SK Rapid Wien

Rapid Wien
Full nameSportklub Rapid Wien
Founded1899
GroundAllianz Stadion
Capacity28,345
ChairmanAlexander Wrabetz
ManagerPeter Stöger
LeagueAustrian Bundesliga
2024-255th

S.K. Rapid Wien is an Austrian football club. Rapid Wien was founded in 1898 and is one of the major clubs in Austria. The club plays in Vienna. Rapid is Austria's most successful team with 32 championships wins. Rapid also won a German title in 1941 when the country was part of Germany.

History

The club was founded in 1898 as First Workers' Football Club of Vienna but was renamed in S(port) K(lub) Rapid Wien on 8 January 1899. The first coulors were red and white. The teams uses these colours in away matches today.

During the years before World War II, Rapid was one of the most successful clubs in Europe. Before the Second World War, Rapid won the Viennese championship 16 times. In these years there was no nationwide championship because professional football teams only played in Vienna. In 1930 Rapid won the Mitropacup against Sparta Praha (2:0; 3:2) (La Coupe de l'Europe Centrale), one of the first international competitions in Europe.[1] Around this time, the rivalry with the other great club of Vienna, FK Austria, started and continues today. Rapid was the club of the working class, while supporters of FK Austria were more middle class. After the annexation of Austria through Nazi-Germany in 1938 Rapid played in the Gauliga Ostmark. Rapid won the Tschammerpokal (Cup) in 1938 with a 3–1 victory over FSV Frankfurt. 1941 they won the Championship versus Schalke 04 (4-3).

Almost since the beginning of the club's history, the fans announce the last 15 minutes with clapping of their hands, the "Rapidviertelstunde".

SK Rapid only won the Austrian championship twice since 2000. The greatest success in recent years was the victory over the Premier League club Aston Villa in the last qualifying round for the UEFA Europa League 2009 and 2010. They played in the group stage twice, but they did not reach the next round. Rapid last reached the group stage of the UEFA Champions League in 2005–06. They finished last in their group and lost all their matches. [2]

Current squad

As of 28 October 2023

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

No. Pos. Nation Player
4 MF  Austria Patrick Greil
5 MF  Austria Roman Kerschbaum
6 DF  Netherlands Neraysho Kasanwirjo
7 FW  Austria Oliver Strunz
8 MF  Austria Lukas Grgic
9 FW  Austria Guido Burgstaller
10 FW  Germany Nicolas Kühn
13 DF  Austria Thorsten Schick
14 DF  Serbia Aleksa Pejic
15 DF  Netherlands Terence Kongolo
16 FW  Barbados Thierry Gale
17 FW  France Fally Mayulu
18 MF  Austria Matthias Seidl
19 DF  Austria Michael Sollbauer
20 DF  Austria Maximilian Hofmann
No. Pos. Nation Player
21 GK  Austria Bernhard Unger
23 DF  Austria Jonas Auer
24 MF  Germany Dennis Kaygin
25 GK  Austria Paul Gartler
26 DF  Austria Martin Moormann
27 FW  Austria Marco Grüll
28 MF  Austria Moritz Oswald
29 FW  Austria Ante Bajic
30 MF  Austria Nicolas Bajlicz
34 MF  Austria Nicolas Sattlberger
43 DF  Austria Leopold Querfeld
45 GK  Austria Niclas Hedl
49 FW  Austria Jovan Zivkovic
50 GK  Austria Laurenz Orgler
55 DF  Serbia Nenad Cvetkovic

Out on loan

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

No. Pos. Nation Player
FW  Netherlands Ferdy Druijf (at PEC Zwolle until 30 June 2024)
FW  Austria Bernhard Zimmermann (at Wolfsberger AC until 30 June 2024)
DF  Austria Pascal Fallmann (at SC Freiburg II until 30 June 2024)

Coaching history (21st century)

[3]

Start End Coach
4/1998 5/2000 Heribert Weber
5/2000 8/2001 Ernst Dokupil
8/2001 9/2001 Peter Persidis
9/2001 5/2002 Lothar Matthäus
7/2002 12/2005 Josef Hickersberger
1/2006 8/2006 Georg Zellhofer
8/2006 9/2009 Roman Pivarník
9/2006 4/2011 Peter Pacult
4/2011 6/2011 Zoran Barisic
7/2011 4/2013 Peter Schöttel
4/2013 6/2016 Zoran Barisic
7/2016 11/2016 Mike Büskens
11/2016 11/2016 Thomas Hickersberger
11/2016 4/2017 Damir Canadi
4/2017 9/2018 Goran Djuricin
10/2018 11/2020 Dietmar Kühbauer
11/2020 11/2020 Manfred Nastl
11/2020 11/2021 Dietmar Kühbauer
11/2021 11/2021 Thomas Hickersberger
11/2021 10/22 Ferdinand Feldhofer
10/22 11/23 Zoran Barisic
12/23 04/25 Robert Klauß
04/25 06/25 Stefan Kulovits
07/25 Peter Stöger

Famous players

Honours

  • National Austrian Championship (16): 1951, 1952, 1954, 1956, 1957, 1960, 1964, 1967, 1968, 1981–82, 1982–83, 1986–87, 1987–88, 1995–96, 2004–05, 2007–08
  • Viennese Championship (16): 1912, 1913, 1916, 1917, 1919, 1920, 1921, 1923, 1929, 1930, 1935, 1938, 1940, 1941, 1946, 1948 [10]
  • German War-time Championship: 1941
  • German War-time Cup: 1938
  • Mitropa Cup: 1930, 1951
  • Cup Winners' Cup Runners Up: 1985, 1996


References

  1. IFFHS Mitropacup 1930
  2. UEFA:Championsleague 2005/06
  3. [1] weltfussball.de. Retrieved 8 February 2022 (in German)
  4. later playing in the American Footbal League
  5. later architect, he designed the homeground of Rapid which is named after him
  6. later coach of the dutch national footballteam
  7. best scorer of Europe, later playing for CF Barcelona
  8. introduced the International Football Cup (now UEFA Intertoto Cup)
  9. later manager of Croatia (2004-2006) and Montenegro (2010- )
  10. Before the Second World war professional football was only played in Vienna.