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Grazer AK
| Field | Value |
|---|---|
| image | GAK 1902 Logo Rund.svg |
| upright | 0.8 |
| clubname | Grazer AK |
| fullname | Grazer Athletiksport Klub |
| nickname | Die Roten (The Reds) |
| Die roten Teufel (The Red Devils) | |
| Rotjacken (Red Jackets) | |
| Athletiker (Athletics) | |
| short name | GAK |
| founded | |
| chairman | Réne Ziesler |
| chrtitle | President |
| manager | Ferdinand Feldhofer |
| mgrtitle | Head coach |
| ground | Merkur-Arena |
| capacity | 16,364 |
| website | |
| league | Austrian Bundesliga |
| season | 2024–25 |
| current | 2025–26 Grazer AK season |
| position | Austrian Bundesliga, 10th of 12 |
| pattern_la1 | _whiteborder |
| pattern_b1 | _macronpropuseco24rw |
| pattern_ra1 | _whiteborder |
| pattern_sh1 | _macronskara2223rw |
| pattern_so1 | _grazer2425h |
| leftarm1 | FF0000 |
| body1 | FF0000 |
| rightarm1 | FF0000 |
| shorts1 | FF0000 |
| socks1 | FF0000 |
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| socks3 | 0000FF |
Die roten Teufel (The Red Devils) Rotjacken (Red Jackets) Athletiker (Athletics)
**** (; abbreviated as GAK), better known simply as ****, is an Austrian sports club based in the city of Graz in the federal state of Styria. The football section was once among Austria's most popular clubs, enjoying success in the decade between 1995 and 2005. The other sections are basketball, diving and tennis, which however all act as separate legal entities. The "GAK" football section folded during the 2012–13 Regionalliga Mitte Season in Autumn 2012. It has since been revived and returned to the Austrian Second League in 2019, and four years later won promotion to the Austrian Bundesliga after a seventeen-year hiatus.
History

The beginning
The club arose from an informal association of local academics around the medical student Georg August Wagner from Prague, later a professor at Charles University and the Charité in Berlin. Acquainted with football from his hometown, he organised the first public match in present-day Austria on 18 March 1894 in the Graz municipal park. The Grazer Athletik-Sport-Club – modeled after the Wiener AC – was established eight years later on the 72nd birthday of Emperor Francis Joseph.
European football and the golden start to the new millennium
Between 1962 and 1983, GAK was involved in European competitions. Their first match was against Odense BK in the Cup Winners Cup in 1962. The club has made regular appearances in European cups ever since, with regular UEFA Cup appearances since the 1980s, but the highlight came on the domestic scene in 1981 when they won the Austrian Cup. The golden years arrived in the first half of the 2000s, when GAK won the Austrian Cup twice more, in 2000 and 2002. Their biggest success was in 2004 where they did the double – they managed to win the cup yet again along with the Austrian title, finishing the league season one point ahead of Austria Wien. Their last appearance in Europe was a disappointing 5–0 away defeat to RC Strasbourg in Round 1 of the UEFA Cup in the 2005–06 season.
Financial troubles and bankruptcy
During the 2006–2007 season, 'Grazer AK' went into administration. The club was docked 28 points as a result. In the 2007–2008 season, the club was not allowed to participate in the professional leagues and was relegated to the Austrian Regional League Central. After a second bankruptcy, the club managed to achieve a settlement and accommodation with its creditors in September 2008, ensuring its survival. Soon after, the club started having difficulties again after it could not recover from its relegation to the Regional League and was eventually dissolved in 2012.
New start
A phoenix club called Grazer AC was set up by the fans soon after the 2012 dissolution called and started from the bottom tier in the 2013–14 season. At an extraordinary meeting on 14 March 2014, Grazer AC was declared to be a continuation of the original "GAK" in agreement with its umbrella association. After winning every single championship, the club made its return to professional football in the 2019–20 season with promotion to the second tier.
Supporters
The Reds recorded their highest average attendance (9234) in 2003/2004. The average attendance since the forced relegations had settled at around 3500, but the quality of the organized support had risen. The "curve" was in sector 22, before relegation to the Regionalliga in sector 25. Despite relegation to the third tier, several hundred fans attended away games. The ultra fan groups are known as the Red Firm, the Graz Society, the Tifosi Rosso Bianco and the Everreds. Parts of the fan scene maintain friendships with KFC Uerdingen 05, NK Čelik Zenica and SV Austria Salzburg and FC Zlín.
