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Valletta F.C.

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Association football club in Malta
Football club
Valletta
Full nameValletta Football Club
NicknamesLilywhites
Tal-Palestina
Citizens[1]
Founded1943; 82 years ago (1943)
ChairmanClaudio Grech
ManagerThane Micallef
LeagueMaltese Premier League
2024–25Maltese Challenge League, 1st of 16 (promoted)
Websitewww.vallettafc.net

Valletta F.C. is a professionalfootball club based inValletta, the capital city ofMalta. The club currently competes in theMaltese Premier League. The club was founded in 1943 after a merge of Valletta Prestons, Valletta St. Paul's and Valletta United, the latter being a two-time league winner before theSecond World War.

Considered one of the most supported and successful clubs in Maltese football,[2] the club has won 25league titles, 14FA Trophies and a record 13Super Cups. During the 2021–22 season the club was sponsored by Meridianbet.[3]

History

[edit]
icon
This sectionmay need to be rewritten to comply with Wikipedia'squality standards.You can help. Thetalk page may contain suggestions.(October 2018)

There is no clear evidence on when Valletta F.C. started, hence the fact that Valletta possessed two clubs at that era. The foundation of Valletta F.C. was laid with the creation of the Valletta United team. Valletta United was known as the "team of the square" since the club was located in St. George's Square. Valletta United represented the city from 1904 to 1932.

The city of Valletta in Malta has a long footballing history, between 1886 and 1919 at some point or another, around fourteen teams had competed representing the city. Amongst these early teams included the popularBoys Empire League,Valletta College,St. George's Square,Dockyard Albion andMalta Athletic Club.

An early step in the history of the current club was the founding ofValletta United Football Club in 1903 by local youngsters. Despite their enthusiasm for the game which had been brought to the island by theBritish, the youngsters had a rough start with limited supplies. They cut their white trousers into long shorts and dyed their shirts into that of the club colours (brown, with yellow sleeves) for their uniforms.

The Ditch atPorte des Bombes, which itself had been the scene of the first ever recorded Maltese football match in 1886, was chosen to host Valletta United's first match on 9 January 1904.[4] United faced off against a team from theCollegiate School and won 1–0 with a strike from a forward named L. Agius. The full Valletta United team that day included;[4]

 
  • M.H. Laferla (Captain)
  • P. Ferrante
  • E. Galea
 
  • E. Vella
  • L. Agius
  • L. Preziosi
 
  • C. Vella
  • V. Casolani
  • R. Vadala
 
  • V. Camilleri
  • L. Castaldi

The club soon found a more permanent home atSt. George's Square, just opposite theGrandmaster's Palace in Valletta; they gained the nickname "the team of the square" because of this. Valletta first gained silverware during the 1914–15 season, when they won both theCousis Shield and theMaltese League championship, it was only the fifth season the league had been competed in Malta.

Much of Maltese football was dominated byFloriana andSliema Wanderers up until theSecond World War, Valletta attempted to upset the status quo several times; they won theCousis Shield for the second time in 1920–21 and finished as runners-up in the Maltese League during both 1925–26 and 1926–27. During their last season, Valletta United upset the two main clubs in Malta of the time, by winning the Maltese League in 1931–32, however they did not enter the following season.

Although Sliema and Floriana dominated the local scene in those times, by winning these trophies it was Valletta United that started to break into this duopoly and induce greater competition. Valletta United were very active in the Championship of the first division and in fact played 97 games.

During the period that Valletta United played within theMalta Football Association (i.e., from 1909 to 1932), Valletta United won the championship in 1931–32. However, for some reason in the following season, Valletta United disappeared from the football scene and thus the monopoly of Sliema and Floriana football clubs recommenced.

Valletta United was not the only team from the city that played in the highest Division of the M.F.A. In the 1925–26 and the 1926–27 seasons there were Valletta Rovers who played in the highest Division of the M.F.A., then in the season 1937–38 and 1938–39 there was Valletta City.

