Founded on 9 December 1906 by the English language teacher Jean Roeder, Fola was the first football club in Luxembourg. During its heyday, it was the best club in the country, winning four
National Division championships and two
Luxembourg Cups between 1918 and 1924. Fola won another championship in 1930 and the
Luxembourg Cup in 1955, but had since this time lost its place in Luxembourg's top flight. Fola stubbornly rejected a merger with its larger neighbours,
Jeunesse Esch, during the wave of consolidation in the 1990s. In 2004–05, Fola were relegated to the third tier of Luxembourgish football, but were promoted the following season. In 2006–07 they finished third, qualifying for a promotion play-off, which they lost to
Victoria Rosport. In August 2007, Fola pulled off a transfer coup by signing former
Morocco midfielder
Mustapha Hadji. In 2008, the club managed to secure second place in the championship, granting them promotion to the
Fortis League (National Division, the top league in the country, renamed BGL League in March 2009 due to the
2008 financial crisis). In May 2013, CS Fola Esch won the championship in the
BGL Ligue with a historic 5–1 win against their rivals,
Jeunesse Esch in the 25th match of the season. The club had a gap of 83 years since their last championship.
Stefano Bensi scored 20 goals during this season. Fola participated in the second qualifying round of the
Champions League 2013–14, but lost to
Dinamo Zagreb 0–5 in the first leg (at home) and 0–1 in the second leg (away). In 2015, Fola won the championship again, after finishing second in 2014. In 2016 they again finished second with an equal number of points with the champions, F91 Dudelange. In 2016 CS Fola Esch, celebrated their 110th birthday, and also became a member of the exclusive
Club of Pioneers, as the oldest football club of Luxembourg.
History • 1906: Club founded as
Football and Lawn Tennis Club Esch • 1907: Adopts current colours of red and white stripes • 1910: Absorbs FC Nerva, becoming
Cercle sportif Fola Esch • 1918: Wins first championship title • 1924: Wins
the Double • 1930: Wins last championship title for the next 83 years • 1935: Moves to current stadium,
Stade Émile Mayrisch • 1955: Wins Luxembourg Cup, last title before a long lean period • 1973: First participation in European competition (season 1973–74) • 2013: Wins first championship since 83 years, followed by another champion title in 2015 • 2017: First qualification to the second round and to the third round in European competition == Honours ==