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RFC Liège Club, the first Belgian Champion in 1896. Alfred Wahl, La balle au pied : Histoire du football (p. 53), "Découvertes Gallimard" collection (vol. 83).. The city of Liège was introduced to football at the end of the 19th century by English workers, and the Parc de la Boverie, which housed a velodrome, quickly became the home for the first football players in the region. [1]
The club won the Belgian league again the following year, securing the club's tenth league title on 24 May 2009 after a home-and-away game against rivals Anderlecht. [4] Standard won the national cup once more in 2011 , defeating Westerlo 2–0 in the final at the King Baudouin Stadium on 21 May 2011. [ 9 ]
Merger from two teams of Former RWD Molenbeek and Standard Wetteren has been dissolved when became a new club in 2015 2020 Lokeren-Temse: Challenger Pro League two clubs Sporting Lokeren has been dissolved on 20 April 2020 and KSV Temse was founded in 1945 merger into Lokeren-Temse in 2020 2021 Belisia Bilzen: Belgian National Division 1
Wallonia derby: Standard de Liege vs. Royal Charleroi; Liège Province derby: Standard de Liège vs. Seraing; Limburg derby: Genk vs. Sint-Truiden [14] East Flanders Derbies: Gent vs. Sporting Lokeren [15] After the bankruptcy of Sporting Lokeren in 2020 there is no derby anymore. [16] Waasland Derby: a derby between KSK Beveren vs. Sporting ...
The first-ever Belgian League Championship was a competition amongst seven teams, four of which were based in Brussels: Racing Club, Léopold Club Uccle, Sporting Club and Union d'Ixelles. Léopold Club was a club for the nobility and bourgeoisie in Brussels and is still active after no less than four mergers between 1982 and 2001 (they are ...
The 2021–22 season was the 118th season in the existence of Standard Liège and the club's 100th consecutive season in the top flight of Belgian football. In addition to the domestic league , Standard Liège participated in this season's edition of the Belgian Cup .
Players with name in bold currently play for the club. Years are the first and last calendar years in which the player appeared in competitive first-team football for the club. League appearances and goals comprise those in the Belgian First Division A and its predecessors of top-level league football in Belgium.
Club City Notes 1 Stade Vélodrome de Rocourt: 40,000: RFC Liège: Liège: demolished in 1995 2 Albert Dyserynckstadion: 25,000: Club Brugge KV: Bruges: demolished in ...