Malmö FF#Notable players
{{Short description|Association football club in Malmö, Sweden}}
{{About|the men's football club|former departments of the club|Malmö FF (disambiguation)|the women's football club|Malmö FF (women)}}
{{Featured article}}
{{Use dmy dates|date=February 2025}}
{{Infobox football club
| nickname = Di blåe (The Blue Ones)Törner, 2005, pp. 42.
Himmelsblått (Sky Blue)
| ground = Eleda Stadion, Malmö
| capacity = 22,500
| current = 2024 Malmö FF season
| clubname = Malmö FF
| image = Malmo FF logo.svg
| image_size = 150px
| caption =
| fullname = Malmö Fotbollförening (Malmö)
| short name = MFF
| founded = {{Start date and age|1910|2|24|df=y}}
| chrtitle = Chairman
| chairman = Anders Pålsson
| mgrtitle = Head coach
| manager = Henrik Rydström
| league = Allsvenskan
| season = 2024
| position = Allsvenskan, 1st of 16
(champions)
| website = {{official URL}}
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| pattern_sh1 = _malmo24h
| pattern_so1 =
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| body1 = 77BBFF
| rightarm1 = 77BBFF
| shorts1 = FFFFFF
| socks1 = 77BBFF
| pattern_la2 = _malmo24a
| pattern_b2 = _malmo24a
| pattern_ra2 = _malmo24a
| pattern_sh2 = _malmo24a
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Malmö Fotbollförening ({{IPA|sv|ˈmâlːmøː ˈfûːtbɔlːfœˌreːnɪŋ}}), commonly known simply as Malmö FF or MFF, is a Swedish professional football club based in Malmö, Scania. They compete in the Allsvenskan, the top division of Swedish football, and play home matches at the Eleda Stadion. Malmö FF is Sweden's most successful football club in terms of domestic trophies won.{{cite web |title=Fakta |trans-title=Facts |url=http://www.mff.se/Ditt_MFF/Om_klubben/Fakta.aspx |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20120910212225/http://www.mff.se/Ditt_MFF/Om_klubben/Fakta.aspx |archive-date=10 September 2012 |access-date=22 August 2012 |work=mff.se |publisher=Malmö FF |language=sv}} They hold 24 Swedish championships and 16 Svenska Cupen titles, both of which are national records.{{cite web |title=Malmö FF |url=https://svenskfotboll.se/allsvenskan/lag/?flid=25517 |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20130516002847/http://svenskfotboll.se/allsvenskan/lag/?flid=25517 |archive-date=16 May 2013 |access-date=22 August 2012 |work=svenskfotboll.se |publisher=The Swedish Football Association |language=sv }}{{refn|The title of "Swedish Champions" has been awarded to the winner of four different competitions over the years. Between 1896 and 1925, the title was awarded to the winner of the Svenska Mästerskapet, a stand-alone cup tournament. No club was given the title between 1926 and 1930 even though the first-tier league Allsvenskan was played. In 1931, the title was reinstated and awarded to the winner of Allsvenskan. Between 1982 and 1990, a play-off in cup format was held at the end of the league season to decide the champions. After the play-off format in 1991 and 1992, the title was decided by the winner of Mästerskapsserien, an additional league after the end of Allsvenskan. Since the 1993 season, the title has once again been awarded to the winner of Allsvenskan.|name=champions|group=upper-alpha}}
The club formed in 1910 and is affiliated with the Scania Football Association, winning its first national championship in 1944.{{cite web | url=http://www.skaneboll.se/forbund/foreningar/?feid=10661 | title=Kontaktuppgifter och tävlingar | work=skaneboll.se | publisher=Skånes Fotbollförbund | access-date=22 August 2012 | language=sv | trans-title=Contact information and competitions | archive-date=17 March 2012 | archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20120317024838/http://www.skaneboll.se/forbund/foreningar/?feid=10661 | url-status=dead }}{{cite web | url=https://svenskfotboll.se/allsvenskan/historik/ | title=Svenska mästare 1896–1925, 1931– | work=svenskfotboll.se | publisher=The Swedish Football Association | access-date=22 August 2012 | language=sv | trans-title=Swedish champions 1896–1925, 1931– | archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20091202133827/http://svenskfotboll.se/allsvenskan/historik/ | archive-date=2 December 2009 | url-status=dead | df=dmy-all }} Their most successful period was the 1970s, during which they won five Swedish championships, four Svenska Cupen titles, and became the only side from the Nordic countries to have reached the a European Cup or UEFA Champions League final. They finished as runner-up in the 1978–79 European Cup, losing 1–0 to English club Nottingham Forest in the final. For this feat, Malmö FF was awarded the Svenska Dagbladet Gold Medal.{{cite news | url=http://www.svd.se/sportspel/bragdguldet/bragdmedaljorer-genom-tiderna_485089.svd | title=Bragdmedaljörer genom tiderna | work=Svenska Dagbladet | date=6 December 2005 | access-date=22 August 2012 | language=sv | trans-title=Sweden's top annual medal for an achievement in any sport, Bragdguldet | archive-date=13 December 2009 | archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20091213191026/http://www.svd.se/sportspel/bragdguldet/bragdmedaljorer-genom-tiderna_485089.svd | url-status=live }}{{cite web|url=http://www.uefa.com/uefachampionsleague/history/season=1978/index.html |title=1978/79: Forest join élite club |publisher=UEFA |access-date=22 August 2012 |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20110501063247/http://www.uefa.com/uefachampionsleague/history/season%3D1978/index.html |archive-date= 1 May 2011 }} Malmö FF also became the only Nordic side to be represented at the Intercontinental Cup, the predecessor of the FIFA Club World Cup, by competing in the tournament's 1979 edition.{{Cite web|url=https://www.uefa.com/teamsandplayers/teams/club=50152/profile/history/index.html|title=Malmö FF history according to Uefa|date=26 December 2019|access-date=27 December 2019|archive-date=25 June 2018|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20180625210911/http://www.uefa.com/teamsandplayers/teams/club=50152/profile/history/index.html|url-status=dead}} The club is the leader of the overall Allsvenskan table maratontabellen, meaning that they have won the most matches of any side in Allsvenkan history. They also lead the table in terms of total goals scored.
Malmö FF is nicknamed Di blåe (Scanian for "The Blue Ones"), and their colours are sky blue and white. This is reflected in their kit: sky blue shirts, white shorts and sky blue socks. They have two long-standing rivalries: a regional derby with fellow Scanian club Helsingborg and a competitive rivalry with IFK Göteborg. Another historical rivalry exists with local Division 2 Södra Götaland side IFK Malmö. The MFF Support are their official fan club.{{cite web|url=http://www.mff-familjen.se/mff-support/mff-support-2/ |title=Vad är MFF Support? |work=mff-familjen.se |publisher=MFF Familjen |access-date=22 August 2012 |language=sv |trans-title=What is MFF Support? |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20120809054415/http://www.mff-familjen.se/mff-support/mff-support-2/ |archive-date=9 August 2012 }}
History
{{Main|History of Malmö FF}}
=Early years=
The club arose from a municipal initiative in 1905 to encourage young people in Malmö to play organised football. One of the youth teams, Bollklubben Idrott, also known simply as BK Idrott, was a predecessor to Malmö FF. BK Idrott joined the newly created football department of IFK Malmö in 1909, but soon left because of issues between the two clubs. On 24 February 1910 the 19 members of BK Idrott founded Malmö FF; the first chairman was Werner Mårtensson.Smitt, 2009, pp. 14–16.{{cite web|url=http://www.mff.se/Ditt_MFF/Om_klubben/Historik/1910-1939.aspx |title=1910–1939 |work=mff.se |publisher=Malmö FF |access-date=22 August 2012 |language=sv |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20120905141459/http://www.mff.se/Ditt_MFF/Om_klubben/Historik/1910-1939.aspx |archive-date= 5 September 2012 }}
The club spent its first ten years in local and regional divisions as there was no official national league competition, playing the majority of their matches in the city division called the Malmömästerskapen. They also competed in regional competitions in Scania, and played matches against Danish clubs. In 1916 Malmö FF reached the final of the Scanian regional competition (Distriktsmästerskapen) for the first time, playing against rivals Helsingborgs IF but losing 3–4.Smitt, 2009, p. 17. The club defeated local rivals IFK Malmö three times during the season, and thus earned the unofficial but much desired title of Malmö's best football club.Smitt, 2009, pp. 16–17. In 1917 Malmö FF competed for the first time in Svenska Mästerskapet, a cup tournament for the title of Swedish champions, but lost their first match in the second qualifying round 4–1 against IFK Malmö. The club continued to play in the cup until 1922, reaching the quarter-finals in 1920 when they were knocked out by Landskrona BoIS. The cup was eventually discontinued and the title of Swedish champions was given to the winners of the Allsvenskan which was first created for the 1924–25 season.Smitt, 2009, p. 258.{{refn|group=upper-alpha|name=champions}}
In 1920 the Swedish Football Association invited Swedish football clubs to compete in official national competitions. Malmö FF earned a place in the Division 2 Sydsvenska Serien. They won this division in the first season, and were promoted to the Svenska Serien Västra, the highest level of competition in Sweden at the time. However, they were relegated after a single season, and found themselves back in Sydsvenska Serien for nearly a decade until they again achieved promotion to Allsvenskan, in 1931.Smitt, 2009, pp. 20–21.
