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Knattspyrnufélag Akureyrar

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Icelandic sports club

Football club
KA
Full nameKnattspyrnufélag Akureyrar
Short nameKA
Founded1928; 97 years ago (1928)
GroundKA-Völlur,
Akureyri
ChairmanHjörvar Maronsson
ManagerHallgrímur Jónasson
LeagueBesta deild karla
2025Besta deild karla, 7th of 12
Websitewww.ka.is
Current season
Departments of
Knattspyrnufélag Akureyrar
Football
(Men's)
Football
(Women's)
Handball
(Men's)
Handball
(Women's)
Volleyball
(Men's)
Volleyball
(Women's)
Tennis Badminton Judo

Knattspyrnufélag Akureyrar (Icelandic pronunciation:[ˈkʰnahtˌspɪ(r)tnʏˌfjɛːˌlaːɣˈaːkʏrˌeiːrar̥],lit.'Akureyri Football Club'), commonly abbreviated toKA, is an Icelandicmulti-sport club based inAkureyri in the north ofIceland.[1] The club was founded in 1928. The football team currently plays inBesta deild karla and have won the top flight once in 1989.

Club

[edit]

The club offers various sports includingfootball,handball,judo,volleyball andweightlifting.

The club crest features a red shield overlaid on a blue shield. Within the red shield is a golden ball, with the letters 'KA' positioned above it in white. The team colours are yellow shirts and blue shorts.

Its main rival is another sports club in Akureyri,Þór Akureyri.

History

[edit]

The early years (1928–1943)

[edit]

KA was founded on January 8, 1928, in the home of Margrét and Axel Schiöth, at Hafnarstræti 23, with the goal of promoting sports in Akureyri.

ÍBA (1943–1974)

[edit]
Main article:ÍB Akureyri

Between 1944 and 1974 the two most prominent football clubs in Akureyri, KA andÞór, sent a united team under the banner of ÍBA to the Icelandic first tier made up of a selection of players from the Akureyri clubs. The club played 17 seasons in the top flight of Icelandic football league,Úrvalsdeild karla.

The first time the two Akureyri clubs, KA and Þór, combined forces was against recent league champions Valur in the middle of July 1942. The teams played twice, the united team from Akureyri won one game but lost the other. The positive results gave impetus to unification ideas and in 1943 for the fourth time a team from Akureyri played in Úrvalsdeild karla. But now it sailed under the flag of Íþróttaráð Akureyrar(In english Akureyri Sports Council) and not KA as in all the previous times.[2]Archived 29 February 2024 at theWayback Machine

The subsequent year, in 1944, saw the establishment of ÍB Akureyri. By 1946, a football team representing ÍBA competed in Úrvalsdeild karla, for the first time.

From 1955 to 1974, the ÍBA team always took part in the Icelandic men's football tournament. In 1974, the two respective sports clubs ended their collaboration and started sending teams separately as KA and Þór.[3]

Back to the top tier (2015– )

[edit]

The summer of2015 was filled with anticipation for KA. Despite losing some key players, the team demonstrated strength during preseason, reaching the final of the Icelandic Men's Football League Cup but ultimately losing toBreiðablik. Good signings, preseason success, and the experienced coach Bjarni Jóhannsson, who took over in 2013, led many pundits to predict that KA would be promoted to the top flight with ease.[2] However, the season failed to meet expectations, and the team finished in 3rd place, prompting the sacking of manager Jóhannsson, with his assistantSrdjan Tufegdzic taking over late in the season.[3]

In2016, KA finally reached the top flight. Under new management withTufegdzic at the helm and notable acquisitions like Hallgrímur Mar Steingrímsson,Guðmann Þórisson, and Ásgeir Sigurgeirsson, the team comfortably won the second division. Expectations were high for KA's first match in the top division in thirteen years. The team facedBreiðablik and emerged victorious with a 1–3 scoreline. The first season in the top division since 2004 fared well as the team finished in 7th place.[4]

The following year saw KA once again finish in 7th place, and at the end of the season, the club parted ways with Tufegdzic. Óli Stefán Flóventsson replaced him and managed to guide the team to 5th place, KA's best showing since 2002. Elfar Árni Aðalsteinsson emerged as the team's top scorer with 13 goals. However, the subsequent season did not go as well for Flóventsson, who was let go after managing five games without a win.[5] His replacement,Arnar Grétarsson, led the team to a 7th-place finish, although the season was cut short due toCOVID-19. The season was notable for an unusual number of draws, with the team drawing 12 times. The team was praised for its solid defending and the homegrown playerBrynjar Ingi Bjarnason had a breakout season.[6]