The winning of five cups in one season

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In 1996–97 Valletta F.C. won all five competitions that the Maltese football offers. This was done by succeeding to win the Premier League, Rothmans Trophy, Super Five Cup, Lowenbrau Cup and Super Cup.

The historic season – 2000–01 – Six cups in one season

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In the season 2000–01, Valletta F.C. succeeded in breaking their own record from 1996 to 1997. This time they won the six competitions offered by the M.F.A. This particular season there was an additional one, namely the Centenary Cup. It had been added to celebrate the 100th Anniversary of the M.F.A.

2007–08: Champions again

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Hope for their first trophy in seven years was a huge thought running through Valletta fans in the summer of 2007. Valletta spent a lot of money in the transfer market and expectations were high. Valletta began the season in the worst possible fashion, with a 3–2 defeat to Eternal rivals, Floriana. Valletta's poor start continued with a 1–1 draw againstHibernians, defeat to Sliema, a 0–0 draw withHamrun Spartans and Msida respectively. However, eventually Valletta hit good form with a 1–0 win over Birkirkara, a 7–0 trashing over championsMarsaxlokk and they gained revenge over Floriana with a 4–0 win on 8 December. After wins over Msida, Mqabba, Hamrun, Sliema and Marsaxlokk the club showed its winning pedigree. Valletta headed to the final round of the season on a high note.

Valletta won their 19th Premier League title after Marsaxlokk failed to beat Birkirkara on Saturday 3 May after a very successful Championship Pool campaign. However, with the title in the bag the long unbeaten streak soon came to an end, and the season ended with a number of defeats. The team also failed to reach the U*Bet F.A. Trophy 2008 final, after losing 4–2 to rivalsBirkirkara in the semi-final. But except for the early stages and the post-championship games, Valletta had been the most consistent side.

Consecutive titles

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Valletta won the2010–11 BOV Premier League as an unbeaten team which brought the 20th title to Valletta FC's history. Valletta won the2011–12 BOV Premier League with two matches still to go after beating Sliema Wanderers 3–0, this was the 21st title in the history of Valletta. They were champions of Malta again in 2013–14, 2015–16 and 2 year in a row 2017–18 and 2018–19 for a total of 25 titles.

Relegation and subsequent promotion

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Valletta were relegated for the first time in the club's history in the2023–24 Maltese Premier League. Valletta spent most of the season in the bottom half of the league. Towards the end of the season, a 1–1 draw against Ħamrun Spartans and a 1–0 win againstBalzan showed a glimmer of hope for salvation. This did not happen however and a 4–0 defeat againstNaxxar Lions condemned Valletta to relegation.[5]

In the2024–25 Maltese Challenge League, the club secured promotion back to the top division, finishing at the top of the table with only one defeat during the season.[6]

Players

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Current squad

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As of 6 September, 2025[7][8]

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 MLTTimothy Aquilina
3DF MLTMatthias Ellul
4DF MLTSteve Borg
5DF MLTZachary Cassar
6DF MLTSheldon Mckay
8FW MLTAndrea Zammit
9FW ROUAndrei Ciolacu
10MF MLTBrandon Paiber
11MF MLTJake Azzopardi
13GK MLTLiam Frendo
17MF MLTZak Barbara
18FW MLTPJ Ohaka
19MF MLTKeyon Ewurum
No.Pos.NationPlayer
20MF MLTYannick Yankam
24MF MLTRowen Muscat
28DF USAShaft Brewer Jr.
31MF MLTThomas Melillo
33DF GEREmmanuel Mbende
44DF MLTNeil Micallef
50FW BRAYuri
55DF SRBSava Radić
77FW ANGThaylor
80DF POREvandro Gomes
90GK BRAAdilson Maringá
94FW BRAJefferson Assis
98MF COLJackson Mendoza

Youth Players in use

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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
No.Pos.NationPlayer

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

Retired numbers

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  • 7MaltaGilbert Agius,FW, 1990–2012
  • 12 – Representing the supporters of Valletta as the 12th player of the team