=First years in the Allsvenskan and early achievements=
The club achieved mid-table league positions for two seasons, but was relegated in 1934 as a penalty for breaking amateur regulations. The club had paid their players a small sum of money for each game. Although against the rules, this was common at the time; Malmö FF was the only club to show it in the accounting records. In addition to relegation to Division 2, the club suffered bans for the entire board of directors and twenty-six players. The version of events told by Malmö FF and local press suggests that local rival, IFK Malmö, had reported the violation to the Swedish Football Association. This belief has contributed to the longstanding competitive tensions between the clubs.Smitt, 2009, pp. 25–26.{{cite web|url=http://www.malmo.se/Medborgare/Kultur--noje/Arkiv--historia/Kulturarv-Malmo/L-O/Malmo-FF.html |title=Malmö FF |work=malmo.se |publisher=Malmö Stad |access-date=22 August 2012 |language=sv |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20110605114951/http://www.malmo.se/Medborgare/Kultur--noje/Arkiv--historia/Kulturarv-Malmo/L-O/Malmo-FF.html |archive-date= 5 June 2011 }}{{cite web |url=http://www.sydsvenskan.se/kultur-och-nojen/dygnetrunt/article82640/Historia-po-himmaplan.html |title=Historia po himmaplan |work=Sydsvenskan |date=31 December 2011 |access-date=22 August 2012 |language=sv |trans-title=History on home turf |archive-url=https://archive.today/20121209080833/http://www.sydsvenskan.se/kultur--nojen/dygnet-runt/historia-po-himmaplan/ |archive-date=9 December 2012 |url-status=dead}}
The club made their way back to the Allsvenskan in 1937 after two seasons in the Division 2. In the same year Eric Persson was elected as chairman after being secretary since 1929, and held the position until 1974. Persson is regarded by club leaders and fans as the most important person in the club's history, as he turned the club professional in the 1970s. Under his leadership the club went from being titleless in 1937 to holding ten Swedish championships by the end of the 1974 season.Smitt, 2009, pp. 165. In 1939 the club reached its highest position yet, third place in the Allsvenskan, nine points behind champions IF Elfsborg. Malmö FF's first Swedish championship came in 1944, when the club won the penultimate game of the season against AIK before 36,000 spectators at the Råsunda. The last game of the season was won 7–0 against Halmstad BK.Smitt, 2009, pp. 27–35.
The following nine seasons, Malmö FF finished in the top three in the league. The club won the Swedish Championship in 1949, 1950, 1951 and 1953, and were runners-up in 1946, 1948 and 1952. The club also won the Svenska Cupen in 1944, 1946, 1947, 1951 and 1953, and finished as runners-up in 1945. Between 6 May 1949 and 1 June 1951, the team were unbeaten in 49 matches, of which 23 were an unbroken streak of victories.Smitt, 2009, pp. 40–48.
The club finished as runners-up in the Allsvenskan twice more, in 1956 and 1957. The following year the club left Malmö IP for Malmö Stadion, which had been built for the 1958 FIFA World Cup, and was to host the club for 50 years. In 1964 Malmö FF contracted Spanish manager Antonio Durán; this was the first of a series of changes that led to the most successful era in the club's history. Young talents such as Lars Granström and Bo Larsson emerged during the early 1960s and would prove to be crucial ingredients in the success that would come in the 1970s. The club finished second in 1964 but went on to win their sixth Swedish Championship in 1965, when Bo Larsson scored 28 goals to finish as the league's top goal scorer. Malmö FF once again won the Allsvenskan in 1967, after a less successful year in 1966. The club's young players, as well as talents bought in from neighbouring clubs in Scania in 1967, became a team that consistently finished in the top three in the Allsvenskan.Smitt, 2009, pp. 49–58.
=Successful 1970s, European Cup 1979, 1980s and 1990s=
After finishing as runners-up in Allsvenskan for the final two years of the 1960s, Malmö FF started the most successful decade of their history with a Swedish Championship in 1970. The club won Allsvenskan in 1970, 1971, 1974, 1975 and 1977 as well as Svenska Cupen in 1976 and 1978. The 1977 Allsvenskan victory qualified the club for the 1978–79 European Cup, and after victories against AS Monaco, Dynamo Kyiv, Wisła Kraków and Austria Wien, Malmö FF reached the final of the competition, which was played at the Olympiastadion in Munich against Nottingham Forest. Trevor Francis, who scored the only goal of the match, won it 1–0 for Nottingham Forest. Nevertheless, the 1979 European Cup run is the biggest success in the history of Malmö FF.Smitt, 2009, pp. 58–67. The team were given the Svenska Dagbladet Gold Medal the same year, awarded for the most significant Swedish sporting achievement of the year, for their achievement in the European Cup.
File:Sweden malmö stadion sweden.jpg
Much of the success during the 1970s was due to new tactics and training methods brought to the club by Englishman Bob Houghton, who managed the club between 1974 and 1980. Eric Persson was succeeded as chairman in 1974 by Hans Cavalli-Björkman. After the team performed respectably under managers Keith Blunt and Tord Grip in the early 1980s, Roy Hodgson took over in 1985. Roy Hodgson led Malmö FF to two Swedish Championships in 1986 and 1988, and the club won Allsvenskan five years in a row between 1985 and 1989. At the time, the championship was decided by play-offs between the best teams after the end of the regular season; this arrangement was in place from 1982 until 1992. The club reached the play-off final four times between 1986 and 1989 but only managed to win the final twice. Apart from Allsvenskan and Swedish Championships, Malmö FF won Svenska Cupen in 1984, 1986 and 1989.Smitt, 2009, pp. 76–80.
Other than finishing as runners-up in Allsvenskan in 1996, the team did not excel in the 1990s, as the club failed to win Allsvenskan and Svenska Cupen throughout the entire decade. The 1990s ended with relegation from Allsvenskan in 1999. Hans Cavalli-Björkman was succeeded as chairman by Bengt Madsen in 1999, and former player Hasse Borg was contracted as Director of Sport. These operational changes, as well as the emergence of young talent Zlatan Ibrahimović, led to the return to Allsvenskan in 2001. Ibrahimović rose to fame and became an important player in Malmö FF's campaign to return to the top league. He was later sold to Ajax in 2001, before playing for several European clubs in Italy's Serie A, FC Barcelona in Spain's La Liga, Paris Saint-Germain in France's Ligue 1, Manchester United F.C. in England's Premier League, LA Galaxy in the MLS, and AC Milan again until his retirement in 2023.Smitt, 2009, pp. 84–90.
=Start of the 2000s to the present=
File:Sweden malmö eleda stadion nya stadion.jpg
The return to Allsvenskan was the start of the successful early 2000s, under the management of Tom Prahl, when the club finished in the top three times in a row. In 2004, it won Allsvenskan, the club's fifteenth Swedish Championship. In 2005, the club reached the last qualifying round for the UEFA Champions League but were defeated by FC Thun. Successful sponsor work and player sales also made Malmö FF the richest club in Sweden.Smitt, 2009, pp. 89–90.{{cite web | url=http://www.idrottensaffarer.se/affarer/2009/02/mff-ar-sveriges-rikaste-klubb | title=MFF är Sveriges rikaste klubb | work=idrottensaffarer.se | publisher=Idrottens Affärer | date=21 February 2009 | access-date=22 August 2012 | language=sv | trans-title=MFF is the richest club in Sweden | archive-date=7 June 2019 | archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20190607212622/http://www.idrottensaffarer.se/affarer/2009/02/mff-ar-sveriges-rikaste-klubb | url-status=live }} This position was further cemented by the successive Champions League group stage appearances the two following years.{{cite web|url=https://www.expressen.se/kvallsposten/sport/90-miljoner-ar-mycket-men-inte-jattemycket/|title=90 miljoner är mycket, men inte jättemycket|language=sv|publisher=Kvällsposten|author=Mattias Larsson|date=26 January 2017|access-date=16 December 2018|archive-date=16 December 2018|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20181216163656/https://www.expressen.se/kvallsposten/sport/90-miljoner-ar-mycket-men-inte-jattemycket/|url-status=live}} Malmö FF moved from Malmö Stadion to Eleda Stadion in 2009, a stadium built entirely for football and located next to the old one.Smitt, 2009, pp. 94–95.
In 2009, Madsen announced that he would step down as chairman, and was replaced by Håkan Jeppsson early the following year.{{cite web|url=http://www.mff.se/Aktuellt/Nyheter/2010-02-19_Arsmotet.aspx |title=Välbesökt årsmöte valde Håkan Jeppsson till ny ordförande |work=mff.se |publisher=Malmö FF |date=19 February 2010 |access-date=22 August 2012 |language=sv |trans-title=Well attended meeting elected Håkan Jeppsson as new chairman |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20120921104146/http://www.mff.se/Aktuellt/Nyheter/2010-02-19_Arsmotet.aspx |archive-date=21 September 2012 }}
In 2010, the club marked their 100th anniversary with many celebratory events at the beginning of the season. On the day of the club's 100th anniversary in 2010, the Swedish football magazine Offside declared Malmö FF to be the greatest football club in Swedish history.{{cite journal|last1=Regnell |first1=Tobias |last2=Ystèn |first2=Henrik |year=2010 |title=Störst i Sverige |journal=Offside |issue=2 |pages=64–81 |language=sv |issn=1404-6822 |url=http://www.offside.org/magasinet/smyglaesning.aspx?id=4605&templateName=preview |access-date=19 February 2011 |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20110725184413/http://www.offside.org/magasinet/smyglaesning.aspx?id=4605&templateName=preview |archive-date=25 July 2011 }} The season became a great success as the club won Allsvenskan for the nineteenth time and became Swedish champions for the sixteenth time.{{cite web|url=http://www.mff.se/Aktuellt/Nyheter/2010-11-07_SM-GULD.aspx |title=Malmö FF – Svenska mästare 2010 |work=mff.se |publisher=Malmö FF |date=7 November 2010 |access-date=22 August 2012 |language=sv |trans-title=Malmö FF – Swedish champions 2010 |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20120921104215/http://www.mff.se/Aktuellt/Nyheter/2010-11-07_SM-GULD.aspx |archive-date=21 September 2012 }} Unlike in 2004, these successes were achieved without any major transfers before the season, and with a squad consisting mostly of younger players.{{cite web | url=https://svenskfotboll.se/allsvenskan/arkiv/svensk-fotboll/2010/12/det-hanger-pa-de-unga-/ | title=Det hänger på de unga | work=svenskfotboll.se | publisher=The Swedish Football Association | date=6 December 2010 | access-date=22 August 2012 | language=sv | trans-title=It relies on the youngsters | archive-date=6 October 2013 | archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20131006201906/http://svenskfotboll.se/allsvenskan/arkiv/svensk-fotboll/2010/12/det-hanger-pa-de-unga-/ | url-status=live }}
In October 2013, Malmö FF won their seventeenth Swedish championship and 20th Allsvenskan title in the penultimate round of the league away from home. Similar to 2010, the title was the result of a young squad. The average age of the squad, 23.8 years, was the youngest team to become champions since the beginning of the 21st century.{{cite web | url=http://www.svt.se/sport/fotboll/mff-yngsta-guldlaget-pa-2000-talet | title=MFF yngsta guldlaget på 2000-talet | work=svt.se | publisher=Sveriges Television | date=29 October 2013 | access-date=3 November 2013 | language=sv | trans-title=MFF has the youngest championship squad in the 21st century | archive-date=24 September 2015 | archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20150924150557/http://www.svt.se/sport/fotboll/mff-yngsta-guldlaget-pa-2000-talet | url-status=live }} The following year Malmö FF qualified for the group stage of the 2014–15 UEFA Champions League by beating Ventspils, Sparta Prague and Red Bull Salzburg in the qualifying rounds.{{cite web|url=http://www.mff.se/Aktuellt/Nyheter/2014-08-28_MFF_Vidare_till_CL |title=Malmö FF är inne i Champions League |work=mff.se |publisher=Malmö FF |date=28 August 2014 |access-date=30 August 2014 |language=sv |trans-title=Malmö FF into the Champions League |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20140831061020/http://www.mff.se/Aktuellt/Nyheter/2014-08-28_MFF_Vidare_till_CL |archive-date=31 August 2014 }} This was the first time the club qualified for the competition proper since the re-branding from the European Cup in the 1992–93 season and the first time since the 2000–01 season that a Swedish club qualified. In the following months Malmö FF defended their league title, winning their eighteenth Swedish championship and 21st Allsvenskan title.{{cite web|url=http://www.mff.se/Aktuellt/Nyheter/2014-10-05_MFF_ar_Svenska_mastare |title=Malmö FF är svenska mästare 2014 |work=mff.se |publisher=Malmö FF |date=5 October 2014 |access-date=7 October 2014 |language=sv |trans-title=Malmö FF are Swedish Champions 2014 |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20141007084822/http://mff.se/Aktuellt/Nyheter/2014-10-05_MFF_ar_Svenska_mastare |archive-date= 7 October 2014 }} This was the first time a club defended the Allsvenskan title since the 2003 season.