The2021 season marked Grétarsson's first full season as head coach, during which significant acquisitions likeJonathan Hendrickx,Dušan Brković, and the return of homegrown playerDaníel Hafsteinsson bolstered the team's roster.[7] On 29 May 2021, Bjarnason made his international debut for the Icelandic national team before being sold toLecce midway through the season.[8] Despite the loss of Bjarnason, KA achieved remarkable success, securing its best result since2002 with a 4th-place finish.[9] Moving into the2022 season, KA continued its upward trajectory, clinching its second-best result ever in theBesta deild karla. This achievement qualified them for theUEFA Europa Conference League.Nökkvi Þeyr Þórisson showcased an outstanding performance throughout the season, earning recognition as the league's best player and top scorer with 17 goals. Notably, his remarkable achievements came despite his transfer toK Beerschot VA before the season concluded.[10] Grétarsson's assistant and former KA player,Hallgrímur Jónasson, assumed managerial duties for the team towards the end of the season, following the departure of Grétarsson.[11] Jónasson successfully navigated the team through the playoffs and a second-place finish.[12]

In2023, KA finished 7th[13] in the league and made it to thecup final againstVíkingur R., ultimately losing3-1.[14] The team also had a relatively successfulUEFA Europa Conference League campaign, defeatingConnah's Quay Nomads andDundalk, with their journey coming to an end againstClub Brugge.[15][16]

Football

[edit]

Men's football

[edit]

They have once been the Icelandic champions, in 1989 after a tough fight against FH (Fimleikafélag Hafnarfjarðar). FH were in the lead until their final match, against already relegated teamFylkir. FH lost and KA obtained the title for the first time in their history.

KA formerly played at Akureyrarvöllur close to downtown Akureyri but have since moved all games to Greifavöllurinn, a temporary arena at the club's training base, KA-Heimilið in the Lundarhverfi neighborhood where a new permanent stadium is also being built.

Current squad

[edit]
As of 16 August 2025

Note: Flags indicate national team as defined underFIFA eligibility rules; some limited exceptions apply. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.

No.Pos.NationPlayer
1GK DENWilliam Tønning
2DF ISLBirgir Baldvinsson
4MF ESPRodri
5DF ISLÍvar Örn Árnason
7FW FROJóan Símun Edmundsson
8MF DENMarcel Rømer
9FW ISLViðar Örn Kjartansson
10FW ISLHallgrímur Mar Steingrímsson
11FW ISLÁsgeir Sigurgeirsson (captain)
12GK NORJonathan Rasheed
13GK ISLSteinþór Már Auðunsson
14MF ISLAndri Fannar Stefánsson
17FW ISLBirnir Snær Ingason
No.Pos.NationPlayer
20FW ISLAgnar Óli Grétarsson
21MF ISLMikael Breki Þórðarson
22DF ISLHrannar Björn Steingrímsson
23DF ISLMarkús Máni Pétursson
25MF ISLDagur Ingi Valsson
26MF ISLIngimar Torbjørnsson Støle
28DF ISLHans Viktor Guðmunsson
29FW ISLJakob Snær Árnason
30DF ISLGuðjón Ernir Hrafnkelsson
44MF ISLValdimar Sævarsson
77MF ISLBjarni Aðalsteinsson
80MF ISLGabriel Lukas Freitas Meira
99GK ISLJóhann Mikael Ingólfsson

Out on loan

[edit]

Note: Flags indicate national team as defined underFIFA eligibility rules; some limited exceptions apply. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.

No.Pos.NationPlayer
1GK ISLÍvar Arnbro Þórhallsson(atVölsungur until 31 January 2026)
3DF ISLKári Gautason(atHK until 31 January 2026)
?MF ISLÁrni Veigar Árnason(atHöttur/Huginn until 31 January 2026)
18DF ISLHákon Atli Aðalsteinsson(atDalvík/Reynir until 31 January 2026)
No.Pos.NationPlayer
26MF ISLDagbjartur Búi Davíðsson(atÞór until 31 January 2026)
6DF ISLBreki Hólm Baldursson(atÍR until 31 January 2026)
MF ISLBjarki Fannar Helgason(atHöttur/Huginn until 31 January 2026)

