Brønshøj Boldklub
| Full name | Brønshøj Boldklub | ||
|---|---|---|---|
| Nickname | Hvepsene (The Wasps) | ||
| Founded | 1919 | ||
| Ground | Tingbjerg Idrætspark, Brønshøj | ||
| Capacity | 4,000 | ||
| Chairman | Jan Juul Jørgensen | ||
| Manager | Bo Holden & Jan Faber | ||
| League | Danish 3rd Division (IV) | ||
| 2023–24 | Denmark Series – Promotion Group East, 2nd (promoted) | ||
| Website | http://www.bronshojboldklub.dk/ | ||
|
| |||
Brønshøj BK, full name Brønshøj Boldklub, is a Danish football club located in the outskirts of Copenhagen. The club was founded on 15 May 1919.[1]
History
Early years
Brønshøj BK's first decades were spent in local leagues in the Copenhagen area, and also saw mergers with other local teams, although always retaining the name Brønshøj Boldklub.
Brønshøj Boldklub had their first appearance in Danmarksturneringen (the national league system) in the season of 1944–45 after winning a qualification group, and the team has continuously since then been a part of the Danmarksturneringen. The next decade was spent yo-yoing between the two lower tiers, the team almost getting demoted out of the league system in the season of 1952–53. They were saved only by a marginally better goal difference than Hvidovre IF.[2]
Division 1
The late 1950s saw the team make a positive turn around, first winning the 3rd tier in 1955–56,[3] and then winning the 2nd tier in 1961,[4] thereby entering the 1st tier (1. division) for the first time ever in 1962. Relegation followed in 1964. The team stuck in 2. division for a handful of seasons being runners up in 1969, and thus getting promoted to 1.division yet again. The stay in the highest league lasted three seasons.
This part of the century in a way marked the best days of Brønshøj BK. The team did not make the top of the 1st tier, but they were relatively competitive in the league due to the strict code of amateurism that Danish football was under at the time. The team also managed to make it to the semifinals of the Danish Cup three times, and additionally about a dozen players appeared on the national team.
The peak
The team was again yo-yoing between the two lower tiers for several seasons, before two consecutive promotions again saw them a place in the 1st tier (1.division) in 1983.
Brønshøj BK reached its peak in the season of 1984 under the guidance of manager Ebbe Skovdahl, when the team finished in 5th place in 1. division, the club's all-time highest.[5] The club was relegated from the 1. division in 1989, and has not since then been represented in the highest tier.
The explanation for this last fact could be that in the meantime, the national league system had undergone a dramatic change, with the introduction of professional football in 1978. Brønshøj BK did (and do) sign contracts with some of their players, but they have never featured a full-time professional squad, so even today, this is meaningful as it shows an economical responsibility that has kept the club free from the bankruptcies, overstretching of budgets and mergings, that has been the fate of several other Danish teams over the years. At the same time though, the shown responsibility has made it increasingly hard to compete with the top-flight teams.
Recent years
The team has been going up and down between the two lower tiers since 1990, although having had a string of seasons in the 2nd tier from 2010–11 to 2014–15 under the auspices of manager Bo Henriksen. This after winning the 3rd tier (2. division-East) in 2009/10.[6] Brønshøj Boldklub is currently participating in the 3rd tier after relegation in 2015. The team only narrowly escaped demotion from the national league system in 2018, with a win in the last match of the season against Greve Fodbold.
Notable players
- Most appearances: Brian Kaus, 350 appearances in all. (1985–90, 1996–2004)[7]
- Most goals: Kaj Petterson, 314 goals. (1938–54)[8]
- Preben (Benny) Arentoft: played 96 games, 1961-65; club manager, 1974-79. Became the first Danish footballer to win a European cup title when Newcastle United (England) won the Inter-Cities Fairs Cup in 1969.
National team
11 players in all have represented Brønshøj BK on the Danish national team, almost all of them in the period from the late 1950s to the early 1970s. The last player to represent the club on the Danish national team was Kent Nielsen in 1986.[9] In 2018 Brønshøj BK was represented by 2 players on the Gambia national football team.
First representative on a national team: Ove Andersen in 1955.
Most caps: Per Røntved, 21 matches from 1970 to 1972. (He had 75 caps overall)
Current squad
As of 28 January 2026 Note: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules; some limited exceptions apply. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.
|
|
Achievements
- 14 seasons in the Highest Danish League
- 32 seasons in the Second Highest Danish League
- 20 seasons in the Third Highest Danish League
Brønshøj BK has made it to the semi-finals of the Landspokalturneringen (the equivalent of the English FA cup) four times. That was in the seasons of 1955/56, 1957/58, 1960/61 and 1987/88.