Image:Malmö FF League Performance.svgThe 2015 season saw Malmö FF failing to retaining the title and missing out on the top-four for the first time since 2009. However, the club managed to qualify once again to the group stages of the UEFA Champions League in the 2015–16 UEFA Champions League edition, beating Žalgiris Vilnius, Red Bull Salzburg and Celtic in qualifiers. In October 2016, Malmö FF won their nineteenth Swedish championship and 22nd Allsvenskan title.{{cite web | url=http://www.mff.se/sv-SE/aktuellt/nyheter/Nyheter/2016-10-26_mff-ar-svenska-mastare-2016 | title=Malmö FF är svenska mästare 2016 | work=mff.se | publisher=Malmö FF | date=26 October 2016 | access-date=26 October 2016 | language=sv | trans-title=Malmö FF are Swedish Champions 2016 | archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20161027123730/http://www.mff.se/sv-SE/aktuellt/nyheter/Nyheter/2016-10-26_mff-ar-svenska-mastare-2016 | archive-date=27 October 2016 | url-status=dead }} The title was Malmö FF's third in the span of four years. This resulted in the club surpassing IFK Göteborg in terms of Swedish championship titles, indisputably becoming the most successful Swedish football club of all time in terms of domestic titles while still being second behind IFK Göteborg in terms of European titles.
The 2020s have brought renewed national success to the club, winning the Allsvenskan in 2020, 2021, 2023 and 2024, reaching a total of 27 league titles, while reaching the Champions League group stage in the 2021–22 edition and reaching the knockout stages of the UEFA Europa League in 2019–20, under the management of Jon Dahl Tomasson and Henrik Rydström.
Malmö FF is a dominant force in Sweden. As of the end of the 2021 Allsvenskan season, the club are the leaders of the overall Allsvenskan table maratontabellen.{{cite web|url=https://www.svenskfotboll.se/serier-cuper/elitfotboll/historik-herr/maratontabell/|title=Maratontabellen|date=27 December 2019|work=svenskfotboll.se|publisher=The Swedish Football Association|language=sv|trans-title=All-time Allsvenskan table|url-status=dead|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20190430032312/https://www.svenskfotboll.se/serier-cuper/elitfotboll/historik-herr/maratontabell/|archive-date=30 April 2019}} Malmö FF are also the record holders for the total number of Swedish championships, Allsvenskan titles and Svenska Cupen titles.{{cite web | url=https://svenskfotboll.se/cuper/svenska-cupen-herrar/cupmastare-1941-/ | title=Svenska Cupens finaler 1941– | work=svenskfotboll.se | publisher=The Swedish Football Association | access-date=22 August 2012 | language=sv | trans-title=Svenska Cupen finals 1941– | archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20120306040850/http://svenskfotboll.se/cuper/svenska-cupen-herrar/cupmastare-1941-/ | archive-date=6 March 2012 | url-status=dead | df=dmy-all }}
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Colours and crest
Because of the club colours, sky blue and white, the club is often known by the nicknames Di blåe (Scanian: The Blues) and Himmelsblått (The Sky Blues). The home kit is sky-blue shirts, white shorts, and sky-blue socks. The away strip is black. Various alternative kits have been used for European play such as an all-white kit introduced in the 1950s, and re-used for the 2011 and 2012 seasons, and all-black kits with sky-blue and golden trimmings were used for the European campaigns in 2005 and 2013.Törner, 2005, p. 40.
=Kit evolution=
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{{Football kit box
| align = right
| pattern_la = _white_stripes
| pattern_b = _whitestripes|_collarwhite
| pattern_ra = _white_stripes
| leftarm = 0000ff
| body = 0000ff
| rightarm = 0000ff
| shorts = ffffff
| socks = 000000
| title = Home kit for the 1910 season
}}
{{col-break}}
{{Football kit box
| align = right
| pattern_la = _white_stripes
| pattern_b = _whitestripes
| pattern_ra = _white_stripes
| pattern_so = _3_stripes_white
| leftarm = ee2c2c
| body = ee2c2c
| rightarm = ee2c2c
| shorts = 000000
| socks = 000000
| title = Home kit between 1910 and 1920
}}
{{col-break}}
{{Football kit box
| align = right
| pattern_la =
| pattern_b =
| pattern_ra =
| leftarm = 6a9afc
| body = 6a9afc
| rightarm = 6a9afc
| shorts = ffffff
| socks = 6a9afc
| title = Home kit from 1920 to the present
}}
{{col-end}}
The club colours have not always been sky blue. The predecessor club BK Idrott wore blue and white striped shirts and white shorts, and this kit was still used for the first six months of 1910 after Malmö FF was founded. This was later changed to red and white striped shirts and black shorts to show that Malmö FF was a new, independent club. This colour combination has on occasion been used in modern times as the away kit. The present sky-blue kit was introduced in 1920.Smitt, 2009, pp. 16, 20. Since 2010 a small Scanian flag is featured on the back of the shirt just below the neck.{{cite web|url=http://www.mff.se/Aktuellt/Nyheter/2009-12-09_Jubileumstrojan.aspx |title=Nu släpper vi matchtröjan för jubileumssäsongen! |work=mff.se |publisher=Malmö FF |date=9 December 2009 |access-date=22 August 2012 |language=sv |trans-title=The kit for the jubilee season is now released! |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20120922154049/http://www.mff.se/Aktuellt/Nyheter/2009-12-09_Jubileumstrojan.aspx |archive-date=22 September 2012 }}
=Crest evolution=
File:Malmo FF Original Crest from 1910.gif|{{center|1910}}
File:Malmö FF Crest from 1920.gif|{{center|1920}}
File:Malmö FF's 3rd Crest.gif|{{center|1920s}}
File:Malmo FF logo.svg|{{center|Current crest}}
The crest of Malmö FF consists of a shield with two vertical sky-blue fields on the sides, and one vertical white field in the middle. Underneath the shield is "Malmö FF" spelled out in sky-blue letters with a sky-blue star under the text. In the top area of the shield is a white horizontal field over the three vertical fields. The abbreviation of the club name "MFF" is spelled out with sky-blue letters in this field. On top of the shield are five tower-like extensions of the white field. The present shield crest made its debut on the shirt in the 1940s.Smitt, 2009, p. 20. There were other crests before this but they were never featured on the shirt. While the first crest was black and white, the second crest was red and white in accordance with the club's main colours between 1910 and 1920.
In the original shield logo the full club name and sky-blue star beneath the shield were not featured, they were later added when club chairman Eric Persson discovered while abroad that people had trouble identifying what city the club came from just by looking at the club crest. The six-pointed star has its origins from the oldest seal of the City of Malmö.{{Citation needed|date=May 2025}}
For the 100th anniversary of the club in 2010, the years 1910 and 2010 were featured on each side of the shield on a sky-blue ribbon behind the shield.
Malmö FF is the only Swedish club to wear two stars above its crest, representing at least 20 domestic championship titles. The stars are only featured on match shirts and are not part of the club's crest.{{Cite web |last=Karlsson |first=Kristopher |date=28 January 2014 |title=MFF anmäls för dubbla stjärnor |trans-title=MFF is reported for double stars |url=https://www.aftonbladet.se/a/kadO09 |access-date=30 March 2023 |work=Aftonbladet |language=sv}}
Supporters
{{See also|MFF Support}}
File:MFF-Helsingborg.jpg at former home stadium Malmö Stadion.]]
File:Malmö_FF_-_BK_Häcken_2016_tifo.jpg.]]
File:MFF-Vidi_FC_Champions_League_2018-2019_Q3_Tifo.jpg qualifier in 2018. The red and yellow flag is the Scanian flag.]]
File:Himmelsblåe_legenden_-_Markus_Rosenberg.jpg's final home game for Malmö FF in 2019.]]