European record

[edit]
CompetitionMatchesWDLGFGA
UEFA European Cup210113
UEFA Cup Winners Cup2002114
UEFA Intertoto Cup202022
UEFA Europa Conference League83231617
Total144461836
Matches
[edit]
SeasonCompetitionRoundOpponents1st leg2nd legAggregate
1970–1971UEFA Cup Winners' Cup1RSwitzerlandZürich1–70–71–14
1990–1991UEFA European Cup1RBulgariaCSKA Sofia1–00–31–3
2003UEFA Intertoto Cup1RBosnia and HerzegovinaSloboda Tuzla1–11–1 (a.e.t.)2–2 (2–3p)
2023–24UEFA Europa Conference League1QWalesConnah's Quay Nomads2–02–04–0
2QRepublic of IrelandDundalk3–12–25–3
3QBelgiumClub Brugge1–51–52–10
2025–26UEFA Conference League2QDenmarkSilkeborg1–12–3 (a.e.t.)3–4 (a.e.t.)
Notes
  • PR: Preliminary Round
  • 1R: First round
  • 1Q: First qualifying round
  • 2Q: Second qualifying round
  • 3Q: Third qualifying round
  • PO: Play-off round

Recent history

[edit]
SeasonPos.Pl.WDLGSGAPCupNotes
1987Úrvalsdeild618567181721Fourth round
1988Úrvalsdeild418837312927Fourth round
1989Úrvalsdeild118972291534Fourth round
1990Úrvalsdeild8185112182816Fourth roundEuropean Cup
1991Úrvalsdeild618747212325Fourth round
1992Úrvalsdeild10183411183313FinalRelegated to the1.deild
19931.deild418927312229Fourth round
19941.deild8185310263418Third round
19951.deild318765262527Second round
19961.deild418756363326Quarter-finals
19971.deild718468243118Fourth round
19981.deild718747242825Third round
19991.deild618657242423Second round
20001.deild3181044382334Fourth round
20011.deild2181143432137FinalPromoted to theÚrvalsdeild
2002Úrvalsdeild418675181925Semi-finals
2003Úrvalsdeild818648292722Semi-finalsUEFA Intertoto Cup
2004Úrvalsdeild10184311133015FinalRelegated to the1.deild
20051. deild3181044402034Fourth round
20061. deild618639222521Quarter-finals
20071. deild11225413144519Third round
20081. deild422958312732Third round
20091. deild5221057322435Fourth round
20101. deild9226610294324Quarter-finals
20111. deild8229211324029Third round
20121. deild422967343033Fourth round
20131. deild622958383132Second round
20141. deild822877423331Third round
20151. deild3221255422241Semi-final
20161. deild1221633421651Third roundPromoted to theÚrvalsdeild
2017Úrvalsdeild722787373129Third round
2018Úrvalsdeild722778363428Fourth round
2019Úrvalsdeild522949343431Fourth round
2020Úrvalsdeild7183123202121Fourth round*Season not completed due toCOVID-19
2021Úrvalsdeild4221246362040Fourth round
2022Besta deild2271656543053Semi-final
2023Besta deild72712510424541FinalUEFA Europa Conference League

[17]

Trophies and achievements

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Notable former players

[edit]

Player of the Season

[edit]
Haukur Heiðar Hauksson, two-time winner of the award
Guðmann Þórisson, won the award in 2016
SeasonNameNationalityPositionRef.
2004Sandor Matus HungaryGoalkeeper
2005Pálmi Rafn Pálmason IcelandMidfielder
2006Janez Vrenko SloveniaDefender
2007Þorvaldur Sveinn Guðbjörnsson IcelandDefender
2008Arnar Már Guðjónsson IcelandMidfielder
2009Haukur Heiðar Hauksson IcelandDefender
2010Sandor Matus (2) HungaryGoalkeeper
2011Haukur Heiðar Hauksson (2) IcelandDefender
2012Gunnar Valur Gunnarsson IcelandDefender
2013Hallgrímur Mar Steingrímsson IcelandMidfielder
2014Srdjan Rajkovic SerbiaGoalkeeper
2015Callum Williams EnglandDefender
2016Guðmann Þórisson IcelandDefender
2017Hallgrímur Mar Steingrímsson (2) IcelandMidfielder
2018Callum Williams (2) EnglandDefender
2019Elfar Árni Aðalsteinsson IcelandForward
2020Brynjar Ingi Bjarnason IcelandDefender
2021Steinþór Már Auðunsson IcelandGoalkeeper
2022Ívar Örn Árnason IcelandDefender
2023Hallgrímur Mar Steingrímsson (3) IcelandMidfielder

Overall most appearances

[edit]
RankNationalityNameYearsAppearances[18]
1IcelandHallgrímur M. Steingrímsson2009–14, 2016–320
2HungarySandor Matus2004–13231
3EnglandDean Martin1995–97, 1999–04, 2008–10214
4IcelandHrannar Björn Steingrímsson2014–205
5IcelandElfar Árni Aðalsteinsson2015–198
6IcelandÁsgeir Sigurgeirsson2016–173
7IcelandSteingrímur Örn Eiðsson1997–07168
8IcelandAndri Fannar Stefánsson2010, 2019–166
9IcelandBjarni Jónsson1987–97166
10IcelandÞorvaldur M. Sigbjörnsson1992–96, 1999–03, 2007160

