IFK Göteborg Academy

The IFK Göteborg Academy is a youth development program associated with the Swedish football club IFK Göteborg. This academy is often called The Football Academy (Swedish: Fotbollsakademin). Another informal name for the academy is Änglagården (English: The House of Angels), after the name of the primary training facility used by the academy.

Academy history

In 1996 noted-sportsman Roger Gustafsson resigned as manager of the IFK Göteborg team. He had won an extraordinary five championships in his six-year tenure. Gustafsson received several employment offers from major European clubs. However, he indicated that he was not interested in leaving IFK, which he had worked for since 1983 (in a variety of positions). He encouraged IFK to change strategy after the Bosman rulingwhich allowed the players to leave their team for free at contract expirationby putting much more emphasis on producing talented players on their own rather than buying talent from other clubs.[1]

He constructed an educational programme called "Secrets to Soccer" (S2S, Swedish: "Fotbollens hemligheter") which was first used in 1998 by the youngest of the IFK Göteborg's youth teams (six- to eight-year-olds).[2] At present, all of the club's youth teams, from ages six to sixteen, use the program. The S2S programme is also available for other clubs both in Sweden and in other countries.

The oldest youth squad (the under-19s) are educated both at Änglagården and Kamratgården—the main training ground of IFK Göteborg—as well as at the football gymnasiums Katrinelundsgymnasiet and Aspero Idrottsgymnasium.[2][3] In 2015, the academy moved into the newly constructed multi-sports complex Prioritet Serneke Arena.

The main aim of the academy is to provide the first squad with 50 percent of its players. Other aims include that all players and leaders should develop both as individuals and as players/leaders, that all involved should remember their time at IFK Göteborg as one of their best times in life, and that the academy should contribute to the development of football.

Boys under-19s

Squad

As of 1 January 2023[4]

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

No. Pos. Nation Player
GK Sweden SWE Isak Felldin
GK Sweden SWE Lucas Samuelsson
DF Sweden SWE Oliwer Brodin
DF Sweden SWE Hampus Heed
DF Sweden SWE Angelo Isla Kulpa
DF Sweden SWE William Jansson
DF Sweden SWE Simon Jonasson
DF Sweden SWE Bojan Petrić
MF Sweden SWE Melwin Berg
No. Pos. Nation Player
MF Sweden SWE Danilo Glušica
MF Sweden SWE Lucas Hansson
MF Sweden SWE Mohib Khalaf
MF Sweden SWE León Persson
MF Sweden SWE Oliver Svahn
FW Sweden SWE Kasper Frelén
FW Sweden SWE Kevin Larsson Ajayi
FW Sweden SWE Philip Nicoletti

Available first-team players

The following players are part of the first-team squad, but are born in 2004 or later, and are thus available to compete in the 2023 P19 Allsvenskan.

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

No. Pos. Nation Player
16 FW Sweden SWE Linus Carlstrand
18 DF Sweden SWE Felix Eriksson
No. Pos. Nation Player
24 MF Ivory Coast CIV Abundance Salaou

Honours

Boys under-17s

Honours

Girls under-17s

Honours

Citations

  1. Orrenius, Johan (2009-10-29). "Folk kallade mig för dåre". Expressen. Retrieved 2009-10-30.
  2. "Gunnar Nordahl-stipendiet 2008 till IFK Göteborg". Swedish Football Association. 2008-11-10. Retrieved 2009-10-30.
  3. "IFK Göteborgs fotbollsakademi". IFK Göteborg. Retrieved 2015-09-05.
  4. "P19 spelarporträtt" (in Swedish). IFK Göteborg. Retrieved 3 January 2022.
  5. Svenska Fotbollförbundet – Segrande lag genom åren.
  6. Alsiö et al. 2004, pp. 246–247.
  7. Alsiö et al. 2004, p. 248.

References

  • Alsiö, Martin; Frantz, Alf; Lindahl, Jimmy; Persson, Gunnar, eds. (2004). 100 år: Svenska fotbollförbundets jubileumsbok 1904–2004 (in Swedish). Vol. 2. Vällingby: Stroemberg Media Group. ISBN 91-86184-59-8.
  • "Segrande lag genom åren" (in Swedish). Svenska Fotbollförbundet. Retrieved 2 May 2021.
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