Seinäjoen Jalkapallokerho

SJK Seinäjoki
Full name Seinäjoen Jalkapallokerho
Nickname(s) SJK
Founded 2007 (2007)
Ground OmaSP Stadion,
Seinäjoki, Finland
Ground Capacity 5,876
Chairman Raimo Sarajärvi
Manager Simo Valakari
League Veikkausliiga
2015 1st

Seinäjoen Jalkapallokerho (or SJK Seinäjoki or SJK) is a Finnish football club from the city of Seinäjoki. The club is currently (2016) playing in the Veikkausliiga, the highest tier of the Finnish league system, of which they are the reigning champions, winning their first title in 2015.

History

SJK was formed in 2007 after the merger of TP-Seinäjoki and Sepsi-78. In 2015, SJK won their first ever Finnish Veikkausliiga title, ending HJK Helsinki's run of 6 titles in a row. SJK has one men's team and two boys' teams. In addition there is the successful Wall-Academy which is sponsored by Wallsport.

Domestic history

Season Level Pos Pld W D L For Against Points Finnish Cup League Cup Top goalscorer[1]
20083rd8261079573737 -Finland Tommi Haanpää  – 12
200952614111565243Third Round-Finland Mikael Muurimäki  – 14
20105261196463142Fifth Round-Finland Mikael Muurimäki  – 9
20111262240721470Seventh Round-Finland Petter Meyer  – 23
2012 2nd2271458422947Fifth Round-Finland Toni Lehtinen – 12
2013 1271854511759Third Round-Finland Toni Lehtinen – 10
2014 1st23316116402659QuarterfinalWinnersFinland Akseli Pelvas – 11
2015 1331869502260Fifth RoundQuarterfinalFinland Akseli Pelvas – 14
2016 33317610493657WinnersRunners UpFinland Roope Riski – 16

European history

Season Competition Round Opponent Home Away Aggregate
2015–16 UEFA Europa League 1Q Iceland FH 0–1 0–1 0–2
2016–17 UEFA Champions League 2Q Belarus BATE 2–2 0–2 2–4
2017–18 UEFA Europa League 1Q
Notes

Stadium

Wallsport Areena is the training ground of SJK

SJK play their home matches at Seinäjoen keskuskenttä, until their new stadium is completed. In 2010, it was reported for the first time that SJK were planning a new football stadium. Eventually, in autumn 2014 it was announced that the construction of SJK's new stadium would start soon. The construction began in summer 2015 and the new stadium will be completed in summer 2016.[2]

Honours

Current squad

As of 22 November 2016[3]

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

No. Position Player
3 Finland DF Juhani Ojala
4 Wales DF Richie Dorman
6 Finland MF Matej Hradecky
7 Finland DF Timo Tahvanainen
8 Finland MF Johannes Laaksonen
10 England FW Billy Ions
13 Finland FW Roope Riski
15 Finland MF Matti Klinga
18 Finland DF Jarkko Hurme
19 Finland FW Youness Rahimi
21 Andorra DF Marc Vales
No. Position Player
25 Finland FW Elias Ahde
26 Finland MF Jesse Sarajärvi
27 Finland FW Aleksis Lehtonen
31 Finland GK Paavo Valakari
33 Estonia GK Mihkel Aksalu (captain)
53 Finland DF Joona Ala-Hukkala
58 Finland MF Mehmet Hetemaj
63 Finland MF Arttu Aromaa
- Finland MF Emil Lidman
- Democratic Republic of the Congo FW Aristote M'Boma

Available youth players

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

No. Position Player
56 Finland FW Joonas Lepistö
60 Finland MF Aatu Kujanpää
Finland DF Nicolas Kotamäki
No. Position Player
Finland MF Matti Lähde
Finland FW Aleksi Pöntinen

Management and boardroom

Management

As of 27 August 2016[4]

Name Role
Finland Simo Valakari Head Coach
Scotland Brian Page Coach
Spain Oriol Mohedano Coach
Finland Jori Särkkä Goalkeeping Coach
Finland Jaakko Nevanlinna Fitness Coach
Finland Juha-Jaakko Ulvila Physiotherapist
Finland Antti Peltonen Mental Coach
Finland Pekka Lehtinen Kit Manager
Finland Jarmo Tervasmäki Team Manager

Boardroom

As of 20 April 2016[5]

Name Role
Finland Raimo Sarajärvi Chairman
Finland Teemu Virtanen Managing Director

Managers

References

  1. "Tilastot ja ennätykset". www.sjk2007.fi (in Finnish). Seinäjoen Jalkapallokerho. Retrieved 4 February 2016.
  2. http://stadiumdb.com/designs/fin/seinajoki_stadion
  3. "SJK 2016". sjk2007.fi. SJK. Retrieved 22 November 2016.
  4. "SJK 2016" (in Finnish). SJK. Retrieved 20 April 2016.
  5. "Yhteystiedot" (in Finnish). SJK. Retrieved 20 April 2016.
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