Overall top scorers

[edit]
RankNationalityNameYearsGoals[19]
1IcelandHallgrímur M. Steingrímsson2009–14, 2016–98
2IcelandHreinn Hringsson2000–0673
3IcelandElfar Árni Aðalsteinsson2015–71
3IcelandÞorvaldur M. Sigbjörnsson1992–96, 1999–03, 200761
5IcelandÁsgeir Sigurgeirsson2016–42
6HungaryDavid Disztl2009–2010, 201232
7IcelandNökkvi Þeyr Þórisson2019–202230
8IcelandÆvar Ingi Jóhannesson2011–1528
9IcelandÞorvaldur Örlygsson1984–89, 2000–0325
10IcelandJóhann Helgason2002–05, 2012, 2014–1524

Managerial history

[edit]

Kit

[edit]
PeriodKit manufacturer
1975–78Adidas
1979Hummel
1980–1981Puma
1982–83Hummel
1984–98Adidas
1999–2002Puma
2003Henson
2004–2014Hummel
2015–2019Diadora
2020–2023Erreà
2023–Macron

Women's Football

[edit]
Main article:Þór/KA

Since 1999, KA has fielded a joint women's team with neighbouring clubÞór Akureyri under the name Þór/KA in the top-level leagueÚrvalsdeild. In 2006 the team finished 7th of 8 teams, 8th/9 in 2007, the reaching a good 4th/10 in 2008 and then bettering those results with 3rd/10 in 2009 and a second-place finish in 2010. As Iceland was in the top 8 leagues ofUEFA,[20] those second place was enough to qualify for the2011–12 UEFA Women's Champions League.[21] The team entered in the round of 32 but lost 14–2 on aggregate to German team Turbine Potsdam.

In 2010 the team also went to the semi-finals in the Icelandic cup, losing to the eventual winnerValur.[22] In 1989 and 2013 they lost the cup final.

In 2012 Þór/KA finished first in theÚrvalsdeild and secured its first ever Icelandic championship.[23]

On 29 September 2017, the club secured its second national championship by defeatingFH, in the last game of the season, 2–0 with goals fromSandra Jessen andSandra Stephany Mayor.[24]

Trophies and achievements

[edit]
  1. As Þór/KA
  2. As KA

Handball

[edit]

Men's handball

[edit]
Main article:KA Handball

Before the 2006–2007 Icelandic handball season, they merged their handball clubs to formAkureyri Handboltafélag. In 2017, KA left the partnership and reinstated theKA Handball section.

Trophies and achievements

[edit]

Women's handball

[edit]
Main article:KA/Þór

Trophies and achievements

[edit]

Volleyball

[edit]

Trophies and achievements

[edit]

Men's volleyball

[edit]
  • Icelandic Championships:
    • 1st place, gold medalist(s)Gold medal: 1989, 1991, 2010, 2011, 2018, 2019
  • Icelandic Cup:
    • Champions: 1991, 1992, 2010, 2011, 2012, 2015, 2016, 2018, 2019
  • Icelandic League Cup:
    • Champions: 1989, 1991, 1994, 2010, 2011, 2018, 2019

Women's volleyball

[edit]
  • Icelandic Championships:
    • 1st place, gold medalist(s)Gold medal: 2019
  • Icelandic Cup:
    • Champions: 2019
  • Icelandic League Cup:
    • Champions: 2019

Club officials

[edit]
As of 29 February 2024[26]

Current technical body

[edit]
PositionNameNationality
Sports directorSævar PéturssonIceland
Head coachHallgrímur JónassonIceland
Assistant coachElmar Dan SigþórssonIceland
Assistant coachSteingrímur Örn EiðssonIceland
Goalkeeper coachMichael Charpentier KjeldsenDenmark
PhysiotherapistHalldór Hermann JónssonIceland
Fitness coachEgill Ármann KristinssonIceland
Head of Youth DevelopmentAðalbjörn HannessonIceland
U-21 CoachEgill Daði AngantýssonIceland
KitmanPetar IvanicSerbia

