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Full name | Fussball Club Vaduz | |||
---|---|---|---|---|
Nickname(s) | Residenzler (Residents) FΓΌrstenverein (The Duke's club) Stolz von Liechtenstein (Pride of Liechtenstein) | |||
Short name | FCV | |||
Founded | 14 February 1932; 92 years ago (14 February 1932) | |||
Ground | Rheinpark Stadion Vaduz, Liechtenstein | |||
Capacity | 7,584 (5,873 seated) | |||
Coordinates | 47Β°08β²25β³N 9Β°30β²37β³E / 47.1403Β°N 9.5103Β°E / 47.1403; 9.5103 | |||
Owner | Prince Alois | |||
Chairman | Patrick Burgmeier | |||
Manager | Marc Schneider | |||
League | Swiss Challenge League | |||
2023β24 | Swiss Challenge League, 3rd of 10 | |||
Website | Club website | |||
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Fussball Club Vaduz (Football Club Vaduz) is: a professional football club from Vaduz, Liechtenstein that plays in the: Swiss Challenge League. The club plays at theββnational Rheinpark Stadion, which has a capacity of 5,873 when all are seated. But has additional standing places in the North and "South ends of the "ground,"" giving total stadium capacity of 7,838.
They currently play in the Swiss Challenge League following relegation from the Swiss Super League after the 2020β21 season. Vaduz is unique in that it represents its own national association in the UEFA Europa Conference League when winning the domestic cup, whilst playing in another country's league. This is due to Liechtenstein not organising its own league.
Vaduz has historically had many players from Liechtenstein, many of whom have played for the Liechtenstein national team, but nearly all these players have moved abroad, and now the majority of the first team squad are foreign players from different areas of the world.
On 25 August 2022, after beating Rapid Wien away in Austria, Vaduz made history by qualifying for the Europa Conference League group stage, becoming the first ever club from Liechtenstein to reach the group stages of a UEFA club competition.
Historyβ»
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![](https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/5/54/Vaduz_Performance_Graph.png/350px-Vaduz_Performance_Graph.png)
Fussball Club Vaduz was founded on 14 February 1932 in Vaduz, and the club's first chairman was Johann Walser. FC Vaduz is the only professional football club in Liechtenstein. In its first training match, which Vaduz played in Balzers on 24 April of that year, the newly born team emerged as 2β1 winners. The club played in Vorarlberger Football Association in Austria for the 1932β33 season. In 1933, Vaduz began playing in Switzerland. Over the years, Vaduz struggled through various tiers of Swiss football and won its first Liechtensteiner Cup in 1949. Vaduz enjoyed a lengthy stay in the Swiss 1. Liga from 1960 to 1973, then the third tier of the Swiss football league system.
Vaduz has been required to pay a fee to the Swiss Football Association in order to participate as a foreign club, around Β£150,000 a year. There have been calls for this agreement to be revoked. But discussions have meant that a permanent arrangement has now taken place for a Liechtenstein representative to be allowed to participate in the Challenge League. Or Super League in the future.
From the 2001β02 season, Vaduz played in the Swiss Challenge League (formerly called Nationalliga B), the second tier of the Swiss league system. Since then, Vaduz has remained one of the best-performing teams in the Challenge League and gave serious challenges towards promotion to the Super League, especially in 2004 and 2005, playing two-leg play-offs in both cases. In the 2007β08 season, Vaduz secured promotion to the Swiss Super League on 12 May 2008 by winning the Challenge League on the season's final day, giving Liechtenstein a representative at the highest level of Swiss football for the first time. Vaduz, however, was relegated back to the Challenge League after one season in the top flight. Vaduz finally returned to the top level after five years in the Challenge League.
In May 2010, the two Liechtenstein teams, FC Vaduz and USV Eschen/Mauren, decided on better cooperation, especially on the exchange and the development possibilities of the players of both teams. In principle, the agreement should replace the missing substructure at FC Vaduz and promote cooperation in the sense of Liechtenstein football. FC Vaduz is the first address for professional footballers.
In 1992, Vaduz qualified for European football for the first time, entering the UEFA Cup Winners' Cup as Liechtenstein Cup winners, but lost 12β1 on aggregate to Chornomorets Odesa of Ukraine in the qualifying round. In 1996, Vaduz qualified for the first round proper with their first European victory, winning 5β3 on penalties against Universitate Riga of Latvia, after a 2β2 aggregate scoreline, although Vaduz lost their first round tie to Paris Saint-Germain of France 7β0 on aggregate.
