Brøndby IF

Full name Brøndbyernes Idrætsforening
Nickname(s) Drengene Fra Vestegnen
(The Boys from the Western outskirts)
Founded 3 December 1964 (1964-12-03)
Ground Brøndby Stadium
Ground Capacity 28,000[1]
Chairman Jesper Møller
Manager Alexander Zorniger
League Alka Superliga
2015–16 Danish Superliga, 4th
Website Club home page

Brøndby IF (Danish pronunciation: [ˈb̥ʁɶnb̥y]) is a Danish football club based in Brøndbyvester, Brøndby, on the western outskirts of Copenhagen. The club is also known as Brøndbyernes Idrætsforening, or Brøndby and BIF for short. The club, founded in 1964 as a merger between two local Brøndby clubs, has won ten national Danish football championship titles and six national Danish Cups, since the club joined the Danish top-flight football league in 1981.

Since the founding of fellow Copenhagen club F.C. Copenhagen in 1992 (a merger between KB anno 1876 and B.1903 anno 1903), the two clubs have had a fierce rivalry, and the Derby between the two sides called the "New Firm", attracts the biggest crowds in Danish football.[2]

History

Brøndby IF was founded in 1964 as an amateur club in the 6th tier of the 11 Danish leagues, the Serie 1, where they finished their two first seasons in fourth place. Among the players of the early years was team captain Per Bjerregaard, a doctor who had moved to Copenhagen from Jutland, and Hans Gregersen, who was the mascot of the team until his death by syphilis in 1967. In 1967, the club hired coach Leif Andersen who instantly secured promotion to Sjællandsserien (the Zealand series). After a few mediocre years, a new coach, John Sinding, was brought in, and the club won promotion to Danmarksserien (the Denmark series).

In 1973, Per Bjerregaard stopped his active career at 27 years of age and became chairman of Brøndby; his first action was to sack head coach Sinding. In his place, Brøndby hired former professional and Denmark national team player Finn Laudrup, who took over as head coach while he still took actively part in the games as a player. Laudrup joined his brother-in-law Ebbe Skovdahl in the Brøndby team, and he brought his two young sons Brian and Michael Laudrup with him to the club. Under Finn Laudrup's influence, the club's playing style was changed to a more attacking strategy, even though Laudrup decided to fully concentrate his efforts as a player after only a year. After winning promotion in 1974, Laudrup left Brøndby in the 3rd Division in 1976 to play for KB in the Danish top-flight league (then named the 1st Division) and a year later Michael Laudrup, the brightest talent in Danish football, followed.

Professional football

In 1977, Brøndby moved up into the 2nd Division, and were one of the clubs who quickly adapted to the new times of paid football in the best Danish leagues in 1978. Per Bjerregaard persuaded Finn Laudrup into returning to Brøndby in 1981 on a professional contract, and following a season of 85 goals in 30 games, Brøndby won promotion to the top-flight 1st Division under coach Tom Køhlert. Finn Laudrup subsequently ended his career at age 36, but in his place Michael Laudrup returned for the 1982 season, being one of ten players leaving KB that year.

Brøndby won their 1st Division debut match 7–1 over fellow promoted team B 1909 in a game which featured two goals from Michael Laudrup. He was subsequently called up for the Denmark national team, and on 15 June 1982 he became the first Brøndby player to win a cap for the national team. Brøndby finished their first 1st Division season in fourth place with Laudrup the league's third top goal scorer with 15 goals, earning him the Danish Player of the Year award. In 1983, Laudrup was sold to Juventus in the then-biggest transfer deal in Denmark, giving Brøndby the economic foundation to expand further.

After four years in the top division, Brøndby won their first Danish championship in 1985 and played its first European match when the club beat Hungarian champions Budapest Honvéd 4–1 in the 1986 European Cup. In 1986, Brøndby became the first Danish club of fully professionals when ten players were signed full-time, and the club was introduced at the Copenhagen Stock Exchange in 1987.

