2015–16 FC Basel season

The 2015–16 FC Basel season was the 123rd season in club history and the club's 21st consecutive season in the top flight of Swiss football. Basel were the reigning Swiss Super League champions. They prepared their season with various warm-up matches against teams from Ukraine, Germany and Netherlands. Their 2015–16 Swiss Super League season began on 19 July with a home game against Vaduz. By the winter break, having won fourteen and drawing one of the first 18 games, Basel led the league table by 10 points ahead of the Grasshoppers and 15 ahead of the Young Boys.

FC Basel
2015–16 season
ChairmanBernhard Heusler
ManagerUrs Fischer
GroundSt. Jakob-Park, Basel, Switzerland
Super LeagueChampions
Swiss CupQuarter-finals
Champions LeaguePlay-off round
Europa LeagueRound of 16
Top goalscorerLeague: Marc Janko (16)
All: Marc Janko (21)
Highest home attendanceSwiss League:
33,360 vs. Young Boys
(25 October 2015)
Champions League:
18,200 vs. Lech Poznań
(5 August 2015)
Europa League:
22,550 vs. Fiorentina
(26 November 2015)
Lowest home attendanceSwiss League:
24,558 vs. Thun
(10 May 2016)
Champions League:
15,620 vs. Maccabi Tel Aviv
(19 August 2015)
Europa League:
17,275 vs. Belenenses
(22 October 2015)

Basel were qualified for the 2015–16 Champions League in the Third qualifying round. The draw for the third qualifying round was held on 17 July 2015 and they were drawn against Lech Poznań. The first leg was played on 28 July in INEA Stadion, the return leg on 5 August 2015 in St. Jakob-Park. In the Play-off round, their opponents were Maccabi Tel Aviv, but Basel failed to qualify for the Champions League groups stage. Because Basel failed to qualify for the Champions League group stage, they dropped into the 2015–16 UEFA Europa League group stage, where were drawn into Group I alongside Fiorentina, Lech Poznań and Belenenses. Basel's first match was played away in Stadio Artemio Franchi in Florence on 17 September 2015. Because they finished as group winners, Basel continued in the knockout phase (which started in February 2016), playing an away game against Saint-Étienne. In the round of 16, Basel played Sevilla, losing 0–3 on aggregate.

In the first round of the 2015–16 Swiss Cup, which was played on 15 August 2015, Basel were drawn away against Meyrin FC, winning 4–0. In the second round, played on 20 September 2015, Basel were drawn away against YF Juventus, winning 4–1. Then in the third round, played on 28 October, Basel were drawn away against SV Muttenz, winning 5–1. The fourth round was played on 13 December 2015, where Basel lost away at the Stade Tourbillon against Sion after a penalty shootout.

Club

Management

Paulo Sousa quit his Trainer position in Basel at the end of the 2014–15 season. On 18 June 2015, Basel announced that Urs Fischer had signed a three-year contract as first team manager.[1] His assistants are Marco Walker and Markus Hoffmann. Massimo Colomba remained the Goalkeeper coach. Massimo Ceccaroni is head of the FCB Youth System. Coach of the Youth Team (U–21) was Thomas Häberli until October, at which time, due to the bad results, he had to step back and then Ceccaronii coached the team.

Position Staff
Manager Urs Fischer (since 18 June 2015)
1 Assistant manager Marco Walker
2 Assistant manager Markus Hoffmann
Goalkeeper Coach Massimo Colomba
Team Administration Gustav Nussbaumer
Youth Team Coach Thomas Häberli
Massimo Ceccaroni (since October 2015)
Youth Team Co-Coach Roland Heri

Last updated: 1 July 2015
Source: FCB Official Site

Further information

The FC Basel AGM took place on 27 April 2015 in Basel's congress center. The board of directors under president Bernhard Heusler with vice-president Adrian Knup, sport director Georg Heitz, financial manager Stephan Werthmüller and marketing manager René Kamm, and the three directors Reto Baumgartner, Dominik Donzé and Benno Kaiser were all willing to continue and they were all re-elected unanimously.[2]

Chairman Mr Bernhard Heusler
Vice Chairman Mr Adrian Knup
Finances Mr Stephan Werthmüller
Sportdirector Mr Georg Heitz
Marketing Mr René Kamm
Director Mr Reto Baumgartner
Director Mr Dominik Donzé
Director Mr Benno Kaiser
Ground (capacity and dimensions) St. Jakob-Park (38,512[3])
(37,500 for international matches)[4] / 120x80 m)

Updated to match played 27 April 2015
Source: FCB Official Site

Overview

Off-season and pre-season

At the end of the 2014–15 FC Basel season four first team players left the club to continue their careers elsewhere. These were Fabian Schär to 1899 Hoffenheim, Fabian Frei to Mainz 05, Giovanni Sio to Rennes and Arlind Ajeti. Also no longer in the team for this season was Marco Streller, who retired from professional football. As mentioned above Urs Fischer was the new first team manager. Basel's biggest signings for the beginning of the new season were Daniel Høegh from Odense, Zdravko Kuzmanović from Internazionale, Michael Lang from Grasshopper and Marc Janko, who came in on a free transfer from Sydney FC. Also new to the team are Manuel Akanji, who transferred in from FC Winterthur, and Mirko Salvi, who returned from his one-year loan to FC Biel-Bienne. Because Streller retired, Matías Delgado was named as captain; Marek Suchý and Kuzmanović were named as his vice-captains.

Mid-season break

During the winter break, there were a number of changes to the Basel squad. Ivan Ivanov, who spent the last two years recovering from an injury, left the club by mutual consent.[5] Also outwards were Zdravko Kuzmanović, on loan to Udinese[6] and Albian Ajeti, who never quite managed to enter into the first team; he transferred to FC Augsburg.[7] Also Yoichiro Kakitani, who only played a minor role in manager Fischer's team, transferred back to Japan to rejoin Cerezo Osaka.[8] However, the one transfer deal that made the most news was midfielder Mohamed Elneny's departure to English Premier League side Arsenal.[9]

There were also a few players on the inwards direction. As early as 8 December 2015, the club announced that Andraž Šporar had signed a four-and-a-half-year contract up until the end of June 2020.[10] Then, on 2 January 2016, the club announced it had signed Alexander Fransson, also on a four-and-a-half-year contract.[11] Again, on 12 January, they announced that Renato Steffen had also joined them on yet another four-and-a-half-year deal.[12]

