Floriana F.C.

Floriana Football Club is a Maltese professional football club in the town of Floriana that currently plays in the Maltese Premier League.[2] In all, Floriana F.C. has won 26 national leagues and 21 FA Trophies (present and longest surviving main knockout competition). It is also the only team from Malta to have qualified from the qualifying rounds to the first round proper of the UEFA Champions League, in the 1993–94 season.[citation needed]

Floriana
Logo
Full nameFloriana Football Club
Nickname(s)Tal-Irish, Il-Greens[1]
Founded1894; 130 years ago (1894)
ManagerDarren Abdilla
LeagueMaltese Premier League
2023–24Maltese Premier League, 2nd of 14
Current season

History

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Floriana Football Club was founded in 1894 with the inauguration of the football ground officiated by Queen Alexandra.[3] The site was a cricket ground from 1890 until its conversion project.[3] Together with St. George's FC, is one of the two oldest clubs in Malta.[4] During that period, football in Malta was introduced by the British Servicemen who were stationed on the island, which was then a colony of the British Empire.[4]

The club is affiliated to the Malta Football Association which in turn is a member of both UEFA and FIFA.[5] The team's colours were green and red but after a friendly match against the Royal Dublin Fusiliers which plays in green and white, Floriana FC changed its colours to green and white. The team's nicknames are: Tal-Irish and Greens.

Floriana Football Club has won the major Maltese League championship 26 times and the FA Trophy 20 times.

Formation

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Football was introduced in Malta at the end of the 19th century by the British troops stationed on the island.[3] At that time Malta formed part of the British Empire and, the Island was the base of British forces in the heart of the Mediterranean.[4] The forces' barracks, which were strategically located around the island of Malta, enjoyed large areas that were used as parade grounds, training areas and for sporting activities.[3]

The sports practised by the soldiers were mainly cricket, hockey and football.[3] The British forces in Malta were mainly stationed in Floriana, Cospicua, Mtarfa, Marsa and Sliema.[3] The locals who were influenced by the soldiers stationed in the area were introduced to these sporting activities.[4] The most popular sport amongst the residents of Floriana was football,[4] however some also practised cricket and hockey.[3] Floriana still has its hockey club, carrying the name Floriana Young Stars Hockey Club.

Club colours and mascot

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Between 1894 and 1905 the club's colours were green/red quartered shirts, black shorts with green and red socks.[4] The official colours of the club as we know them today, green and white vertical striped shirts, white shorts and green/white horizontal striped socks, were introduced in 1905.[4] At that time the Royal Dublin Fusiliers were stationed in Floriana.[4] During that year, three friendly matches were held between this regiment and FFC.[4] At the end of the final match both teams exchanged their shirts and later the FFC changed their official colours to their green and white shirts.[4] The regiment left the Island for India in that same year.[4] The ties between Floriana and the Royal Dublin Fusiliers were so strong that the people hailing from Floriana were nicknamed after the Irish, "Tal-Irish".[4]

The club's mascot is the lion, which features prominently on the club's badge since 1936 together with the Latin motto "Ex Ludis Virtus", meaning "virtue out of the game".[6] In this regard the club's badge represents the fierceness of the lion together with the virtues of sportsmanship. The lion was chosen as the club's mascot for two general reasons attributed to history of Floriana.

First attribution is to the coat-of-arms of the Grandmaster of Order of St. John, Manoel de Vilhena, which has the lion on it.[6] Vilhena was the mastermind behind the construction of a fortification suburg of Floriana (originally known as Borgo Vilhena) to defend the capital city of Valletta from land attacks.[4] He even ordered the construction of a lion statue fountain, with his Grandmaster coat of arms being held by the lions hand, in the centre of Floriana's main square, St. Anne Square, which is still there today.[6]

Second attribution to the lion is the statue of St. Publius who is the patron saint of Floriana. The St. Publius' statue has a lion with it which shows how Publius was killed for his Christian preachings.