European success

Throughout the second half of the 1980s, the team dominated the league and did not finish lower than second place until 1992. The team was built around talented Danish players, and from 1987 to 1991 players from Brøndby won the Danish Player of the Year award every year. The recipients formed the backbone of the Denmark national team which later won UEFA Euro 1992, and was the first goalscorer in the 2–0 Euro 1992 final win John "Faxe" Jensen (1987), national team captain Lars Olsen (1988), the World's Best Goalkeeper 1992 and 1993 award winner Peter Schmeichel (1989), four-time Danish Player of the Year award winner Brian Laudrup (1990) and the second goalscorer of the Euro 1992 final Kim Vilfort (1991). The club became used to winning the national title and turned its attention towards European success.

In 1990, Brøndby hired former national team captain Morten Olsen as coach, and under his reign, the 1990–91 UEFA Cup became the high point in the short history of the club. Especially the meriting wins over German sides Eintracht Frankfurt and Bayer Leverkusen, and Russian club Torpedo Moscow saw the many Danish profiles shine, and the club was minutes from qualifying for the final game of the tournament. In the 88th minute of the semi-final, however, a Rudi Völler goal denied Brøndby a trip to the UEFA Cup final in favour of Roma. Following the impressive European display by the comparatively small club, important members of the team, including Lars Olsen, top scoring striker Bent "Turbo" Christensen and star goalkeeper Peter Schmeichel, left the club.

The following year, 1992, was the worst year in the club's history as the intended takeover of the Danish bank Interbank went awry. It was expected that European Cup success would boost the Brøndby stock value in order to finance the buy, but as the club was beaten by Dynamo Kyiv in the 1991–92 European Cup qualification, the stocks never reached the value necessary to finalize the deal. It had been arranged for financial backers Hafnia Insurance Company to step in and take over the buy in case Brøndby could not finance it, but as Hafnia went bankrupt, Brøndby were forced to buy Interbank and financial collapse was imminent as club debts amassed to 400 million DKK.[3] A long-term rescue plan was initiated to save the club, but these events influenced the performance of the team and the championship, now called the Danish Superliga, was not won again until 1996.

Rebuilding

The rebuilding of the team was led by head coach Ebbe Skovdahl, who deployed the team in a 4-4-2 formation. The return to the club of Euro 1992 veterans John Jensen and captain Lars Olsen combined with the emergence of goalkeeper Mogens Krogh and striker Ebbe Sand got the club back on its feet. The rebuilding culminated in the 1995–96 UEFA Cup elimination of Liverpool, though Roma once again knocked Brøndby out. Including that year, Brøndby won three Danish championships in a row, and the next year's UEFA Cup saw one of the biggest upsets in Brøndby history, as a 3–1 home defeat to Karlsruher SC was changed to an aggregate win when Brøndby beat the team of Euro 1996 winner Thomas Häßler 5–0 away in Germany. Most importantly for the club's economy, Brøndby qualified for the new format of the European Cup, rebranded as the UEFA Champions League.[4] The Champions League qualification meant six guaranteed matches in a group stage with three of the biggest teams of Europe, and when they were paired with Barcelona and later finalists Manchester United and Bayern Munich, Brøndby faced very economically attractive games. Despite winning 2–1 over Bayern in the first game of the group stage, Brøndby conceded 18 goals in 6 matches and were eliminated with a single win to their name.

Skovdahl decided to take a stab at coaching at Scottish club Aberdeen and Brøndby took a more Scandinavian approach, in search of stable success in the European competitions with Norwegian club Rosenborg the role model.[5] The club hired Norwegian manager Åge Hareide in 2000, who proclaimed a shift in line-up to a more attacking 4–3–3 system. With Hareide came a handful of Scandinavian players of whom especially Sweden national team player Mattias Jonson became a fan favourite.

The year 2000 was also the year the club finalized a planned expansion of Brøndby Stadium from a 20,000 to a 29,000 capacity, making it the second largest stadium in Denmark, only trailing the Parken Stadium of F.C. Copenhagen. At the cost of 250 million DKK, the vast expenditure was seen as a sign that the club was out of its former financial crisis.[6] The building project was finalized in Autumn 2000, and on 22 October, 28,416 spectators saw Brøndby beat Akademisk Boldklub 4–2 in the opening game of the rebuilt stadium.

Hareide's visions of a 4–3–3 system never worked out, and the team soon returned to the well-known 4–4–2 setup. As he slowly lost hold of a ten-point lead to rivals F.C. Copenhagen, gained in a great first half of the 2001–02 Superliga season, Hareide took his leave in spring 2002 before the last games of the season.[7] He was replaced by youth team coach Tom Køhlert, who, though reluctant to take the job, gave first team debuts to the top youth team players, most notably Thomas Kahlenberg, who helped the club narrowly secure the championship win on goal difference.