Personnel

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Coaching staff

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Position[7]Staff
ManagerMalta Thane Micallef
Assistant ManagerMaltaJesmond Zerafa
Goalkeeping coachMalta Romeo Schembri
Team managerMalta Gerard Ellul
Training assistantMalta Jason Galea Lucas
Physical trainerMalta Karl Sciortino
PhysioSpain Oscar Alonso
Kit managerMalta Clint Mizzi

Managerial history

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Dates[9]Name
1949–1950England Harry Tedder
1958–1959Scotland Bob Gilmour
1959–1960England William Dingwall
1962–1964Malta Carm Borg
1968–1970MaltaTony Formosa
1970–1972Malta Josie Urpani
1973–1975MaltaTony Formosa
1976–1977ItalyTerenzio Polverini
1977–1978MaltaLolly Debattista
1978–1981Malta John Calleja
1982–1984MaltaJoe Cilia
1986–1988MaltaTony Formosa
Malta Joe Micallef
1989–1990Malta George Busuttil
1989–1990MaltaEddie Vella
1991–1993Malta Tony Euchar Grech
1993–1994Malta Lawrence Borg
1994–1995MaltaJoe Cilia
Malta Edward Aquilina
1995–1998Malta Edward Aquilina
1998–2001BulgariaKrasimir Manolov
2001–2002Bulgaria Georgi Deanov
2003–2004Bulgaria Atanas Marinov
2004–2005MaltaJoseph John Aquilina
2004–2009MaltaPaul Zammit
2009–2010NetherlandsTon Caanen
2010–2012MaltaJesmond Zerafa
2012–2013EnglandMark Miller
2014NetherlandsAndré Paus
2014–2015MaltaGilbert Agius
MaltaIvan Zammit
2015–2017Malta Paul Zammit
2015–2017SerbiaZoran Popović
2017– 2019SerbiaDanilo Dončić
2019MaltaGilbert Agius (Caretaker)
2019–2020Malta Darren Abdilla[10]
2020ItalyGiovanni Tedesco[11]
2020MaltaJesmond Zerafa[12]
2020MaltaGilbert Agius (Caretaker)[13]
2020-2022PortugalTozé Mendes[14]
2022SerbiaDanilo Dončić[15]
2022-2023Malta Thane Micallef
2023-2024Italy Enzo Potenza
2024ArgentinaJuan Cruz Gill (Caretaker)
2024-Malta Thane Micallef

European record

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As of 10 August 2020[16]
CompetitionPlayedWonDrewLostGFGAGDWin%
European Cup / Champions League45863137112−75017.78
Cup Winners' Cup140212654−48000.00
UEFA Cup / UEFA Europa League3657243580−45013.89
UEFA Intertoto Cup402239−6000.00
Total9913176975255−180013.13

Legend: GF = Goals For. GA = Goals Against. GD = Goal Difference.

