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FC Wacker Innsbruck

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This article is about the defunct football club. For the current club, seeFC Wacker Innsbruck (2002).

Football club
FC Wacker Innsbruck
Full nameFußballclub Wacker Innsbruck
Founded4 February 1915
Dissolved20 May 1999
LeagueAustrian 1. Klasse
1998-99unknown

FC Wacker Innsbruck was anAustrian association football club fromInnsbruck,Tyrol.

History

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TheFußball-Club Wacker ("Valiant")Innsbruck was established in 1915 by Jakob Hanspeter, Benedikt Hosp, Josef Leitner, Josef Albrecht and other now unknown football enthusiasts and adopted club colours of black and green. After a few years playing friendlies against other Innsbruck sides, the club was put on hiatus until 1918 because of the interruption of the First World War. In 1964 the club participated the first time in Austria's A-Liga, today'sBundesliga, winning its first championship in 1971.

Historical chart of FC Wacker Innsbruck league performance (incl. mergers and successor clubs)

On 20 July 1971, FC Wacker Innsbruck andSV Wattens, also playing in Austrian first division, merged to form a single team calledSpGSwarovskiWattens-Innsbruck (SSW Innsbruck) in order to focus the football power ofTyrol better. The union applied only to the professional footballers – the junior sides of both teams carried on as part of their original clubs. SSW Innsbruck won the Austrian Championship five times and reached the quarterfinals in the1977–78 European Cup.

In 1981 SSW Innsbruck was relegated the first time and in 1986 the club was renamed FC Wacker Innsbruck. After the new clubFC Swarovski Tirol took over the license of the club, FC Wacker Innsbruck was forced to play in the eighth division, quickly managing to reach the fourth division in 1992. In the same year the FC Swarovski was dissolved and Wacker regained the Bundesliga license and access to the1992–93 UEFA Cup. They nevertheless played in the Bundesliga only for one season, as in 1993 theFC Tirol Innsbruck was formed, to which FC Wacker again lost its license. In 1999 the club, meanwhile playing in the seventh division, finally folded.

Honours

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National

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International

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European cup history

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QF = Quarterfinal

SeasonCompetitionRoundCountryClubHomeAwayAggregate
1970–71UEFA Cup Winners' Cup1AlbaniaPartizani3–22–15–3
2SpainReal Madrid0–21–01–2
1971–72European Cup1PortugalBenfica1–30–41–7
1972–73European Cup1UkraineDynamo Kyiv0–10–20–3
1973–74European Cup1BulgariaCSKA Sofia0–10–30–4
1974–75UEFA Cup1GermanyBorussia M'Gladbach2–10–32–4
1975–76European Cup1GermanyBorussia M'gladbach1–11–62–7
1976–77UEFA Cup1NorwayIK Start2–15–07–1
2HungaryVideoton1–10–11–2
1977–78European Cup1SwitzerlandBasel0–13–13–2
2ScotlandCeltic3–01–24–2
3GermanyBorussia Mönchengladbach3–10–23–3[1]
1978–79UEFA Cup Winner's Cup1PolandZagłębie Sosnowiec3–21–14–3
2EnglandIpswich Town0–11–11–2
1979–80UEFA Cup Winners' Cup1CzechoslovakiaFC Lokomotíva Košice1–20–11–3
1983–84UEFA Cup Winners' Cup1GermanyFC Koln1–01–72–7
1984–85UEFA Cup1SpainReal Madrid2–00–52–5
1985–86UEFA Cup1BelgiumRFC Liege1–30–11–4
1992–93UEFA Cup[2]1ItalyRoma1–40–11–5
  1. ^Gladbach progressed on away goals
  2. ^as successor of FC Swarovski Tirol

Managers

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International
National
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