2016–17 off-season

On 4 May, Basel announced that they had signed 18-year-old Paraguayan defender Blás Riveros on a five-year deal. Due to Riveros' commitments with the Paraguay national team at the upcoming Copa América Centenario, he will not be expected to join the Basel first team until the beginning of July.[13] On 10 May, Basel also announced that they had signed Egyptian defender Omar Gaber from Zamalek on a four-year deal.[14][15]

Super League

Basel's priority aim for the season is to win the league championship for the seventh time in a row. Basel's 2015–16 Swiss Super League season began well with a home victory on 18 July against Vaduz. In fact, they started the season very well, winning each of their first eight games, scoring 22 goals conceding 7. They suffered their first defeat in the Stade de Suisse 3–4 against Young Boys. Four of the next five games were won; the away game against Zürich in Letzigrund ended in a 2–2 draw. Two defeats were followed by two victories. By the winter break, Basel led the league table with 43 points, 10 points ahead of the Grasshoppers and 15 ahead of the Young Boys. They had won 14 and drawing 1 of the first 18 games, scoring 43 goals and conceding just 20. Basel started the second half of the season with three straight wins, a further 2–2 draw against Zürich and another three straight wins. In round 31, on 30 April, the home win against Sion gave Basel a 16-point lead in the league table with just five games left to play and thus the championship title. Basel ended the season with two defeats in the last three games, but won the championship with 83 points and were 14 points ahead of Young Boys and 29 points ahead of Luzern. Basel had won 26 games drawing five and had suffered five defeats; they had scored 88 goals, conceding 38.

Swiss Cup

Basel's clear aim for the 2015–16 Swiss Cup is to regain the title that they last won four seasons ago. In the previous three seasons they had ended the cup competitions as runners-up, in 2013 against Grasshopper Club Zürich, in 2014 against Zürich and the previous season 2015 against Sion. In the first round of this season's competition, which was played on 15 August 2015, Basel are drawn away against Meyrin FC, winning 4–0. In the second round, Basel were drawn away against YF Juventus, which was played on 20 September. Because of safety reasons, however, the game was not played at YF Juventus' home ground, the Utogrund, but instead at St. Jakob-Park. Then in the third round, played on 28 October, Basel were drawn away against SV Muttenz, marking the first time that these two teams played against each other. The game was played at the Sportplatz Margelacker with a stadium record crowd of 5,800. The match was a 5–1 win for Basel. The fourth round was played on 13 December 2015 away in the Stade Tourbillon against Sion, where Basel lost after a penalty shootout.

Champions League

Basel entered into this season's Champions League in the Third qualifying round. Their initial aim was to remain in the competition and reach the group stage. The draw for the third qualifying round was held on 17 July 2015 and they were drawn against Lech Poznań and in the play-off round against Maccabi Tel Aviv.

Lech Poznań (29 July 2015)

The first leg was played in INEA Stadion. Basel took the lead as Michael Lang, in the 24th minute, scored after a corner taken by Luca Zuffi. Just two minutes later, however, Lech Poznań equalized through Denis Thomalla. Although Shkëlzen Gashi missed a penalty in the 67th minute, Marc Janko (77th minute) and Davide Callà (92nd minute) completed the 3–1 away win.

Lech Poznań (5 August 2015)

The return leg at St. Jakob-Park ended in a home victory for Basel. Birkir Bjarnason scored his first goal for his new club in injury time to give Basel a 1–0 win.

Maccabi Tel Aviv (19 August 2015)

The first leg was played in Basel. Eran Zahavi put Maccabi in the lead with their first chance, in the 31st minute. Basel were awarded a penalty in the 39th minute which captain Matías Delgado netted to equalize. Breel Embolo scored in the 88th minute to give Basel a 2–1 lead, but Zahavi equalised six minutes into added time for Maccabi as the match ended 2–2.

Maccabi Tel Aviv (19 August 2015)

The return game had a sold out Bloomfield Stadium crowd of 13,350. Luca Zuffi gave the visitors an early lead with a free-kick in the 11th minute. Eran Zahavi's seventh goal of this season's competition levels the score in the 24th minute. Maccabi reached the Champions League group stage for the first time in a decade, progressed on the away goals rule.

Europa League

Because Basel failed to qualify for the Champions League group stage, they dropped into the 2015–16 UEFA Europa League group stage. The draw was held on 28 August 2015, 13:00 CEST, at the Grimaldi Forum in Monaco and Basel were drawn into Group I, together with Fiorentina, Lech Poznań and Belenenses.

Fiorentina (17 September 2015)

Basel's first match was played away at the Stadio Artemio Franchi in Florence. Fiorentina's new first team manager was Basel's ex-manager, Paulo Sousa. Nikola Kalinić scored a fourth-minute opener for Fiorentina and they held the lead until well into the second half of the game. Fiorentina captain Gonzalo Rodríguez was sent off after 66 minutes and following his dismissal the Swiss club took charge and managed to draw level. Birkir Bjarnason beat Luigi Sepe with a low drive from the edge of the area on 71 minutes. Eight minutes later, Mohamed Elneny capped the fightback in style. His super-rising drive from outside the box completed the comeback success. With this 2–1 win, Basel extended their unbeaten run to five matches in Europe this term.

Lech Poznań (1 October 2015)

The first home game in the Europa League group stage was against Lech Poznań, who had been opponents in the Champions League qualifying earlier in the season. Lech's Swiss midfielder Darko Jevtić was signed from Basel after a successful loan spell. The 22-year-old was born in Basel and came through the youth ranks at the Swiss club. The first half passed without much action, but the home team dominated. Icelandic midfielder Birkir Bjarnason brought a long ball down with his chest at the edge of the penalty area, kept his balance under pressure, and then turned a finish past Maciej Gostomski to give the hosts the lead after 55 minutes. In the 90th minute, Luca Zuffi made a cross from the right, Marc Janko controlled with his chest and laid off for the waiting Breel Embolo, who finished with a powerful low volley. The final score 2–0 was a deserved result.

Belenenses (22 October 2015)

The third game in the group stage was the home match against Belenenses. Basel took an early lead after 15 minutes, Matías Delgado kicked an inswinging corner to the back post from the left and Michael Lang jumped highest to power his header into the goal from five metres. Belenenses leveled after 27 minutes with their first chance. A long ball forward was headed clear by Marek Suchý, but it dropped to Luís Leal, who was 25 metres from goal. He hammered a low volley into the bottom corner and the ball bounced to evade the dive of Germano Vailati. During the extra time of the first half, Leal ran clear on the right flank, rushed into the area, playing the ball across the face of goal to Kuca Miranda who had easyest of finishes, tapping in from just three metres. During the second half, Basel played forward non-stop but were unable to score the equalizer. Until this 1–2 defeat, Basel had been unbeaten this season, in the domestic league (nine games) and in Europe (six).