The Laudrup years 2002–2006

In the 2002–03 pre-season, Brøndby announced that Danish icon Michael Laudrup was taking the manager seat in his old club with John Jensen, also a club legend, as his assistant. In their first season, there were massive cuts from the very large squad; ten players were put in the reserves squad or sold and a talent squad was established. The club was to rely even more home grown players as Brøndby was already famous for developing very talented players. In the process, Laudrup told several players to find new clubs as he thought they would not fit in the playing style he wanted to implement.

During the Laudrup era, Brøndby won the Double in 2005, the latest championship the club has won. The club was relatively successful in the European competitions as Schalke 04 was beaten 2–1[8] in the 2003–04 UEFA Cup but was later beaten by Laudrup's former club Barcelona, 0–1.[9]

In May 2006 it was announced that Laudrup and Jensen could not agree with the board of Brøndby regarding an extension of their contracts, and the duo left the club.

Years of crisis 2006 – 2013

The two were replaced by Dutch coach René Meulensteen, who had a rough start in charge of the first team. Together with newly appointed Anders Bjerregaard – son of director Per Bjerregaard – Meulensteen bought a number of questionable players in the final days of the summer transfer window. In the first games, the new coach struggled with injuries among the key players and the team had problems living up to the expectations.

Meulensteen resigned after six months, leaving Brøndby in seventh position halfway through the 2006–07 Superliga. The official explanation for his departure was that his family could not settle in Denmark,[10] but soon after, the former coach revealed major infrastructural problems in the club's organization, calling the club "a very sick patient requiring immediate attention",[11] as well as cliques inside the first team. In order to solve the clique problems, he had gone to director Per Bjerregaard to fire three key players Marcus Lantz, Thomas Rytter and one club man Per Nielsen – in order to reestablish the balance in the first team squad, a demand Danish football experts later described as the quickest way of getting sacked.

Tom Køhlert took the managerial reins once more, this time as a permanent solution on a two-and-a-half-year contract.

After losing 2–4 to Horsens on 26 August, their 23rd consecutive away game without a victory, the team was greeted by approximately 200 furious fans and cries like "die mercenaries" and "we are Brøndby, who are you?" on their return to Brøndby.[12]

On 31 August 2007, Per Bjerregaard announced that he resigned from the director seat, and instead took over as chairman of the board in Brøndby IF. Shortly after his resignation, Peter Schmeichel announced that he was ready to purchase Brøndby and become a director. The announcement divided the fans. Some praised the former player for trying to save the club, while others criticized him for bringing investor Aldo Petersen along, a keen supporter and former stockholder of rivals F.C. Copenhagen. Schmeihel's offer, however, was rejected. On 1 April 2008, Hermann Haraldsson was appointed to the vacant position.[13]

Following a disappointing beginning of the 2007–08 Superliga season with only five points gained from seven matches, manager Tom Køhlert made it clear in August 2007 that the Danish Cup now had a higher priority for the club.[14] The change of priorities was successful, and Brøndby won their first domestic title in almost three years on 1 May 2008 when Esbjerg were beaten 3–2 in the final of the 2007–08 Danish Cup.

Soon after, manager Køhlert declared his job complete, prompting club chairman Bjerregaard to search for his replacement. On 16 June 2008, the club announced the appointment of former player and head coach of Horsens, Kent Nielsen.[15] Nielsen took charge of the first team on 1 January 2009. Former legendary coach Køhlert led Brøndby to the first place, where they stayed until Nielsen arrived.

On 1 July 2008, KasiGroup replaced Codan as the main sponsor of the club. The partnership involved a cooperation with UNICEF, making Brøndby the third club in Europe next to Barcelona and Swedish side Hammarby Fotboll to wear the UNICEF logo on their shirts. Furthermore, KasiGroup entered a sponsorship for the stadium and promised substantial funds for taking the player squad to the next level. During the 2008 summer break, this contributed to Brøndby transferring five new players with national team experience in order to strengthen the team.