SeasonCompetitionRoundClubHomeAwayAggregate
1963–64European CupPRCzechoslovakiaDukla Prague0–20–60–8
1964–65European Cup Winners' Cup1RSpainReal Zaragoza0–31–51–8
1972–73UEFA Cup1RItalyInter Milan0–11–61–7
1974–75European Cup1RFinlandHJK Helsinki1–01–42–4
1975–76European Cup Winners' Cup1RHungaryHaladás VSE1–10–71–8
1977–78European Cup Winners' Cup1RSoviet UnionDynamo Moscow0–20–50–7
1978–79European Cup1RSwitzerlandGrasshopper3–50–83–13
1979–80UEFA Cup1REnglandLeeds United0–40–30–7
1980–81European CupPRHungaryBudapest Honvéd0–30–80–11
1983–84European Cup Winners' Cup1RScotlandRangers0–80–100–18
1984–85European Cup1RAustriaAustria Wien0–40–40–8
1987–88UEFA Cup1RItalyJuventus0–40–30–7
1989–90UEFA Cup1RAustriaFirst Vienna1–40–31–7
1990–91European Cup1RScotlandRangers0–40–60–10
1991–92UEFA Cup Winners' Cup1RPortugalPorto0–30–10–4
1992–93UEFA Champions LeaguePRIsraelMaccabi Tel Aviv1–20–11–3
1993–94UEFA Cup1RTurkeyTrabzonspor1–31–32–6
1994–95UEFA CupPRRomaniaRapid București2–61–13–7
1995–96UEFA Cup Winners' CupQRSlovakiaInter Bratislava0–02–52–5
1996–97UEFA Cup Winners' CupQRRomaniaGloria Bistrița1–21–22–4
1997–98UEFA Champions League1QRLatviaSkonto Riga1–00–21–2
1998–99UEFA Champions League1QRCyprusAnorthosis Famagusta0–20–60–8
1999–00UEFA Champions League1QRWalesBarry Town3–20–03–2
2QRAustriaRapid Wien0–20–30–5
2000–01UEFA Cup1QRCroatiaRijeka4–52–36–8 (a.e.t.)
2001–02UEFA Champions League1QRFinlandHaka0–00–50–5
2002UEFA Intertoto Cup1RAlbaniaTeuta1–20–01–2
2003–04UEFA Cup1QRSwitzerlandNeuchâtel Xamax0–20–20–4
2005UEFA Intertoto Cup1RSerbia and MontenegroBudućnost Podgorica0–52–22–7
2008–09UEFA Champions League1QRSlovakiaArtmedia0–20–10–3
2009–10UEFA Europa League1QRIcelandKeflavík3–02–25–2
2QRRepublic of IrelandSt Patrick's Athletic0–11–11–2
2010–11UEFA Europa League2QRPolandRuch Chorzów1–10–01–1 (a)
2011–12UEFA Champions League1QRSan MarinoTre Fiori2–13–05–1
2QRLithuaniaEkranas2–30–12–4
2012–13UEFA Champions League1QRAndorraLusitanos8–01–09–0
2QRSerbiaPartizan1–41–32–7
2013–14UEFA Europa League1QRSan MarinoFiorita1–03–04–0
2QRBelarusMinsk1–10–21–3
2014–15UEFA Champions League2QRAzerbaijanQarabağ0–10–40–5
2015–16UEFA Europa League1QRWalesNewtown1–21–22–4
2016–17UEFA Champions League1QRFaroe IslandsB36 Tórshavn1–01–22–2 (a)
2QRSerbiaRed Star Belgrade1–21–22–4
2017–18UEFA Europa League1QRSan MarinoFolgore2–01–03–0
2QRNetherlandsFC Utrecht0–01–31–3
2018–19UEFA Champions League1QRAlbaniaKukësi1–10–01–1 (a)
UEFA Europa League2QRBosnia and HerzegovinaZrinjski Mostar1–21–12–3
2019–20UEFA Champions League1QRLuxembourgF91 Dudelange1–12–23–3 (a)
2QRHungaryFerencváros1–11–32–4
UEFA Europa League3QRKazakhstanAstana1–50–41–9
2020–21UEFA Europa League1QRWalesBala Town0–1