Belenenses (5 November 2015)

The return game against Belenenses was played in Estádio do Restelo two weeks after the home game. Basel took early command, a first chance from Breel Embolo hit the post after nine minutes, and Basel continued to dominate their opponents entirely. But it was not until very nearly half time that their efforts were rewarded. In the 44 minute, Embolo was fouled in the penalty area by Filipe Ferreira, and Marc Janko scored from the spot. Embolo himself scored the second goal after being played free by Luca Zuffi's long deep pass into the penalty box which was flicked on by Janko. With this 2–0 victory, Basel avenged their matchday three loss.

Fiorentina (26 November 2015)

Basel's third and last home match in the Europa League group stage was the return game against Fiorentina. Paulo Sousa returned to St. Jakob-Park, but this time to the visitors' bench. Basel's first choice goalkeeper Tomáš Vaclík injured himself shortly before kick-off and was replaced by Germano Vailati. Federico Bernardeschi ended his personal run of 11 games without a goal with a first-half double (23 and 36 minutes) to give Fiorentina a two-goal lead. After 26 minutes, Facundo Roncaglia was punished with a red card after elbowing Breel Embolo in the face. Basel fought back into the game, with Marek Suchý cutting the gap before half-time (40th minute) and Mohamed Elneny equalizing on 74 minutes. The game ended in a 2–2 and Basel advance as Group I winners after recovering from being two down.

Lech Poznań (10 December 2015)

As written above, Basel were certain to finish top of the section before matchday six. For the last match in the group stage Basel had to travel to the INEA Stadion in Poznań. Lech Poznań had already lost to Basel three times this season and only a win would have given them any chance of making it through Group I. Unable to play were defenders Manuel Akanji, Philipp Degen and Daniel Høegh (all due to injury), as well as Marek Suchý, who was out suspended. Walter Samuel made his 100th UEFA club competition appearance playing this match. Reserve goalkeeper Germano Vailati was again Basel's starter because of first choice goalkeeper Tomáš Vaclík's injury. In the 44th minute, Vailati himself also suffered an injury as he played a long pass forward. Just before half-time, third-choice goalkeeper Mirko Salvi was introduced and made his professional debut for the club. Adonis Ajeti also made his debut for the club after coming on as a substitute at half-time in place of Michael Lang.[16] Jean-Paul Boëtius scored the only goal five minutes after half-time, it was his first goal for the Swiss champions.

Because Basel ended this stage as group winners, they continued (seeded in the draw) in the knockout phase, which started in February 2016. The draw for the round of 32 was held on 14 December 2015, where Basel were drawn against French side Saint-Étienne. The first leg was played on 18 February at 19:00 and the return leg in the St. Jakob-Park played on 25 February 2016 at 21:05.

Saint-Étienne (18 February 2016)

The first leg of the round of 32 was played in the Stade Geoffroy-Guichard, but without Basel supporters due to the high security alert following the terror attacks in Paris two months earlier. Basel came back from 2–0 down but ended up losing. Moustapha Sall in the fifth minute and Kévin Monnet-Paquet in the 39th minute put the hosts 2–0 in the lead. Then Walter Samuel started Basel's fight-back just before half-time in the 44th minute, becoming the second-oldest scorer in the UEFA Europa League at age 37 years and 332 days; he is surpassed only by Molde FK's Daniel Hestad, who scored at age 40 years and 98 days in this season's group stage. Marc Janko, via a penalty in the 56th minute, put Basel level and the guests pressed for their third goal. After a long clearance, however, defender Jean-Christophe Bahebeck scored for the hosts in the 79th against the run of play, and the final score ended 3–2 in favour of Saint-Étienne.

Saint-Étienne (25 February 2016)

The return game against was played a week later and Basel had to win to qualify for the next round. This was very apparent as Basel played forwards immediately and levelled the aggregate as midfielder Luca Zuffi curled in a 25-yard free-kick on 15 minutes. Saint-Étienne went close, but goalkeeper Tomáš Vaclík saved the shot from substitute Romain Hamouma. Both teams were later reduced to ten men: In the 82nd minute, Saint-Étienne midfielder Valentin Eysseric collected two quick yellow cards for a foul and then a clash with Renato Steffen, while Basel's 19-year-old attacker Breel Embolo followed him off the pitch for a second caution. Saint-Étienne thought they had won it when captain Moustapha Sall netted from close range with just one minute of regular time left, only for Zuffi to crash the ball home in added time to level the tie at 4–4 and send Basel through on away goals.[17]

Sevilla (10 March 2016)

The first leg of the round of 16 was played in the Basel and Sevilla had not won a European away game all season, so the goalless draw in Switzerland represented an improvement. Three second-half saves from Basel goalkeeper Tomáš Vaclík kept the home team in contention, but reigning Europa League title holders Sevilla cannot be unhappy with a goalless draw in this first leg. Marc Janko jumped high to head Basel's first chance just a little bit wide as early as the seventh minute – easily Basel's best chance of the first half – with Sevilla dominating possession thereafter. Steven Nzonzi went quite close with headers at either end of the period, while Éver Banega twice found Coke with free-kicks but the Sevilla captain was unable to find the target from either position. Basel's resolve returned after the half time break, if not their composure, Birkir Bjarnason blazing off target from a loose ball after a Renato Steffen shot was blocked. The Icelandic midfielder then pulled a decent ball across from the right, only for substitute Adama Traoré to scuff his attempted conversion. However, it could have been worse for the Swiss team but for Vaclík, who was very awake and saved with his feet after Nzonzi was played in and then kept out Kevin Gameiro's low drive, going to ground once more to repel Yevhen Konoplyanka as time ticked down.[18] Midfielder Nzonzi's dismissal near the end of the game offered Basel hope, but Sevilla held firm.

Sevilla (17 March 2016)

The return game against was played a week later on 17 March 2016 at the Ramón Sánchez Pizjuán Stadium. Defender Adil Rami opened the scoring as he stooped to head a José Antonio Reyes corner in off the post. The match then slipped out of Basel's reach inside two minutes at the end of the first half. Reyes danced through the Basel defence and his low cross gave Kevin Gameiro an easy finish from close range. A minute later, Michael Krohn-Dehli advanced with a quick run and was the provider of the cross that found Gameiro. The striker's header came back off the underside of the crossbar and bounced in off his leg to make it 3–0 at half-time. Basel showed only small signs of a fightback. Luca Zuffi's effort from 25 yards out was still rising as it flew over the crossbar. Breel Embolo missed two chances late in the game as the Swiss side were dumped out of the competition. The result extended Sevilla's run of Europa League home wins to 11 – the longest in the competition's history and put a dent in Basel's impressive away record in Europe this season.