Malmö FF has several fan clubs, of which the largest is the official fan club MFF Support, founded in 1992. MFF Support describes itself as "a non-profit and non-political organization working against violence and racism". The chairman of MFF Support is Thelma Ernst.{{cite web|url=http://www.sydsvenskan.se/sport/fotboll/mff/article1547427/Han-ar-MFF-Supports-nya-ordforande.html |title=Han är MFF Supports nya ordförande |work=Sydsvenskan |date=21 September 2011 |access-date=22 August 2012 |language=sv |trans-title=He is MFF Support's new chairman |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20111104134726/http://www.sydsvenskan.se/sport/fotboll/mff/article1547427/Han-ar-MFF-Supports-nya-ordforande.html |archive-date= 4 November 2011 }}
There are also several smaller independent supporter groups. The most prominent of these is Supras Malmö, which was founded in 2003 by a coalition of smaller ultras groups and devoted fans.{{cite web | url=http://sm03.wordpress.com/manifest2/ | title=Manifest | work=suprasmalmo.se | publisher=Supras Malmö | date=12 January 2009 | access-date=22 August 2012 | language=sv | trans-title=Manifesto}} The name "Supras" is derived from the words supporters and ultras – the latter indicating that the group is inspired by a fan culture with roots in southern Europe. Supras Malmö is the most visible group in the main supporter stand at Eleda Stadion, marking its presence with banners, flags and choreography. Another group with similar goals is Rex Scania. MFF Tifosi 96 (MT96) is a network of supporters creating tifos for special occasions and important games.{{cite web|url=http://www.mff-familjen.se/mff-tifosi-96/vad-aer-mt96/ |title=Vad är MT96? |work=mff-familjen.se |publisher=MFF Familjen |access-date=22 August 2012 |language=sv |trans-title=What is MT96? |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20120314222831/http://www.mff-familjen.se/mff-tifosi-96/vad-aer-mt96/ |archive-date=14 March 2012 }}
Malmösystrar (Sisters of Malmö) is the largest female supporter faction in Europe with over 200 members.{{cite web|title=Malmösystrar är Europas största kvinnliga supporterförening: "Man ska veta att det finns en plats dit man kan gå"|url=http://www.fotbollskanalen.se/allsvenskan/malmosystrar-ar-europas-storsta-kvinnliga-supporterforening-man-ska-veta-att-d/|work=fotbollskanalen.se|access-date=12 July 2019|language=sv|archive-date=12 July 2019|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20190712125646/https://www.fotbollskanalen.se/allsvenskan/malmosystrar-ar-europas-storsta-kvinnliga-supporterforening-man-ska-veta-att-d/|url-status=live}}
Malmö FF supporters maintains a friendship with the supporters of Hertha BSC.{{cite news |last=Graeber |first=Julian |date=7 October 2022 |title=Malmö war nur der traurige Höhepunkt: Der 1. FC Union hat einiges aufzuarbeiten vor dem Rückspiel in der Europa League= |url=https://www.tagesspiegel.de/sport/malmo-war-nur-der-traurige-hohepunkt-der-1-fc-union-hat-einiges-aufzuarbeiten-vor-dem-ruckspiel-in-der-europa-league-8724538.html |language=German |work=Der Tagesspiegel |location=Berlin |publisher=Verlag Der Tagesspiegel GmbH |access-date=12 February 2024 }}
=Rivalries=
{{main|IFK Göteborg–Malmö FF rivalry{{!}}Mesta Mästarmötet|Helsingborgs IF–Malmö FF rivalry{{!}}Skånederby|IFK Malmö–Malmö FF rivalry{{!}}Malmö derby}}
Because of geographical proximity, minor rivalries exist with Trelleborgs FF and Landskrona BoIS, which are both also located in Scania.Törner, 2005, pp. 52–54. The main rivals of the club are Helsingborgs IF, IFK Göteborg and IFK Malmö. The rivalry between Malmö FF and Helsingborgs IF has existed since Malmö FF were promoted up to Allsvenskan in the 1930s, and is primarily geographic, since both teams are from Scania in southern Sweden. The rivalry with IFK Göteborg relates more to title clashes; the two are the most successful clubs in Swedish football history and the only two to have appeared in European cup finals, IFK Göteborg in the UEFA Cup in 1982 and 1987 and Malmö FF in the European Cup in 1979.Törner, 2005, pp. 52–54.
During the 2000s, a rivalry between Malmö FF and FC Copenhagen has grown stronger. The rivalry is mainly about geographical proximity and the fact that the teams have played against each other more frequently. During a match in the Royal League in 2005 at Parken Stadium in Copenhagen, the meeting was given greater significance than before, this after Danish police, for unclear reasons, handed out blows with batons to Malmö supporters in the stands.
The rivalry with IFK Malmö is both geographical and historical. The two clubs come from the same city and used to play at the same stadium in the early 20th century. The supposed actions of board members of IFK Malmö in 1933, revealing Malmö FF's breaches of amateur football rules to the Swedish Football Association, further contribute to the competitive tensions between the two clubs. IFK Malmö have not played in Allsvenskan since 1962; thus matches between the two sides are rare.Törner, 2005, pp. 58–59.
=Average attendances=
Malmö FF are well known for their large average attendance.{{cite web | url=https://svenskfotboll.se/allsvenskan/arkiv/svensk-fotboll/2010/11/publik2010/ | title=Malmö i topp även i publikligan | work=svenskfotboll.se | publisher=The Swedish Football Association | date=10 November 2010 | access-date=22 August 2012 | language=sv | trans-title=Malmö, now in the top in the attendance league as well | archive-date=22 February 2014 | archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20140222133025/http://svenskfotboll.se/allsvenskan/arkiv/svensk-fotboll/2010/11/publik2010/ | url-status=live }} Average attendances at Malmö FF's home matches in Allsvenskan and European competitions for the last ten seasons running.
class="wikitable sortable" style="text-align: center"
|+ Allsvenskan 2010–2024 |
width="80" |Season
! width="80" |Stadium ! width="80" |Capacity ! width="80" |{{Tooltip|Total|Total season attendance}} ! width="80" |{{Tooltip|High|Highest season attendance}} ! width="80" |{{Tooltip|Low|Lowest season attendance}} ! width="80" |{{Tooltip|Average|Average season attendance}} ! width="80" |Occupancy ! width="80" |{{Tooltip|Median|Median season attendance}} |
---|
2010
| rowspan="15" |Eleda Stadion | rowspan="5" |24,000Original capacity of the Stadion in domestic competitions. |227,904 |24,148 |9,346 |15,194 {{increase}} |63.3% |14,149 |
2011
|185,825 |23,612 |6,715 |12,388 {{decrease}} |51.6% |11,333 |
2012
|221,981 |23,638 |10,088 |14,799 {{increase}} |61.7% |14,583 |
2013
|241,395 |23,758 |9,837 |16,093 {{increase}} |67.1% |15,560 |
2014
|211,357 |20,310 |9,336 |14,090 {{decrease}} |58.7% |13,382 |
2015
| rowspan="10" |22,500Capacity of Stadion was reduced by the Malmo Police in 2015 due to safety concerns. |259,973 |22,337 |12,862 |17,332 {{increase}} |77.0% |16,215 |
2016
|267,622 |21,719 |13,747 |17,841 {{increase}} |79.3% |17,526 |
2017
|273,807 |21,354 |14,482 |18,254 {{increase}} |81.1% |18,830 |
2018
|223,822 |20,072 |11,237 |14,921 {{decrease}} |66.3% |14,745 |
2019
|248,496 |21,812 |11,521 |16,566 {{increase}} |73.6% |16,267 |
2020
|0 |0 |0 | 0 {{steady}} |0% |0 |
2021
|108,115 |21,067 |0 | 7,208 {{increase}} |32.0% |5,113 |
2022
|261,156 |20,231 |13,312 | 17,410 {{increase}} |77.4% |17,052 |
2023
|301,126 |21,612 |17,116 | 20,075 {{increase}} |89.2% |20,231 |
2024
|304,320 |21,576 |19,173 | 20,288 {{increase}} |90.2% |20,118 |
class="wikitable sortable" style="text-align: center"
|+European Competitions 2010–2022 |
width="80" |Season
!Competition ! width="80" |Capacity ! width="80" |Matches ! width="80" |{{Tooltip|Total|Total season attendance}} ! width="80" |{{Tooltip|High|Highest season attendance}} ! width="80" |{{Tooltip|Low|Lowest season attendance}} ! width="80" |{{Tooltip|Average|Average season attendance}} |
---|
2011–12
|UEFA Champions League | rowspan="14" |20,500 |3 |46,916 |19,084 |12,501 |15,639 |
2011–12
|UEFA Europa League |3 |26,900 |10,802 |7,632 |8,967 |
2013–14
|UEFA Europa League |3 |25,855 |11,538 |5,689 |8,618 |
2014–15
|UEFA Champions League |6 |110,014 |20,500 |8,831 |18,336 |
2015–16
|UEFA Champions League |6 |113,958 |20,500 |12,436 |18,993 |
2017–18
|UEFA Champions League |1 |20,058 |20,058 |20,058 |20,058 |
2018–19
|UEFA Champions League |3 |45,985 |18,153 |10,623 |15,328 |
2018–19
|UEFA Europa League |5 |82,692 |20,312 |11,487 |16,538 |
2019–20
|UEFA Europa League |8 |125,471 |20,500 |8,667 |15,684 |
2020–21
|UEFA Europa League |3 |0 |0 |0 |0 |
|2021–22
|UEFA Champions League |7 |61,522 |19,551 |4,012 |8,789 |
2022–23
|UEFA Champions League |2 |29,064 |17,234 |11,830 |14,532 |
2022–23
|UEFA Europa League |5 |64,029 |16,057 |10,912 |12,806 |
2024–25
|UEFA Champions League |3 |57,679 |20,589 |18,432 |19,226 |
Stadia
{{See also|Malmö IP|Malmö Stadion|Eleda Stadion}}
Malmö FF's first stadium was Malmö IP, which was shared with arch-rivals IFK Malmö. The team played here from the founding of the club in 1910, until 1958. The stadium still exists today, albeit with lower capacity, and is now used by women's team FC Rosengård, who were previously the women's section of Malmö FF. Capacity in 2012 is 7,600, but attendances were usually much higher when Malmö FF played there. For the last season in 1957, the average attendance was 15,500. The club's record attendance at Malmö IP is 22,436 against Helsingborgs IF on 1 June 1956.{{cite web|url=http://www.mff.se/Ditt_MFF/Om_klubben/Historik/1940-1969.aspx |title=1940–1969 |work=mff.se |publisher=Malmö FF |access-date=22 August 2012 |language=sv |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20120918133947/http://www.mff.se/Ditt_MFF/Om_klubben/Historik/1940-1969.aspx |archive-date=18 September 2012 }} The stadium is still considered a key part of the club's history, as it was here that the club were founded, played their first 47 seasons, and won five Swedish championships.Smitt, 2009, pp. 12–13.
A new stadium was constructed in Malmö after Sweden was awarded the 1958 FIFA World Cup – this saw the birth of Malmö Stadion. Malmö FF played their first season at the stadium in 1958. The first time the club won the Swedish championship at the stadium was in 1965. An upper tier was added to the stadium in 1992.{{cite web|url=http://sydsvenskan.se/malmo/article324352.ece |title=Malmö kan få tre nya badhus |work=Sydsvenskan |date=21 May 2008 |access-date=22 August 2012 |language=sv |trans-title=Malmö can get three new aquatic centres |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20110810182009/http://www.sydsvenskan.se/malmo/article324352.ece |archive-date=10 August 2011 }} The club enjoyed the most successful era of their history at this stadium, winning ten out of twenty Swedish championships while based there. The stadium originally had a capacity of 30,000 but this was lowered to 27,500 due to changes in safety regulations. The club's record attendance at the stadium was 29,328 against Helsingborgs IF on 24 September 1967.Smitt, 2009, p. 50.
