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{{Jupiler League|catkey=Genk Racing}} | |||
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Revision as of 05:08, 11 January 2007
Football clubFile:Genk2.gif | |||
Full name | Koninklijke Racing Club Genk | ||
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Nickname(s) | - | ||
Founded | 1923 (creation) July 1, 1988 (merge) | ||
Ground | Fenix Stadion, Genk | ||
Capacity | 24,604 | ||
Chairman | Harry Lemmens | ||
Manager | Hugo Broos | ||
League | Jupiler League | ||
2005-06 | Jupiler League, 5th | ||
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K.R.C. Genk, usually referred to as Racing Genk is a Belgian football club based in the city of Genk in Limburg, province of Belgium. It was formed in 1988 by the fusion of Waterschei Thor and K.F.C. Winterslag. It is currently one of the four most successful clubs in Belgium as Racing Genk often qualifies for European competitions and it won the championship and the cup twice since 1998. The club has been in the Jupiler League since the 1996-97 season. The supporters of Genk produced in their homegames one of the best atmospheres in the Benelux (Belgium, Netherlands and Luxemburg). Genk counts 68 fan clubs.
History
K.F.C. Winterslag history (1923--1988)
The club F.C. Winterslag was founded in 1923 and it became that year a member of the Belgian Football Association that gave it the matricule n°322. On its 35th anniversary the club changed its name to K.F.C. Winterslag. In 1972 Winterslag reached the second division and it eventually qualified for the 1974-75 season in the first division after finishing second in the final round. It had taken advantage of the increase in the number of first division clubs (from 16 to 20). The club ended the season in last place but won the second division right after.
K.F.C. Winterslag reached the 5th place in 1981 but two seasons later it was relegated to the second stage after a disappointing last place. That season Standard Liège won the championship on bribery in a match against the club of Waterschei Thor that would eventually merge with the matricule n°322. Following a spell of four seasons in the second division, Winterslag found its place again in the Jupiler League by winning the 1987 final round, one point ahead of Tongeren. It finished 15th on 18 but at the end of the season, the club merged with the neighbour club of Waterschei Thor which was playing in the second division since its relegation in 1986.
K.R.C. Genk history (1988--present)
The new club was named K.R.C. Genk and as it kept the matricule of Winterslag, it began in the first division but it finished last. The next year Genk managed to win the final round and then played 4 seasons in the Jupiler League. In 1995 the chairman hired Aimé Anthuenis as a coach and the Racing finished second and skipped the final round as two first division teams merged (Seraing and Standard Liège). After an eighth place in 1997, the club had a good 1997-98 season with a cup win and a second place in the championship. In its first European season, Racing Genk eliminated successively Apolonia and MSV Duisburg but it lost to RCD Mallorca in the round of 16 after two draws (1-1 on aggregate) in the last Cup Winners' Cup ever. The season was ended in beauty as Genk won its first Belgian championship in May after what the manager Aimé Anthuenis signed to Anderlecht.
Genk subsequently played the UEFA Champions League in 1999-2000 but lost in the second qualifying round to NK Maribor. It saved its season when it won the Belgian Cup again to Standard this time, but ended the championship in 9th place. It then finished 11th the next season and it lost in the UEFA Cup second round to Werder Bremen after a win against FC Zürich.
In the new season 2006-2007 (place 5 in 2005-2006), Genk made the best start in its history, with 32 points in 12 games (they also beat Belgium's biggest club, RSC Anderlecht, with 1-4). Genk is the leader in the Jupiler League from the first game in the competition.
Current squad
As of 2 January, 2007: Note: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules; some limited exceptions apply. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.
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Honours
- Belgian First Division:
- Winners (2): 1998-99, 2001-02
- Runners-up (1): 1997-98
- Belgian Second Division:
- Winners (1): 1975-76
- Runners-up (2): 1986-87, 1995-96
- Belgian Second Division Final Round:
- Winners (2): 1987, 1990
- Runners-up (1): 1974
- Belgian Cup:
- Winners (2): 1997-98, 1999-2000
- Belgian Supercup:
- Runners-up (4): 1997-98, 1998-99, 1999-2000, 2001-02
European record
Competition | A | P | W | D | L | GF | GA |
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UEFA Champions League | 2 | 10 | 2 | 4 | 4 | 10 | 18 |
Cup Winners' Cup | 1 | 6 | 3 | 3 | 0 | 16 | 3 |
UEFA Cup | 2 | 8 | 4 | 1 | 3 | 15 | 15 |
Intertoto Cup | 2 | 10 | 6 | 1 | 3 | 22 | 13 |
A = appearances, P = matches played, W = won, D = drawn, L = lost, GF = goals for, GA = goals against.
Noted players
- 1990s: Carmel Busuttil, Branko Strupar, Souleymane Oulare, Bart Goor, Marc Hendrikx, Philippe Clement
- 2000s: Didier Zokora, Josip Skoko, Koen Daerden, Kevin Vandenbergh, Moumouni Dagano, Mirsad Bešlija, Sunday Oliseh, Wesley Sonck
Noted managers
- 1990s: Enver Alisic (?-1995), Aimé Anthuenis (1995-1999), Jos Heyligen (1999-2000), Johan Boskamp (2000)
- 2000s: Pierre Denier, caretaker (2001), Sef Vergoossen (2001-2003), Pierre Denier and Ronny Van Geneugden, caretakers (2003-2004), René Vandereycken (2004-2005), Hugo Broos (2005-present)