Players

First team squad

The following is the list of the Basel first team squad. It also includes players that were in the squad the day the season started on 18 July but subsequently left the club after that date.

As of 27 August 2015[19]

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

No. Pos. Nation Player
1 GK  CZE Tomáš Vaclík
3 DF  CIV Adama Traoré
4 DF   SUI Philipp Degen
5 DF   SUI Michael Lang
6 DF  ARG Walter Samuel
7 MF   SUI Luca Zuffi
8 MF  ISL Birkir Bjarnason
9 FW  SVN Andraž Šporar
10 MF  ARG Matías Delgado (Captain)
11 MF  ALB Shkëlzen Gashi
14 FW  JPN Yoichiro Kakitani
15 MF  SWE Alexander Fransson
16 DF   SUI Manuel Akanji
17 DF  CZE Marek Suchý (vice-captain)
18 GK   SUI Germano Vailati
19 DF  SWE Behrang Safari
No. Pos. Nation Player
21 FW  AUT Marc Janko
22 MF  SRB Zdravko Kuzmanović
23 GK   SUI Mirko Salvi
24 MF   SUI Renato Steffen
26 DF  DEN Daniel Høegh
27 DF  ALB Naser Aliji
28 MF   SUI Robin Huser
30 MF   SUI Cedric Itten
33 MF  EGY Mohamed Elneny
34 MF  ALB Taulant Xhaka
36 FW   SUI Breel Embolo
38 FW   SUI Albian Ajeti
39 MF   SUI Davide Callà
40 GK   SUI Dario Thürkauf
41 DF   SUI Eray Cümart
42 DF   SUI Charles Pickel
77 FW  NED Jean-Paul Boëtius

Out on loan

19 MF   SUI Musa Araz (on loan at Winterthur until 30 June 2016)
20 MF  SRB Veljko Simić (on loan at Schaffhausen from 30 December 2015 until 30 June 2016)[20]
22 MF  SRB Zdravko Kuzmanović (on loan at Udinese until 30 June 2016)[6]
23 GK   SUI Mirko Salvi (on loan at Lugano from 7 January until 30 June 2016)[21]
24 FW  EGY Ahmed Hamoudi (on loan at Zamalek until 30 June 2016)
27 DF  ALB Naser Aliji (on loan at Vaduz from 1 July until 10 September 2015)
35 FW  PRK Pak Kwang-ryong (on loan at Biel-Bienne until 30 June 2016)

In

5 DF   SUI Michael Lang (from Grasshopper Club Zürich Free Transfer)
8 MF  ISL Birkir Bjarnason (from Pescara)[22]
21 FW  AUT Marc Janko (from Sydney FC Free Transfer)
22 MF  SRB Zdravko Kuzmanović (from Internazionale)
26 DF  DEN Daniel Høegh (from Odense BK)
77 FW  NED Jean-Paul Boëtius (from Feyenoord)

Out

FW  PAR Derlis González (to Dynamo Kyiv)
DF   SUI Fabian Schär (to 1899 Hoffenheim)
MF   SUI Fabian Frei (to Mainz 05)
GK   SUI Pascal Albrecht (to St. Gallen II Free Transfer)
DF  ALB Arlind Ajeti (to Unattached)
DF  ARG Gastón Sauro (to Columbus Crew)
FW  IRL Giovanni Sio (to Rennes)[23]
FW   SUI Marco Streller (end of career)

In

9 FW  SVN Andraž Šporar (from Olimpija Ljubljana)[10]
15 MF  SWE Alexander Fransson (from IFK Norrköping)[24]
24 MF   SUI Renato Steffen (from Young Boys)[12]

Out

11 FW  ALB Shkelzen Gashi (to Colorado Rapids)[25]
15 DF  BUL Ivan Ivanov (contract beended mutual agreement)[5]
38 FW   SUI Albian Ajeti (to FC Augsburg)[7]
14 FW  JPN Yoichiro Kakitani (to Cerezo Osaka)[8]
33 MF  EGY Mohamed Elneny (to Arsenal)[9]

Results and fixtures

Kickoff times are in CET

Legend

  Win   Draw   Loss   Postponed

Preseason

3 July 2015 (2015-07-03) Pre-season FC Basel 1 – 2 1860 München Isarau Stadium Geretsried (Germany)
20:00 Kakitani  5' FCB Report  31' (o.g.) Vaclík
 34' Hain
Attendance: 2,000
Referee: Florian Kornblum (TSV Chieming)
9 July 2015 (2015-07-09) Pre-season FC Basel 1 – 3 Shakhtar Donetsk Stade du Christ-Roi, Lens (Switzerland)
19:00 Janko  5' FCB Report  33', 70' Hladkyy
 85' Marlos
Attendance: 1,200
Referee: Stephan Klossner
11 July 2015 (2015-07-11) Pre-season PSV 2 – 3 Basel Stadion FC Solothurn, Solothurn (Switzerland)
17:00 Bergwijn  37'
Narsingh  81'
FCB Report  23' (pen.) Gashi
 45+2' Embolo
 90+3' Callà
Attendance: 1,950
Referee: Adrien Jaccottet (Basel)
15 July 2015 (2015-07-15) Pre-season Basel 2 – 1 Bayer Leverkusen St. Jakob-Park, Basel
20:00 Embolo  23'
Al. Ajeti  84',  52'
Kuzmanović  69'
FCB Report  15' Bender
 21' Bellarabi
 69' Stafylidis
Attendance: 13,224
Referee: Stephan Klossner