Graz Derby
GAK have an important rivalry with cross-town rivals Sturm Graz, with whom they contest the Graz derby. In 1974, there was significant opposition from both sets of fans against a proposed merger to become FC Graz. Since 1920, excluding the friendly matches (especially before the first official Styrian Cup in 1920), 199 matches have been played between the two, of which there were: 185 encounters in the league (130 at the professional level and 55 at amateur level in the Styrian League); an additional seven encounters in Austrian Cup (including one final that was won by the GAK in 2002); 1 match in the Austrian Supercup; 2 meetings in the Tschammerpokal and 4 games in the Styrian Cup. The first derby took place in 1911 and the most recent on 2 November 2023. The Red Devils have the superior record in the rivalry. On 19 October 2022, a long period without a derby ended when the two clubs met in the last 16 of the ÖFB-Cup.
Past seasons
Positions since the team was re-founded at the end of 2012.
| Season | League | Level | Place | MP | W | D | L | GF | GA | GD | Pts | Austrian Cup |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 2013–14 | 1. Klasse Mitte A (VIII) | 8 | 1 | 22 | 20 | 2 | 0 | 124 | 12 | 112 | 62 | not qualified |
| 2014–15 | Gebietsliga Mitte (VII) | 7 | 1 | 26 | 23 | 1 | 2 | 107 | 29 | 78 | 70 | not qualified |
| 2015–16 | Unterliga Mitte (VI) | 6 | 1 | 26 | 22 | 3 | 1 | 88 | 19 | 69 | 69 | not qualified |
| 2016–17 | Oberliga Mitte/West (V) | 5 | 1 | 26 | 14 | 9 | 3 | 65 | 29 | 36 | 51 | not qualified |
| 2017–18 | Landesliga Steiermark (IV) | 4 | 1 | 30 | 21 | 5 | 4 | 61 | 24 | 37 | 68 | not qualified |
| 2018–19 | Regionalliga Mitte (III) | 3 | 1 | 30 | 21 | 5 | 4 | 70 | 28 | 42 | 68 | Semi-finals |
| 2019–20 | First League (II) | 2 | 15 | 30 | 7 | 10 | 13 | 40 | 50 | -10 | 31 | Second round |
| 2020–21 | First League (II) | 2 | 6 | 30 | 13 | 7 | 10 | 46 | 42 | 4 | 46 | First round |
| 2021–22 | First League (II) | 2 | 7 | 30 | 13 | 7 | 10 | 47 | 39 | 8 | 46 | First round |
| 2022–23 | First League (II) | 2 | 2 | 30 | 17 | 9 | 4 | 52 | 29 | 23 | 60 | Third round |
| 2023–24 | First League (II) | 2 | 1 | 30 | 21 | 6 | 3 | 57 | 27 | 30 | 69 | Third round |
| 2024–25 | Bundesliga (I) | 1 | 11 | 22 | 3 | 7 | 12 | 27 | 45 | -18 | 16 | Third round |
| Green marks a season followed by promotion |
European competition
Results
| Season | Competition | Round | Opponent | Aggregate | 1st leg | 2nd leg |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1962–63 | UEFA Cup Winners Cup | Round 2 | DEN B 1909 Odense | 4:6 | 1:1 (H) | 3:5 (A) |
| 1964–65 | Inter-Cities Fairs Cup | Round 1 | YUG NK Zagreb | 2:9 | 2:3 (A) | 0:6 (H) |
| 1968–69 | UEFA Cup Winners Cup | Round 1 | NED ADO Den Haag | 1:6 | 1:4 (A) | 0:2 (H) |
| 1973–74 | UEFA Cup | Round 1 | GRE Panachaiki | 1:3 | 0:1 (H) | 1:2 (A) |