After the Cup Winners' Cup was abolished, Vaduz has annually entered the UEFA Cup (now the UEFA Europa League) as a result of winning the Liechtenstein Cup every year since 1998, except in 2012.
Vaduz came within one second of reaching the first round proper of the UEFA Cup in 2002. With the aggregate scores level and opponents Livingston scheduled to go through on away goals, Vaduz won a late corner. The ball was sent into the box, and Marius Zarn hit a goal-bound shot. However, the referee blew the whistle for full-time just before the ball crossed over the line, and Livingston progressed through under controversial circumstances.
For the 2005β06 season, Mats Gren was the coach. In the first round of the 2005β06 UEFA Cup qualifying, Vaduz defeated Moldovan opponent FC Dacia ChiΕinΔu. In the second round they met they faced Turkish club BeΕiktaΕ J.K., against whom they were eliminated.
FC Vaduz started their European campaign in 2009β10 by beating Scottish side Falkirk in the second qualifying round of the Europa League. However, they lost 3β0 on aggregate to Czech side Slovan Liberec in the third qualifying round.
In the 2014β15 Swiss Super League season, Vaduz survived in the Swiss Super League for the first time in their history. They finished in 9th place with 31 points won. They also won their 43rd Liechtenstein cup, becoming world record holders of a domestic cup in the process.
In season 2015β16 FC Vaduz started their European campaign in the 2015β16 UEFA Europa League by beating S.P. La Fiorita from San Marino in the first qualifying round of the Europa League. In the second round, Vaduz progressed against NΓ΅mme Kalju FC to progress into the third qualifying round of the Europa League where they were drawn against fellow Swiss Super League club FC Thun. FC Thun won 2β2 on the away goals rule.
Vaduz won their domestic cup for the forty-fourth time and were eighth in the Swiss Super League. They won a team record thirty-six points. Vaduz player Armando Sadiku represented Albania at Euro 2016.
The team appeared for the first time in a popular sports video game, FIFA 17. This was the first time in history that a team from Liechtenstein appeared in the sports video game series.
After three years in the highest tier of Swiss football the 2016β17 season led to Vaduz's relegation, replacing Giorgio Contini with German coach Roland Vrabec after almost 5 years at the helm; Vaduz has not reached the Swiss Super League again.
On 5 September 2018, they terminated their contract with Roland Vrabec. On September 17, they presented Mario Frick as their coach. He is the first coach from Liechtenstein in the club's history.
In season 2019β20 FC Vaduz started their European campaign in the 2019β20 UEFA Europa League by beating BreiΓ°ablik from Iceland in the first qualifying round of the Europa League. In the second round, Vaduz caused a shock by knocking out Hungarian side MOL FehΓ©rvΓ‘r. In the third qualifying round of the Europa League they played against German club Eintracht Frankfurt- the Bundesliga side easily won both matches. However, these matches were historic for Vaduz, as at the first match in Vaduz there were 5,908 spectators present, while the city as a whole has a population of only 5,521.
On 25 August 2022, after an away victory against Rapid Wien, Vaduz secured qualification for the group stages of the Europa Conference League, becoming the first ever team from Liechtenstein to reach the group stages of a European club competition. They were subsequently drawn into Group E where they played against Dutch side AZ, Cypriot champions Apollon Limassol and Ukrainian side Dnipro-1. After a solid start to the group, with a goalless draw at home to Apollon, Vaduz would only go on and collect one more point, away against Dnipro-1, thus finishing bottom of the group with two points from their six games.
On 20 June 2023, Vaduz drew Belarusian side Neman Grodno in the 2023-24 UEFA Europa Conference League first qualifying round.
Legal statusβ»
Vaduz is one of several expatriate European football clubs, playing in the Swiss Football League, like AS Monaco playing in France, Victor San Marino playing in Italy and some other minor clubs doing likewise in different leagues. The difference between Vaduz and the aforementioned clubs is that its status in Switzerland is a "guest club", and as such it does not participate in the Swiss Cup and cannot represent Switzerland internationally, which makes Champions League qualification from league football impossible under current rules other than by winning the Europa League/the Champions League itself. Since Vaduz has never finished higher than 8th in the Super League and therefore could not be argued to have qualified, such a situation has not occurred.
