2011 Veikkausliiga

The 2011 Veikkausliiga was the 81st season of top-tier football in Finland. It began on 2 May 2011 and ended on 29 October 2011.[2] HJK were the defending champions and successfully defended their title.

Veikkausliiga
Season2011
ChampionsHJK
8th Veikkausliiga title
24th Finnish title
RelegatedRoPS
Champions LeagueHJK
Europa LeagueInter Turku
JJK
KuPS
MYPA
Matches played198
Goals scored599 (3.03 per match)
Top goalscorerTimo Furuholm (22 goals)
Biggest home winHJK 6–0 TPS
(22 June)
FF Jaro 8–2 RoPS
(29 June)
HJK 6–0 FF Jaro
(28 September)
Biggest away winHaka 0–5 HJK
(18 June)
Highest scoringFF Jaro 8–2 RoPS
(29 June)
Longest winning runHJK
(10 games)[1]
Longest unbeaten runFC Honka
(14 games)[1]
Longest winless runRoPS
(21 games)[1]
Longest losing runRoPS
(6 games)[1]
2010
2012

The pre-season was severely affected by license revocations to two teams, which eventually resulted in a later than originally scheduled begin date and an increase of scheduled matches from 26 to 33 per team.

Teams

The league was originally supposed to have 14 teams, but AC Oulu was refused a license due to club's bad economic situation and Tampere United was excluded from every official competition of Football Association of Finland due to breaking the rules of the association, and the league will therefore be played with only 12 teams.[3][4] AC Oulu was, however, obtained a license for Ykkönen, where it will play this season.

FC Lahti were relegated to Ykkönen after finishing at the bottom of the 2010 season. Their place was taken by Ykkönen champions RoPS. 13th-placed Veikkausliiga team JJK and Ykkönen runners-up FC Viikingit competed in a two-legged relegation play-offs for one spot in this season. JJK won 3–1 on aggregate and thereby retained their league position once again.

Team summaries

Location of teams in 2011 Veikkausliiga
ClubLocationStadiumCapacityManagerCaptain
FC HonkaEspooTapiolan Urheilupuisto6,000 Mika Lehkosuo Tomi Maanoja
FC InterTurkuVeritas Stadion10,000 Job Dragtsma Henri Lehtonen
FF JaroJakobstadJakobstads Centralplan5,000 / Alexei Eremenko Sr. Heikki Aho
HakaValkeakoskiTehtaan kenttä3,516 Sami Ristilä Regillio Nooitmeer
HJKHelsinkiSonera Stadium10,770 Antti Muurinen Ville Wallén
JJKJyväskyläHarjun stadion3,000 Kari Martonen Mikko Hyyrynen
KuPSKuopioKuopion keskuskenttä5,000 Esa Pekonen Pietari Holopainen
IFK MariehamnMariehamnWiklöf Holding Arena4,000 Pekka Lyyski Allan Olesen
MYPAKouvolaSaviniemi4,167 Toni Korkeakunnas[5] Tuomas Aho
RoPSRovaniemiRovaniemen keskuskenttä4,000 Matti Hiukka Tuomo Könönen
TPSTurkuVeritas Stadion10,000 Marko Rajamäki Jarno Heinikangas
VPSVaasaHietalahti Stadium4,600 Petri Vuorinen Tero Koskela

Managerial changes

TeamOutgoing managerManner of departureDate of vacancyIncoming managerDate of appointmentTable
VPS Tommi PikkarainenResigned28 July 2011[6] Petri Vuorinen28 July 201111th
RoPS John AllenSacked8 August 2011[7] Matti Hiukka8 August 201112th

League table

PosTeamPldWDLGFGAGDPtsQualification or relegation
1HJK (C)3326348623+6381Qualification to Champions League second qualifying round
2FC Inter3316987044+2657Qualification to Europa League second qualifying round[a]
3JJK33141276048+1254Qualification to Europa League first qualifying round
4FC Honka33131465740+1753
5TPS33131194844+450
6KuPS331010134455−1140Qualification to Europa League first qualifying round[a]
7IFK Mariehamn33108153947−838
8MYPA33115173952−1338Qualification to Europa League first qualifying round[b]
9VPS33813123244−1237
10Haka33107163660−2437
11FF Jaro33710164964−1531
12RoPS (R)3358203978−3923Relegation to Ykkönen
Source: soccerway.com
Rules for classification: 1) points; 2) goal difference; 3) number of goals scored.
(C) Champions; (R) Relegated
Notes:

Results

As a consequence of the decreased number of teams immediately prior to the start of the season, the schedule for this season had to be significantly altered. Teams will now play each other a third time after a regular double-round robin schedule; each team will hence play a total of 33 matches. The schedule for the additional round of matches was determined by the final positions of the 2010 season, with the best six teams being assigned an extra home match in the process.

Source: Soccerway
Legend: Blue = home team win; Yellow = draw; Red = away team win.

Matches 23–33

Home \ AwayHAKHJKHONINTJARJJKKPSMARMYPRPSTPSVPS
Haka1–30–42–11–10–1
HJK4–26–00–01–05–02–0
FC Honka1–11–12–22–05–21–1
FC Inter1–12–22–12–05–26–2
FF Jaro1–13–22–31–12–40–1
JJK2–11–22–04–01–2
KuPS1–42–12–12–02–04–2
IFK Mariehamn0–21–15–25–20–3
MYPA2–00–10–12–02–3
RoPS0–23–31–13–10–0
TPS1–22–11–12–12–21–1
VPS1–20–10–01–13–2
Source: Soccerway
Legend: Blue = home team win; Yellow = draw; Red = away team win.

Statistics

Updated to games played on 29 October 2011.

Top scorers

Source: veikkausliiga.com (in Finnish)

RankPlayerClubGoals
1 Timo FuruholmFC Inter22
2 Tamás GruborovicsJJK16
Mika OjalaFC Inter16
Akseli PelvasHJK16
5 Henri LehtonenFC Inter15
Berat SadikHJK15
Demba SavageFC Honka15
8 Babatunde WusuJJK14
9 Papa NiangFF Jaro11
Teemu PukkiHJK11
Ilja VenäläinenKuPS11
Mika ÄäritaloTPS11
13 José Manuel RiveraRoPS10
14 DuduFC Honka9
Irakli SirbiladzeFF Jaro9
Olajide WilliamsKuPS9
173 players8
205 players7
2512 players6
376 players5
439 players4
5220 players3
7232 players2
10458 players1

Monthly awards

MonthCoach of the MonthPlayer of the Month
May[10] Job Dragtsma (FC Inter) Timo Furuholm (FC Inter)
June[11] Antti Muurinen (HJK) Mika Ojala (FC Inter)
July[12] Toni Korkeakunnas (MYPA) Mika Ojala (FC Inter)
August[13] Sami Ristilä (Haka) Sampsa Timoska (MYPA)
September[14] Kari Martonen (JJK) Alexander Ring (HJK)
October[15] Mika Lehkosuo (FC Honka) Akseli Pelvas (HJK)

Players of the year

Source: veikkausliiga.com (in Finnish)

PositionPlayer
Best Goalkeeper Ville Wallén (HJK)
Best Defender Mathias Lindström (HJK)
Best Midfielder Mika Ojala (FC Inter)
Best Striker Timo Furuholm (FC Inter)

References

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