Switzerland 1.Liga Promotion | 10/05 15:00 | 10 | FC Bulle vs Basel II | - | View | |
Switzerland 1.Liga Promotion | 10/12 13:30 | 11 | Basel II vs Young Boys II | - | View | |
Switzerland 1.Liga Promotion | 10/19 13:00 | 12 | Lugano II vs Basel II | - | View | |
Switzerland 1.Liga Promotion | 10/26 14:00 | 14 | Breitenrain vs Basel II | - | View | |
Switzerland 1.Liga Promotion | 11/02 14:30 | 15 | Basel II vs SC Bruhl | - | View | |
Switzerland 1.Liga Promotion | 11/10 14:00 | 16 | Biel Bienne vs Basel II | - | View |
Switzerland 1.Liga Promotion | 09/28 15:00 | 26 | Basel II v Vevey Sports 05 | - | PPT. | |
Switzerland 1.Liga Promotion | 09/21 18:00 | 8 | Delemont v Basel II | W | 1-2 | |
Switzerland 1.Liga Promotion | 09/18 16:30 | 24 | [8] FC Paradiso v Basel II [16] | W | 1-3 | |
Switzerland 1.Liga Promotion | 09/14 13:30 | 7 | Basel II v FC Paradiso | - | PPT. | |
Switzerland 1.Liga Promotion | 09/07 15:30 | 6 | Kriens v Basel II | D | 0-0 | |
Switzerland 1.Liga Promotion | 08/31 14:00 | 5 | [12] Bavois v Basel II [14] | L | 3-0 | |
Switzerland 1.Liga Promotion | 08/25 12:00 | 4 | Basel II v SC Cham | W | 1-0 | |
Switzerland 1.Liga Promotion | 08/17 15:00 | 3 | FC Grand-Saconnex v Basel II | D | 1-1 | |
Switzerland 1.Liga Promotion | 08/10 16:00 | 2 | Basel II v Lucerne II | - | PPT. | |
Switzerland 1.Liga Promotion | 08/03 14:00 | 1 | FC Rapperswil-Jona v Basel II | L | 5-2 | |
Switzerland 1.Liga Promotion | 05/25 14:00 | 34 | Kriens v Basel II | L | 3-2 | |
Switzerland 1.Liga Promotion | 05/18 14:00 | 33 | Basel II v Biel Bienne | D | 0-0 |
Total | Home | Away | |
---|---|---|---|
Matches played | 32 | 13 | 19 |
Wins | 11 | 8 | 3 |
Draws | 9 | 4 | 5 |
Losses | 12 | 1 | 11 |
Goals for | 48 | 27 | 21 |
Goals against | 50 | 11 | 39 |
Clean sheets | 6 | 5 | 1 |
Failed to score | 10 | 2 | 8 |
Fussball Club Basel 1893, widely known as FC Basel, FCB, or just Basel, is a Swiss professional football club based in Basel, in the Canton of Basel-Stadt. Formed in 1893, the club has been Swiss national champions 20 times, Swiss Cup winners 13 times, and Swiss League Cup winners once.
Basel competed in UEFA competitions for 25 consecutive seasons between 1999–2000 and 2023–2024. They have qualified for the Group stages of the Champions League more times than any other Swiss club – a total of seven times – and are the only Swiss club to have ever qualified to the Group stages directly. In 2021, they set the new record for a Swiss team with the most successful international group stage campaign by reaching 14 points in their Conference League group. Since 2001, the club has played its home games at St. Jakob-Park, built on the site of their previous home, St. Jakob Stadium. Their home colours are red and blue, leading to a nickname of RotBlau.
FC Basel was started by an advertisement placed by Roland Geldner in the 12 November 1893 edition of the Basler national newspaper, requesting that a football team be formed and that anyone who wished to join should meet up the following Wednesday at 8:15 in the restaurant Schuhmachern-Zunft. Eleven men attended the meeting, generally from the academic community, founding Fussball Club Basel on 15 November 1893.
(Source: the documentation to the club's 50th anniversary)
Fussball Club Basel 1893 has a long and illustrious history, that spans the period from 1893 to the present day. Having competed at the highest level of football in Switzerland for most of this time, FCB currently play in the Swiss Super League. The club was founded on 15 November 1893. At first the club played their home games in the Landhof stadium. During the mid-1960s Basel then played their games in St. Jakob Stadium which was demolished in 1998. During the construction of the new stadium, between 1998 and 2001, the Stadion Schützenmatte was the club's temporary home ground. Since 2001 Basel play home games at St. Jakob-Park, which is currently the largest club stadium in Switzerland.
Due to its size the history of FC Basel has been divided into five sections. For details on individual periods of the club's history, see the following articles:
The first section deals with the foundation, the early years, the forming of the Swiss Football Association (ASF-SFV), the first league championships and the years up to and during the first World War.
The second section is about the period between the two World Wars and the introduction of the Swiss Cup. FCB did not have much of an early footballing success; it took them 40 years to win their first trophy, winning the cup in 1933, as they defeated arch-rivals and reigning cup-holders Grasshopper Club Zürich in the final.
The third section starts with relegation, no promotion, missed promotion, promotion after all, another relegation, another promotion and the second cup title. It then spans the period of Jules Düblin as chairman, the first championship title and the third cup win.
Under the motto rise and fall, the fourth section deals with the era Benthaus, seven domestic league titles, the subsequent decline, relegation, six seasons of second-tier football and the long-awaited promotion.
The fifth section deals with the financial backing that had been put into the club at that time, the move to the new stadium St. Jakob-Park, how success returned and how things have progressed to the present day.