Winter break

9 January 2016 Friendly Basel 3 – 2 FC Biel FC Basel Campus, Basel (?)
14:30 Delgado  33'
Itten  50', 64'
(FCB Report) (in German)  52' Kololli
 55' Kilezi
Attendance: 500
Referee: Adrien Jaccottet (Basel)
16 January 2016 Friendly Basel 0 – 2 FC Augsburg Marbella Football Center, San Pedro de Alcántara
16:00 (FCB Report) (in German)  6' Hong
 78' Morávek
Attendance: 150
21 January 2016 Friendly Basel 1 – 1 SC Freiburg Marbella Football Center, San Pedro de Alcántara
16:00 Höhn  44' (o.g.) (FCB Report) (in German)  57' Grifo Attendance: 75
Referee: Juan Pedro Guarnido Peters
29 January 2016 Friendly Austria Wien 3 – 1 Basel Generali Arena, Vienna
18:00 Kayode  5'
Grünwald  45'
Gorgon  61'
(FCB Report) (in German)  36' Janko
 66' Xhaka
Attendance: 2,200
Referee: Vladimir Lukenic
2 February 2016 Friendly Basel 4 – 2 Xamax FC Basel Campus, Basel (?)
16:00 Steffen  4'
Delgado  32' (pen.), 54', 61'
(FCB Report) (in German)  1', 34' (pen.) Doudin Attendance: 500
Referee: Adrien Jaccottet (Basel)

Swiss Super League

First half of season

19 July 2015 Round 1 Basel 2 – 0 Vaduz St. Jakob-Park, Basel
13:45 Delgado  10' (pen.)
Elneny  74'
Kakitani  80'
Traoré  85'
FCB Report Attendance: 27,066
Referee: Sandro Schärer
25 July 2015 Round 2 Grasshopper Club 2 – 3 Basel Letzigrund, Zürich
20:00 Dabour  30'
Caio  32',  90+1'
FCB Report  17' Kuzmanović
 21' Gashi
 38',  80' Janko
 68' Lang
 84' Xhaka
 88' Elneny
Attendance: 9.600
Referee: Alain Bieri (Solothurn)
1 August 2015 Round 3 Basel 3 – 0 Sion St. Jakob-Park, Basel
15:00 Delgado  27'
Xhaka  45+1'
Traoré  69'
Lacroix  89' (o.g.)
Summary
FCB Report
 25' Follonier
 34' Salatić
 45+1' Jagne
 67' Zverotić
 90+3' Lacroix
Attendance: 27,792
Referee: Sascha Amhof
8 August 2015 Round 4 Luzern 1 – 3 Basel Swissporarena, Luzern
20:00 Lezcano  3'
Sarr  50'
Jantscher  78'
 27', 33'  78' Embolo
 29' Bjarnason
 43' Safari
 53' Degen
 76' Callà
 90' Delgado
Attendance: 14,748
Referee: Sandro Schärer
12 August 2015 Round 5 Basel 3 – 1 Thun St. Jakob-Park, Basel
19:45 Janko  55',  4', 49'
Lang  29'
Bjarnason  37'
Gashi  78' (pen.)
Traoré  90'
 29' (pen.) Frontino
 52' Reinmann
 78' Schindelholz
 84' Bürki
Attendance: 27,034
Referee: Alain Bieri
22 August 2015 Round 6 Lugano 1 – 3 Basel Cornaredo, Lugano
17:45 Piccinocchi  9'
Urbano  35'
Sabbatini  49'
FCB Report  11' (pen.), 48' Callà
 42' Elneny
 62' Boëtius
 75' P. Degen
Attendance: 6,500
Referee: Sandro Schärer
30 August 2015 Round 7 Basel 3 – 1 Zürich St. Jakob-Park, Basel
16:00 Lang  5'
Gashi  71'
Janko  85' (pen.)
FCB Report  38' Kecojević
 41' Cabral
 53' Schneuwly
 84' Nef
Attendance: 30,579
Referee: Nikolaj Hänni
12 September 2015 Round 8 Basel 2 – 1 St. Gallen St. Jakob-Park, Basel
20:00 Delgado  2' (pen.)
Suchý  42'
Janko  82'
Xhaka  90+3'
FCB Report  18' Mutch
 40' Gelmi
 88' Aratore
Attendance: 27,736
Referee: Sascha Amhof
22 September 2015 Round 9 Young Boys 4 – 3 Basel Stade de Suisse, Bern
20:30 Sulejmani  5', 45'
Lecjaks  15'  89'
Gerndt  65', 81'
Mvogo  86'
Steffen  90'
Vilotić  90+1'
FCB Report  17' Aliji
 23' Embolo
 54' Kuzmanović
 74' Suchý
 76',  finished' Xhaka
 90+1' Janko
Attendance: 19,409
Referee: Stephan Klossner
26 September 2015 Round 10 Basel 3 – 1 Lugano St. Jakob-Park, Basel
20:00 Zuffi  39', 57'
Kuzmanović  81'
Bjarnason  84'
FCB Report  90+4' Čulina Attendance: 26,083
Referee: Sébastien Pache
3 October 2015 Round 11 Zürich 2 – 2 Basel Letzigrund, Zürich
16:00 Gavranović  35'
Sadiku  90+3'
(Report)  49' Lang
 52' Janko
 81' Kuzmanović
 84' Al. Ajeti
 90+4' Samuel
Attendance: 10,467
Referee: Alain Bieri (Solothurn)
18 October 2015 Round 12 Sion 0 – 2 Basel Stade Tourbillon, Sion
13:45 Kouassi  28'
Assifuah  90+1'
Summary Janko  5',  89'
Manuel Akanji  56'
Elneny  67'
Gashi  79'
Vaclík  90+1'
Attendance: 10,700
Referee: Sandro Schärer
25 October 2015 Round 13 Basel 1 – 0 Young Boys St. Jakob-Park, Basel
16:00 Embolo  17',  31'
Safari  59'
Janko  85'
Summary Wüthrich  26'  67'
Zakaria  30'
Vilotić  53'
Bertone  75'
Attendance: 33,360
Referee: Alain Bieri
31 October 2015 Round 14 Vaduz 1 – 2 Basel Rheinpark Stadion, Vaduz
20:00 Avdijaj  2'
Caballero  61'
Summary Bjarnason  6'
Suchý  20'
Aliji  67'
Janko  80',  84'
Attendance: 4,897
Referee: Lukas Fähndrich
8 November 2015 Round 15 Basel 2 – 3 Grasshopper St. Jakob-Park, Basel
16:00 Boëtius  27'
Callà  62'
Embolo  74'
(Report)  15' Bauer
 19',  8' Källström
 25' (o.g.) Suchý
 52' Pnishi
 65' Barthe
 80',  90' Dabour
Attendance: 31,669
Referee: Sascha Amhof
22 November 2015 Round 16 St. Gallen 2 – 1 Basel AFG Arena, St. Gallen
13:45 Tafer  38', 68'
Tréand  79'
Everton  88'
(Report)  5' Janko Attendance: 15,740
Referee: Harald Lechner
29 November 2015 Round 17 Basel 3 – 0 Luzern St. Jakob-Park, Basel
13:45 Bjarnason  25',  7'
Callà  26'
Elneny  32',  84'
Zuffi  90+2'
(Report)  1' Lezcano
 30' Affolter
 58' Basha
 84' Lustenberger
 90' Freuler
Attendance: 29,691
Referee: Stephan Klossner
6 December 2015 Round 18 Thun 0 – 2 Basel Stockhorn Arena, Thun
16:00 (Report)  5' Samuel
 55' Xhaka
 67', 70' Janko
Attendance: 7,156
Referee: Fedayi San

