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R.W.D. Molenbeek (1909)

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This article is about the club dissolved in 2002. For the club continuing its traditions dissolved in 2014, see R.W.D.M. Brussels F.C. For the club continuing its traditions founded in 2015, see R.W.D. Molenbeek (2015). For club of similar name founded in 1948, see White Star Woluwé F.C.

Football club
R.W.D. Molenbeek
Full nameRacing White Daring Molenbeek
Nickname(s)Les Coalisés
Founded1909 (as White Star (Athletic) Club d'Ixelles)
1973 (merging)
Dissolved2002
GroundEdmond Machtens Stadium
Capacity12,266
Websitewww.rwdm.be
Home colours Away colours
Current season

R.W.D. Molenbeek, short for Racing White Daring Molenbeek, was a Belgian football club founded in 1909 as White Star Club de Bruxelles. It then became a member of the Belgian Football Association later the same year as White Star Athletic Club and received the registration number 47.

History

White Star A.C.

The club played several seasons in the first division (1924–25 and from 1934–35 to 1946–47) first as White Star Woluwé A.C. then as Royal White Star A.C. The present White Star Woluwé F.C. took its name from this team but is not otherwise related.

Racing White

In 1963 the club merged with Racing de Bruxelles to become Royal Racing White. It played in the first division from 1965 until 1973 after two seasons in the second division. Its home ground was the Stade Fallon in Woluwe-Saint-Lambert, Brussels till the club merged with the famous Daring Club de Bruxelles in July 1973, becoming R.W.D. Molenbeek. The main reason for that merger was the poor league attendance.

R.W.D. Molenbeek

The club played in the first division for ten seasons after its inception, winning the 1974–75 Belgian First Division, regularly qualifying for European competitions and even reaching the semi-final of the 1976–77 UEFA Cup. Since the club had kept the registration number 47 of R. Racing White it could begin in the first division but it had lost the honours of the Daring Club. The club played in Molenbeek-Saint-Jean, Brussels.

From 1984, the club encountered many difficulties, leading to bankruptcy in 2002.

During the 2002–03 season, K.F.C. Strombeek (located near Brussels) moved to the Edmond Machtens Stadium and became F.C. Molenbeek Brussels Strombeek the next season. The new club, which used Strombeek's matricule (registration) №1936, subsequently began in the second division but was promoted to the Belgian First Division in 2004.

At the same time, a group of fans, who fought to keep the name alive, had also recreated a new team called RWD Molenbeek (with a new registration number) in 2003. The new team started at the very bottom of the Belgian football league system - provincial division 4 in Brabant (level 8), but has been promoted to the Brabant provincial division 1 (level 5 in Belgium) in 2006 after absorbing another team from the Brabant province. In 2015, the matricule of Standaard Wetteren was sold to a group of investors who started the club RWDM47, trying to reinstate the history of the club.

European Cup history

Season Competition Round Club Home Away Aggregate
1972–73 UEFA Cup 1R Portugal CUF Barreiro 0–1 0–2 0–3
1973–74 UEFA Cup 1R Francoist Spain Espanyol 1–2 3–0 4–2
2R Portugal Vitória Setúbal 2–1 0–1 2–2 (a)
1974–75 UEFA Cup 1R Scotland Dundee 1–0 4–2 5–2
2R Netherlands Twente 0–1 1–2 1–3
1975–76 European Cup 1R Norway Viking 3–2 1–0 4–2
R16 Socialist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia Hajduk Split 2–3 0–4 2–7
1976–77 UEFA Cup 1R Denmark Næstved 4–0 3–0 7–0
2R Poland Wisła Kraków 1–1 1–1 2–2 (5–4 p)
3R West Germany Schalke 04 1–0 1–1 2–1
QF Netherlands Feyenoord 2–1 0–0 2–1
SF Francoist Spain Athletic Bilbao 1–1 0–0 1–1 (a)
1977–78 UEFA Cup 1R Scotland Aberdeen 0–0 2–1 2–1
2R East Germany Carl Zeiss Jena 1–1 1–1 2–2 (5–6 p)
1980–81 UEFA Cup 1R Italy Torino 1–2 2–2 (aet) 3–4
1996–97 UEFA Cup 1R Turkey Beşiktaş 0–0 0–3 0–3

Honours

Molenbeek players celebrate after winning the 1975 Amsterdam tournament final against Ajax

References

Belgian Pro League
Seasons
Clubs
2024–25 clubs
Former clubs
Active
Defunct
Statistics and awards
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