Following the 2004 victory in Allsvenskan,{{cite web | url=https://svenskfotboll.se/allsvenskan/tidigare-ar/resultat-2004/ | title=Femtonde SM-guldet till Malmö FF | work=svenskfotboll.se | publisher=The Swedish Football Association | access-date=22 August 2012 | language=sv | trans-title=Malmö FF wins their fifteenth Swedish championship | archive-date=4 November 2012 | archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20121104081644/http://svenskfotboll.se/allsvenskan/tidigare-ar/resultat-2004/ | url-status=live }} plans were made to construct a new stadium. In July 2005, Malmö FF announced that work was to begin on Eleda Stadion, designed for 18,000 seated spectators and 6,000 standing. The stadium can also accommodate 21,000 as an all-seater for international and European games in which terracing is not allowed. Construction started in 2007 and was finished in 2009. The new stadium is located next to Malmö Stadion. Although there was still small-scale construction going on around the stadium at the time, the stadium was inaugurated on 13 April 2009 with the first home game of the 2009 season against Örgryte IS; Malmö FF's Labinot Harbuzi scored the inaugural goal in the 61st minute.{{cite web|url=http://sydsvenskan.se/sport/fotboll/mff/article426117/Storseger-for-MFF-i-hemmapremiaren.html |title=Storseger för MFF i hemmapremiären |work=Sydsvenskan |date=14 April 2009 |access-date=22 August 2012 |language=sv |trans-title=Big victory for MFF in the first home game |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20111119030923/http://www.sydsvenskan.se/sport/fotboll/mff/article426117/Storseger-for-MFF-i-hemmapremiaren.html |archive-date=19 November 2011 }} The first Swedish championship won at the stadium occurred in 2010, when the club beat Mjällby AIF on 7 November in the final game of the season 2–0. Attendance at this game set the stadium record of 24,148.Smitt, 2009, p. 95. Stadion is a UEFA category 4 rated stadium.{{cite web|url=http://www.mff.se/Aktuellt/Nyheter/2011-01-26_stadion_hogt_rankad.aspx |title=Swedbank Stadion högt rankad av UEFA |work=mff.se |publisher=Malmö FF |date=26 January 2011 |access-date=22 August 2012 |language=sv |trans-title=Swedbank Stadion highly ranked by UEFA |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20110902070043/http://mff.se/Aktuellt/Nyheter/2011-01-26_stadion_hogt_rankad.aspx |archive-date= 2 September 2011 }}
{{wide image|Pano of Swedbank Stadion.jpg|900px|align-cap=center|A panorama of Stadion from the Northern Stand, showing from left to right the Eastern Stand, the Southern Stand and the Western Stand}}
{{wide image|Malmö_FF_-_Red_Bull_Salzburg_2014.jpg|900px|align-cap=center|Stadion from the Western stand before a UEFA Champions League play-off game against FC Red Bull Salzburg in 2014}}
European record
{{Main|Malmö FF in European football}}
Malmö FF has a rich European legacy with participation in UEFA competitions since 1964. The club's best European performance was in the 1978–79 season, when they reached the final of the UEFA Champions League (then European Champion Clubs' Cup), where they were beaten 0–1 by English Champions Nottingham Forest. This makes Malmö FF the only Nordic club to have reached this far in the European Cup or Champions League.{{Cite web|url=http://www.uefa.com/uefachampionsleague/season=1978/|title=UEFA Champions League 1978/79 - History|publisher=UEFA|language=en|access-date=4 August 2017|archive-date=24 July 2017|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20170724134704/http://www.uefa.com/uefachampionsleague/season=1978/|url-status=dead}} Malmö FF is also the only Nordic club to have been represented at the Intercontinental Cup (succeeded by FIFA Club World Cup) in which they competed for the 1979 title.{{Cite web|url=https://www.uefa.com/teamsandplayers/teams/club=50152/profile/history/index.html|title=Malmö FF according to Uefa|date=26 December 2019|access-date=27 December 2019|archive-date=25 June 2018|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20180625210911/http://www.uefa.com/teamsandplayers/teams/club=50152/profile/history/index.html|url-status=dead}} Malmö FF is one of the four Swedish clubs to have participated in the UEFA Champions League group stages, along with IFK Göteborg, AIK, and Helsingborg.
=Overall record by competition=
class="wikitable plainrowheaders sortable"
! Tournament !scope=col| {{tooltip|S|Seasons}} !scope=col| {{tooltip|Pld|Games played}} !scope=col| {{tooltip|W|Games won}} !scope=col| {{tooltip|D|Games drawn}} !scope=col| {{tooltip|L|Games lost}} !scope=col| {{tooltip|GF|Goals for}} !scope=col| {{tooltip|GA|Goals against}} !scope=col| {{tooltip|GD|Goal difference}} |
scope=row align=left|{{sort|1|European Champion Clubs' Cup / UEFA Champions League}}
| align=center | 19 | align=center | 95 | align=center | 32 | align=center | 23 | align=center | 40 | align=center | 103 | align=center | 148 | align=center | −45 |
---|
scope=row align=left|{{sort|2|UEFA Cup / UEFA Europa League}}
| align=center | 17 | align=center | 80 | align=center | 34 | align=center | 15 | align=center | 31 | align=center | 122 | align=center | 97 | align=center | +25 |
scope=row align=left|{{sort|3|Cup Winners' Cup}}
| align=center | 5 | align=center | 22 | align=center | 9 | align=center | 7 | align=center | 6 | align=center | 35 | align=center | 18 | align=center | {{sort|17|+17}} |
scope=row align=left|{{sort|4|Inter-Cities Fairs Cup}}
| align=center | 4 | align=center | 8 | align=center | 0 | align=center | 1 | align=center | 7 | align=center | 4 | align=center | 23 | align=center | {{sort|−19|−19}} |
scope=row align=left|{{sort|5|UEFA Intertoto Cup}}
| align=center | 1 | align=center | 2 | align=center | 0 | align=center | 0 | align=center | 2 | align=center | 1 | align=center | 4 | align=center | {{sort|−03|−3}} |
scope=row align=left|{{sort|6|Intercontinental Cup / FIFA Club World Cup}}
| align=center | 1 | align=center | 2 | align=center | 0 | align=center | 0 | align=center | 2 | align=center | 1 | align=center | 3 | align=center | {{sort|−02|−2}} |
class=sortbottom
!scope=row | Total ! align=center | 45 ! align=center | 197 ! align=center | 70 ! align=center | 43 ! align=center | 83 ! align=center | 247 ! align=center | 273 ! align=center | {{sort|−26|−26}} |
=UEFA Coefficient=
{{Further|UEFA coefficient}}
Correct as of 14 June 2024.{{cite web |url=https://kassiesa.net/uefa/data/method5/trank2024.html |title=UEFA 5-year Club Ranking 2024 |publisher=UEFA |access-date=14 June 2024 }}{{cite web | url = https://kassiesa.net/uefa/data/method5/trank2024.html | title = UEFA Team Ranking 2024 | publisher = UEFA European Cup Football by Bert Kassies | access-date = 14 June 2024 }} The table shows the position of Malmö FF (highlighted), based on their UEFA coefficient club ranking for 2024, and the four clubs which are closest to Malmö FF's position (the two clubs with the higher coefficient and the two with the lower coefficient).
class="wikitable plainrowheaders sortable"
!2024 !2023 ! scope="col" |Mvmt. ! scope="col" |Club ! scope="col" |2019–20 ! scope="col" |2020–21 ! scope="col" |2021–22 ! scope="col" |2022–23 ! scope="col" |2023–24 ! scope="col" |2024 Coeff. |
scope=row align=left|86
!scope=row align=left|83 | align="left" |15x15px −3 | align=left | {{flagicon|POL}} Lech Poznan | align=center | | align=center |3.00 | align=center | | align=center |14.00 | align=center |2.00 ! align="center" |19.000 |
---|
scope=row align=left|87
!scope=row align=left|103 | align=left |15x15px +16 | align=left | {{flagicon|UKR}} Zorya Luhansk | align=center |2.50 | align=center |4.00 | align=center |5.00 | align=center |2.00 | align=center |5.00 ! align="center" |18.500 |
bgcolor=#CCFFCC
!scope=row align=left|87 !scope=row align=left|63 | align=left |15x15px −24 | align=left | {{flagicon|Sweden}} Malmö FF | align=center |8.00 | align=center |2.50 | align=center |5.00 | align=center |1.50 | align=center | ! align="center" |18.500 |
scope=row align=left|89
!scope=row align=left|102 | align=left |15x15px +13 | align=left | {{flagicon|ITA}} Torino | align=center |2.50 | align=center | | align=center | | align=center | | align=center | ! align="center" |18.056 |
scope=row align=left|60
!scope=row align=left|134 | align=left |15x15px +74 | align=left | {{flagicon|POL}} Legia Warsaw | align=center |2.50 | align=center |2.50 | align=center |4.00 | align=center | | align=center |9.00 ! align="center" |18.000 |
Ownership and finances
Malmö FF made the transition from an amateur club to fully professional in the late 1970s under the leadership of club chairman Eric Persson.Smitt, 2009, p. 168. The club is an open member association, and the annual general meeting is the highest policy-making body where each member has one vote, therefore no shares are issued. The meeting approves the accounts, votes to elect the chairman and the board, and decides on incoming motions. During the successful 2010's era Håkan Jeppsson was the chairman after taking over after Bengt Madsen in 2010, prior to his sudden death in 2018. The club's legal status means that any interest claims are made to the club and not to the board of directors or club members. Daily operations are run by a managing director who liaises with the chairman.{{cite web|url=http://www.mff.se/Ditt_MFF/Om_klubben/~/media/MFF/Dokument/Arsredovisningar/MFFStadgar.pdf |title=Stadgar för Malmö Fotbollförening |work=mff.se |publisher=Malmö FF |access-date=22 August 2012 |year=2012 |language=sv |trans-title=By-laws for Malmö Fotbollförening |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20120922154544/http://www.mff.se/Ditt_MFF/Om_klubben/~/media/MFF/Dokument/Arsredovisningar/MFFStadgar.pdf |archive-date=22 September 2012 }}
With an equity of 497 million SEK the club is the richest football club in Sweden as of 2019. The turnover for 2018 was 343 million SEK.{{cite web | url=http://www.mff.se/~/media/MFF_2013/Dokument/2019/2019-02-15_MFF_%C3%85rsredovisning_2018.ashx?la=sv-SE | title=Årsredovisning för 2018 | trans-title=Financial statement | work=mff.se | publisher=Malmö FF | date=15 February 2019 | access-date=15 February 2019 | language=sv | archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20190216035208/http://www.mff.se/~/media/MFF_2013/Dokument/2019/2019-02-15_MFF_%C3%85rsredovisning_2018.ashx?la=sv-SE | archive-date=16 February 2019 | url-status=dead }} The highest transfer fee received by Malmö FF for a player was 86.2 million SEK (€8.7 million at that time) for Zlatan Ibrahimović who was sold to Ajax in 2001. At the time, this was the highest transfer fee ever paid to a Swedish football club.Smitt, 2009, p. 197.