Second half of season

7 February 2016 Round 19 Basel 3 – 0 Luzern St. Jakob-Park, Basel
16:00 Safari  43'
Bjarnason  50'
Delgado  72'
Steffen  85',  90+1'
(Report)  67' Jantscher
 82' Lustenberger
 90+2' Rogulj
Attendance: 25,821
Referee: Sandro Schärer
14 February 2016 Round 20 Grasshopper Club 0 – 4 Basel Letzigrund, Zürich
16:00 Bašić  25'
Lüthi  34'
(Report)  12', 54' Lang
 20' Suchý
 31' Janko
 70' Delgado
 90+3' Zuffi
Attendance: 9,500
Referee: Alain Bieri (Solothurn)
21 February 2016 Round 21 Basel 5 – 1 Vaduz St. Jakob-Park, Basel
13:45 Embolo  42'
Lang  51'
Fransson  57'
Zuffi  66'
Bjarnason  73', 87'
(Report)  8' Bühler
 36' Muntwiler
 65' Untersee
Attendance: 25,195
Referee: Pascal Erlachner
28 February 2016 Round 22 Thun 1 – 1 Basel Stockhorn Arena, Thun
13:45 Munsy  5' (Report)  21' Akanji
 44' Steffen
Attendance: 6,807
Referee: Alain Bieri (Solothurn)
6 March 2016 Round 23 Lugano PP Basel Cornaredo, Lugano
13:45 (Postponed)
13 March 2016 Round 24 Basel 4 – 2 St. Gallen St. Jakob-Park, Basel
13:45 Janko  5', 49', 54'
Suchý  50'
Steffen  90+2'
(Report)  12' Salli
 22' Angha
 33' Aratore
Attendance: 27,305
Referee: Fedayi San
20 March 2016 Round 25 Sion 0 – 1 Basel Stade Tourbillon, Sion
16:00 Zverotić  20'
Rüfli  83'
(Report)  35' Janko
 67' (pen.) Delgado
Attendance: 10,000
Referee: Nikolaj Hänni
3 April 2016 Round 26 Basel 2 – 0 Young Boys St. Jakob-Park, Basel
16:00 Embolo  46'
Janko  71'
Steffen  90+4'
(Report)  87' Florent Hadergjonaj Attendance: 31,642
Referee: Stephan Klossner
10 April 2016 Round 27 Basel 2 – 2 Zürich St. Jakob-Park, Basel
13:45 Suchý  14'
Embolo  65'
Safari  76'
Delgado  83' (pen.)
Bjarnason  85'
[ (Report)]  60' Buff
 61' Kerzhakov
 70' Bua
 73' Brunner
 82' Nef
 90+3' Koch
Attendance: 31,257
Referee: Fedayi San (Gebenstorf)
13 April 2016 Round 23 Lugano 1 – 4 Basel Cornaredo, Lugano
18:30 Veseli  22'
Rey  40'
Čulina  47'
Urbano  54'
[ (Report)]  10' Bjarnason
 13' Samuel
 22' (pen.) Delgado
 44' Itten
Attendance: 3,085
Referee: Lukas Fähndrich
17 April 2016 Round 28 St. Gallen 0 – 7 Basel AFG Arena, St. Gallen
16:00 Gaudino  49' (Report)  29', 67', 78',  56' Steffen
 47' (o.g.) Angha
 62' (o.g.) Gaudino
 64' Callà
 72' Embolo
 76'Itten
Attendance: 14,876
Referee: Pascal Erlachner
20 April 2016 Round 29 Basel 3 – 0 Lugano St. Jakob-Park, Basel
19:45 Suchý  38'
Embolo  44', 56'
Boëtius  90+1'
(Report)  52' Datković
 73' Veseli
Attendance: 24,938
Referee: Sandro Schärer
24 April 2016 Round 30 Vaduz 0 – 0 Basel Rheinpark Stadion, Vaduz
16:00 (Report)  22' Itten
 62' Suchý
Attendance: 5,543
Referee: Stephan Klossner
30 April 2016 Round 31 Basel 2 – 1 Sion St. Jakob-Park, Basel
20:00 Delgado  24' (pen.)
Steffen  30'
Bjarnason  67'
Embolo  85'
(Report)  87' Carlitos
 11',  90+2' Salatić
Attendance: 32,244
Referee: Alain Bieri (Solothurn)
7 May 2016 Round 32 Zürich 2 – 3 Basel Letzigrund, Zürich
20:00 Koch  16'
Buff  60'
Vinícius  69'
Nef  76'
(Report)  10' Delgado
 55' Callà
 58' Aliji
 88' (pen.) Embolo
Attendance: 9.636
Referee: Nikolaj Hänni (Gams SG)
10 May 2016 Round 33 Basel 1 – 1 Thun St. Jakob-Park, Basel
19:45 Bjarnason  81'
Suchý  84'
(Report)  43' Schirinzi
 46' Wieser
 86' Joss
Attendance: 24,558
Referee: Sébastien Pache
16 May 2016 Round 34 Luzern 4 – 0 Basel Swissporarena, Luzern
16:00 Schneuwly  7'
Jantscher  10'
Hyka  48'
Affolter  56'
Haas  60'
(Report)  79' Steffen
 85' Aliji
Attendance: 16,500
Referee: Sandro Schärer
21 May 2016 Round 35 Young Boys 2 – 3 Basel Stade de Suisse, Bern
16:00 Lecjaks  25'
Von Bergen  58'
Nuzzolo  80'
Hadergjonaj  86'
Hoarau  90+1'
(Report)  10',  16' Delgado
 31', 44' Boëtius
 45' Callà
Attendance: 21,721
Referee: Fedayi San (Gebenstorf)
25 May 2016 Round 36 Basel 0 – 1 Grasshopper St. Jakob-Park, Basel
20:30 Boëtius  77' (FCB report)
(Summary)
 41' (o.g.) Traoré
 51' Bašić
 52' Dabour
 52' Källström
 80' Kamberi
Attendance: 30,682
Referee: Stephan Klossner

League table

Pos Team Pld W D L GF GA GD Pts Qualification or relegation
1 Basel (C) 36 26 5 5 88 38 +50 83 Qualification for the Champions League group stage
2 Young Boys 36 20 9 7 78 47 +31 69 Qualification for the Champions League third qualifying round
3 Luzern 36 15 9 12 59 50 +9 54 Qualification for the Europa League third qualifying round
4 Grasshopper 36 15 8 13 65 56 +9 53 Qualification for the Europa League second qualifying round
5 Sion 36 14 8 14 52 49 +3 50
Source: Swiss Super League, Soccerway
Rules for classification: 1) Points; 2) Goal difference; 3) Goals scored; 4) Head-to-head points 5) Draw.[26]
(C) Champion.