Honours

[edit]
CompetitionTitlesSeasons
Maltese Premier League251914–15,[a]1931–32,[a]1944–45,1945–46,1947–48,1958–59,1959–60,1962–63,1973–74,1977–78,1979–80,1983–84,1989–90,1991–92,1996–97,1997–98,1998–99,2000–01,2007–08,2010–11,2011–12,2013–14,2015–16,2017–18,2018–19
Maltese FA Trophy141959–60, 1963–64, 1974–75, 1976–77, 1977–78, 1990–91, 1994–95, 1995–96, 1996–97, 1998–99,2000–01,2009–10,2013–14,2017–18
Maltese Super Cup131990, 1995, 1997, 1998, 1999, 2001, 2008, 2010, 2011, 2012, 2016, 2018, 2019
Cassar Cup41943–44, 1958–59, 1965–66, 1967–68
Super 5 Lottery Tournament41992–93, 1996–97, 1999–2000, 2000–01
Cousis Shield21914–15, 1920–21
Scicluna Cup21960–61, 1963–64
Independence Cup31974–75, 1979–80, 1980–81
Malta Cup11943–44
Testaferrata Cup11979–80
Centenary Cup12000–01
Maltese National League 100 Anniversary Cup12009–10
Euro Challenge Cup61983–84, 1987–88, 1989–90, 2011–12, 2013–14, 2014–15
Löwenbräu Cup61993–94, 1994–95, 1995–96, 1996–97, 1997–98, 2000–01
Coronation Cup11953–54
Sons of Malta Cup21974–75, 1978–79
Olympic Cup11962–63
Melita Cup11911
Ranger's Cup11914
Poppy Day Fund Cup11960–61
BetFair Cup12008
Mare Blue Cup22010–11, 2011–12
Doubles: League & Trophy in the same season81914–15, 1959–60, 1977–78, 1996–97, 1998–99, 2000–01, 2013–14, 2017–18
All Cups in the same season31996–97 (5/5 Cups), 2000–01 (6/6 Cups), 2017–2018 (3/3 Cups)

Notes

[edit]
  1. ^abValletta United, the predecessors of Valletta F.C., won the league title in 1914–15 and 1931–32 seasons.

References

[edit]
  1. ^"Valletta edge Balzan to capture BOV Super Cup". 13 December 2018.Archived from the original on 3 August 2020. Retrieved16 July 2020.
  2. ^"UEFA-MFA study confirms football as no.1 sport in Malta". Malta Football Association. 26 September 2018. Archived fromthe original on 14 October 2018. Retrieved14 October 2018.
  3. ^"With a goal to promote Maltese sport, Meridianbet sponsored two football clubs during the 2021/22 season!".TVM News. 10 July 2022. Retrieved28 May 2024.
  4. ^ab"The Birth of Valletta United". VallettaFCOfficial.net. 12 July 2007. Archived fromthe original on 16 July 2011. Retrieved10 January 2014.
  5. ^"Valletta FC condemned to first ever relegation after heavy loss". Malta Independent. 28 April 2024.
  6. ^"BOV Challenge League: Valletta secure promotion". maltafootball.com. 1 March 2025.
  7. ^ab"Squad 2018–19". Valletta F.C.Archived from the original on 3 October 2018. Retrieved14 October 2018.
  8. ^"Valletta". UEFA.Archived from the original on 15 July 2018. Retrieved12 July 2018.
  9. ^"The Coaches". Valletta F.C.Archived from the original on 14 October 2018. Retrieved14 October 2018.
  10. ^V. Camilleri (19 February 2020)."Abdilla sacked as Valletta coach".Archived from the original on 19 February 2020. Retrieved19 February 2020.
  11. ^V. Camilleri (19 February 2020)."Updated: Proud Tedesco keen to lead Valletta to more trophies".Archived from the original on 19 February 2020. Retrieved19 February 2020.
  12. ^V. Camilleri (17 June 2020)."Zerafa agrees terms to become Valletta coach".Archived from the original on 18 June 2020. Retrieved18 June 2020.
  13. ^Camilleri, Valhmor (2 December 2020)."Agius appointed interim coach at Valletta FC".Times of Malta.Archived from the original on 2 December 2020. Retrieved30 December 2020.
  14. ^V. Camilleri (28 December 2020)."Portuguese coach Cardoso Mendes takes over at Valletta FC".Archived from the original on 25 February 2021. Retrieved30 December 2020.
  15. ^Busuttil, Antoine (3 February 2022)."DANILO DONCIC APPOINTED VALLETTA FC COACH".Archived from the original on 4 February 2022. Retrieved4 February 2022.
  16. ^"UEFA Competitions". Valletta F.C.Archived from the original on 14 October 2018. Retrieved14 October 2018.

External links

[edit]
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