Þór Akureyri men's football

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Þór Akureyri
Full nameÍþróttafélagið Þór
Nickname(s)Þórsarar
Founded6 June 1915; 108 years ago (1915-06-06)
GroundÞórsvöllur,
Akureyri
Capacity984
ChairmanNói Bjornsson
ManagerSigurdur Heidar Hoskuldsson
League1. deild karla
20231. deild karla, 7th of 12

The Þór Akureyri men's football team, commonly known as Þór Akureyri, is the men's football department of Þór Akureyri multi sports club, based in the town of Akureyri in Iceland.

History[edit]

On 18 September 2010, Þór won against Fjarðabyggð to move into second place in the second division of Icelandic football, 1. deild karla. Going into the game, Þór had to win and they also needed Leiknir to lose in order to go into second place since Leiknir was 3 points clear of them. This was their last gasp to reach promotion to the top flight football of Iceland, Úrvalsdeild. Even though Þór already had a superior goal difference, they defeated Fjarðabyggðar 9–1 in a thrashing. Leiknir played their match at the same time and so knew they needed to at least draw to earn promotion as the scoreline was always in Þór's favor. However, only 5 minutes into the game Leiknir's opponent Fjölnir scored on a strike from forward Pétur Georg Markan. Leiknir found a response in the 44th minute, but it would not be enough. Just before the half, Pétur added a second goal for Fjölnir. Then, came the dagger, a 47th-minute strike by none other than Pétur to begin the second half left Leiknir stunned. He had completed his treble and although Leiknir was not out of it by any means, they would not be able to pull another goal back.

In the first meeting of the season between the two Reykjavík teams, with five minutes remaining and Leiknir winning 3–2, Fjölnir leveled in the 87th minute. Then in stoppage time, Aron Jóhannsson completed his treble for Fjölnir and Leiknir had lost. So, Þór returned to top flight for the first time since 2002, finishing runner-up to Víkingur Reykjavík.[1]

In 2011, Þór lost to KR, 0-2, in the Icelandic Cup finals.[2]

Players[edit]

Current squad[edit]

As of 18 January 2024

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

No. Pos. Nation Player
1 GK Iceland ISL Aron Birkir Stefánsson
3 DF Iceland ISL Birgir Ómar Hlynsson
8 MF Iceland ISL Nikola Kristinn Stojanovic
11 MF Denmark DEN Marc Rochester Sorensen
9 FW Iceland ISL Alexander Már Þorláksson
19 DF Iceland ISL Ragnar Óli Ragnarsson
24 DF Iceland ISL Ýmir Már Geirsson
30 DF Iceland ISL Bjarki Þór Viðarsson
10 MF Iceland ISL Aron Ingi Magnússon
15 FW Iceland ISL Kristófer Kristjánsson
20 DF Iceland ISL Vilhelm Ottó Biering Ottósson
23 FW Iceland ISL Ingimar Arnar Kristjánsson
No. Pos. Nation Player
2 DF Iceland ISL Elmar Þór Jónsson
17 FW Iceland ISL Fannar Daði Malmquist Gíslason
22 MF Iceland ISL Nökkvi Hjörvarsson
4 MF Iceland ISL Hermann Helgi Rúnarsson
00 FW Portugal POR Rafael Alexandre Romao Victor
00 DF Iceland ISL Davíð Örn Aðalsteinsson
00 FW Iceland ISL Atli Þór Sindrason
00 DF Iceland ISL Pétur Orri Arnarson
00 DF Iceland ISL Egill Orri Arnarsson
00 MF Iceland ISL Einar Freyr Halldórsson
00 GK Iceland ISL Auðunn Ingi Valtýsson

Former players[edit]

For details of current and former players, see Category:Þór Akureyri players.

Managers[edit]

  • Iceland Páll Viðar Gíslason (1 July 2009 – 4 October 2014)
  • Iceland Halldór Jón Sigurðsson (1 January 2015 – 24 September 2016)
  • Iceland Lárus Sigurðsson (29 September 2016 – 5 October 2018)
  • England Gregg Ryder (5 October 2018 – 21 September 2019)
  • Iceland Páll Viðar Gíslason (18 October 2019- 1 October 2020)
  • Iceland Orri Freyr Hjaltalín (15 October 2020- 18 September 2021)
  • Iceland Thorlakur Mar Arnason (30 October 2021 - 15 October 2023)
  • Iceland Sigurður Heiðar Höskuldsson

References[edit]

  1. ^ "Þór í Úrvalsdeild - Fjarðarbyggð féll". Morgunblaðið (in Icelandic). 18 September 2010. Retrieved 20 August 2019.
  2. ^ Kolbeinn Tumi Daðason (13 August 2011). "Umfjöllun: KR-ingar bikarmeistarar - Þórsarar skutu fimm sinnum í slá". Vísir.is (in Icelandic). Retrieved 20 August 2019.

External links[edit]