The first game won by the team was confirmed on the feast of the patron's village St. Publius, on 13 April 1910, which is to some considered a divine confirmation.[6]

2020 Win and COVID-19 national outrage

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On 25 May 2020 Floriana FC were crowned champions of the BOV Premier League for the 26th title in their history and their first in 27 years, following a shortened season by a legal notice from the health authority in Malta to stop all contact sports on the Island because of the COVID-19 pandemic. In June 2020 a vote was taken in the MFA Counsel and declared all those on top of the table in all participating divisions will be declared champions. Due to the COVID-19 pandemic, the season was ultimately stopped earlier and Floriana was crowned champions of the league.

Celebrations were then hosted in the Fosos in Floriana, where a mass gathering of supporters broke social distancing rules and broke several Maltese laws by not staying in groups of six of less. The event sparked national outrage within the public in Malta and was featured on nearly all Maltese national newspapers.[7]

Domestic successes

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Since the foundation of the Malta Football Association, in 1909,[8] (fiv)and local competitions the club won a total of 108 honours, which includes 26 league titles and 25 Cup knock out competitions. The club has also achieved a number of impressive feats, such as four consecutive league championships, ten doubles (League plus Cup) and a League title with maximum points.

UEFA competitions

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Over the years FFC participated in the various competitions organised by the European football body, UEFA, such as the:

  • UEFA Champions League
  • UEFA Cup Winners' Cup
  • Fairs Cities' Cup
  • UEFA Europa League
  • Intertoto Cup

In 1962, the club was the first to represent Malta in UEFA competitions in its Cup Winners' Cup against the Hungarian side Ujpest Dozsa. Over the years, FFC had the opportunity to meet some renowned European football clubs, including the likes of:

On two occasions FFC made it to the next round, 1993–94 Champions Cup and Intertoto Cup 1999–00.

Youth sector

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In 1987 the club founded its youth sector, Floriana FC Nursery (FFCN), which is affiliated to the Malta Youth Football Association.[9] The club's youth sector may also be considered one of the most successful organisations of its type on the Island; not only has it produced a number of some of the finest footballers, but it has also won a number of league titles organised by the Association. The following are some of the major honours won by FFCN:

06 / 07 UNDER 14 Knock out competition

  • U/14 League Champions – twice
  • U/16 League Champions – six times, four of which in a row, 1993 to 1997
  • U/18 League Champions – six times, four of which in a row, 1996 to 2000

Today all the major six Premiership clubs in Malta have at least two players forming part of their squad, which have been raised by the Floriana Youth Nursery.

Rivalries

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During their history Floriana has had three main rivals, these being St. George's FC, Sliema Wanderers and neighbors Valletta.[4] The rivalry against St. George's started from the beginnings of football in Malta circa 1890, before the rivalry with Sliema Wanderers FC developed (now referred to as the old firm rivalry).This rivalry peaked from 1922 onwards and lasted until the late 1970s, during which time both sides dominated the Maltese football scene.[4] Football hooliganism and direct conflicts between supporters were something usual.[4]

Today the rivalry has declined. Recently Floriana won their 20th FA Trophy against Sliema. This re-ignited the rivalry between both clubs, as Floriana won 9 finals in this cup competition against the Blues. [10]

The rivalry against Valletta is still alive, and is now considered the biggest fixture in the Maltese Premier League and one of the most classic derbies in Maltese football.[10] The rivalry stems from the close proximity of the two localities they represent, as well as the history and huge domestic success of both clubs. The matches between the two sides always attract big crowds to the stadium and the fans treat these clashes as cup finals.[10]

Players

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Current squad

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As of 22 January 2024[11]

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

No.Pos. NationPlayer
1GK  MLTSean Mintoff
2DF  MLTAdam Magri Overend
4DF  TUNOualid El Hasni
7MF  MLTMattia Veselji
8MF  MLTJake Grech
9MF  MLTKemar Reid
10MF  ARGUlisses Arias
11FW  BRAMatheus
12MF  MLTDunstan Vella
14MF  MLTEman Micallef
17DF  MLTOwen Spiteri
19MF  MLTLuca Accarino
No.Pos. NationPlayer
20MF  MLTMatías García
21MF  MLTCarlo Zammit Lonardelli
22FW  MLTKyrian Nwoko
24MF  ITALorenzo De Grazia
33GK  BULGeorgi Kitanov
42DF  BLRMaksim Valadzko
55DF  GREAlexandros Kouros
77DF  MLTAleandro Garzia
79DF  CIVGuy Serge Yaméogo
93FW  GREChristos Rovas
94FW  CPVWillis Furtado
99GK  SRBNemanja Andrijanić