On 30 December 2009, KasiGroup owner Jesper Nielsen got in trouble with Brøndby and refused to pay the remainder of the money. On 31 August 2012, Brøndby told the Danish media B.T. that KasiGroup now owes the club more than 45 million DKK (€6,000,000 / £5,000,000).[16] The two will meet in court next year. Nielsen told B.T. that he could recognize the amount but that his lawyer thought they could make a settlement at a much lower figure than the 45 million.

Nielsen was the owner of AG København, which went bankrupt on 31 July 2012 due to his overuse of money. Nielsen is thus both chased by Brøndby and the Danish tax authorities.[17] Brøndby is still looking for a new main sponsor as it has not been possible to find one yet. Brøndby started looking for a new sponsor in 2010 when they realized that KasiGroup did not intend to pay the amount stipulated by contract.

2013: New Owners, New Management, New Squad, New Hope

In May 2013, the club was again close to bankruptcy, but was taken over and saved by a small group of investors led by Ole Abildgaard and Aldo Pedersen.[18] On 10 April 2014, the new main investor Jan Bech Andersen took over as chairman and replaced the board with his own team.[19] On 14 July 2014, the club announced that they had signed a one-year deal with the Danish betting company Bet25 as its main sponsor, with the option to extend the deal for an additional two years.[20] The deal was said to be worth "a significant amount in the million Danish kroner range".[21] The deal includes a strategic partnership between Brøndby and Bet25. As part of the deal, Danish telecommunications company TDC A/S (which owns 51% of Bet25), installed wi-fi in Brøndby Stadium in December 2014. On 15 January 2015, it was announced that Brøndby and Bet25 extended their deal until summer 2017.[22]

Stadium

Main article: Brøndby Stadium
Panorama view of Brøndby Stadium at the 3–0 win against Horsens on 5 August 2006
2005: The facade of the rebuilt Brøndby Stadium

Brøndby have always played their games at Brøndby Stadium. A part of the merging of Brøndbyvester IF and Brøndbyøster IF was a promise by the Brøndby municipality mayor to build a ground, and in 1965 it was ready for the club to play in. Through the first years in the secondary Danish leagues, the stadium was little more than a grass field with an athletics track circling the field of play. It was not until 1978 that the main stand was built, sporting a capacity of 1,200 seated spectators. As newly promoted to the top Danish league in 1982, concrete terraces opposite the main stand were constructed, allowing for a crowd of 5,000 additional people. Following the first years of success in the top-flight, the athletic track was discarded and a further 2,000 seats were installed on top of the concrete stands from 1989 to 1990.

When Brøndby played games against other successful European teams in the 1990–91 UEFA Cup, the then capacity of up to 10,000 spectators was quickly dwarfed by the ticket interest. As the Denmark national stadium Idrætsparken in Copenhagen was being rebuilt, the club found no other way to host the games but to get a dispensation to use scaffolding stands, which boosted the stadium capacity to 18,000 in the semi-final leg of the tournament, a 0–0 draw with Roma. Following the European adventure, the club inaugurated its end stands in 1992, allowing for a total of 22,000 spectators.

In May 1998, the club bought Brøndby Stadium from the Brøndby municipality for 23.5 million DKK[23] and immediately spent double that amount to modernize the stadium. When the club qualified for the 1998–99 UEFA Champions League, the stadium was still under construction and the games were moved to archrival F.C. Copenhagen's Parken Stadium. In 2000, all stands were standardized and built to the same height, allowing for crowds of 29,000 at domestic games and 22,000 in the European games, which allow only all-seated crowds. Since then, the stadium has seen a number of lesser or larger infrastructural and technical enhancements, and the February 2004 European game against Barcelona was played in front of a 26,031-man crowd.

Organisation

Brøndbyernes Idrætsforening was founded on 3 December 1964 as a merger between two small clubs, Brøndbyvester IF from 1909 and Brøndbyøster IF from 1928, and was a broad sports association, including branches in football, handball, gymnastics and badminton among others. In 1971 the club was split off into clubs for each individual sport, and Brøndby mayor Kjeld Rasmussen became the first chairman of the footballing branch, which retained the name of Brøndbyernes Idrætsforening.