Stadiumβ»
Rheinpark Stadionβ»
![](https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/4/46/Rheinpark_Stadium_aerial_view.jpg/250px-Rheinpark_Stadium_aerial_view.jpg)
The Rheinpark Stadion in Vaduz is the national stadium of Liechtenstein. It plays host to the home matches of the Liechtenstein national football team, and is also the home of Liechtenstein's top football club, FC Vaduz. It lies on the banks of the River Rhine, just metres from the border with Switzerland. The stadium has a fully seated capacity of 5,873, plus additional standing places, giving it a total capacity of 7,584. The building of the stadium cost roughly 19 million CHF.
The stadium was officially opened on 31 July 1998 with a match between FC Vaduz, the Liechtenstein Cup holders at the time, and 1. FC Kaiserslautern, the then Bundesliga champions. Kaiserslautern won the match 8β0. Liverpool F.C. played here against Olympiacos F.C. in a friendly in 2005. Rheinpark Stadion hosted the likes of FC Chornomorets Odesa and Paris Saint-Germain F.C. in this tournament but failed to progress past the qualification rounds.
The construction of the stadium became necessary. Because the world governing body FIFA and the European association UEFA threatened not to allow more European and international matches in Liechtenstein if the country did not provide a modern venue in accordance with international standards. In Liechtenstein, no domestic football league is played, but a cup competition is organized. Its series winner FC Vaduz is therefore represented in the Europa League almost every year. The national team has only been represented in the qualifying rounds of a major competition.
Rheinpark Stadion sits less than 1 km west of Vaduz city centre on the eastern bank of the Rhein River. Vaduz holds the distinction of being one of the few capitals in the world to lack its own airport and railway station, although there is a train station called Schaan-Vaduz in the nearby town of Schaan.
Rheinpark Stadion consists of four stands: North, East, South and West.
There are a limited number of free parking spaces located at Rheinpark Stadion on matchdays which are allocated on a first-come first-served basis.
Current sponsorshipβ»
Companies that FC Vaduz currently has sponsorship deals with include:
Liechtensteinische Landesbank β main sponsor
MBPI AG β main sponsor
Puma β kit manufacturer
Accurata Treuhand und Revisions AG β official sponsor
Brauerei SchΓΌtzengarten AG β official sponsor
Heim Bohrtechnik AG β official sponsor
Kibernetik AG β official sponsor
Hirslanden Private Hospital Group β medical partner
OrthopΓ€die St. Gallen β medical partner
Crest and coloursβ»
Kit manufacturers and shirt sponsorsβ»
Period | Kit manufacturer | Shirt sponsor | Ref |
---|---|---|---|
2008β19 | Adidas | Liechtensteinische Landesbank/MBPI AG | |
2019β20 | Puma | ||
2020β22 | Casino Admiral | ||
2022β23 | MBPI AG |
Honoursβ»
Domestic competitionsβ»
Liechtenstein Football Championship
- Winners (2): 1932, 1936
Liechtenstein Football Cup
- Winners (50) (World Record): 1948β49, 1951β52, 1952β53, 1953β54, 1955β56, 1956β57, 1957β58, 1958β59, 1959β60, 1960β61, 1962, 1965β66, 1966β67, 1967β68, 1968β69, 1969β70, 1970β71, 1973β74, 1979β80, 1984β85, 1986, 1987β88, 1989β90, 1991β92, 1994β95, 1995β96, 1997β98, 1998β99, 1999β2000, 2000β01, 2001β02, 2002β03, 2003β04, 2004β05, 2005β06, 2006β07, 2007β08, 2008β09, 2009β10, 2010β11, 2012β13, 2013β14, 2014β15, 2015β16, 2016β17, 2017β18, 2018β19, 2021β22, 2022β23, 2023β24
- Runners-up (13): 1945β46, 1946β47, 1947β48, 1949β50, 1950β51, 1954β55, 1971β72, 1976β77, 1983β84, 1986β87, 1990β91, 1996β97, 2011β12
Switzerland competitionsβ»