Club Board

[edit]
PositionNameNationality
Club ChairmanEiríkur S. JóhannssonIceland
Vice-chairmanVignir Már ÞormóðssonIceland
TreasurerSigríður JóhannsdóttirIceland
Board MemberHjalti Þór HreinssonIceland
Board MemberLinda ÍvarsdóttirIceland
Football ChairmanHjörvar MaronssonIceland
Handball ChairmanHaddur Júlíus StefánssonIceland
Volleyball ChairmanArnar Már SigurðssonIceland
Judo ChairmanSigmundur MagnússonIceland
Weightlifting ChairmanBirkir Örn JónssonIceland

Football Board

[edit]
PositionNameNationality
ChairmanHjörvar MaronssonIceland
Board MemberGunnlaugur EiðssonIceland
Board MemberRóbert Már KristinssonIceland
Board MemberJóhann Rúnar SigurðssonIceland
Board MemberElmar Dan SigþórssonIceland
Board MemberKatrín VilhjálmsdóttirIceland
Board MemberSigurður Skúli EyjólfssonIceland

References

[edit]
  1. ^"Lög Knattspyrnufélags Akureyrar".ka.is (in Icelandic). Knattspyrnufélag Akureyrar. Retrieved11 February 2018.
  2. ^"Fótbolti.net".www.fotbolti.net (in Icelandic). Retrieved2 March 2024.
  3. ^"Keppnistímabilið 2015".Knattspyrnufélag Akureyrar (in Icelandic). Retrieved2 March 2024.
  4. ^"Keppnistímabilið 2016".Knattspyrnufélag Akureyrar (in Icelandic). Retrieved2 March 2024.
  5. ^"Óli Stefán hættur með KA".www.mbl.is (in Icelandic). Retrieved2 March 2024.
  6. ^Jónsson, Óskar Ófeigur (25 September 2020)."KA-menn farnir að nálgast met jafntefliskónga Gumma Ben - Vísir".visir.is (in Icelandic). Retrieved2 March 2024.
  7. ^Sverrisson, Ingvi Þór Sæmundsson, Runólfur Trausti Þórhallsson, Sindri (26 April 2021)."Pepsi Max-spáin 2021: Belgísk áhrif á Brekkunni - Vísir".visir.is (in Icelandic). Retrieved6 March 2024.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
  8. ^"Brynjar Ingi seldur til Lecce - RÚV.is".RÚV. 29 June 2021. Retrieved6 March 2024.
  9. ^"Íslandsmót - Pepsi Max deild karla - 2021".www.ksi.is (in Icelandic). Retrieved6 March 2024.
  10. ^Vikublaðið."Nökkvi Freyr Þórisson til Beerschot".Vikublaðið (in Icelandic). Retrieved6 March 2024.
  11. ^"Arnar hættur og Hallgrímur tekur við".www.mbl.is (in Icelandic). Retrieved6 March 2024.
  12. ^"Íslandsmót KSÍ - Besta deild karla - Efri hluti - 2022".www.ksi.is (in Icelandic). Retrieved6 March 2024.
  13. ^"Íslandsmót KSÍ - Besta deild karla - Neðri hluti - 2023".www.ksi.is (in Icelandic). Retrieved6 March 2024.
  14. ^"Leikskýrsla: Víkingur R. - KA - Knattspyrnusamband Íslands".www.ksi.is (in Icelandic). Retrieved6 March 2024.
  15. ^UEFA.com."KA-Club Brugge".UEFA. Retrieved6 March 2024.
  16. ^akureyri.net."KA tekur á móti Club Brugge í Laugardalnum".akureyri.net (in Icelandic). Retrieved6 March 2024.
  17. ^"Mótalisti".ksi.is (in Icelandic).KSI. Retrieved18 January 2018.
  18. ^"Öll mót" (in Icelandic). KSÍ. Retrieved20 December 2018.
  19. ^"Öll mót" (in Icelandic). KSÍ. Retrieved20 December 2018.
  20. ^UEFA rankings for 2011/12, retrieved 21 October 2010
  21. ^Thor/KA is champion, own website, retrieved 21 October 2010
  22. ^women.soccerway.com, 2010 Cup results
  23. ^"Úrslit – staða – Knattspyrnusamband Íslands".ksi.is. Retrieved25 September 2017.
  24. ^"Þór/KA – FH: Bein lýsing".Vísir.is (in Icelandic). 28 September 2017. Retrieved28 September 2017.
  25. ^"Frá upphafi". Archived fromthe original on 20 March 2012. Retrieved23 September 2017.
  26. ^[1]‚ KA.is, 4 January 2018

External links

[edit]
National teams
Men
Women
League system
Men
Women
Domestic cups
Men
Women
Annual tournaments
Youth
Defunct Competition
Men
Women
  • Faxafloi Women Cup
Culture
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