Swiss Cup

15 August 2015 Round 1 Meyrin FC (GE) 0 - 4 Basel Stade des Arberes, Meyrin
18:00 CET Matteo Rezzonico  56'
Fitim Rugovaj  75'
Summary
(Report) (in German)
 34', 59' Al. Ajeti
 58' Elneny
 60' Delgado
Attendance: 2,100
Referee: Lukas Fähndrich
20 September 2015 Round 2 YF Juventus 1 - 4 Basel St. Jakob-Park, Basel
14:00 Mychell Da Silva  45'  85' (pen.)
Nicolas Huber  52'
(Report)  15', 80' Callà
 30', 50' Delgado
 85' Samuel
Attendance: 4,606
Referee: Alain Bieri (Solothurn)
28 October 2015 Round 3 SV Muttenz 1 - 5 Basel Sportplatz Margelacker, Muttenz
19:30 Manuel Jenny  64',  48' (pen.) (Report)  25',  46' Høegh
 35', 62', 72',  64' Gashi
 75' (pen.) Al. Ajeti
Attendance: 5,800 (stadium record)
Referee: Sascha Amhof
13 December 2015 Quarterfinal Sion 2 - 2 (a.e.t.)
(4–3 p)
FC Basel Stade de Tourbillon, Sion
15:30 Pa Modou  37'
Salatić  55'
Assifuah  66'
Kouassi  69'
Adão  84'
Lacroix  113'
Fernandes  116'
(Report)  32' Delgado
 50' Lang
 54' Samuel
 78' Bjarnason
 79',  90+1' Elneny
 89' (pen.),  120'Janko
 96' Safari
Attendance: 9,200
Referee: Stephan Klossner
Penalties
Bia
Ziegler
Salatić
Carlitos
Pa Modou
Elneny
Janko
Bjarnason
Samuel
Callà

UEFA Champions League

Third qualifying round

The draw for the third qualifying round was held on 17 July 2015. The first leg is to be played on 29 July, and the second leg will be played on 5 August 2015.

29 July 2015 First leg Lech Poznań 1 – 3 Basel INEA Stadion, Poznań
20:45 Thomalla  36' Report Lang  34'
Janko  77'
Callà  90+2'
Referee: Anthony Taylor (England)
5 August 2015 Second leg Basel 1 – 0
(4 – 1 agg.)
Lech Poznań St. Jakob-Park, Basel
20:15 Suchý  44'
Lang  55'
Callà  80'
Bjarnason  90+1'
Report Linetty  44'
Kamiński  56'
Douglas  86'
Referee: Ruddy Buquet

Basel won 4–1 on aggregate.

Play-off round

The draw was held on 7 August 2015.[27][28]

19 August 2015 First leg Basel 2 – 2 Maccabi Tel Aviv St. Jakob-Park, Basel
20:45 CET Delgado  39' (pen.)
Embolo  88'
Report Zahavi  31', 90+6' Attendance: 15,620
Referee: Willie Collum (Scotland)
25 August 2015 Second leg Maccabi Tel Aviv 1 – 1
((a) 3 – 3 agg.)
Basel Bloomfield Stadium, Tel Aviv
20:45 CET Zahavi  24' Report Zuffi  11' Attendance: 13,350
Referee: Damir Skomina (Slovenia)

Maccabi Tel Aviv won on away goals rule.

UEFA Europa League

Group stage

The draw was held on 28 August 2015, at the Grimaldi Forum in Monaco and Basel were drawn into Group I.

Pos Team Pld W D L GF GA GD Pts Qualification BSL FIO LCH BEL
1 Basel 6 4 1 1 10 5 +5 13 Advance to knockout phase 2–2 2–0 1–2
2 Fiorentina 6 3 1 2 11 6 +5 10 1–2 1–2 1–0
3 Lech Poznań 6 1 2 3 2 6 4 5 0–1 0–2 0–0
4 Belenenses 6 1 2 3 2 8 6 5 0–2 0–4 0–0
Source: UEFA
Rules for classification: Group stage tiebreakers
17 September 2015 Round 1 Fiorentina 1 – 2 Basel Stadio Artemio Franchi, Florence
21:05 Kalinić  4'
Roncaglia  35'
Rodríguez  65'
Report  34' Xhaka
 56' Suchý
 71' Bjarnason
 79' Elneny
 83' Janko
Attendance: 15,212
Referee: Michael Oliver
1 October 2015 Round 2 Basel 2 – 0 Lech Poznań St. Jakob-Park, Basel
19:00 Samuel  41'
Bjarnason  55'
Embolo  90'
Report  42'  59' Linetty Attendance: 17,567
Referee: Ognjen Valjić
22 October 2015 Round 3 Basel 1 – 2 Belenenses St. Jakob-Park, Basel
19:00 Lang  15'
Suchý  73'
Report  27',  87' Leal
 34' Ferreira
 45+1' Kuca
Attendance: 17,275[29]
Referee: Simon Lee Evans (Wales)
5 November 2015 Round 4 Belenenses 0 – 2 Basel Estádio do Restelo, Lisbon
21:05 Silva  65'
Pinto  66'
Caeiro  70'
Report  45+1' (pen.) Janko
 60' Elneny
 64' Embolo
 66' Janko
 89' Lang
Attendance: 4,802
Referee: Tamás Bognár (Hungary)
26 November 2015 Round 5 Basel 2 – 2 Fiorentina St. Jakob-Park, Basel
19:00 Safari  26'
Bjarnason  29'
Suchý  65'  40'
Janko  45+1'
Elneny  74'
Zuffi  78'
Report  23', 36' Bernardeschi
 26' Roncaglia
 45+1' Rodríguez
 45+3' Badelj
 75' Valero
Attendance: 22,550
Referee: Ivan Kružliak (Slovakia)
10 December 2015 Round 6 Lech Poznań 0 – 1 Basel INEA Stadion, Poznań
21:05 Report Boëtius  50' Referee: Bobby Madden (Scotland)

Knockout phase

Round of 32

The draw for the round of 32 was held on 14 December 2015. The first leg was played on 18 February, and the second leg played on 25 February 2016.

