Sønderjyske Fodbold

Danish association football club based in Haderslev From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Sønderjyske Fodbold is a professional football club. The club plays in the Danish Superliga, the top tier of the Danish football league system. Their home is Sydbank Park in Haderslev.

Full nameSønderjyske Fodbold
Short nameSE, SJF, Sønderjyske
Founded1 January 2004; 22 years ago (2004-01-01)
Quick facts Full name, Short name ...
Sønderjyske
Full nameSønderjyske Fodbold
Short nameSE, SJF, Sønderjyske
Founded1 January 2004; 22 years ago (2004-01-01)
GroundSydbank Park,
Haderslev
Capacity10,000 (5,100 seated)
Owner(s)Davidsen Family & MKH Fodbold A/S
ChairmanSøren Davidsen
Head coachThomas Nørgaard
LeagueSuperliga
2024–25Superliga, 9th of 12
Websitesoenderjyskefodbold.dk
Current season
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They are part of the general sports club SønderjyskE, which also has a handball and ice hockey team.

History

Club names

  • Haderslev FK (14 July 1906 – 31 December 2000)
  • HFK Sønderjylland ("Southern Jutland", 1 January 2001 – 31 December 2003)
  • SønderjyskE Fodbold ("Southern Jutlandic Football", 1 January 2004 – 14 October 2022, under Sønderjysk Elitesport A/S)
  • Sønderjyske Fodbold[1] ("Southern Jutlandic Football", 15 October 2022 – Present)

Progenitors

Haderslev Fodboldklub (Haderslev FK / HFK) was founded on 14 July 1906.[2] At the time, Haderslev was a part of the German Empire as a part of Schleswig-Holstein. The club had both Danish and German members, and in the initial years there were disagreement over if the club should be called Haderslev Fodboldklub (in Danish) or Haderslebener Fussball Club (in German).[3] In the first many years the team had trouble assembling a proper match squad due to lack of members.[3] In 1908 they became South Jutland champions for the first time beating Sønderborg 11–1 in the final.[3]

For the first many years the club did not have their own field and instead played at barracks. Their first proper football ground was built in 1930.[4]

In 1958 HFK were promoted to the 4th division (Jyllandsserien), and in 1965 they were promoted to the 3rd Division.[4] In 1992 they were promoted to the Danish 2nd Division and in 1996 they were promoted to the second tier, Danish 1st Division, for the first time.[4]

In 2000 the team, which was now called HFK Sønderjylland, were promoted to the Superligaen, the first team from Southern Jutland to ever do so. They were however relegated the following season.[5] The team also moved into a new stadium, hosting 10,000 spectators.

The creation of SønderjyskE

After teams from Sønderjylland in both football, ice hockey and handball started to have success, the company Sønderjysk Elitesport A/S was founded on 1 January 2004 to promote professional sports in Southern Jutland. It was a union of the handball club TM Tønder (who later left the initiative), HFK, the Ice Hockey club Vojens Ishockeyklub, and the women's football team IK Sønderjylland.[6]

SønderjyskE was promoted to the Superligaen again in 2005, but once again it would only be for a single season.[7][8]

In 2008 they returned to the Superliga,[9] and after finishing 10th they managed to survive for the first time ever.[10] The following three seasons they improved on their best ever league finishes with a 9th, a 7th and a 6th-place finish.[11][12][13][14]

In the 2012–13 season, SønderjyskE achieved the unfortunate European record of missing 7 penalty kicks in a row.[15]

Second place and qualification to Europe

In 2016-17 the club played continental games for the first time ever, after finishing second in the 2015-16 Danish Superliga[16] and their coach Jakob Michelsen was named Danish coach of the year. Here they beat Norwegian Strømgodset in the Europa League qualification 2–1.[16] It was followed up by beating Polish Zagłębie Lubin. In the last qualification match against Sparta Prague they managed a 0–0 draw at home, and went up 2–0 in the return fixture, but Sparta Prague would go on to win 3–2.[17]

The Danish Cup and club sale

In 2020 SønderjyskE won their first ever trophy, the DBU Pokalen, when they beat AaB in the final 2–0.[18]

In September 2020 the club was bought by the American investor Robert Michael Platek for an unknown fee.[19]

In 2021 they reached the cup final for the second time in a row, after beating FC Midtjylland in the semi-final. They would however lose to Randers FC in the final 4–0.[20]

The season afterwards the team was relegated to the Danish 1st Division for the first time ince 2007–08, winning just 4 matches the entire season. The new ownership faced heavy criticism for their management of the club, and in August 2022 the team was sold back to local ownership.[21] Following the sale the club was administratively separated from the other sports teams in SønderjyskE and changed their name from SønderjyskE to Sønderjyske.[1] They did however share some administrative coordination regarding sponsors, logo and sales.

Two seasons later the team was promoted to the Superliga again by winning the Danish 1st Division.[22]

Fan culture

The official fanclub is called SønderjyskE Fodbold Support, and was founded in 2004. The number of members is unknown.[23] The fan section is called "Blue Section".[24]

The supporters have often referenced their German past with banners in German such as "Deutsche Kvalitet, Dänische Mentalitet" (German quality, Danish mentality).[24]

Players

Current squad

As of 25 February 2026[25]

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

Youth players in use 2025-26

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

More information No., Pos. ...
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Out on loan

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

More information No., Pos. ...
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Honours

Recent history

More information Season, Pos. ...
Season Pos. Pl. W D L GS GA P Cup Notes
2000–01 SL 12 331824 308811 Fourth round Relegated
2001–02 1D 3 301749 615055 Fourth round
2002–03 1D 6 301389 645447 Fourth round
2003–04 1D 6 301569 725151 Third round
2004–05 1D 1 301974 753164 Fifth round Promoted
2005–06 SL 11 336819 417226 Fourth round Relegated
2006–07 1D 3 301659 573453 Fourth round
2007–08 1D 2 3017103 553261 Fourth round Promoted
2008–09 SL 10 3351315 305628 Third round
2009–10 SL 9 3311814 374341 Quarter-finals
2010–11 SL 7 3311616 324639 Second round
2011–12 SL 6 33111111 485144 Semi-finals
2012–13 SL 8 3312516 535741 Fourth round
2013–14 SL 10 3310815 415338 Third round
2014–15 SL 10 3371610 354437 Semi-finals
2015–16 SL 2 331959 563662 Quarter-finals
2016–17 SL 6 36121014 445446 Fourth round
2017–18 SL 8 3211813 424041 Quarter-finals
2018–19 SL 10 329815 374535 Fourth round
2019–20 SL 10 3291112 374938 Winners
2020–21 SL 8 3213514 454844 Runners-up
2021–22 SL 12 3241117 285423 Semi-finals Relegated
2022–23 1D 3 321688 604556 Quarter-finals
2023–24 1D 1 322084 712968 Second round Promoted
2024–25 SL 9 3210715 476437 Fourth round
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Sønderjyske in Europe

More information Season, Competition ...
Season Competition Round Club Home Away Agg
2016–17 UEFA Europa League 2Q Norway Strømsgodset 2–1 2–2 (aet) 4–3
3Q Poland Zagłębie Lubin 1–1 2–1 3–2
Czech Republic Sparta Prague 0–0 2–3 2–3
2020–21 UEFA Europa League 3Q Czech Republic Viktoria Plzeň N/a 0–3 N/a
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Managers

References

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