With the introduction of paid football in Denmark by the Danish Football Association in 1978, the club split into an amateur and a professional department. The amateurs consisted of the various youth departments which had been the trademark of the club since the 1964 merger, as well as the numerous volunteers who service every match of the professional club for free. In 1987 the professional department, Brøndby IF Fodbold A/S, was the second football club in the world (with Tottenham Hotspur being the first) to float its shares on a public stock exchange. The shares were divided in A and B shares of equal value, with only the B shares for sale to the public. Each A share counts for ten votes and each B share counts for a single ownership vote, and the A shares were divided between three groups to prevent hostile takeovers; the volunteer amateur leaders of the club, the main sponsors of the club, and the company Euro Sportsholding, owned by Brøndby IF itself. The A shares accounted for 64% of the votes,[24] and thereby the power in the club.

When the club was on the verge of financial collapse in 1992, the A shares posed as security to the creditors, until the club was saved and the shares were sold for the symbolic amount of 1 DKK[25] to the newly founded Brøndbyernes IF Fodbold Fond, which strives to keep Brøndby IF controlled by the amateur department. The shares are currently divided into 355,000 A and 3,500,000 B shares, with Brøndbyernes IF Fodbold Fond owning 300,000 of the A shares, accounting for 42.6% of the total votes.[26]

Supporters

Brøndby Support is the official fanclub of Brøndby IF.[27] It was founded in the beginning of 1993, with the first official meeting held 30 September 1987 and has approximately 12000 members.[28]

Honours

Brøndby IF's most commonly used players during the Double-winning 2004–05 season, their most recent league title.

Records

Squads and players

See also Brøndby IF players

More than 300 players have represented Brøndby in the Danish leagues, cups and the European competitions since 1964.

Current squad

As of 30 August 2016[30]

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

No. Position Player
1 Denmark GK Frederik Rønnow
2 South Korea DF Yun Suk-young
4 Germany DF Benedikt Röcker
5 Denmark DF Martin Albrechtsen
6 Iceland DF Hjörtur Hermannsson
7 Denmark MF Thomas Kahlenberg (captain)
8 Jamaica MF Rodolph Austin
9 Finland FW Teemu Pukki
10 Germany MF Hany Mukhtar (on loan from Benfica)
12 Denmark MF Frederik Holst
13 Sweden DF Johan Larsson (vice-captain)
15 Costa Rica FW Marcos Ureña
16 Denmark GK Mads Toppel
No. Position Player
17 Denmark MF Rezan Corlu
18 South Africa MF Lebogang Phiri
19 Denmark MF Christian Nørgaard
20 Poland FW Kamil Wilczek
21 Denmark MF Andrew Hjulsager
22 Sweden FW Gustaf Nilsson
24 Denmark FW Daniel Stückler
25 Denmark MF Christian Jakobsen
26 Paraguay FW José Ariel Núñez
27 Denmark DF Svenn Crone
29 Czech Republic FW Jan Kliment (on loan from VfB Stuttgart)
30 Denmark GK Viktor Anker

Incoming players

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

No. Position Player
  Finland DF Paulus Arajuuri (joins on 1 January 2017 from Lech Poznań)

Out on loan

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

No. Position Player
Kosovo FW Elba Rashani (at Rosenborg until 31 December 2016 – with buying option)
Denmark DF Mads Juel Andersen (at HB Køge until 31 December 2016)

Player of the year

Starting from 1980, the club has annually named its player of the year.[31] Players still playing for the club are marked in bold:

Wall of Honour

Since Michael Laudrup became the first player to represent Brøndby on the Denmark national team in June 1982, more than 80 players have donned the national team jersey of their respective countries. Apart from Denmark, players from Nigeria, Norway, Lithuania, Burkina Faso, Sweden, Faroe Islands, Morocco, Iceland, Zambia, Australia, Gambia and the United States have represented their countries. The players are displayed on the "Wall of Honour", according to their year of national team debut.[32] Players still playing for the club are marked in bold:

1980s
1990s

2000s

The "Wall of Honour" chronicling Brøndby's national team players, of varying nationalities, since 1982.
2010s

Staff

Source:[33]

Football management

Director of Football

Senior section

Head Coach

Assistant Coach

Individual Attacking Coach

Fitness Coach

Goalkeeper Coach

Youth Section "Masterclass"