The main sponsors of Malmö FF are Volkswagen, Elitfönster AB, Intersport, Imtech, JMS Mediasystem, Mercedes-Benz, SOVA and Svenska Spel.{{cite web |url=http://www.mff.se/sv-SE/aktuellt/media/nyhetsarkiv/2012/2012-02-27_intersport |title=Intersport ny Officiell Sponsor i Malmö FF |work=mff.se |publisher=Malmö FF |date=27 February 2012 |access-date=22 August 2012 |language=sv |trans-title=Intersport new official sponsor for Malmö FF |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20171111094608/http://www.mff.se/sv-SE/aktuellt/media/nyhetsarkiv/2012/2012-02-27_intersport |archive-date=11 November 2017 |url-status=dead }} The club also had a naming rights deal with Swedbank regarding the name of Eleda Stadion between 2007 and 2017 when it was called Swedbank Stadion.
Media coverage
Malmö FF have been the subject of several films. Some examples are Swedish football documentaries Blådårar 1 and Blådårar 2, which portray the club from both supporter and player perspectives during the 1997 and 2000 seasons. Blådårar 1 is set in 1997, when the club finished third in Allsvenskan. The film focuses on devoted fan Lasse, player Anders Andersson, former chairman Hans Cavalli-Björkman and other individuals.{{cite web|url=http://www.wgfilm.se/svenska/filmer/filmer/bladarar_1/ |title=Blådårar – om kärleken till ett fotbollslag |work=wgfilm.se |publisher=Wg Film |access-date=22 August 2012 |language=sv |trans-title=Blådårar – about the love for a football team |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20130129035725/http://www.wgfilm.se/svenska/filmer/filmer/bladarar_1/ |archive-date=29 January 2013 }}{{cite web|url=http://www.wgfilm.se/svenska/filmer/filmer/bladarar_1/proddetaljer/ |title=Produktionsdetaljer |work=wgfilm.se |publisher=Wg Film |access-date=22 August 2012 |language=sv |trans-title=Production details |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20100818193622/http://www.wgfilm.se/svenska/filmer/filmer/bladarar_1/proddetaljer/ |archive-date=18 August 2010 }} Blådårar 2 is set in 2000, the year after the club had been relegated to Superettan, and follows the team as they fight for Malmö FF's return to Allsvenskan.{{cite web|url=http://www.wgfilm.se/svenska/filmer/filmer/bladarar_2/ |title=Blådårar 2 Vägen Tillbaka |work=wgfilm.se |publisher=Wg Film |access-date=22 August 2012 |language=sv |trans-title=Blådårar 2 The way back |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20120423104007/http://www.wgfilm.se/svenska/filmer/filmer/bladarar_2/ |archive-date=23 April 2012 }}{{cite web|url=http://www.wgfilm.se/svenska/filmer/filmer/bladarar_2/proddetaljer/ |title=Produktionsdetaljer |work=wgfilm.se |publisher=Wg Film |access-date=22 August 2012 |language=sv |trans-title=Production details |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20100818193528/http://www.wgfilm.se/svenska/filmer/filmer/bladarar_2/proddetaljer/ |archive-date=18 August 2010 }} The second film continues to follow Lasse, but also has a significant focus on Zlatan Ibrahimović, his progress and how he was eventually sold to AFC Ajax during the 2001 season.{{cite web|url=http://www.sydsvenskan.se/sport/article4267/Zlatan-Ibrahimovic-till-Ajax.html |title=Zlatan Ibrahimovic till Ajax |work=Sydsvenskan |date=25 April 2005 |access-date=22 August 2012 |language=sv |trans-title=Zlatan Ibrahimovic to Ajax |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20100107182414/http://sydsvenskan.se/sport/article4267/Zlatan-Ibrahimovic-till-Ajax.html |archive-date=7 January 2010 }}{{cite web | url=http://www.autoimages.se/produktioner/dokumentarfilm/bladarar_2/ | title=Vägen tillbaka – Blådårar 2 | work=autoimages.se | publisher=Autoimages | access-date=22 August 2012 | language=sv | trans-title=The way back – Blådårar 2 | url-status=dead | archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20121130063634/http://www.autoimages.se/produktioner/dokumentarfilm/bladarar_2/ | archive-date=30 November 2012 | df=dmy-all }}
The club have also been featured in Mitt Hjärtas Malmö, a series of documentaries covering the history of Malmö. Clips used included match footage from the 1940s (Volume 7), and match footage from the 1979 European Cup Final in Munich from a fan's perspective (Volume 8).{{cite web | url=http://mitthjartasmalmo.se/start/ | title=Mitt Hjärtas Malmö | work=mitthjartasmalmo.se | publisher=Mitt Hjärtas Malmö | access-date=22 August 2012 | language=sv | archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20110713090058/http://mitthjartasmalmo.se/start | archive-date=13 July 2011 | url-status=dead | df=dmy-all }} Volume 9 of the series is devoted entirely to coverage of the club's 100th anniversary in 2010.{{cite web | url=http://www.mitthjartasmalmo.se/filmerna/volym_9/ | title=Mitt hjärtas Malmö Volym 9, 1905–2004 | work=mitthjartasmalmo.se | publisher=Mitt hjärtas Malmö | access-date=22 August 2012 | language=sv | trans-title=Mitt hjärtas Malmö Volume 9, 1905–2004 | archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20120320174728/http://www.mitthjartasmalmo.se/filmerna/volym_9/ | archive-date=20 March 2012 | url-status=dead | df=dmy-all }}
In the 2005 Swedish drama movie Om Sara, actor Alexander Skarsgård plays the fictional football star Kalle Öberg, who plays for Malmö FF.{{cite web | url=http://www.onetiredbrother.se/Produktioner.html | title=Filmer i urval | work=onetiredbrother.se | publisher=Onetiredbrother | access-date=22 August 2012 | language=sv | trans-title=A selection of our films | archive-date=20 March 2012 | archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20120320174728/http://www.onetiredbrother.se/Produktioner.html | url-status=live }}{{cite web|url=http://www.filmiskane.se/om-film-i-skane/produktion/vara-filmer/2005/366-om-sara.html |title=Om Sara |work=filmiskane.se |publisher=Film i Skåne |access-date=22 August 2012 |language=sv |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20120320174728/http://www.filmiskane.se/om-film-i-skane/produktion/vara-filmer/2005/366-om-sara.html |archive-date=20 March 2012 }}
Finally, a recurring sketch in the second season of the comedy sketch show Hipphipp! involved a group of Malmö FF fans singing and chanting while performing everyday tasks, such as shopping or operating an ATM.{{cite web | url=http://www.aftonbladet.se/nojesbladet/tv/article133142.ab | title="Hipp hipp"-gänget har gjort tv-succé | work=Aftonbladet | date=10 April 2003 | access-date=22 August 2012 | language=sv | trans-title=The "Hipp hipp"-gang has made TV success | archive-date=19 October 2012 | archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20121019110644/http://www.aftonbladet.se/nojesbladet/tv/article133142.ab | url-status=live }}
Players
=Current squad=
File:Malmö FF.JPG group stage match against FC Metalist Kharkiv]]
{{Updated|20 March 2025}}{{cite web | url=https://www.mff.se/lag/herr/spelare/ | title=Trupp - Herr | work=mff.se | publisher=Malmö FF | access-date=20 March 2025 | language=sv | trans-title=Squad – Men}}
{{Fs start}}
{{Fs player|no=1|nat=BRA|pos=GK|name=Ricardo Friedrich}}
{{Fs player|no=2|nat=SWE|pos=DF|name=Johan Karlsson}}
{{Fs player|no=6|nat=SWE|pos=MF|name=Oscar Lewicki}}
{{Fs player|no=7|nat=SWE|pos=MF|name=Otto Rosengren}}
{{Fs player|no=8|nat=ISL|pos=FW|name=Arnór Sigurðsson}}
{{Fs player|no=9|nat=SWE|pos=FW|name=Isaac Kiese Thelin}}
{{Fs player|no=10|nat=DEN|pos=MF|name=Anders Christiansen|other=captain}}
{{Fs player|no=11|nat=SWE|pos=FW|name=Emmanuel Ekong}}
{{Fs player|no=13|nat=SWE|pos=DF|name=Martin Olsson}}
{{Fs player|no=16|nat=NOR|pos=MF|name=Oliver Berg}}
{{Fs player|no=17|nat=DEN|pos=DF|name=Jens Stryger}}
{{Fs player|no=18|nat=SWE|pos=DF|name=Pontus Jansson}}
{{Fs player|no=19|nat=NOR|pos=DF|name=Colin Rösler}}
{{Fs player|no=20|nat=NOR|pos=FW|name=Erik Botheim}}
{{Fs player|no=21|nat=SWE|pos=MF|name=Stefano Vecchia}}
{{Fs mid}}
{{Fs player|no=22|nat=SWE|pos=MF|name=Taha Ali}}
{{Fs player|no=23|nat=NOR|pos=MF|name=Lasse Berg Johnsen}}
{{Fs player|no=24|nat=SWE|pos=GK|name=Robin Olsen}}
{{Fs player|no=25|nat=BRA|pos=DF|name=Gabriel Busanello}}
{{Fs player|no=27|nat=SWE|pos=GK|name=Johan Dahlin}}
{{Fs player|no=29|nat=MNE|pos=FW|name=Sead Hakšabanović}}
{{Fs player|no=30|nat=SWE|pos=GK|name=Joakim Persson}}
{{Fs player|no=32|nat=ISL|pos=FW|name=Daníel Guðjohnsen}}
{{Fs player|no=33|nat=SWE|pos=GK|name=Melker Ellborg}}
{{Fs player|no=34|nat=SWE|pos=MF|name=Zakaria Loukili}}
{{Fs player|no=35|nat=SWE|pos=DF|name=Nils Zätterström}}
{{Fs player|no=37|nat=SWE|pos=DF|name=Adrian Skogmar}}
{{Fs player|no=38|nat=SWE|pos=MF|name=Hugo Bolin}}
{{Fs player|no=40|nat=SWE|pos=MF|name=Kenan Busuladžić}}
{{Fs player|no=43|nat=SWE|pos=MF|name=Gentian Lajqi}}
{{Fs end}}
=Out on loan=
{{Fs start}}
{{Fs player|no=14|nat=DEN|pos=MF|name=Sebastian Jørgensen|other=to IFK Norrköping until 30 June 2025}}
{{Fs player|no=15|nat=GAM|pos=MF|name=Joseph Ceesay|other=to Cesena until 30 June 2025}}