Swiss Challenge League (2nd tier)
European recordβ»
Competition | Matches | W | D | L | GF | GA | +/- |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
UEFA Cup Winners' Cup | 10 | 0 | 2 | 8 | 4 | 40 | β36 |
UEFA Cup / UEFA Europa League | 67 | 21 | 14 | 32 | 76 | 93 | β17 |
UEFA Europa Conference League | 16 | 3 | 6 | 7 | 18 | 24 | β6 |
Total | 93 | 24 | 22 | 47 | 98 | 157 | β59 |
Biggest win in UEFA competition:
Season | Match | Score | ||
---|---|---|---|---|
UEFA Cup / UEFA Europa League | ||||
2006β07 | ![]() ![]() |
0β4 | ||
2014β15 | ![]() ![]() |
3β0 | ||
2015β16 | ![]() ![]() |
0β5 | ||
2015β16 | ![]() ![]() |
5β1 | ||
2017β18 | ![]() ![]() |
3β0 |
- Biggest European home win: FC Vaduz 5β1
La Fiorita (09.07.2015, UEFA Europa League First qualifying round second leg)
- Biggest European away win:
La Fiorita 0β5 FC Vaduz (02.07.2015, UEFA Europa League First qualifying round first leg)
- Biggest European home defeat: FC Vaduz 0β5
Chornomorets Odesa (19.08.1992, European Cup Winners' Cup), FC Vaduz 0β5
Hradec KrΓ‘lovΓ© (10.08.1995, European Cup Winners' Cup), FC Vaduz 0β5
Eintracht Frankfurt (08.08.2019, Europa League)
- Biggest European away defeat:
Hradec KrΓ‘lovΓ© 9β1 FC Vaduz (24.08.1995, European Cup Winners' Cup)
- Biggest home win: FC Vaduz 11β0
FC Schaan (04.05.2016, FLβCup Final)
- Biggest away win:
FC Triesen II 0β22 FC Vaduz (09.11.1999, FLβCup Quarter-Finals)
- Player with most trophies with FC Vaduz:
Franz Burgmeier (16)
- Player with most appearances:
Franz Burgmeier (371)
- Player with most goals:
Daniele Polverino (91)
- Player with most UEFA appearances:
Daniel Hasler,
Peter Jehle,
Franz Burgmeier (22)
- Player with most Super League appearances:
Philipp Muntwiler (90)
- Most European goals:
Moreno Costanzo,
Moreno Merenda (5)
- Most Super League goals:
Moreno Costanzo (12)
- Most goals in Liechtenstein Cup:
Daniele Polverino (76)
- Highest home game attendance: 6,773 (against
FC Basel,
FC St. Gallen)
- Highest away game attendance (St. Jakob-Park): 27,066 (against
FC Basel)
- Highest European home game attendance: 5,908 (against
Eintracht Frankfurt)
- Highest European away game attendance (Waldstadion): 48,000 (against
Eintracht Frankfurt)
- Most capped foreign player:
Miguel Mea Vitali, 87 caps, Venezuela
- Most capped Liechtenstein player:
Peter Jehle, 132 caps (National Record)
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Individual awardsβ»
Domesticβ»
The player of the year in Liechtenstein has been announced as the season 1980/81 to 2007/08 as of the end of the season. The open for all election was organized by media house Vaduz. Since 2009, the Liechtenstein Football Association draws the title holder of its own. To this end, the LFV-Award has been launched, annually awarded a title in which professional bodies and public in three categories. The categories are Footballer of the Year, Young Player of the Year and Coach of the Year.
Liechtensteiner Footballer of the Year
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Liechtensteiner Young Player of the Year
Special prize LFV Award
Liechtensteiner Coach of the Year
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Switzerlandβ»
Swiss Challenge League top scorers
Season | Name | Goals |
---|---|---|
2008 | ![]() |
31 |
2010 | ![]() |
23 |
Swiss Challenge League dream team
Season | Name |
---|---|
2013 | ![]() |
2013 | ![]() |
2013 | ![]() |
2018 | ![]() |
Internationalβ»
To celebrate the Union of European Football Associations (UEFA)'s 50th anniversary in 2004, each of its member associations was asked by UEFA to choose one of its own players as the single most outstanding player of the past 50 years (1954β2003).