Club culture and supporters
Brønshøj Boldklub, founded in 1919, has historically been rooted in being a working-class neighbourhood club located within Copenhagen. Since moving its home matches to Tingbjerg Idrætspark in 1976, the club has been closely associated with a modest, local ground that lacks physical separation between players and spectators. Tingbjerg has shaped the club’s social character, with limited facilities, low ticket prices, and regular informal contact between supporters, players, and staff before and after matches. The ground does not meet Superliga standards, a fact that has been repeatedly cited by club officials and supporters as reinforcing the club’s position outside fully commercialised professional football. From at least the early 2010s, both Brønshøj Boldklub and significant sections of its supporter base have expressed reluctance toward promotion, citing concerns that higher-level football would weaken the club’s connection to Tingbjerg and its local community. Promotion has been associated with increased commercial pressures, higher operating costs, and the likelihood of relocating home matches away from Tingbjerg Idrætspark.[10][11]
The supporter culture has consisted of both long-standing local followers and younger supporters from nearby working-class and inner-city districts such as Nørrebro and Copenhagen’s northwest. The official supporters’ club, Hvepsene (meaning "the Wasps"), has focused on continuity, family involvement, and fundraising for the club, while the unofficial group Brønshøj Drunken Army emerged in the late 2000s as a more vocal and visible presence. By 2012, the Drunken Army was known for coordinated chanting, standing support, and a predominantly left-wing political identity, as well as for enforcing informal norms against racist or discriminatory behaviour among spectators. Politically, Brønshøj is identified as a left-leaning workers' club. During a match against Aarhus Gymnastikforening in 2015, Brønshøj supporters confronted the presence of far-right fans associated with the group "White Pride", blocking the away section and using chants to prevent them from entering the stadium.[12] The political character of Brønshøj Boldklub is also evident in its local rivalry with Akademisk Boldklub, known as the Mose derby. The clubs are geographically close but socially distinct: Brønshøj draws from working-class and immigrant communities, while AB historically required players to have university degrees. The derby represents a cultural clash between academics and workers, yet players and supporters maintain a tradition of camaraderie, often sharing a beer after the match regardless of the result.[12]
Brønshøj has been described as a club where players and supporters are closely interwoven in everyday practice. Players regularly socialised with supporters at Tingbjerg after matches, including shared meals and drinks, and were expected to engage with the surrounding community.[11] The club’s youth section reflected the demographic composition of Tingbjerg, with many players from immigrant backgrounds, and first-team players were involved in school and local activities.[11]
References
- ^ "Brønshøj Boldklub - Divisionsfodbold siden 1945 - Historie / Klubben / Forside". www.bronshojboldklub.dk.
- ^ "danskfodbold.com - DBU's Officielle Statistikere". www.danskfodbold.com.
- ^ "danskfodbold.com - DBU's Officielle Statistikere". www.danskfodbold.com.
- ^ "danskfodbold.com - DBU's Officielle Statistikere". www.danskfodbold.com.
- ^ "danskfodbold.com - DBU's Officielle Statistikere". www.danskfodbold.com.
- ^ "danskfodbold.com - DBU's Officielle Statistikere". www.danskfodbold.com.
- ^ "Brian Kaus". Archived from the original on 11 January 2018. Retrieved 10 February 2017.
- ^ "BFlest scorede mål for BB". Archived from the original on 4 March 2016. Retrieved 9 September 2015.
- ^ "Landsholdsdatabasen spillersøgning". www.dbu.dk.
- ^ Johannesen, Sven (2 June 2012). "Klubben der ikke må rykke op". Dagbladet Information (in Danish). Retrieved 2 January 2026.
- ^ a b c Olsen, Niels (13 July 2025). "Hvepsene fra Brønshøj – altid mod oddsene". POV.international (in Danish). Retrieved 2 January 2026.
- ^ a b Havskov Hansen, Mads (22 December 2015). "Politiske fodboldklubber: I Brønshøj må elitesport aldrig blive elitært". piopio.dk (in Danish). Retrieved 2 January 2026.
External links
- Brønshøj Boldklub – official site
- Brønshøj Boldklub – clubfacts at the Danish Football Association's database (archived 27 September 2007)
- Doctor Brønshøj – Independent supporters' site with summary in English (archived 28 September 2007)