{{Fs player|no=36|nat=KVX|pos=MF|name=Patriot Sejdiu|other=to Roda until 30 June 2025}}
{{Fs player|no=42|nat=SWE|pos=MF|name=Viggo Jeppsson|other=to Olympic until 31 December 2025}}
{{Fs player|no=–|nat=SWE|pos=GK|name=William Nieroth Lundgren}}
{{Fs player|no=–|nat=SWE|pos=GK|name=Marcus Pettersson|other=to Landskrona BoIS until 31 December 2025}}
{{Fs player|no=–|nat=GHA|pos=DF|name=Banabas Tagoe|other=to Olympic until 31 December 2025}}
{{Fs mid}}
{{Fs player|no=–|nat=SWE|pos=MF|name=Anton Höög|other=to Olympic until 31 December 2025}}
{{Fs player|no=–|nat=FRA|pos=MF|name=Mahamé Siby|other=to Martigues until 30 June 2025}}
{{Fs player|no=–|nat=PLE|pos=MF|name=Moustafa Zeidan|other=to Rosenborg until 31 December 2025}}
{{Fs player|no=–|nat=SWE|pos=FW|name=Alexandru Ghiţă|other=to Olympic until 31 December 2025}}
{{Fs player|no=–|nat=SWE|pos=FW|name=Mubaarak Nuh|other=to Olympic until 31 December 2025}}
{{Fs player|no=–|nat=SWE|pos=DF|name=André Alvarez Perez|other=to Landskrona BoIS until 31 December 2025}}
{{Fs end}}
=Retired numbers=
12 – MFF Support{{cite web | url=http://www.mff.se/Personer/A_truppen/Hedersspelare/MFF%20Support.aspx | title=MFF Support | work=mff.se | publisher=Malmö FF | access-date=22 August 2012 | language=sv | archive-date=15 December 2014 | archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20141215063854/http://www.mff.se/Personer/A_truppen/Hedersspelare/MFF%20Support.aspx | url-status=live }}
=Notable players=
File:Bosse Larsson 1965 (cropped).jpg is Malmö FF's all-time leading goalscorer in Allsvenskan with 119 goals in 302 matches.{{cite book | title=100 år med Allsvensk fotboll | publisher=Idrottsförlaget | author=Alsiö, Martin | year=2011 | pages=307–309 | language=sv | isbn=978-91-977326-7-3}}|alt=A blonde man raises his right hand to the camera with three fingers up; he is dressed in a light-coloured football kit.]]
File:Zlatan Ibrahimović Euro 2012 vs England.JPG started his professional career at Malmö FF. He made 40 league appearances and scored 16 goals for the club between 1999 and 2001.|alt=A photograph of a man with dark hair wearing a yellow football shirt, blue shorts and a dark blue captain's armband on his arm, the man is looking away from the camera.]]
{{See also|List of Malmö FF players|Category:Malmö FF players}}
List criteria:
- player has made more than 500 appearances overall for the club, or
- player has won Guldbollen,{{cite web|url=https://svenskfotboll.se/svensk-fotboll/historia/fotbollsgalan/guldbollen/ |title=Guldbollen |work=svenskfotboll.se |publisher=The Swedish Football Association |access-date=22 August 2012 |language=sv |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20120403035509/http://svenskfotboll.se/svensk-fotboll/historia/fotbollsgalan/guldbollen/ |archive-date= 3 April 2012 }} an official UEFA or FIFA award,{{cite web | url=http://en.uefa.com/community/teamoftheyear/history/index.html | title=Team of the Year: History | publisher=UEFA | access-date=22 August 2012 | archive-date=6 December 2010 | archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20101206025359/http://en.uefa.com/community/teamoftheyear/history/index.html | url-status=dead }}{{cite web | url=http://www.uefa.com/news/newsid=130150.html | title=Golden Players take centre stage | publisher=UEFA | date=29 November 2003 | access-date=22 August 2012 | archive-date=24 May 2012 | archive-url=https://archive.today/20120524213938/http://www.uefa.com/news/newsid=130150.html | url-status=dead }} or
- player has been picked as one of the 11 best players in the official hall of fame Sydsvenskan team that was selected by the newspapers readers for the club's 100th anniversary in 2010.{{Cite journal| last1 =Sandström| last2 =Weman| last3 =Stolt| last4 =Wiman| last5 =Gatu| title =MFF 100 år| journal =Sydsvenskan| pages =28–29| location =Malmö}}
class="wikitable plainrowheaders sortable" style="text-align:center" |
scope="col" |Name
!scope="col" |Nationality !scope="col" |Malmö FF !scope="col" |Total !scope="col" |Total !scope="col" |Guldbollen !scope="col" |UEFA/FIFA Award !scope="col" |Sydsvenskan team |
---|
scope="row" align="left"|{{sortname|Erik|Nilsson}}
|Sweden | 1934–1953 | 600 | 4 | 1950 | | |
scope="row" align="left"|{{sortname|Helge|Bengtsson}}
|Sweden | 1934–1951 | 501 | 3 | | | |
scope="row" align="left"|{{sortname|Prawitz|Öberg||Oberg}}
|Sweden | 1952–1965 | 515 | 103 | 1962 | | |
scope="row" align="left"|{{sortname|Ingvar|Svahn}}
|Sweden | 1957–1968 | 414 | 161 | 1967 | | |
scope="row" align="left"|{{sortname|Bo|Larsson}}
|Sweden | 1962–1966 | 546 | 289 | 1965 | | Yes |
scope="row" align="left"|{{sortname|Krister|Kristensson}}
|Sweden | 1963–1979 | 626 | 16 | | | Yes |
scope="row" align="left"|{{sortname|Roy|Andersson|Roy Andersson (footballer)}}
|Sweden | 1968–1983 | 624 | 49 | 1977 | | Yes |
scope="row" align="left"|{{sortname|Roland|Andersson}}
|Sweden | 1968–1974 | 564 | 13 | | | |
scope="row" align="left"|{{sortname|Jan|Möller||Moller}}
|Sweden | 1971–1980 | 591 | 1 | 1979 | | Yes |
scope="row" align="left"|{{sortname|Ingemar|Erlandsson}}
|Sweden | 1976–1987 | 473 | 46 | | | Yes |
scope="row" align="left"|{{sortname|Magnus|Andersson|Magnus Andersson (footballer born 1958)}}
|Sweden | 1975–1988 | 568 | 28 | | | |
scope="row" align="left"|{{sortname|Robert|Prytz}}
|Sweden | 1977–1982 | 132 | 36 | 1986 | | Yes |
scope="row" align="left"|{{sortname|Torbjörn|Persson}}
|Sweden | 1980–1995 | 574 | 39 | | | |
scope="row" align="left"|{{sortname|Jonnie|Fedel}}
|Sweden | 1984–2001 | 588 | 1 | | | |
scope="row" align="left"|{{sortname|Jonas|Thern}}
|Sweden | 1985–1987 | 160 | 30 | 1989 | | Yes |
scope="row" align="left"|{{sortname|Martin|Dahlin}}
|Sweden | 1987–1991 | 176 | 83 | 1993 | | Yes |
scope="row" align="left"|{{sortname|Stefan|Schwarz}}
|Sweden | 1987–1991 | 103 | 7 | 1999 | | Yes |
scope="row" align="left"|{{sortname|Patrik|Andersson}}
|Sweden | 1989–1992 | 184 | 24 | 1995 | Yes |
scope="row" align="left"|{{sortname|Zlatan|Ibrahimović}}
|Sweden | 1999–2001 | 69 | 16 | 2005 |UEFA Team of the Year | Yes |
scope="row" align="left"|{{sortname|Jari|Litmanen}}
|Finland | 2005–2007 | 18 | 6 | | |
scope="row" align="left"|{{sortname|Emil|Forsberg}}
|Sweden |2013–2014 |57 |19 |2021 | | |
Management
=Organisation=
As of 8 January 2024{{cite web |title=Styrelse och valberedning |url=http://www.mff.se/ditt-mff/om-klubben/styrelse-och-valberedning |website=mff.se |publisher=Malmö FF |access-date=16 March 2022 |language=sv |archive-date=29 March 2019 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20190329174611/http://mff.se/ditt-mff/om-klubben/styrelse-och-valberedning |url-status=live }}{{cite web |title=Ledarstab |url=https://www.mff.se/ledarstab-a-laget/ |website=mff.se |publisher=Malmö FF |access-date=16 March 2022 |language=Swedish |archive-date=16 March 2022 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20220316203941/https://www.mff.se/ledarstab-a-laget/ |url-status=live }}{{cite web |title=Contact |url=http://www.mff.se/sv-SE/in-english/info/contact |website=mff.se |publisher=Malmö FF |access-date=16 March 2022 |archive-date=1 April 2019 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20190401164359/http://mff.se/sv-SE/in-english/info/contact |url-status=live }}
class="wikitable" |
Name
!Role |
---|
{{Flag icon|SWE}} Anders Pålsson
|President |
{{Flag icon|SWE}} Niclas Carlnén
|Chief executive officer |
{{Flag icon|SWE}} Pontus Hansson |
{{Flag icon|SWE}} Daniel Andersson |
{{Flag icon|SWE}} Ola Toivonen
|Assistant sporting director |
{{Flag icon|SWE}} Anne-Maj Jansson
|Sporting assistant |
{{Flag icon|SWE}} Jeffrey Aubynn |
{{Flag icon|ARG}} Jaime Segura
|Technical manager |
{{Flag icon|SWE}} Alf Westerberg
|Sporting co-ordinator |
{{Flag icon|SWE}} Per Ågren
|Sporting director (youth) |
{{Flag icon|DEN}} Lars Hallengreen
|Chief scout (youth) |
{{See also|List of Malmö FF chairmen}}
=Technical staff=
class="wikitable" |
Name
!Role |
---|
{{Flag icon|SWE}} Henrik Rydström
|Head coach |
{{Flag icon|SWE}} Theodor Olsson
|rowspan="2"|Assistant coaches |
{{Flag icon|SWE}} Martin Falk |
{{Flag icon|SWE}} Tobias Eriksson
|rowspan="3"|Analysts |
{{Flag icon|SWE}} James Slaughter |
{{Flag icon|HKG}} Pak Hei Mak |
{{Flag icon|ENG}} Tom Noon
|rowspan="2"|Fitness coaches |
{{Flag icon|ENG}} Jamie Mackay |
{{Flag icon|SWE}} Jonnie Fedel
|Goalkeeping coach |
{{Flag icon|SWE}} Alexander Nilsson
|rowspan="4"|Physiotherapists |
{{Flag icon|SWE}} Jesper Robertsson |
{{Flag icon|SWE}} Roem Muftee |
{{Flag icon|SWE}} Johan Ahlberg |
{{Flag icon|SWE}} Amanda Lahti
|Club doctor |
{{Flag icon|SWE}} Greger Andrijevski
|Club masseur |
{{Flag icon|SWE}} Sverker Fryklund |
{{Flag icon|SWE}} Daniel Möller
|Equipment manager |
=Notable coaches=
File:Bob_Houghton_(1979).jpg won three Swedish championships, four Svenska Cupen titles and reached the 1979 European Cup Final during his time in Malmö.]]