Head of Masterclass

Senior Transition Coach

Under 19's coach

Under 19's assistant coach

Under 17's coach

Under 17's assistant coach

Under 15's coach

Youth GK coach

Youth physical coach

Scouting Section

Senior Chief Scout

Youth Chief Scout

Former managers

Listed according to when they became managers for Brøndby IF (years in parentheses):

1960s
  • Denmark Egon Knudsen (1964–67)
  • Denmark Leif Andersen (1967–69)
  • Denmark Ib Jensen (1969–70)
1970s
  • Denmark John Sinding (1970–72)
  • Denmark Finn Laudrup (1973)
  • Denmark Mogens Johansen (1973)
  • Denmark Kaj Møller (1974)
  • Denmark John Sinding (1975)
  • Denmark Jørgen Hvidemose (1975–80)
1980s

1990s
2000s

2010s

References

Footnotes

  1. http://brondby.com/klub/stadion/stadionoverblik/
  2. Attendance season records at NetSuperligaen.dk, which dates back to the 1998–99 Danish Superliga, records the biggest crowd each year has been a derby between F.C. København and Brøndby.
  3. (Danish) Henrik H. Brandt, "Brøndby IF: Mirakelkuren", Jyllands-Posten article, 1 June 1997
  4. Danish club Aalborg BK played in the 1995–96 Champions League tournament as a result of the bribing scandal of Dynamo Kyiv, thus they did not qualify through the qualification rounds.
  5. (Danish) Kurt Lassen and Thorsten Dam, "Brøndby enig med Hareide", Berlingske Tidende article, 17 April 1999
  6. (Danish) Christian Hüttemeier, "Supertanker på succeskurs", Politiken article, 22 October 2000
  7. (Danish) Mikael Børsting and Jesper Tornvig Ludvigsen, "FORUDSÅ HAREIDES FALD", B.T. article, 16 April 2002
  8. Brondby IF – FC Schalke 04 : 2–1 (Match report) ScoresPro.com
  9. Brondby IF – FC Barcelona 04 : 0–1 (Match report) ScoresPro.com
  10. Brøndby får ny cheftræner, Brondby IF - official website, 5 January 2007
  11. Rivals' pity highlights Brøndby gloom, UEFA.com, 25 September 2007
  12. "Rasende fans belejrede Brøndbys bus" (in Danish). Politiken. 27 August 2007. Retrieved 27 August 2007.
  13. (Danish) Fondsbørsmeddelelse September 2008, Brøndbyernes IF Fodbold A/S, 13 March 2008
  14. (Danish) Brøndby opprioriterer pokalturneringen, politiken.dk, 28 June 2008
  15. FBM nr 13/2008: Kent Nielsen ny træner pr. 1.1. 2009, Brondby - official website, 16 June 2008
  16. Brøndby: Vi skal have Kasi-millioner 31 August 2012
  17. SKAT kræver 168 millioner af Kasi-familien 6 August 2012
  18. Rigmænd redder Brøndby
  19. http://brondby.com/nyhed/2014/04/10/selskabsmeddelelse-12_2014
  20. http://brondby.com/nyhed/2014/07/14/selskabsmeddelelse-15_2014-ny-hovedsponsor
  21. http://www.b.dk/sport/her-er-broendbys-nye-hovedsponsor
  22. http://brondby.com/nyhed/2015/01/14/broendby-if-forlaenger-med-bet25
  23. (Danish) Christian W. Larsen, "Brøndby får eget stadion", Aktuelt article, 14 May 1998
  24. (Danish) Michael Aae, "A/S FODBOLD ET HOLD TIL 70 MILLIONER", B.T. article, 18 August 1991
  25. (Danish) Steen Ankerdal, "Fik brøndby for en krone", Ekstra Bladet article, 7 May 1994
  26. (Danish) Distribution of shares, according to Brondby.com
  27. Brøndby Support
  28. Brøndby Support Wikipedia
  29. Up until 1991/92, the tournament of the European national club champions was the European Cup; from the 1992/93 season the structure of the competition was changed, and it was renamed the UEFA Champions League.
  30. http://brondby.com/spillere/superligatruppen/
  31. (Danish) Årets Spiller Archived 6 August 2006 at the Wayback Machine. at Brondby.com
  32. (Danish) Wall of Honour at Brondby.com
  33. http://brondby.com/klub/medarbejdere/

External links

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