Danish Football Association

Danish Football Association
UEFA
Short nameDBU
Founded18 May 1889; 134 years ago (1889-05-18)
HeadquartersBrøndbyvester
FIFA affiliation21 May 1904
UEFA affiliation1954
PresidentJesper Møller (2014–)
Websitewww.dbu.dk

The Danish Football Union (Danish: Dansk Boldspil-Union; abbr. DBU) is the governing body of football in Denmark. It is the organization of Danish football clubs and runs the professional Danish football leagues, alongside the men's and women's national teams. Based in the city of Brøndby, it is a founding member of both FIFA and UEFA. The DBU has also been the governing body of futsal in Denmark since 2008.

Beginnings

The DBU was founded on 18 May 1889 and was the first national football association outside Great Britain and Ireland.[1] However, it did not register games officially before the 1908 Summer Olympics, meaning that the win in the 1906 Intercalated Olympics tournament was not officially recorded by the DBU.

List of presidents

The following is a list of presidents since its creation in 1905.[2]

President Term
Frederik Markmann 1889–1890
Harald Hilarius-Kalkau 1890–1894
Johannes Forchhammer 1894–1897
Albert Albertsen 1897–1911
Ludvig Sylow 1911–1918
Louis Østrup 1918–1935
Kristian Middelboe 1935–1940
Leo Frederiksen 1940–1948
Kristian Middelboe 1948–1950
Ebbe Schwartz 1950–1964
Vilhelm Skousen 1965–1977
Carl Nielsen 1977–1990
Hans Erik Jensen 1990–1991
Poul Hyldgaard 1991–2002
Allan Hansen 2002–2014
Jesper Møller 2014–present

DBU competitions

Men's

Women's

  • Elite Division (Elite Divisionen)
  • First Division (1. Division)
  • Danish Series (Danmarksserien) (3 groups)
  • Cup (Landspokalturneringen)

Defunct

Regional structure

  DBU Jutland (numbers indicate regions)
  DBU Funen
  DBU Zealand
  DBU Lolland-Falster
  DBU Copenhagen
  DBU Bornholm

The DBU is separated into six regional associations, based on the former counties of Denmark:

The Faroe Islands and Greenland, which are autonomous territories within Denmark, have their own football associations and are not part of the DBU. Greenland is not a member of FIFA or any continental federation, but the Faroe Islands are a member of both FIFA and UEFA.

International teams

The Denmark national football teams represents Denmark in international football competitions and is controlled by the DBU. As of June 2021,[3] the teams consist of:

Women's

Men's

Yearly honours

The DBU awards the best national team players each year, with an award to the best senior team player, as well as the best player in three of the DBU's six national youth teams.

Player of the Year

Since 1963, the DBU has awarded the Danish Player of the Year in a vote amongst the Danish players. In the time of amateur football, only players in the domestic league could achieve the prize, and even after the emergence of paid football in 1978, no players in foreign clubs were eligible for the award. When the award was finally opened to all Danish players, domestic and abroad, in 1983, national team captain Morten Olsen was the first player to win the Player of the Year award taking all Danish players into consideration. The record number of award wins is four, by Brian Laudrup (1989, 1992, 1995, and 1997).

Young Players of the Year

The Young Players of the Year Awards on the other hand are sponsored by Arla Foods, the awards were initially known as Mælkens talentpriser (the Milk Talent Awards) in order to promote the line of dairy products of the company then known as MD Foods. DBU found new sponsor DONG (later DONG Energy), an oil company, in 2004 but Arla went on to sponsor the prize which was renamed Arla's talentpriser (the Arla Talent Awards) in 2005.[4][5][6]

National team contract negotiations

Women's national team

In 2017, the negotiations regarding terms and salary with the women's national team broke down, causing DBU to cancel the world cup qualification match against Sweden. The team lost the match 3–0 due to forfeit. DBU was handed a fine by the UEFA disciplinary committee. The national team and DBU came to an agreement before the match was supposed to be played, but the match was already cancelled. The team then failed to qualify directly to the world cup. A playoff match will decide if the team will qualify to the world cup.

Men's national team

After the 2018 FIFA World Cup, the agreement between DBU and the men's national team expired. The negotiations about terms and salary are still ongoing. Currently DBU has selected a squad without any players from the top tier of international and national leagues. The team is to play two matches. DBU refuses to negotiate before the end of the two matches.

The badge is still in use on the Danish men's kit for the European Championship 2020 (so-named despite being played in 2021 due to the COVID-19 pandemic).

References

  1. ^ "Denmark - Member associations - Inside UEFA". www.uefa.org. Archived from the original on 15 June 2017. Retrieved 19 March 2018.
  2. ^ "Liste over DBUs formænd" [List of presidents on official site]. www.dbu.dk (in Danish). Archived from the original on 2015-04-02. Retrieved 7 July 2023.
  3. ^ "DBU Landshold". www.dbu.dk. 30 June 2021. Retrieved 30 June 2021.
  4. ^ "DBU TALENTPRIS". dbu.dk (in Danish). Archived from the original on 2018-12-12.
  5. ^ "NIKI ZIMLING FIK ARLA TALENTPRIS". dbu.dk (in Danish). Archived from the original on 2018-12-17.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: unfit URL (link)
  6. ^ "Unknown". dbu.dk (in Danish). Archived from the original on 2016-03-16. Retrieved 2007-11-06.

External links

  • Official website (in Danish and English)
  • Denmark at FIFA site (archived 6 June 2007)
  • Denmark at UEFA site
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