File:Roy Hodgson Euro 2012 vs Italy (cropped).jpg won five consecutive Allsvenskan titles and two Svenska Cupen titles during his five years at the club. He is pictured in 2012 as head coach of England.|alt=A photograph of a grey-haired, middle-aged man at a football match. He is wearing a black suit, a white shirt and a black and white striped tie. He is watching the game from the sideline.]]
{{See also|List of Malmö FF managers}}
This is a list of coaches who have won one or more titles at the clubSmitt, 2009, p. 312.
class="wikitable" style="text-align: center;" |
Name
!Years !Allsvenskan !Svenska Cupen |
---|
align="left"| {{Flag icon|Sweden}} Sven Nilsson
| 1944 |
align="left"| {{Flag icon|Hungary}} Kálmán Konrád
| 1947–1949 |1947 |
align="left"| {{Flag icon|Wales}} Bert Turner
| 1951–1954 |
align="left"| {{Flag icon|Spain}} Antonio Durán
| 1964–1971 |1967 |
align="left"| {{Flag icon|Sweden}} Karl-Erik Hult
| 1972–1973 | |
align="left"| {{Flag icon|England}} Bob Houghton
| 1974–1980 |
align="left"| {{Flag icon|Sweden}} Tord Grip
| 1983–1984 | |
align="left"| {{Flag icon|England}} Roy Hodgson
| 1985–1989 |
align="left"| {{Flag icon|Sweden}} Tom Prahl
| 2002–2005 |2004 | |
align="left"| {{Flag icon|Sweden}} Roland Nilsson
| 2008–2011 |2010 | |
align="left"| {{Flag icon|Sweden}} Rikard Norling
| 2011–2013 |2013 | |
align="left"| {{Flag icon|Norway}} Åge Hareide
| 2014–2015 |2014 | |
align="left"| {{Flag icon|Denmark}} Allan Kuhn
| 2016 |2016 | |
align="left"| {{Flag icon|Sweden}} Magnus Pehrsson
| 2017–2018 |2017 | |
align="left"| {{Flag icon|Denmark}} Jon Dahl Tomasson
| 2020–2021 | |
align="left"| {{Flag icon|SER}} Miloš Milojević
| 2022 | |
align="left"| {{Flag icon|Sweden}} Henrik Rydström
| 2023– |
Statistics
{{Main|List of Malmö FF records and statistics|List of Malmö FF seasons}}
Malmö FF have played 86 seasons in Allsvenskan. The only clubs to have played more seasons are AIK with 93 and IFK Göteborg with 89 (2021).{{Cite web|url=https://www.svenskfotboll.se/serier-cuper/elitfotboll/historik-herr/maratontabell/|title=Maratontabell|date=27 December 2019|access-date=28 December 2019|archive-date=30 April 2019|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20190430032312/https://www.svenskfotboll.se/serier-cuper/elitfotboll/historik-herr/maratontabell/|url-status=live}} The club are also the leaders of the all-time Allsvenskan table since the end of the 2012 season. They are the only Nordic club to have played a European Cup final, present day UEFA Champions League, having reached the 1979 European Cup Final. Malmö FF is also the only Nordic club to have been represented at the Intercontinental Cup (succeeded by FIFA Club World Cup) in which they competed for the 1979 title.{{Cite web|url=https://www.uefa.com/teamsandplayers/teams/club=50152/profile/history/index.html|title=Malmö FF According to Uefa|date=26 December 2019|access-date=27 December 2019|archive-date=25 June 2018|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20180625210911/http://www.uefa.com/teamsandplayers/teams/club=50152/profile/history/index.html|url-status=dead}}
Honours
{{See also|Malmö FF in European football}}
Malmö FF have won domestic honours. The club currently holds the records for most Swedish championships, Allsvenskan and Svenska Cupen titles.{{refn|group=upper-alpha|name=champions}} The club's most recent honour was in 2023 when they won Allsvenskan. The club first played in Europe for the 1964–65 European season in the European Cup, and most recently in the 2021–22 European season in the group stage for the UEFA Champions League. Including the qualification stages, they have participated in the European Cup and UEFA Champions League eighteen times and in the UEFA Cup and UEFA Europa League seventeen times. The club have also played in other now defunct European competitions such as the UEFA Cup Winners' Cup and the UEFA Intertoto Cup.Smitt, 2009; pp. 282–308.Smitt, 2009; pp. 192–308.
= Domestic =
- Swedish Champions{{refn|group=upper-alpha|name=champions}}
- Winners (24): 1943–44, 1948–49, 1949–50, 1950–51, 1952–53, 1965, 1967, 1970, 1971, 1974, 1975, 1977, 1986, 1988, 2004, 2010, 2013, 2014, 2016, 2017, 2020, 2021, 2023, 2024
== League ==
- Allsvenskan (Tier 1)
- Winners (27): 1943–44, 1948–49, 1949–50, 1950–51, 1952–53, 1965, 1967, 1970, 1971, 1974, 1975, 1977, 1985, 1986, 1987, 1988, 1989, 2004, 2010, 2013, 2014, 2016, 2017, 2020, 2021, 2023, 2024
- Runners-up (15): 1945–46, 1947–48, 1951–52, 1955–56, 1956–57, 1964, 1968, 1969, 1976, 1978, 1980, 1983, 1996, 2002, 2019
- Division 2 Sydsvenska Serien (Tier 2)Smitt, 2009, pp. 258–259.
- Winners (1): 1920–21
- Runners-up (1): 1923–24
- Division 2 Södra (Tier 2)Smitt, 2009, pp. 262–265.
- Winners (3): 1930–31, 1934–35, 1935–36
- Runners-up (1): 1929–30
- Superettan (Tier 2)Smitt, 2009, p. 304.
- Runners-up (1): 2000
== Cups ==
- Svenska Cupen
- Winners (16): 1944, 1946, 1947, 1951, 1953, 1967, 1972–73, 1973–74, 1974–75, 1977–78, 1979–80, 1983–84, 1985–86, 1988–89, 2021–22, 2023–24
- Runners-up (6): 1945, 1970–71, 1995–96, 2015–16, 2017–18, 2019–20
- Allsvenskan play-offs
- Winners (2): 1986, 1988
- Runners-up (2): 1987, 1989
- Svenska Supercupen{{cite news | url=https://svenskfotboll.se/cuper/supercupen-herrar/2011/ | title=Supercupen 2011 herrar | work=svenskfotboll.se | publisher=The Swedish Football Association | access-date=22 August 2012 | language=sv | trans-title=Supercupen 2011, men | archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20120105013019/http://svenskfotboll.se/cuper/supercupen-herrar/2011/ | archive-date=5 January 2012 | url-status=dead | df=dmy-all }}
- Winners (2): 2013, 2014
- Runners-up (1): 2011
= European =
- European Cup (Champions League)
- Runners-up (1): 1978–79
= Worldwide =
- Intercontinental Cup
- Runners-up (1): 1979
= Doubles =
- Allsvenskan and Svenska Cupen
- Winners (9): 1943–44, 1950–51, 1952–53, 1967, 1974, 1975, 1986, 1989, 2024
Footnotes
{{Reflist|group=upper-alpha}}
References
General
- {{Cite book |last=Smitt |first=Rikard |title=Ända sen gamla dagar... |publisher=Project Management |year=2009 |isbn=978-91-633-5767-1 |language=sv }}
- {{Cite book |last=Törner |first=Ole |title=Malmö FF; En Supporters Handbok |publisher=Bokförlaget DN |year=2005 |isbn=91-7588-683-9 |language=sv }}
Specific
{{Reflist|30em}}
External links
{{Portal bar|Sweden|Association football}}
{{Commons category|Malmö FF}}
- {{Official website|http://www.mff.se/}} {{in lang|sv}}
- [http://www.mffsupport.com/ MFF Support] {{in lang|sv}} – official supporter club site
- [http://www.svenskafans.com/fotboll/mff/ Himmelriket] {{in lang|sv}} – supporter site
- [https://web.archive.org/web/20091126104314/http://www.mff-familjen.se/ MFF-Familjen] {{in lang|sv}} – supporter site
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{{s-ttl|title=Svenska Dagbladet Gold Medal|years=1979}}
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{{Malmö FF}}
{{Allsvenskan}}
{{Authority control}}
{{DEFAULTSORT:Malmo Ff}}
Category:1910 establishments in Sweden
Category:Association football clubs established in 1910
Category:Football clubs in Malmö