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Frigg Oslo FK

Norwegian sports club

Frigg Oslo FK

Summary

Norwegian sports club

FieldValue
clubnameFrigg Oslo FK
imageFrigg Oslo.png
image_size150px
fullnameFrigg Oslo Fotballklubb
founded
groundFrogner Stadion
capacity5,500
chairmanGeir Hustad
managerMagnus Aadland
league3. divisjon
season2024
position3. divisjon group 3, 3rd of 14
websitehttps://cms.frigg.no/
pattern_la1pattern_b1=pattern_ra1=
leftarm1232940body1=232940rightarm1=232940shorts1=232940socks1=232940
pattern_la2pattern_b2=pattern_ra2=
leftarm2FF5630body2=FF5630rightarm2=FF5630shorts2=FF5630socks2=FF5630
Football team, c. 1930
national bandy final]] against [[Mjøndalen IF]] in 1947
Frigg training at Marienlyst

Frigg Oslo Fotballklubb is a Norwegian sports club from Majorstua in Oslo.

It has sections for association football and bandy.

History

It was founded on 17 May 1904 as SK Frigg, named after Frigg of Norse mythology. It was merged on 21 April 1954 with SK Varg. It took the name Frigg Oslo FK in 1990. The club colors are white and blue, and the team plays at Marienlyst stadion. It has a training field at Tørteberg not far from Marienlyst.

As the name indicates it is mainly a football club. It formerly had a handball team; the women's team became national champions in 1962 and 1964. The men's football team played for many years in the Norwegian top flight, and won the Norwegian football cup in 1914, 1916 and 1921. It had several players for the Norwegian national team, including Harald Hennum and Per Pettersen. Frigg last played in the top flight in 1973. The team currently plays in the Norwegian Third Division, having been relegated from the 2022 Norwegian Second Division.

European record

SeasonCompetitionRoundCountryClubHomeAwayAggregate
1966–67Inter-Cities Fairs CupFirst roundScotlandDunfermline Athletic1–31–32–6

Recent history

:{|class="wikitable" ! Season ! ! Pos. ! Pl. ! W ! D ! L ! GS ! GA ! P !Cup !Notes |- |2008 |3. divisjon ||First round | |- |2009 |3. divisjon ||First round

Promoted
2010
2. divisjon

| |- |2011 |2. divisjon ||First round | |- |2012 |2. divisjon ||First round | |- |2013 |2. divisjon ||First round

Relegated
2014
3. divisjon

| |- |2015 |3. divisjon ||Second qual. round

Promoted
2016
2. divisjon
Relegated
-
2017
3. divisjon

| |- |2018 |3. divisjon ||First round | |- |2019 |3. divisjon ||First round | |-

2020
2021
3. divisjon
Promoted
-
2022
2. divisjon
Relegated
-
2023
3. divisjon

| |- |2024 |3. divisjon ||Second round | |} Source:

Honours

Bandy

The men's bandy team played four cup finals in 1917, 1923, 1947 and 1948 but lost all. They were relegated from the 1st division (2nd tier) after the 2019/2020 season.

References

References

  1. (2007). "Frigg – sportsklubb". Kunnskapsforlaget.
  2. "Frigg Oslo FK". [[Norwegian News Agency.
Wikipedia Source

This article was imported from Wikipedia and is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 License. Content has been adapted to SurfDoc format. Original contributors can be found on the article history page.

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