Wolfsberger AC

Wolfsberger AC, commonly referred to as Wolfsberg or simply WAC, is an Austrian association football club from Wolfsberg, Carinthia. The club competed twenty seasons on the second level of the Austrian football pyramid. Between the 2007–08 and 2011–12 seasons, Wolfsberger AC entered a cooperation with SK St. Andrä, competing under the name WAC/St. Andrä during that period. The team is currently called RZ Pellets WAC for sponsorship reasons.

Wolfsberger AC
Full nameRiegler & Zechmeister Pellets Wolfsberger Athletik Club
Nickname(s)GAM FC
Founded1931 (1931)
GroundLavanttal-Arena, Wolfsberg
Capacity7,300
ChairmanDietmar Riegler
ManagerFerdinand Feldhofer
LeagueAustrian Bundesliga
2019–20Austrian Bundesliga, 3rd
WebsiteClub website

After having played the majority of its existence in the lower leagues, Wolfsberger AC finished their 2011–12 season as champions of the 2011–12 Austrian Football First League and earned promotion to the Austrian Bundesliga for the first time in the club's history, in which they finished fifth at the end of the 2012–13 Austrian Football Bundesliga.

Wolfsberger finished third in the 2018–19 Austrian Football Bundesliga which qualified them to the 2019–20 UEFA Europa League group stage. They finished in fourth place in Group J of the UEFA Europa League in the 2019–20 season.

History

Wolfsberger AC was founded by Adolf Ptazcowsky, Karl Weber, Hermann Maierhofer, Franz Hafner and Michael Schlacher in 1931. After spending the first thirty-seven years of its existence on lower tiers of the Austrian league pyramid, the club eventually achieved promotion to the Austrian Regional League, which was on the second tier of the pyramid at that time, in 1968. WAC stayed at this level, with one exception during the 1977–78 season, for the next seventeen years, establishing themselves as a middle table side.

At the end of the 1984–85 season, Wolfsberger AC eventually dropped back to the third level. The club returned for two further second-level appearances during the 1988–89 and 1990–91 seasons, but was immediately relegated each time. In 1994, the club was a founding member of the reactivated Regional League as the third tier of the pyramid. After being in the promotion race for the first few years in the new league, strength of the club gradually declined and eventually led to relegation at the end of the 2001–02 season.

Historical chart of Worfsberger AC league performance

In 2007, WAC and neighbours SK St. Andrä decided to enter a cooperation. While both clubs remained as separate entities, they closely worked together on almost all aspects: "Central areas of both clubs like administration, management, economy, marketing, gastronomy, as well as the athletic section as the core (both the senior and junior teams) will be centrally administered from the newly created offices of WAC/St. Andrä at Wolfsberg." Since SK St. Andrä were playing at the Regional League, the corporation began at this level, from which it was promoted to the First League in 2010. At the end of the 2011–12 season, the cooperation secured promotion to the Bundesliga with one round of matches to go. Soon afterwards, the cooperation was dissolved; Wolfsberger AC thus competed as an independent club on the highest level of Austrian football for the first time in their history.

After their first year in the highest class they came in 5th. After the season manager Nenad Bjelica left the club and became manager of FK Austria Wien, the champion of the 2012–13 season. Slobodan Grubor replaced him but after weak performances in the new season he was replaced by Dietmar Kühbauer.

The team became known as 'RZ Pellets WAC' from the 2014–15 season, due to sponsorship.[1]

Wolfsberger AC qualified to the 2019–20 UEFA Europa League for first time in their history, after finishing third in the 2018–19 Austrian Football Bundesliga.[2]

Honours

League

European record

Season Competition Round Opponent Home Away Aggregate
2015–16 UEFA Europa League 2Q Shakhtyor Soligorsk 2–0 1–0 3–0
3Q Borussia Dortmund 0–1 0–5 0–6
2019–20 UEFA Europa League Group J Roma 1–1 2–2 4th out of 4
Borussia Mönchengladbach 0–1 4–0
İstanbul Başakşehir 0–3 0–1
2020–21 UEFA Europa League Group K CSKA Moscow 1–1 1–0 2nd out of 4
Dinamo Zagreb 0–3 0–1
Feyenoord 1–0 4–1
RO32 Tottenham Hotspur

Current squad

As of 26 August 2020

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

No. Pos. Nation Player
2 DF  GEO Guram Giorbelidze
3 DF  SWE Gustav Henriksson
4 DF  AUT Jonathan Scherzer
5 DF  AUT Stefan Perić
6 MF  AUT Mario Pavelić
7 MF  ISR Eliel Peretz
8 FW  SEN Cheikhou Dieng
9 FW  SRB Dejan Joveljić (on loan from Eintracht Frankfurt)
10 MF  AUT Michael Liendl
11 FW  CRO Dario Vizinger
15 DF  SRB Nemanja Rnić
16 MF  AUT Mario Leitgeb
17 MF  AUT Kai Stratznig
No. Pos. Nation Player
19 MF  AUT Sven Sprangler
22 DF  AUT Dominik Baumgartner
23 MF  AUT Lukas Schöfl
24 MF  AUT Christopher Wernitznig
25 DF  AUT Fabian Tauchhammer
27 DF  AUT Michael Novak
29 GK  AUT Manuel Kuttin
30 MF  AUT Matthäus Taferner
31 GK  AUT Alexander Kofler
32 GK  AUT Marko Soldo
37 FW  AUT Amar Hodzić
44 DF  GEO Luka Lochoshvili

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
MF  AUT Joshua Steiger (at SV Lafnitz)

Managers

  • Helmut Kirisits (7 April 1989 – 4 Nov 1990, 7 June 1991 – 30 June 1991, 13 Oct 1992 – 17 Oct 1995)
  • Hans-Peter Buchleitner (1 July 1995 – 30 June 1997)
  • Peter Hrstic (1 July 2007 – 26 Oct 2008)
  • Hans-Peter Buchleitner (27 Oct 2008 – 9 May 2010)
  • Nenad Bjelica (10 May 2010 – 17 June 2013)
  • Slobodan Grubor (17 June 2013 – 1 Sept 2013)
  • Dietmar Kühbauer (2 Sept 2013 – 25 Nov 2015)
  • Heimo Pfeifenberger (25 Nov 2015 – 17 March 2018)[3]
  • Robert Ibertsberger (caretaker) (18 March 2018 – 31 May 2018)
  • Christian Ilzer (1 June 2018 – 30 June 2019)
  • Gerhard Struber (1 July 2019 – 19 Nov 2019)
  • Mohamed Sahli (caretaker) (20 Nov 2019 – 31 December 2019)
  • Ferdinand Feldhofer (1 January 2020 – present)

References

  1. "Getting to know: WAC RZ Pellets | Official Site | Chelsea Football Club". ChelseaFC.
  2. "Nach historischem Erfolg: WAC sucht Coach und Stadion". SPOX (in German). 27 May 2019.
  3. m.b.H., STANDARD Verlagsgesellschaft. "WAC setzt Trainer Kühbauer vor die Tür". Retrieved 4 September 2016.
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