Suvarna Garge (Editor)

FC Koper

Updated on
Edit
Like
Comment
Share on FacebookTweet on TwitterShare on LinkedInShare on Reddit
Full name
  
Football Club Koper

Ground
  
President
  
Valter Valenčič

Head coach
  
Igor Pamić

Founded
  
1955

Short name
  
FCK

Ground Capacity
  
4,047

Arena/Stadium
  
Manager
  
Igor Pamić

Location
  
Koper, Slovenia

FC Koper FC Koper Wikipedia

Nickname(s)
  
Kanarčki (The Canaries)Kozlički (The Goatlings)

Profiles

Nk maribor fc koper 1 0 0 0


Football Club Koper, commonly referred to as FC Koper or simply Koper, is a Slovenian football club, playing in the town of Koper. The club was founded in 1920. Koper is one of five football clubs in the country that won all three domestic competitions (League, Cup and Supercup).

Contents

FC Koper FC Internazionale Milano v Koper Preseason Friendly Pictures

The club's home ground is the Bonifika Stadium, which has a capacity of 4,047 seats.

Novinarska konferenca fc koper pred tekmo s krko 10 5 2016


History

FC Koper Araz Abdullayev Nefti PFK amp Miroslav ovilo FC Koper UEFA

From the records, it appears that football in Koper was played as early as in the 1920s, but officially, the club took the name NK Koper in 1955, when it was formed by the merger of two football teams: Aurora and Meduza. The club played under this name in different Yugoslav leagues until 1991 and was one of the most successful Slovenian clubs. After Slovenia became independent, the club started to play in the Slovenian PrvaLiga and Slovenian Second League. At the beginning of the 1990s, the club was achieving mid-table success. By the end of the 1990s, the club had been relegated to the second division twice, had serious financial problems and renamed itself to FC Koper, thereby avoiding the necessity of paying off its debts. With the advent of the new millennium, FC Koper consistently achieved positions in the upper half of the table (achieving third place in the 2001–02 season, its highest since Slovenian independence). In the 2003–04 season, they were playing in a European competition for the first time since 1991: the UEFA Intertoto Cup. Two years of mid-table anonymity and significant financial difficulties followed, in part because the former owner, Georg Suban, left substantial debts to the club and took half of the team with him when he moved to the other Slovenian PrvaLiga team Mura.

FC Koper httpsuploadwikimediaorgwikipediaslbbaFC

The fans took control of the club and tried to improve its finances to save it from going bankrupt and disappearing like three other major Slovenian clubs (Olimpija, Mura and Ljubljana), with reasonable success. In the 2005–06 season, Mladen Rudonja returned to the club and brought with him the Serbian-American businessman Milan Mandarić, who paid off all the remaining debts. After the first half of the season, before the arrival of the new patron, Koper was battling against relegation, but in the second part of the season, with a new coach, Milivoj Bračun, the club started an unbeaten run that led them to reach the 3rd place in the Slovenian PrvaLiga and to win the Slovenian Cup for the first time, FC Koper's first trophy since the Slovenian independence from Yugoslavia. This also qualified the team to play in the UEFA Cup qualifying rounds in the 2006–07 season. The following seasons were more difficult, with the club narrowly avoiding relegation in 2009. In the 2009–10 season, the team was expanded and, under the leadership of veteran playmaker/director-of-football Miran Pavlin eventually won the Slovenian league championship for the first time, winning a place in the UEFA Champions League qualifiers, where they succumbed to a spirited 5–4 agg. defeat by Dinamo Zagreb (1–5, 3–0). In the aftermath, Pavlin left the club.

Name changes

FC Koper Slovenia FC Koper Results fixtures tables statistics Futbol24

  • 1920: Formed as Circolo sportivo Capodistriano
  • 1928: Renamed to Unione Sportiva Capodistriana
  • 1946: Renamed to Aurora Koper
  • 1955: Fusion from Aurora Koper and Meduza Koper to NK Koper
  • 1990: Renamed to NK Koper Capodistria
  • 2002: Renamed to FC Koper
  • 2003: Renamed to FC Anet Koper
  • 2008: Renamed to FC Luka Koper
  • 2015: Renamed to FC Koper
  • Stadium

    FC Koper Regaining Identity FC Luka Koper The Itinerant Football Watcher

    The Bonifika is the team's home stadium, which is named after the area where it is situated in the town of Koper. The stadium was built in 1947. In 2010, the old stadium was demolished and completely rebuild. It has a capacity for 4,047 spectators. The largest attendance was in 1987 in a match between Koper and Olimpija (10,000 spectators).

    Yugoslavia

    League

  • Yugoslav Third League
  • Cup

  • Slovenian Republic Cup
  • Slovenia

  • Slovenian First League:
  • Slovenian Second League:
  • Cup

  • Slovenian Cup:
  • Slovenian Supercup:
  • MNZ Koper Cup
  • Current squad

    As of 14 February 2017.

    Note: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.

    Koper in UEFA competitions

    Koper goals always listed first.
    Score results denote: "Home, Away".

    References

    FC Koper Wikipedia