Albanian Football Federation

Governing body of football in Albania
Albanian Football Federation
UEFA
Short nameFSHF
Founded6 June 1930; 93 years ago (1930-06-06) (as a wing of the Albanian Sports Federation)
February 1962 (as a separate entity > Albanian Football Federation)
HeadquartersTirana
FIFA affiliation16 June 1932; 91 years ago (1932-06-16)
UEFA affiliation1954
PresidentArmand Duka
Websitefshf.org

The Albanian Football Federation (Albanian: Federata Shqiptare e Futbollit; FSHF) is the governing body of football in Albania. The federation is based in Tirana, Albania. It organises the national football leagues of the Albanian Superliga, the First Division, the Second Division, the Third Division, the Albanian Cup and Supercup. Albania women's national football team, Albanian women's football championship, and the Albanian Women's Cup are also overseen by the FSHF. The federation also coordinates the activities of the Albania national football team and the Albania national youth football teams such as Under-21, Under-20, Under-19, Under-18, Under-17, Under-16 and Under-15.

History

On June 6, 1930, the government of King Zog I issued a royal decree recognizing the establishment of the Albanian Sports Federation. The newly formed sports entity would join the world governing body, FIFA,[1] during the June Congress of 1932, officially marking Albania’s participation in international football. A revised order was issued in March of 1934, to dissolve the Federation, transferring its authority to the heads of the national entity "Vllaznija Shqiptare" (est.1928), which oversaw various sports activities at the time. The federation was one of the founding members of UEFA in 1954.[2]

Old Logo

On 14 March 2008, FSHF were suspended by FIFA for "heavy political interference." This meant that their national teams were banned from playing official matches, representatives banned from official events, and referees unable to officiate FIFA-sanctioned matches.[3] The ban was subsequently lifted as the political interferences were clarified, and on 27 May 2008, Albania played a friendly against Poland.

The current president of FSHF, Armand Duka, has been at this position since 2002 and won the elections for a third term in 2010.[4]

During the 2009 controversy between FSHF and the Albanian government as to the property of the Qemal Stafa Stadium. UEFA insisted in lobbying that the stadium be given to FSHF ownership so that investments on it can be made.[5] In February 2011 it was decided that the new stadium, which will replace the current one and will cost 60M Euro, will be 75% of FSHF and 25% of the Albanian government.[6]

Offices

FSHF headquarters in Tirana

Presidents

No. Name Term in office
Albanian Sports Federation (1930–34)
1 Izedin Beshiri 6 June 1930 April 1931
2 Musa Juka April 1931 December 1934
Vllaznija Shqiptare (1934–45)
3 Mirash Ivanaj 13 August 1935 19 October 1935
4 Nush Bushati 21 October 1935 7 November 1936
5 Faik Shatku January 1937 December 1938
Albanian Sports Federation (1945–62)
6 Anton Mazreku June 1945 June 1946
7 Kristo Papajani March 1947 February 1948
8 Kiço Janku February 1948 July 1948
Albanian Football Federation (1962–present)
9 Eduard Dervishi* 1997 6 February 2002
10 Armand Duka 1 March 2002 Incumbent

Current sponsorships

General Sponsor

Technical Sponsor

  • Macron

Premium Sponsor

  • SIGAL

Official Sponsors

  • Uji Tepelene
  • Unionbank
  • Vas Tour
  • ama Caffe
  • MAK Albania Hotel | Kastrati Group
  • Infinity Destinations
  • Match Worn Shirt

See also

References

  1. ^ "Results hint at Albanian ascension". UEFA.com. 22 January 2015. Retrieved 11 January 2018.
  2. ^ "Foto e rrallë/ Ja si e ka pritur Ahmet Zogu ekipin kombëtar të futbollit" [Rare picture / Here's how Ahmet Zogu hosted the national football team] (in Albanian). Citynews. 27 December 2015. Archived from the original on 2018-01-12. Retrieved 11 January 2018.
  3. ^ "UEFA statement on Albania". UEFA.com. 20 March 2008. Retrieved 11 January 2018.
  4. ^ "Duka re-elected as Albanian FA president". UEFA.com. 10 March 2010. Retrieved 11 January 2018.
  5. ^ Bashkim Tufa (25 August 2010). "80 vjet futboll, Blater d he Platini në Tiranë" [80 years of football, Blatter and Platini in Tirana)] (in Albanian). Sport Ekspres. Retrieved 24 August 2010.[permanent dead link]
  6. ^ "Stadiumi i ri 60 milione euro" [New stadium 60 million euros] (in Albanian). FSHF.org. 3 February 2011. Archived from the original on 2018-01-12. Retrieved 11 January 2018.
  7. ^ Inagurohet zyra e pare rajonale e FSHF-se ne Durres Archived 2017-12-10 at the Wayback Machine FSHF.org

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  • Official website
    • FSHF Documentary about Albania football history
  • Albania at UEFA site
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