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LASK

Linzer Athletik-Sport-Klub, commonly known as LASK, or Linzer ASK, is an Austrian professional football club based in Upper-Austrian state capital Linz. It is the oldest football club in that region, and plays in the Austrian Football Bundesliga, the top tier of Austrian football. The club's colours are black and white. The women's team plays in the second highest division of Austrian women's football.

History
In the winter of 1908, Albert Siems, head of the royal post-office garage at Linz, who had already been a member of an 1899-founded club for heavy athletics, Linzer Athletik Sportklub Siegfried, decided to establish a football club. At that time, the side already played in the black-and-white lengthwise-touched shirts. The club's first name was Linzer Sportclub. During an extraordinary general meeting on 14 September 1919, the final change of name, to Linzer Athletik Sport-Klub (short form Linzer ASK) took place, its forerunner setting the example. Nevertheless, the public denomination of the team was largely LASK. The club first appeared in top-flight competition in the Gauliga Ostmark in 1940–41, coming last and being relegated. In 1949–50, LASK was promoted, becoming professional for the first time in its history. However, years in the top flight were tough, and the club was involved in a relegation battle most of the time, until it was finally relegated in 1953–54. In 1957–58, LASK won the second division and was promoted again. In 1961–62, the club finished runner up to Austria Wien, their best position in history up to that time, and in 1962–63 they played their first cup final, losing 1–0 to Austria Wien. Two years later, LASK achieved its greatest success, winning the Austrian League in 1965. No club outside Vienna had ever won before. Additionally, the club won the Austrian cup that same year, completing a domestic double and becoming one of the only Austrian clubs to do so. In 1967, the club reached the cup final again, losing again to Austria Wien on a coin toss after extra time was played. Three years later the club reached the cup final again, losing to Wacker Innsbruck. The club spent most of the 70s in mid table, but were relegated in 1977–78, although achieving immediate promotion for the 1980–81 season. In the 1985–86 UEFA Cup, the side beat European giants Internazionale Milan at home (1–0), on 23 October 1985, eventually bowing out 4–1 on aggregate (second round). In 1995, the club slipped into a financial crisis, and filed for bankruptcy. The president fled to Ivory Coast with large chunks of money, leaving the club with severe debt, and forcing the sale of several key players. In May 1997, the club merged with city rivals FC Linz, and the new official name became LASK Linz, as officials wanted to bring out the city's name as a complement to the LASK designation, which had constituted itself as a brand name. The club name, colours, chairmen and members remained the same, effectively saving the club from dissolving. However, this merger angered many people, who believed that FC Linz were a more successful club than LASK. Ten days before the merger, FC Linz beat LASK 3–0 in the city derby. For the next few years, the players that LASK took from FC Linz made a big part of the starting lineup. Although LASK were eliminated with a large score margin, this was their best European campaign and the club gained attention as an underdog after their victories against PSV and Sporting On 24 February 2023, LASK officially opened their new stadium called Raiffeisen Arena in a victory against Austria Lustenau. == Logos ==
Logos
Logo LSK.jpg|Logo of the Linz Sports Club (LSK) 1908–1919 on the jerseys. LASK Linz.png|Old logo until 2017 LASK logo.svg|Old logo (2017–2023) LASK-Logo 2023.svg|New logo since May 2023 In 2017, the club removed the "Linz" part of their name and returned it to LASK. The merger with FC Linz has long fallen apart and the club have now removed "Linz" from the name. ==Players==
Players
Current squad Other players under contract Out on loan ==Club officials==
Club officials
==Historical list of coaches==
Historical list of coaches
Georg Braun (1946–1952) • Walter Alt (1950–1953) • Ernst Sabeditsch (1953–1955) • Josef Epp (1958–1960) • Pál Csernai (1960–1962) • Karl Schlechta (1962–1964) • František Bufka (1965–1968) • Vojtech Skyva (1969–1970) • Wilhelm Kment (1970–1972) • Otto Barić (1972–1974) • Felix Latzke (1974–1976) • Wilhelm Huberts (1976–1978) • Wolfgang Gayer (1978) • Laszlo Simko (1978) • Adolf Blutsch (1978–1983) • Johann Kondert (1983–1987) • Adolf Blutsch (1987) • Ernst Hložek (1987–1988) • Ernst Knorrek (1988) • Lothar Buchmann (1989) • Adam Kensy (1989) • Aleksander Mandziara (1989–1990) • Erwin Spiegel (1990) • Adolf Blutsch (1990) • Ernst Weber (1990) • Erwin Spiegel (1990–91) • Helmut Senekowitsch (1991–1993) • Dietmar Constantini (1993) • Walter Skocik (1993–1995) • Günter Kronsteiner (1995–1996) • Max Hagmayr (1996) • Friedel Rausch (1996–1997) • Per Brogeland (1997–1998) • Adam Kensy (1998, caretaker) • Otto Barić (1998–1999) • Marinko Koljanin (1999–2000) • Johann Kondert (2000–2001) • František Cipro (2001) • Johann Kondert (2001) • Dieter Mirnegg (2001–2002) • Norbert Barisits (2003–2004) • Klaus Lindenberger (2004) • Werner Gregoritsch (2004–2006) • Karl Daxbacher (2006–2008) • Andrej Panadić (2008) • Klaus Lindenberger (2008–2009) • Hans Krankl (2009) • Matthias Hamann (2009–2010) • Helmut Kraft (2010) • Georg Zellhofer (2010–2011) • Walter Schachner (2011–2012) • Karl Daxbacher (2012–2015) • Martin Hiden (2015) • Alfred Olzinger (2015) • Oliver Glasner (2015–2019) • Valérien Ismaël (2019–2020) • Dominik Thalhammer (2020–2021) • Andreas Wieland (2021–2022) • Dietmar Kühbauer (2022–2023) • Thomas Sageder (2023–2024) • Thomas Darazs (2024) • Markus Schopp (2024-2025) • João Sacramento (2025) • Dietmar Kühbauer (2025-present) == Honours ==
Honours
League Austrian LeagueWinners (1): 1964–65 • Runners-up: 1961–62, 2018–19Austrian Second DivisionWinners (5): 1957–58, 1978–79, 1993–94, 2006–07, 2016–17 Cups Austrian CupWinners (2): 1964–65, 2025–26 • Runners-up: 1962–63, 1966–67, 1969–70, 1998–99, 2020–21 == European competition history ==
European competition history
UEFA Club Ranking UEFA coefficient {{cite web |url=https://www.uefa.com/nationalassociations/uefarankings/club/?year=2025 |title=UEFA Club Coefficient Ranking |website=UEFA ==References==
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