more successful stint in 1990[3] that eventually led to two spells in the Nationalliga A in the 1993–94 and 1997–98 seasons. The team nearly achieved promotion on multiple occasions, albeit without success, under the leadership of managers such as Kudi Müller and Jürgen Seeberger.[1][4] However, they failed to make the cut after the second division was restructured from 16 to 10 teams in 2012 and spent several years in lower divisions until 2018.[5]

Stadium

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SC Kriens play at the Stadion Kleinfeld, which hosts a capacity of 5,370.[6] It was originally known as the Waisenhausmatte, which was first opened on 7 August 1949. It received its first floodlights in 1950, and by 1958, the stadium reopened under its current name with an expanded seating of 700. In 1969, two further pitches and the main stand were added.[1] In 2018 the stadium was completely rebuilt including a new main stand which includes a built-in sports centre and a photovoltaic system on its roof.

Current squad

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As of 5 August 2024

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 Switzerland SUI Diego Heller
3 DF Switzerland SUI Flavio Caserta (on loan from Aarau)
4 DF Switzerland SUI Manuel Fäh
5 DF Switzerland SUI Colin Erdin
6 MF Switzerland SUI Leandro Aversa
7 MF Switzerland SUI Lukas Riedmann
8 MF Switzerland SUI Alejandro Willimann
9 FW Switzerland SUI Luka Slišković
10 MF Switzerland SUI Marco Rüedi
11 MF Switzerland SUI Diego Martin
14 MF Switzerland SUI Noah Gabriel
15 DF Switzerland SUI Enea Heiniger
16 DF Kosovo KOS Stiljan Gegaj
No. Pos. Nation Player
17 DF Switzerland SUI Mauro Bender
18 GK Switzerland SUI Pascal Brügger
19 FW Switzerland SUI Rrezart Hoxha
20 FW Switzerland SUI Célien Wicht
21 MF Spain ESP Jorge Facal
22 GK Switzerland SUI Lars Hunn
23 DF Switzerland SUI Julian Hermann
24 DF Switzerland SUI Timo Harperink
25 MF Switzerland SUI Leonardo Gubinelli
27 MF Switzerland SUI Joël Ris
28 MF Switzerland SUI Daniel Kadima
29 FW Switzerland SUI Andi Ukmata
30 MF Switzerland SUI Nico Siegrist

Out on loan

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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

Famous players

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References

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  1. ^ a b c "Geschichte". SC Kriens. Retrieved 5 December 2020.
  2. ^ "Wolfisberg von Kriens zu Luzern". Neue Zürcher Zeitung. 5 May 1978. Retrieved 14 December 2020.
  3. ^ "Fussball: Kriens anstelle des Aufsteigers in der NLB". Thuner Tagblatt. 20 June 1990. Retrieved 14 December 2020.
  4. ^ "Kudi Müller wird neuer Kriens-Trainer". Walliser Bote. 25 May 1998.
  5. ^ Bucher, Turi. "Gezittert, getroffen, gefeiert: Kriens steigt in die Challenge League auf". Luzerner Zeitung (in German). Retrieved 2020-12-14.
  6. ^ "Stadion Kleinfeld - Soccerway". int.soccerway.com. Retrieved 2020-12-12.
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47°1′47.41″N 8°17′16.07″E / 47.0298361°N 8.2877972°E / 47.0298361; 8.2877972