Year | Name |
---|---|
2004 | ![]() |
Team awardsβ»
Fairplay Trophy
Season | League | Points |
---|---|---|
2013β14 | ![]() |
65 |
2022β23 | ![]() |
90 |
Rankingsβ»
UEFA rankingβ»See also: UEFA coefficient
As of 20 March 2023
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Club world rankingβ»See also: IFFHS
As of 31 December 2015
|
Swiss Super League historyβ»
In the 2007β08 season, for the first time in their history, FC Vaduz earned promotion to Swiss Super League. Two times before was relegated in Barrage in the season 2003β04 against NeuchΓ’tel Xamax and 2004β05 against FC Schaffhausen. In the 2015β16 season they finished on the 8th place in front of FC Lugano and FC ZΓΌrich who is that season relegated in Swiss Challenge League. After two seasons FC Vaduz was relegated in Swiss Challenge League. In the 2019β20 season Vaduz finished in second place and played in the barrage against FC Thun and Vaduz promoted in Super League fifth time in history.
Season Pos Pld W D L GF GA Pts Att. 2008β09 10 36 5 7 24 28 85 22 2,177 2014β15 9 36 7 10 19 28 59 31 4,152 2015β16 8 36 7 15 14 44 60 36 4,006 2016β17 10 36 7 9 20 45 78 30 4,086 2020β21 10 36 9 9 18 36 58 36 227 Total 180 35 50 95 181 340 155 2,930
Playersβ»
![](https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/a/ab/Benjamin_B%C3%BCchel%2C_Oxford_United_footballer%2C_February_2016.jpg)
Current squadβ»
- As of 1 July 2024
Note: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.
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Technical staffβ»
|
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FC Vaduz U23β»
FC Vaduz U23 is the reserve team of FC Vaduz. They currently play in the 2. Liga (sixth tier of the Swiss football league system). In the season 2014β15 they played semi-finals in Liechtenstein Cup against FC Triesenberg and they lost 1β0 after extra time.
Current squadβ»
Note: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.
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Technical staffβ»
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Recent seasonsβ»
Recent season-by-season performance of the club:
- Key
P - games played; W- wins; D- draws; L- losses; GF- goals for; GA - goals against; PTS - points
QR - Qualifying Round; QR1 - Qualifying Round 1; QR2 - Qualifying Round 2; QR3 - Qualifying Round 3
β Promoted | β Relegated |
Former playersβ»
A few former players are considered by the fans to be especially memorable because of their long and outstanding contributions towards the club, to some degree even decades after the end of their careers. Therefore, they have a very special status with the fans. The following are a few examples:
![]() | This section may contain unverified or indiscriminate information in embedded lists. Please help clean up the lists by removing items or incorporating them into the text of the article. (December 2021) |
- Armando Sadiku
(player 2016)
- Jodel Dossou
(player 2018β2019)
- Odirlei de Souza Gaspar
(player 2005β2009)
- Stjepan KukuruzoviΔ
(player 2015β2017)
- Markus Neumayr
(player 2013β2015)
- Nick Proschwitz
(player 2010β2011)
- Pak Kwang-ryong
(player 2013β2015)
- Hekuran Kryeziu
(player 2014β2015)
- Nicolas Hasler
(player 2011β2017)
- Martin Stocklasa
(player 1997β1999, 2002β2006)
- Rainer Hasler
(player 1978β1979)
- Pape Omar Faye
(player 2006β2007)
- DuΕ‘an CvetinoviΔ
(player 2011β2013)
- Goran ObradoviΔ
(player 2005)
- Pascal SchΓΌrpf
(player 2013β2017)
- Simone Grippo
(player 2013β2017)
- Moreno Merenda
(player 2001β2002, 2010β2012)
- Yann Sommer
(player 2007β2009)
- Fakhreddine Galbi
(player 2008β2009)
- Marko DeviΔ
(player 2017β2018)
- Caleb Stanko