Out on loan

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

No.Pos. NationPlayer
MF  MLTJames Scicluna (at Żabbar St. Patrick until 30 June 2024)
No.Pos. NationPlayer
FW  MLTDaniel Agius (at Sirens until 30 June 2024)

Non-playing staff

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Administration

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Position[12]Name
PresidentJohann Said
Vice President, Head of Legal & International RelationsDr Shazoo Ghaznavi
Vice PresidentEmmanuel Bezzina
Secretary & 1st MFA DelegateDr Jacques Grima
TreasurerEdward Spiteri
Assistant SecretaryAnton Vella
Head of u/19's & 2nd MFA DelegateJordie Delia
Head of MediaRyan Agius
Head of Marketing & Commercial RelationsJustin Muscat
Head of EventsLisa Aquilina
Head of Supporters ClubMark Edward Galea
Head of NurseryRaymond Vella
Committee MemberDione Borg
Clubhouse ManagerKenny Roberts
Club AdministratorJulian Attard

Managerial positions

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NameNatFromTo
Karim Bencherifa 1 July 200030 June 2002
Zijad Švrakić 20022004
Jimmy Briffa 20052006
Joseph Grech 20062007
Danilo Dončić 1 July 200730 June 2008
Zoran Popović 1 July 20089 Jan 2009
Antonio Carlos Vieira 1 July 200824 March 2009
Roddy Collins 1 July 200915 Dec 2009
Zoran Popović 20092010
Todor Raykov 1 July 201021 Feb 2011
Michael Woods 20102012
Joe Brincat 20 March 20122012
Mark Wright 18 Aug 201218 Oct 2012
Stephen Azzopardi 18 Oct 201225 Jan 2013
Iain Brunskill 29 Jan 20138 May 2013
Ian Dawes 9 May 20138 April 2014
Giovanni Tedesco 8 April 20148 May 2015
Luis Oliveira 14 June 20158 May 2016
Giovanni Tedesco 15 June 20164 December 2017
Nicolas Hernan Chiesa 15 December 201727 August 2018
Luis Oliveira 28 August 201814 November 2018
Guido Ugolotti 14 November 201815 May 2019
Vincenzo Potenza 15 May 2019[13]23 December 2020[14]
John Buttigieg 26 December 2020[15]11 February 2021[16]
Darren Vella 11 February 2021[17]16 February 2021
Vincenzo Potenza 16 February 2021[18]14 June 2021
Gianluca Atzori 17 June 2021[19]10 May 2023
Mauro Camoranesi 5 June 202315 May 2024
Darren Abdilla 20 May 2024

