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2016–17 Lyngby Boldklub season; L. Lyngby Stadium This page was last edited on 29 December 2024, at 05:23 (UTC). Text is available under the Creative Commons ...
Lyngby Stadion is a combined football and athletics stadium in Kongens Lyngby, Denmark. It is owned by the municipality of Lyngby-Taarbæk. It is the home of the football club Lyngby Boldklub, and Trongårdens IF athletics association. The stadium has a capacity of approximately 10,000 with 3,100 seated. [1]
The 2024–25 season is the 104th season in the history of Lyngby Boldklub, and the club's third consecutive season in the Danish Superliga. In addition to the domestic league, the team is scheduled to participate in the Danish Cup .
On 30 March 1921, 30 young people from the football department of Lyngby IF decided to break away and start their own club. They named it Lyngby Boldklub af 1921. For the first few years, they played at Lundtofte Flyveplads, using the flight hangars as locker rooms. In 1949 the club moved to the area where the present-day Lyngby Stadion is located.
Kongens Lyngby was also the site of a watermill, Lyngby Watermill, which is first mentioned in 1492 but is probably several hundred years older. A royal road, Lyngby Kongevej , was created in 1584 to provide an easy link between Copenhagen and Frederick's new Frederiksborg Castle from where it was later extended to Fredensborg and Helsingør .
The oldest usage of the phrase in specific reference to college basketball was used by Dick Dunkel of The Charlotte News, who used "blue bloods" in his men's basketball rating system. [3] During the 1950s, the Associated Press (AP) and Cincinnati Enquirer used the phrase in a casual sense, describing teams ranked near the top of the AP poll. [3]
The history of basketball can be traced back to a YMCA International Training School, known today as Springfield College, located in Springfield, Massachusetts.The sport was created by a physical education teacher named James Naismith, who in the winter of 1891 was given the task of creating a game that would keep track athletes in shape and that would prevent them from getting hurt.
Peter Aluma became the first Liberty men's basketball player enshrined in the Big South Conference's Hall of Fame on May 29, 2008. On April 1, 2009, McKay was hired by the University of Virginia to be the head assistant coach of men's basketball to his friend and mentor Tony Bennett. Ritchie McKay 2 Seasons (2007–2009, 1st stint) Record: 39–28