| 1981–82 | UEFA Cup Winners Cup | Round 1 | URS Dinamo Tbilisi | 2:4 | 0:2 (A) | 2:2 (H) |
| 1982–83 | UEFA Cup | Round 1 | ROM Corvinul Hunedoara | 1:4 | 1:1 (H) | 0:3 (A) |
| 1996–97 | UEFA Cup | Qualification | YUG Vojvodina | 7:1 | 2:0 (H) | 5:1 (A) |
| Round 1 | BEL Germinal Ekeren | (a) 3:3 | 1:3 (A) | 2:0 (H) | ||
| Round 2 | ITA Inter Milan | 1:1 | ||||
| (3:5 p) | 0:1 (A) | 1:0 a.e.t. | ||||
| (3:5 p) (H) | ||||||
| 1997 | UEFA Intertoto Cup | Group stage | DEN Silkeborg IF | 5:4 | 2:0 (H) | |
| WAL Ebbw Vale | 0:0 (A) | |||||
| CRO NK Hrvatski Dragovoljac | 1:3 (H) | |||||
| FRA SC Bastia | 2:1 (A) | |||||
| 1998–99 | UEFA Cup | Qualifying Round 2 | FIN VPS | 3:0 | 0:0 (A) | 3:0 (H) |
| Round 1 | BUL Litex Lovech | 3:1 | 1:1 (A) | 2:0 (H) | ||
| Round 2 | FRA AS Monaco | 3:7 | 3:3 (H) | 0:4 (A) | ||
| 1999–00 | UEFA Cup | Qualifying Round 2 | FRO KÍ Klaksvík | 9:0 | 5:0 (A) | 4:0 (H) |
| Round 1 | SVK FC Spartak Trnava | 4:2 | 3:0 (H) | 1:2 (A) | ||
| Round 2 | GRE Panathinaikos | (a) 2:2 | 2:1 (H) | 0:1 (A) | ||
| 2000–01 | UEFA Cup | Round 1 | SVK 1. FC Košice | 3:2 | 3:2 (A) | 0:0 (H) |
| Round 2 | ESP Espanyol | 1:4 | 0:4 (A) | 1:0 (H) | ||
| 2001–02 | UEFA Cup | Qualifikation | FRO HB Tórshavn | 6:2 | 2:2 (A) | 4:0 (H) |
| Round 2 | NED FC Utrecht | 3:6 | 0:3 (A) | 3:3 (H) | ||
| 2002–03 | UEFA Champions League | Qualifying Round 2 | MDA Sheriff Tiraspol | 6:1 | 4:1 (A) | 2:0 (H) |
| Qualifying Round 3 | RUS Lokomotiv Moscow | 3:5 | 0:2 (H) | 3:3 (A) | ||
| 2002–03 | UEFA Cup | Round 1 | CYP APOEL | 1:3 | 0:2 (A) | 1:1 (H) |
| 2003–04 | UEFA Champions League | Qualifying Round 2 | ALB Tirana | 7:2 | 5:1 (A) | 2:1 (H) |
| Qualifying Round 3 | NED Ajax | 2:3 | 1:1 (H) | 1:2 (s.g.) (A) | ||
| 2003–04 | UEFA Cup | Round 1 | NOR Vålerenga IF | 1:1 (a) | 0:0 (A) | 1:1 (H) |
| 2004–05 | UEFA Champions League | Qualifying Round 3 | ENG Liverpool | 1:2 | 0:2 (H) | 1:0 (A) |
| 2004–05 | UEFA Cup | Round 1 | BUL Litex Lovech | 5:1 | 5:0 (H) | 0:1 (A) |
| Group stage | FRA AJ Auxerre | 5:4 | 0:0 (A) | |||
| POL Amica Wronki | 3:1 (H) | |||||
| SCO Rangers | 0:3 (A) | |||||
| NED AZ Alkmaar | 2:0 (H) | |||||
| 1/16 finals | ENG Middlesbrough | 3:4 | 2:2 (H) | 1:2 (A) | ||
| 2005–06 | UEFA Cup | Qualifying Round 2 | MDA Nistru Otaci | 3:0 | 2:0 (A) | 1:0 (H) |
| Round 1 | FRA Strasbourg | 0:7 | 0:2 (H) | 0:5 (A) |
Derby statistics vs. SK Sturm Graz
Total in Austrian first tier as of 23 August 2005:
- 46 Won
- 42 Drawn
- 42 Lost (Goals: 174:168)
Current squad
Out on loan
Managerial history
- Austria Karl Mütsch (1948–1951)
- Austria Josef Pojar (1951–1952)
- Austria Engelbert Smutny (1952)
- Austria Karl Mütsch (1953–1954)
- Austria Alfred Pestitschek (1954–1957)
- Hungary Austria János Szép (1957–1960)
- Austria Ferdinand Fritsch (1960–1962)
- Chile Hungary Juan Schwanner (1962–1963)