Honours

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European record

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Matches

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SeasonCompetitionRoundClubHomeAwayAggregate
1961–62European Cup Winners' CupPreliminary round Újpest2–52–104–15
1962–63European CupPreliminary round Ipswich Town1–40–101–14
1965–66European Cup Winners' CupFirst round Borussia Dortmund1–50–81–13
1966–67European Cup Winners' CupFirst round Sparta Rotterdam1–10–61–7
1967–68European Cup Winners' CupFirst round NAC Breda1–20–11–3
1968–69European CupFirst round Lahti1–10–21–3
1969–70Inter-Cities Fairs CupFirst round Dinamo Bacău0–10–60–7
1970–71European CupFirst round Sporting CP0–40–50–9
1972–73European Cup Winners' CupFirst round Ferencvárosi1–00–61–6
1973–74European CupFirst round Club Brugge0–20–80–10
1975–76European CupFirst round Hajduk Split0–50–30–8
1976–77European Cup Winners' CupFirst round Śląsk Wrocław1–40–21–6
1977–78European CupFirst round Panathinaikos1–10–41–5
1978–79European Cup Winners' CupFirst round Internazionale1–30–51–8
1981–82European Cup Winners' CupFirst round Standard Liège1–30–91–12
1988–89European Cup Winners' CupFirst round Dundee United0–00–10–1
1991–92UEFA CupFirst round Neuchâtel Xamax0–00–20–2
1992–93UEFA CupFirst round Borussia Dortmund0–12–72–8
1993–94UEFA Champions LeaguePreliminary round Ekranas1–01–02–0
First round Porto0–00–20–2
1994–95UEFA Cup Winners' CupQualifying round Sligo Rovers2–20–12–3
1995UEFA Intertoto CupGroup 11 Tirol Innsbruck0–45th
Hapoel Petah Tikva1–1
Strasbourg0–4
Gençlerbirliği0–3
1996–97UEFA CupPreliminary round Beitar Jerusalem1–51–32–8
1997UEFA Intertoto CupGroup 12 SV Ried1–25th
Tbilisi0–5
Torpedo Moscow0–1
Iraklis0–1
1999UEFA Intertoto CupFirst round Aberystwyth Town2–12–24–3
Second round Jokerit1–11–22–3
2000UEFA Intertoto CupFirst round Stabæk1–10–21–3
2011–12Europa LeagueSecond qualifying round AEK Larnaca0–80–10–9
2012–13Europa LeagueFirst qualifying round Elfsborg0–40–80–12
2017–18UEFA Europa LeagueFirst qualifying round Red Star Belgrade3–30–33–6
2020–21UEFA Champions LeagueFirst qualifying round CFR Cluj0–2[20]
UEFA Europa LeagueSecond qualifying round Linfield1–0
Third qualifying round Flora0–0 (2–4 p)
2022–23UEFA Europa Conference LeagueFirst qualifying round Petrocub Hîncești0–00–10–1
2024–25UEFA Conference LeagueFirst qualifying round Tre Penne

League and cup history

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SeasonLeagueTop ScorerCupYouths
Div.Pos.Pl.WDLGSGAPNameGoalsSect.Pos.Cup
2000–20011st5th2813411544827 Rufin Oba12SFA3rdRU
2001–20025th2810612393825 Eduardo 'Bizu' Do Nascimento9R21stSF
2002–20038th248610323420 Grigol Gvazava
Nicolò Baldacchino
6SF1stR1
2003–20046th288713415118 Eduardo 'Bizu' Do Nascimento
Nicolò Baldacchino
8QF2ndW
2004–20056th287714283916 Nicolò Baldacchino6QF4thSF
2005–20067th24699363718 Adrian Mifsud15RU6thQF
2006–20077th24978413022 Adrian Mifsud9R15thQF
2007–20085th2810612404222 Ryan Darmanin10SF6thQF
2008–20096th287615254416 Ryan Darmanin10QF8thRP
2009–20107th241068354125 Ryan Darmanin17R24thRU
2010–20112nd281459463234 Daniel Nwoke13W4thSF
2011–20124th3216610473533 Christian Caruana
Andre Grabowski
7QF5thSF
2012–20137th3214108483838 Igor Coronado13R47thR2
2013–20147th3214513504830 Igor Coronado14R49thR2
2014–20155th3313119585136 Matteo Piciollo14R4B7thR3
2015–20165th3318411604239 Mario Fontanella20QF4thSF
2016–20175th331599513754 Mario Fontanella14W7thR2
2017–20185th2612104481846 Mario Fontanella17R39thQF
2018–20198th269512282532 Arthur Oyama5R3C4thR3
2019–2020W201253381537 Tiago Adan8R3C4thR3
2020–202112th237610263427 Kristian Keqi5QFC4thQF
2021–20222nd16862241330 Andrei Ciolacu4R3?4th