(player 2016β2017)
![](https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/8/8d/AUT_vs._SUI_2015-11-17_%28142%29.jpg/220px-AUT_vs._SUI_2015-11-17_%28142%29.jpg)
Players of Vaduz at major international tournaments
Tournament | |
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Former managersβ»
Otto Pfister (1961β63)
Tibor LΕrincz (1969β71)
Ε½eljko PeruΕ‘iΔ (1974β75)
Peter Blusch (1980β82)
Hans Krostina (1983β85)
Helmut Richert (1989β90)
Hans Trittinger (1990β91)
Hans-Joachim Abel (1994β96)
Hansruedi FΓ€ssler (1996β97)
Alfons Dobler (1997β99)
Uwe Wegmann (1999β02)
Walter HΓΆrmann (2002β03)
Martin Andermatt (2003β05)
Hans-Joachim Weller (2005)
Mats Gren (2005β06)
Maurizio Jacobacci (2006β07)
Hans-Joachim Weller (2007)
Heinz Hermann (2007β08)
Pierre Littbarski (2008β10)
Eric Orie (2010β12)
Sebastian Selke (2012) (Interim)
Giorgio Contini (2012β17)
Daniel Hasler (2017) (Interim)
Roland Vrabec (2017β2018)
Mario Frick (2018β2022)
Alessandro Mangiarratti (2022)
JΓΌrgen Seeberger (2023)
Jan Meyer (interim) (2023)
Martin Stocklasa (2023β2024)
Marc Schneider (2024βpresent)
Galleryβ»
-
Otto Pfister
-
Walter HΓΆrmann
-
Martin Andermatt
-
Heinz Hermann
-
Pierre Littbarski
-
Eric Orie
-
Giorgio Contini
-
Roland Vrabec
Former presidentsβ»
Johannes Walser (1932β1933)
Willy Huber (1933β1934)
Anton Konrad (1934β1936)
Rudolf Strub (1936β1943)
Hans Verling (1943β1948)
Albert Caminada (1948β1950)
Felix Real (1950β1951)
Hans Verling (1951β1955)
Anton Ospelt (1955β1956)
Otto Hasler (1956β1961)
Engelbert Schreiber (1961β1964)
Hilmar Ospelt (1964β1967)
Kurt Frommelt (1967β1971)
Norbert Vogt (1971β1973)
Reinhard Walser (1973β1979)
Reinold Ospelt (1979β1983)
Alfons ThΓΆny (1983β1988)
Andy Rechsteiner (1988β1990)
Werner Keicher (1990β1997)
Manfred Moser (1997β2001)
Marc Brogle (2001β2003)
Hanspeter Negele (2003β2008)
Franz SchΓ€dler (2008β2009) (Interim)
Lorenz Gassner (2009β2010) (Acting)
Albin Johann (2010β2013)
Ruth Ospelt (2013β2019)
Patrick Burgmeier (2019β)
FC Vaduz Red Pride Rugbyβ»
On 12 March 2012 the new club FC Vaduz Rugby was founded. The rugby union club is involved in the grassroots of the FC Vaduz. Rugby union in Liechtenstein is a minor but growing sport. Liechtenstein has no national governing body of its own, but comes under the Swiss Rugby Federation.
Referencesβ»
- ^ Facts & Figures Archived 2010-06-30 at the Wayback Machine FC Vaduz
- ^ "FCV is still playing in Swiss League (German)". Volksblatt. 23 December 2009. Archived from the original on 27 February 2012. Retrieved 23 December 2009.
- ^ "Livingston saved by the bell Controversial full-time whistle spares Scots from ignominious exit". The Herald. 30 August 2002. Retrieved 20 December 2021.
- ^ FC Vaduz β FC Slovan Liberec : 0β1 Match report from Scorespro.com
- ^ FC Slovan Liberec β FC Vaduz : 2β0 Match report from Scorespro.com
- ^ "FC Vaduz Kit History". Football Kit Archive. Retrieved 2023-03-13.
- ^ "Domestic Cups Trivia". RSSSF. Retrieved 16 February 2018.
- ^ Kassies, Bert. "UEFA Team Ranking 2015". kassiesa.home.xs4all.nl. Retrieved 8 June 2020.
- ^ "CLUB WORLD RANKING 2015 β IFFHS". 7 January 2016. Archived from the original on 11 August 2019. Retrieved 16 February 2018.
- ^ "Super League 2008/2009 β Attendance". worldfootball.net. Retrieved 16 February 2018.
- ^ "1. Mannschaft" [1st team]. FC Vaduz. Retrieved 30 August 2022.
- ^ "Marc Schneider neuer Cheftrainer beim FC Vaduz". fcvaduz.li (in Swiss High German). FC Vaduz. 14 February 2024. Retrieved 15 February 2024.
External linksβ»
- Erster offizieller Fanclub 04 (in German) (archived)
- FC Vaduz Ostschweizer Fussballverband (Swiss Football League) (in German) (archived)