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Full name | Fotboll Club Roseng?rd | ||
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Founded | 7 September 1970 12 December 2013 (as FC Roseng?rd Malm?) | (as Malm? FF Dam)||
Ground | Malm? IP, Malm? | ||
Capacity | 7,600 | ||
Chairman | H?kan Wifvesson | ||
Head coach | Joel Kjetselberg | ||
League | Damallsvenskan | ||
2024 | 1st, Champions | ||
Website | fcrosengard | ||
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FC Roseng?rd (Swedish: [ru?s?nɡo?rd]), known as Malm? FF Dam ([?mal?m?? ?f?f dɑ?m]) until 2007 and later LdB FC Malm? until 2013, is a professional football club based in Malm?, Scania, Sweden. The team was established as Malm? FF Dam in 1970. It started out with playing 7 seasons in the Division 1 (until 1987), but has played in Damallsvenskan in since it formed in 1988. The team has won the league a record thirteen times, the latest in 2022.[1] As of the end of the 2015 season, the club ranks first in the overall Damallsvenskan table.[2] FC Roseng?rd play their home games at Malm? IP in Malm?. The club it merged with, FC Roseng?rd 1917, has both men's and women's teams.[3]
History
[edit]On 7 September 1970 the board of Malm? FF decided to start a women's team as part of the main club. The team was called Malm? FF Dam – the word dam meaning lady – to distinguish the team from the men's division of the same club.
In 1986 the club won the Swedish Women's Football Division 1 for the first time. The Division 1 was Sweden's highest division until 1988 when the Damallsvenskan was formed. It took three seasons for the club to win the newly formed Damallsvenskan in 1990 and more success followed in 1991, 1993 and 1994. Malm? FF Dam would then finish as runners-up for seven consecutive seasons (from 1996 to 2002).
In April 2007, Malm? FF Dam started a rebranding of the team, including a new team name, jerseys, and logo. The team was renamed LdB FC Malm? on 11 April 2007. This meant that the club fully withdrew from Malm? FF and became a club of its own. The change of name was related to a 24 million SEK sponsorship deal with Swedish skincare firm Hardford; whose leading brand Lait de Beauté (lit. beauty milk) became the name of the club.[4]
Under the LdB FC Malm? name, the club won the Damallsvenskan championship in 2010, which qualified them for the 2011–12 UEFA Women's Champions League. A successful title defense campaign followed in the 2011 season. In the final match of the 2012 season they suffered a home defeat (0–1) to Tyres? FF, the result meant Tyres? FF were champions due to better goal difference.[5] In 2013, they clinched the title once again, with a (2–3) win away against Tyres? FF being the turning point of the season.
In October 2013, LdB FC Malm? merged with FC Roseng?rd 1917, adopting the name of the latter.[3] The Damallsvenskan title wins of 2014 and 2015 added to the 2013 title (as LdB FC Malm?), made the club three times in a row title winners for the first time in its history.
Squad
[edit]- As of 25 January 2025[6]
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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Former players
[edit]For details of current and former players, see Category:FC Roseng?rd players.
Honours
[edit]- Note: Achievements of Malm? FF Dam, LdB FC Malm? and FC Roseng?rd are all counted here
Domestic
[edit]League
[edit]- Damallsvenskan (Tier 1)
- Division 1 S?dra (Tier 1)
- Winners (1): 1986
- Division 2 S?dra G?taland (Tier 2)
- Winners (1): 1980
Cups
[edit]- Svenska Cupen:
- Winners (5): 1990, 1997, 2015–16, 2016–17, 2017–18, 2021–22
- Runners-up (2): 2003, 2014–15
- Svenska Supercupen:
- Winners (4): 2011, 2012, 2015, 2016
Record in UEFA competitions
[edit]All results (away, home and aggregate) list Roseng?rd Malm?'s goal tally first.
f First leg.
Social impact
[edit]FC Roseng?rd is renowned for their remarkable work off the pitch in various projects. Under the slogan "Believe in your dream" the club has made it possible for thousands to make a better life.
In South Africa, FC Roseng?rd runs the football center "Football for Life" for girls, educating them to be football players, coaches and referees since 2008.
In Malm?, FC Roseng?rd has helped over 7000 people since 2003 in the program "Boost by FC Roseng?rd". The club has employed teachers, work counsellors and personnel to guide young unemployed people to work, studies and/or better health. Right now the club is running a project for the European Social Fund.
Every week, the club reads for 350 children in the ages between 5 and 10 years, before their practice. The club visits kindergarten schools in the area of Roseng?rd in Malm?, where most people don't speak Swedish at home. Through the club, the kids get a better vocabulary which strengthes their chances of academic success in school.
In the project Move, financied by the municipality of Malm? and sponsor Novo Nordisk - the club fights diabetes 2 in socioeconomic challenged areas in Malm?. Nutrition, football, awareness and knowledge is spread to parents and children also in cooperation with health agencies and nurses.
Footnotes
[edit]- ^ "A-lag Dam – FC Roseng?rd" (in Swedish). Retrieved 12 June 2022.
- ^ "Damallsvenskan All Time Table". svenskfotboll.se (in Swedish). Swedish Football Association (SvFF). Retrieved 16 February 2016.
- ^ a b "LDB blir FC Roseng?rd". Sydsvenskan (in Swedish). 9 October 2013. Archived from the original on 12 October 2013. Retrieved 13 October 2013.
- ^ "MFF dam byter namn till LDB Football Club". Sydsvenskan (in Swedish). Archived from the original on 7 August 2011. Retrieved 2025-08-14.
- ^ "Damallsvenskan 2012 Table and Results". svenskfotboll.se (in Swedish). Swedish Football Association (SvFF). Retrieved 16 February 2016.
- ^ "Lagsida | FC Roseng?rd | FC Roseng?rd". www.fcrosengard.se.
- ^ "Svenska m?starinnor & publiksnitt 1973–". svenskfotboll.se (in Swedish). Swedish Football Association (SvFF). Archived from the original on 22 April 2017. Retrieved 30 October 2019.
- ^ Karlsson, Erik; Bergstr?m, Kristoffer (20 October 2019). "FC Roseng?rd ?r svenska m?stare". Aftonbladet. Retrieved 30 October 2019.
- ^ "Roseng?rd ?r svenska m?stare. Detta sedan Link?ping p? m?ndagen spelat oavgjort". Expressen (in Swedish). 24 October 2022. Retrieved 24 October 2022.
External links
[edit] Media related to FC Roseng?rd at Wikimedia Commons
- Official website (in Swedish)