References

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  1. ^ Cassar Pullicino, J. (1956). "Social Aspects of Maltese Nicknames" (PDF). Scientia. 22 (2): 92. Archived (PDF) from the original on 23 August 2021. Retrieved 24 February 2017.
  2. ^ "LaLiga: The best show in Malta | News | Liga de Fútbol Profesional 2016". Archived from the original on 16 July 2019. Retrieved 29 October 2018.
  3. ^ a b c d e f g Armstrong, Gary; Mitchell, Jon P. (2008). Global and Local Football: Politics and Europeanization on the Fringes of the EU. Routledge. pp. 23, 29, 68. ISBN 9781134269198. Archived from the original on 8 September 2023. Retrieved 17 October 2020.
  4. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p Armstrong, Gary; Mitchell, Jon P. (2008). Global and Local Football: Politics and Europeanization on the Fringes of the EU. Routledge. pp. 43–46. ISBN 9781134269198. Archived from the original on 8 September 2023. Retrieved 17 October 2020.
  5. ^ Armstrong, Gary; Mitchell, Jon P. (2008). Global and Local Football: Politics and Europeanization on the Fringes of the EU. Routledge. p. 31. ISBN 9781134269198. Archived from the original on 8 September 2023. Retrieved 14 September 2020.
  6. ^ a b c d Armstrong, Gary; Mitchell, Jon P. (2008). Global and Local Football: Politics and Europeanization on the Fringes of the EU. Routledge. pp. 44, 47, 50. ISBN 9781134269198. Archived from the original on 8 September 2023. Retrieved 17 October 2020.
  7. ^ "Charges expected against Floriana fans over mass celebration". Times of Malta. Archived from the original on 19 June 2020. Retrieved 28 May 2020.
  8. ^ Armstrong, Gary; Mitchell, Jon P. (2008). Global and Local Football: Politics and Europeanization on the Fringes of the EU. Routledge. p. 13. ISBN 9781134269198.
  9. ^ Armstrong, Gary; Mitchell, Jon P. (2008). Global and Local Football: Politics and Europeanization on the Fringes of the EU. Routledge. p. 81. ISBN 9781134269198. Archived from the original on 8 September 2023. Retrieved 17 October 2020.
  10. ^ a b c Armstrong, Gary; Mitchell, Jon P. (2008). Global and Local Football: Politics and Europeanization on the Fringes of the EU. Routledge. pp. 48–50. ISBN 9781134269198.
  11. ^ "Squad". Floriana FC. Archived from the original on 30 August 2019. Retrieved 22 June 2019.
  12. ^ "FLORIANA FC 2020/21 CLUB ADMINISTRATION". Archived from the original on 25 January 2021. Retrieved 16 February 2021.
  13. ^ "Floriana appoint Potenza as coach". Times of Malta. 15 May 2019. Archived from the original on 5 April 2023. Retrieved 16 May 2019.
  14. ^ Aquilina, Kurt (23 December 2020). "Updated: Potenza resigns as Floriana coach". Times of Malta. Archived from the original on 24 December 2020. Retrieved 28 December 2020.
  15. ^ Camilleri, Valhmor (26 December 2020). "John Buttigieg appointed new Floriana coach". SportsDesk. Archived from the original on 26 December 2020. Retrieved 28 December 2020.
  16. ^ "John Buttigieg steps down as Floriana coach". Times of Malta. 11 February 2021. Archived from the original on 12 February 2021. Retrieved 16 February 2021.
  17. ^ Busuttil, Antoine (13 February 2021). "FLORIANA RETURN TO WINNING WAYS". MaltaFootball. Archived from the original on 13 February 2021. Retrieved 16 February 2021.
  18. ^ Camilleri, Valhmor (16 February 2021). "I could never turn my back on Floriana, says Potenza". SportsDesk. Archived from the original on 26 February 2021. Retrieved 16 February 2021.
  19. ^ Busuttil, Antoine (17 June 2021). "FLORIANA FC APPOINT GIANLUCA ATZORI AS THEIR NEW COACH". MaltaFootball. Archived from the original on 8 November 2022. Retrieved 25 July 2021.
  20. ^ Lia, Gianluca (19 August 2020). "Watch: CFR Cluj need two second-half goals to knock out Floriana". SportsDesk. Archived from the original on 22 August 2020. Retrieved 19 August 2020.
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