18 February 2016 First Leg Saint-Étienne 3 – 2 Basel Saint-Étienne, France
19:00 Sall  9'
Monnet-Paquet  39'
Tannane  60'
Pajot  72'
Bahebeck  77'
Report  25' Steffen
 44',  74' Samuel
 56' (pen.),  88' Janko
 60' Xhaka
Stadium: Stade Geoffroy-Guichard
Attendance: 27,013
Referee: Tasos Sidiropoulos (Greece)
25 February 2016 Second leg Basel 2 – 1 Saint-Étienne St. Jakob-Park, Basel
21:05 Zuffi  15', 90+2'
Embolo  55'  84'
Report  31' Tannane
 63' Pogba
 82'  82' Eysseric
 90' Sall
Attendance: 20,976
Referee: Danny Makkelie (Netherlands)

4–4 on aggregate. Basel won on away goals.

Round of 16

The draw was held on 26 February 2016. The first leg played on 10 March, and the second leg played on 17 March 2016.

10 March 2016 (2016-03-10) Round Basel 0 – 0 Sevilla St. Jakob-Park, Basel
19:00 Samuel  8'
Steffen  90'
Report  37' Banega
 41' Cristóforo
 85' Trémoulinas
 75'  87' Nzonzi
Attendance: 22,403
Referee: Anthony Taylor (England)
17 March 2016 (2016-03-17) Sevilla 3 – 0 Basel Ramón Sánchez Pizjuán, Seville
21:05 Kolodziejczak  7'
Rami  35'
Gameiro  44', 45'
Report  39' Steffen
 90+4' Embolo
Attendance: 35,546[30]
Referee: Deniz Aytekin (Germany)

Sevilla won 3–0 on aggregate.

References

  1. FC Basel 1893 (2015). "Urs Fischer ist der neue Trainer des FC Basel 1893" (in German). FC Basel 1893. Retrieved 2015-06-18.
  2. Caspar Marti (2015). "Unterhaltsame 121 Generalversammlung des FC Basel 1893". FC Basel homepage. Retrieved 2015-04-21.
  3. "The largest stadium in Switzerland". FC Basel 1893. 2015. Retrieved 2015-07-01.
  4. https://www.uefa.com/MultimediaFiles/Download/StatDoc/competitions/UCL/01/67/63/78/1676378_DOWNLOAD.pdf
  5. "FCB und Ivanov loesen Vertrag vorzeitig auf". FC Basel 1893. 2015. Retrieved 2015-12-14.
  6. FC Basel 1893 (2016). "Zdravko Kuzmanovic leihweise zu Udinese Calcio". FC Basel 1893. Retrieved 2016-01-21.
  7. "Albian Ajeti zu Augsburg". FC Basel 1893. 2016. Retrieved 2016-01-08.
  8. "Yoichiro Kakitani kehrt zurueck nach Japan". FC Basel 1893. 2015. Retrieved 2015-12-30.
  9. FC Basel 1893 (2016). "Elneny: Ich werde für immer FCB-Fan bleiben". FC Basel 1893. Retrieved 2016-01-14. (in German)
  10. FC Basel 1893 (2015). "FCB verpflichtet den Slowenen Andraz Sporar". FC Basel 1893. Retrieved 2015-12-08.
  11. "Alexander Fransson wechselt zum FC Basel 1893". fcb.ch. FC Basel 1893. 2 January 2016. Retrieved 2 January 2016.
  12. FC Basel 1893 (2016). "Renato Steffen wechselt zum FC Basel 1893". FC Basel 1893. Retrieved 2016-01-12.
  13. FC Basel 1893 (2016). "Der FC Basel 1893 verpflichtet Blás Riveros". FC Basel 1893. Retrieved 2016-05-04.
  14. FC Basel 1893 (2016). "Der FC Basel 1893 verpflichtet Omar Gaber". FC Basel 1893. Retrieved 2016-05-10.
  15. Talaat, Tarek (2016). "Omar Gaber: Defender aims to emulate success of Salah and Elneny". bbc.com. Retrieved 2016-05-10.
  16. Lech Poznań vs. Basel - 10 December 2015 - Soccerway
  17. "Basel snatch last-16 spot from St-Étienne's grasp". uefa.com. 2016. Retrieved 2016-02-25.
  18. Marti, Caspar (2016). "Keine Tore im Hinspiel zwischen dem FCB und Sevilla". FC Basel 1893. Retrieved 2016-03-10.
  19. "Das Kader – Spielerportraits" [The Team – Player Portraits]. FC Basel 1893 (in German). fcb.ch. Retrieved 1 July 2015.
  20. FC Basel 1893 (2015). "Simic leihweise zum FC Schaffhausen". FC Basel 1893. Retrieved 2015-12-30.
  21. "Mirko Salvi leihweise zum FC Lugano". FC Basel 1893. 2015. Retrieved 2016-01-07.
  22. Marti, Caspar (2015). "Birkir Bjarnason wechselt zum FC Basel 1893". FC Basel 1893. Retrieved 2015-07-08.
  23. "Giovanni Sio, nouvel attaquant Rouge et Noir !". www.staderennais.com. 2015. Retrieved 2015-06-29.
  24. FC Basel 1893 (2015). "Alexander Fransson wechselt zum FC Basel 1893". FC Basel 1893. Retrieved 2015-12-30.
  25. FC Basel 1893 (2016). "Gashi wechselt in die USA zu den Colorado Rapids". FC Basel 1893. Retrieved 2016-02-01.
  26. "Super League 2015/2016 - Season rules". Scoresway. Retrieved 19 July 2015.
  27. "Draws — Play-off round". UEFA.com. Union of European Football Associations. Retrieved 10 July 2015.
  28. "UEFA Champions League play-off draw made". UEFA.com. Union of European Football Associations. 7 August 2015. Retrieved 7 August 2015.
  29. "Basel vs. Belenenses". Soccerway. 28 October 2015.
  30. "Sevilla v Basel". Soccerway. Retrieved 18 March 2016.
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