Resultate

Finland Ykkosliiga 10/07 13:00 5 [5] SJK Akatemia v HIFK [6] L 3-2
Finland Ykkosliiga 10/02 15:30 4 [6] HIFK v MP [3] W 3-2
Finland Ykkosliiga 09/27 15:30 3 [4] TPS Turku v HIFK [6] W 1-3
Finland Ykkosliiga 09/22 15:30 2 [6] HIFK v IF Gnistan [1] D 2-2
Finland Ykkosliiga 09/17 15:00 1 [1] EIF v HIFK [6] L 2-0
Finland Ykkosliiga 09/02 13:00 1 [6] HIFK v SJK Akatemia [5] L 1-2
Finland Ykkosliiga 08/24 15:30 1 [5] TPS Turku v HIFK [6] L 2-0
Finland Ykkosliiga 08/18 15:30 1 [6] HIFK v EIF [3] L 0-2
Finland Ykkosliiga 08/13 15:00 1 [9] FF Jaro v HIFK [6] L 3-0
Finland Ykkosliiga 08/04 15:30 1 [6] HIFK v KaPa [9] W 1-0
Finland Ykkosliiga 07/29 13:00 1 [8] JaPS v HIFK [6] W 2-3
Finland Ykkosliiga 07/21 15:30 1 [6] HIFK v JJK [11] W 4-2

Statistik

 TotalHEIMAUSWÄRTS
Spiele 30 12 18
Wins 12 6 6
Draws 8 3 5
Losses 10 3 7
Goals for 44 19 25
Goals against 41 15 26
Clean sheets 9 4 5
Failed to score 9 2 7

Wikipedia - HIFK Fotboll

HIFK Fotboll or IFK Helsingfors, was the association football section of HIFK, a sports club based in Helsinki, Finland. The men's football team most recently competed in the second tier of Finnish football, Ykkönen. Their home ground was the Bolt Arena. The team operated from 1897 to 2024 and was dissolved due to bankruptcy.

History

Bolt Arena

Idrottsföreningen Kamraterna i Helsingfors was formed on 15 October 1897 by Georges Doubitsky, a 15-year-old student at the Svenska Reallyceum school in Helsinki. In the early years the club specialised in athletics, football and bandy. The football section was established in 1907, the same year that the Football Association of Finland was founded. HIFK's first football game was at the Kaisaniemi ground on 17 May 1908 where the new team lost 1–2 to Unitas.

In those early years[] HIFK were runners-up in the Mestaruussarja (then played as a cup competition) on 5 occasions in 1909, 1912, 1928 and 1929. In addition in 1912 the Finnish Football team at the Stockholm Olympics comprised a team of HIFK players.

HIFK won their first Finnish championship (Mestaruussarja) in 1930 a feat that they were to repeat on three other occasions in 1931, 1933 and 1937 in a tremendous decade for the club. HIFK also won the Mestaruussarja in 1947, 1959 and 1961. In total HIFK won the Finnish championship on 7 occasions.

HIFK was one of the most successful football sides in Finland until the early 1970s when the team were relegated from the Mestaruussarja (Finnish Premier League). After 1972 the team wandered around the lower divisions of Finnish football, having even played in the Nelonen (Fourth Division), the fifth tier of the Finnish football league system, in 1980–83 and 2003–05, and only would return to the first level 43 years later.

In total, since 1930, HIFK have played 33 seasons in the Mestaruussarja (the top tier), 22 seasons in the second tier and 19 seasons in the third tier. Their best spell in recent decades was from 1999 to 2002 when the club participated in the Ykkönen (First Division). However, the club overstretched themselves which resulted in the withdrawal from the Ykkönen at the end of the 2002 season and taking the place of the second team in the Nelonen (Fourth Division) in 2003. More recently, in 2010, they won the third tier, after defeating FC Santa Claus in the promotion playoff match, returning them to the second-tier Ykkönen of Finnish football for seasons 2011 and 2012, only to be relegated back to Kakkonen after their 2012 season. Back in Kakkonen, HIFK rehired coach Jani Honkavaara who was the coach when HIFK first were promoted to Ykkönen. Since his second term they were able to play in Ykkönen for a third time this millennia, when beating their promotion play-off opponent PS Kemi Kings.

HIFK won Ykkönen in 2014 and thereby were automatically promoted into the highest tier of Finnish football, Veikkausliiga. After securing their promotion, HIFK announced that they would play their 2015 season home games on Telia 5G -areena, the home ground of their local rivals HJK Helsinki. In December 2014 HIFK launched a crowdfunding campaign through Invesdor. HIFK aimed to gather 250.000 – 500.000 euros by selling shares of the club valued at 189,70 euros a piece. According to club chairman René Österman, HIFK was in need of funding for the upcoming Veikkausliiga season and crowdfunding gave a chance for the club's supporters to own a part of the club. The campaign ended successfully in January 2015 and HIFK gathered 335.495 euros from 786 investors.

After three seasons in Veikkausliiga, HIFK were relegated to Ykkönen after finishing 11th in 2017 season and losing relegation play-offs against FC Honka on away goals. However, after a successful 2018 campaign in Ykkönen, HIFK was promoted back to Veikkausliiga for the 2019 season.

On the 4th of January 2024, HIFK Fotboll Ab filed for bankruptcy and the club was dissolved after 127 years.

The governing body of the club, HIFK Soccer rf, will continue playing in the new fifth-tier league Kolmonen in 2024.

HIFK, der Helsinki IFK, ist ein 1897 gegründeter finnischer Fußballverein. Er wurde zu Beginn des 20. Jahrhunderts gegründet und ist einer der erfolgreichsten Vereine in der finnischen Geschichte. HIFK hat insgesamt sieben finnische Meisterschaften und sechs finnische Pokale gewonnen. Der Verein spielt seine Heimspiele im Bolt-Stadion in Helsinki.