Íþróttafélagið Höttur

Íþróttafélagið Höttur
Founded 1952
Team history 1952 (1952), as Ungmennafélagið Höttur
1974 (1974), as Íþróttafélagið Höttur
Location Egilsstaðir, Iceland
Colors black, white, red
              
President Ásthildur Jónasdóttir [1]
Website hottur.is

Íþróttafélagið Höttur is an Icelandic sports club from Egilsstaðir in the center, of the east side of Iceland. It is primarily known for its basketball, football and track & field departments but also fields departments in badminton, gymnastics, handball, swimming, taekwondo and volleyball.

The club was founded in 1952 as Ungmennafélagið Höttur. On 19 february 1974 it merged with Knattspyrnufélagið Spyrnir and became Íþróttafélagið Höttur.[2]

Basketball

Höttur's men's basketball team plays in the Icelandic top-tier Úrvalsdeild karla after winning Division I in 2017.[3]

Football

Höttur
Full name Íþróttafélagið Höttur (ÍFH)
Nickname(s) Höttur
Founded 1974 (1974)
Ground Vilhjálmsvöllur, Egilsstaðir, Iceland
Capacity 500
Chairman Davíð Þór Sigurðsson
Manager (M) Viðar Jónsson
League 2. deild karla
2. deild kvenna
2017 2. deild karla, 10th of 12
2. deild kvenna, 7th of 9

The club plays its home games at Vilhjálmsvöllur, named after Vilhjálmur Einarsson, the most famous athlete from the area.

Men's football

Höttur men's team plays in 2. deild karla as of 2018.[4]

Achievements

Breiðablik went all the way, and won the 2009 Cup.

Women's football

Höttur women's team plays in 2. deild kvenna as of 2018. It fields a joint team with Fjarðarbyggð and Ungmennafélagið Leiknir under the name Fjarðab/Höttur/Leiknir.[5] In 2017 it finished 7th in the 2. deild kvenna.[6]

References

  1. Höttur
  2. "Íþróttafélagið Höttur". hottur.is (in Icelandic). Retrieved 24 May 2018.
  3. Jónsson, Óskar Ófeigur (March 3, 2017). "Höttur komst aftur upp í Domino´s deildina í kvöld". Vísir.is (in Icelandic). Retrieved 2 September 2017.
  4. "Aðildarfélag - Höttur". ksi.is (in Icelandic). Retrieved 24 May 2018.
  5. "Aðildarfélag - Fjarðab/Höttur/Leiknir". ksi.is (in Icelandic). Retrieved 24 May 2018.
  6. "Staða & úrslit Íslandsmót - 2. deild kvenna - 2017". ksi.is (in Icelandic). Retrieved 24 May 2018.
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