2015 HJK season
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| 2015 season | |||
|---|---|---|---|
| Chairman | Olli-Pekka Lyytikäinen | ||
| Manager | Mika Lehkosuo | ||
| Stadium | Sonera Stadium | ||
| Veikkausliiga | 3rd | ||
| Finnish Cup | Semifinal | ||
| League Cup | Champions | ||
| UEFA Champions League | Third qualifying round | ||
| UEFA Europa League | Play-off round | ||
| Top goalscorer | League: Atomu Tanaka (8) Demba Savage (8) Erfan Zeneli (8) All: Erfan Zeneli (13) | ||
| Highest home attendance | League: 10,521 (6 July 2015 vs HIFK, Veikkausliiga) Other: | ||
| Lowest home attendance | League; 2,152 (29 April 2015 vs KTP, Veikkausliiga) Other: | ||
| Average home league attendance | 5,281[1] | ||
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The 2015 season was Helsingin Jalkapalloklubi's 107th competitive season.[2] HJK is the most successful football club in Finland with 27 Finnish Championships, 12 Finnish Cup titles, 5 Finnish League Cup titles, one appearance in the UEFA Champions League group stages and one appearance in the UEFA Europa League group stages.[3][4]
As Veikkausliiga 2014 champions, HJK entered the 2015–16 UEFA Champions League second qualifying round.
The Under-19 team, including several players from Klubi-04 participated in the 2015–16 UEFA Youth League.
On loan
As of September 1, 2015. Source:
| No. | Name | Nationality | Position | Date of birth (age) | Previous club |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Goalkeepers | |||||
| 1 | Daniel Örlund | GK | 23 June 1980 (aged 35) | ||
| 21 | Thomas Dähne | GK | 4 January 1994 (aged 21) | ||
| 35 | Saku-Pekka Sahlgren | GK | 8 April 1992 (aged 23) | ||
| Defenders | |||||
| 3 | Gideon Baah | DF | 1 October 1991 (aged 24) | ||
| 4 | Juhani Ojala | DF | 19 June 1989 (aged 26) | loan from | |
| 5 | Tapio Heikkilä | DF | 8 April 1990 (aged 25) | ||
| 6 | Markus Heikkinen | DF | 13 October 1978 (aged 37) | ||
| 11 | Veli Lampi | DF | 18 July 1984 (aged 31) | ||
| 15 | Roni Peiponen | DF | 9 April 1997 (aged 18) | ||
| 27 | Sebastian Sorsa | DF | 25 January 1984 (aged 31) | ||
| 33 | Taye Taiwo | DF | 16 April 1985 (aged 30) | ||
| Midfielders | |||||
| 7 | Lucas Lingman* | MF | 25 January 1998 (aged 17) | ||
| 10 | Atomu Tanaka | MF | 4 October 1987 (aged 28) | ||
| 13 | Toni Kolehmainen | MF | 20 July 1988 (aged 27) | ||
| 20 | Matti Klinga | MF | 10 December 1994 (aged 20) | ||
| 26 | Obed Malolo | MF | 18 April 1997 (aged 18) | ||
| 28 | Rasmus Schüller | MF | 18 June 1991 (aged 24) | ||
| 91 | Guy Moussi | MF | 23 January 1985 (aged 30) | ||
| Forwards | |||||
| 8 | Demba Savage | FW | 17 June 1988 (aged 27) | ||
| 17 | Nikolai Alho | FW | 12 March 1993 (aged 22) | ||
| 18 | Ousman Jallow | FW | 21 October 1988 (aged 27) | ||
| 22 | Formose Mendy | FW | 23 March 1989 (aged 26) | ||
| 80 | Erfan Zeneli | FW | 28 December 1986 (aged 28) | ||
| 95 | Ademir Candido | FW | 30 January 1995 (aged 20) | loan from | |
| 99 | Macoumba Kandji | FW | 2 August 1985 (aged 30) | ||
- Dual registered with feeder team Klubi-04.
Note: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules; some limited exceptions apply. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.
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Transfers
Winter
Summer
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In: Note: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules; some limited exceptions apply. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.
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Out: Note: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules; some limited exceptions apply. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.
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