- Austria Friedrich Pimperl (1963–1964)
- SFR Yugoslavia Milan Zeković (1964)
- Austria Karl Durspekt (1964–1965)
- Austria Karl Kowanz (1965–1967)
- Austria Fritz Kominek (1967–1969)
- SFR Yugoslavia Vlado Šimunić (1969–1970)
- Austria Karl Durspekt (1970–1971)
- Austria Helmut Senekowitsch (1971–1973)
- Austria Alfred Günthner (1973–1974)
- Austria Hans Hipp (1974–1975)
- Austria Hermann Stessl (1975–1977)
- Austria Hermann Repitsch (interim) (1977)
- Austria Gerd Springer (1977–1978)
- Austria Walter Koleznik (interim) (1978)
- Czechoslovakia Austria Václav Halama (1978–1981)
- Yugoslavia Zlatko Čajkovski (1981–1982)
- Austria August Starek (1982–1984)
- Austria Helmut Senekowitsch (1984–1985)
- Austria Gernot Fraydl (1985–1986)
- Austria Adolf Blutsch (1986–1987)
- Austria Adi Pinter (1987–1988)
- Czechoslovakia Austria Václav Halama (1988–1989)
- Austria Karl Philipp (1989)
- Austria Adi Pinter (1989–1990)
- Austria Heinz Binder (1990)
- BIH Savo Ekmečić (1990–1992)
- Slovenia Milan Miklavič (1992–1993)
- Germany Hans Ulrich Thomale (1993–1996)
- FR Yugoslavia Ljupko Petrović (1996)
- Austria Hans Peter Schaller (1996)
- Austria August Starek (1996–1997)
- Germany Klaus Augenthaler (1997–2000)
- Germany Rainer Hörgl (2000)
- Austria Werner Gregoritsch (2000–2001)
- Austria Christian Keglevits (2001)
- NetherlandsThijs Libregts (2001–2002)
- Austria Christian Keglevits (2002)
- Austria Walter Schachner (2002–2006)
- Denmark Lars Søndergaard (2006–2007)
- Austria Dietmar Pegam (2007)
- Austria Stojadin Rajković (2008)
- Austria Gregor Pötscher (2008–2010)
- Austria Heinz Karner (2010)
- Austria Peter Stöger (2010–2011)
- Slovenia Aleš Čeh (2011–2012)
- Slovenia Ante Šimundža (2012)
- Austria David Preiß (9 October 2017 – 25 February 2020)
- Austria Gernot Plassnegger (2020–2021)
- Austria Gernot Messner (2021–2024)
- Austria Rene Poms (2024–2025)
- Austria Ferdinand Feldhofer (2025–present)
Honours
- Austrian Bundesliga (I)
- Austrian Cup
- Austrian Supercup
- Winners (2): 2000, 2002
- Runners-up (1): 2004
- Austrian First League (II)
- Winners (4): 1974–75, 1992–93, 1994–95, 2023–24
- Austrian Regionalliga Mitte (III)
- Winners (2): 2011–12, 2018–19
- Landesliga Steiermark (IV)
- Winners (1): 2017–18
- Oberliga Mitte/West (V)
- Winners (1): 2016–17
- Unterliga Mitte (VI)
- Winners (1): 2015–16
- Gebietsliga Mitte (VII)
- Winners (1): 2014–15
- 1. Klasse Mitte A (VIII)
- Winners (1): 2013–14
References
References
- "2019/20 Ende! Der GAK trifft auf den SV Lafnitz.".
- "Zurück aus der Gruft – GAK 1902 is back!".
- (11 April 2005). "Austria's GAK agree to leave top flight". [[FIFA]].
- Rijavec, Matej. (25 June 2010). "Mura išče novega trenerja: Šimundža skočil čez mejo". [[RTV Slovenija]].
- "Neues Trainerteam: Feldhofer und Urlesberger übernehmen beim GAK 1902".
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