Rapid Wien II

Rapid Wien II Standings

2. Liga crest2. Liga

Key:
  1. Promotion
  2. Relegation
PosTeamPWDLFA+/-PTSForm
1Austria Lustenau crestAustria Lustenau25145634231147
L
W
W
L
D
2SKN St. Poelten crestSKN St. Poelten25144740261446
D
D
L
W
W
3Floridsdorfer AC crestFloridsdorfer AC26136737172045
D
W
L
L
W
4SKU Amstetten crestSKU Amstetten26101153732541
D
L
L
W
D
5Admira Wacker crestAdmira Wacker241011347252241
D
D
D
L
W
6FC Liefering crestFC Liefering2510873738-138
W
D
W
L
L
7Austria Wien II crestAustria Wien II2511593031-138
L
D
W
D
L
8First Vienna FC crestFirst Vienna FC259792724334
D
D
W
W
L
9SV Austria Salzburg crestSV Austria Salzburg257993135-430
D
D
D
D
L
10SPG HOGO Wels crestSPG HOGO Wels2586113435-130
W
W
D
L
W
11SK Austria Klagenfurt crestSK Austria Klagenfurt2586112937-827
W
D
W
L
W
12Rapid Wien II crestRapid Wien II2575132942-1326
L
L
W
L
W
13Kapfenberger SV crestKapfenberger SV2474132844-1625
W
L
L
W
D
14Sturm Graz II crestSturm Graz II2456132337-1421
D
L
W
L
W
15SW Bregenz crestSW Bregenz2539133451-1715
L
L
W
L
D
16SV Stripfing crestSV Stripfing00000000

Regionalliga crestRegionalliga

Key:
  1. Promotion
  2. Relegation
PosTeamPWDLFA+/-PTSForm
1Rapid Wien II crestRapid Wien II30215473254868
W
W
W
W
W
2SR Donaufeld crestSR Donaufeld30168668373156
W
L
D
W
W
3SV Leobendorf crestSV Leobendorf30148852391350
D
L
D
W
L
4Kremser SC crestKremser SC3013984537848
D
L
L
D
W
5SC Wiener Viktoria crestSC Wiener Viktoria30121175244847
L
W
W
D
D
6FC Marchfeld Donauauen crestFC Marchfeld Donauauen30137104645146
L
W
L
W
L
7Wiener SC crestWiener SC30111095246643
W
D
L
W
L
8Austria Wien II crestAustria Wien II301010104942740
W
L
D
L
L
9FCM Traiskirchen crestFCM Traiskirchen30108126052838
L
D
D
D
W
10Oberwart crestOberwart30114154052-1237
L
W
W
D
L
11TWL Elektra crestTWL Elektra30810123443-934
L
D
D
L
W
12SC Neusiedl am See 1919 crestSC Neusiedl am See 19193096153860-2233
L
D
L
L
W
13Favoritner AC crestFavoritner AC30611133454-2029
L
L
D
L
D
14FC Mauerwerk crestFC Mauerwerk30611132858-3029
W
D
W
L
W
15SCU Ardagger crestSCU Ardagger30610142237-1528
W
W
D
L
L
16ASV Drassburg crestASV Drassburg3076173860-2227
W
D
D
W
L

Frequently asked questions

A group of workers from the Woolwich Arsenal Armanent Factory, who called themselves Dial Square, formed a football team in 1886. They would later rename themselves to Royal Arsenal in the same year. In 1893, the club was renamed to Woolwich Arsenal, before finally being named just Arsenal in 1919, six years after they moved to Highbury.

American billionaire Enos Stanley Kroenke is the owner of Arsenal, purchasing the club via Arsenal Holdings Limited, a subsidiary of Kroenke Sports & Entertainment (KSE).

The Emirates Stadium is the name of Arsenal's stadium. It has been the team's home ground since 2006, replacing Highbury, which served as Arsenal's home venue from 1913.

The Emirates Stadium has a capacity of 60,704 and is among the UK's biggest football venues.

Arsenal have won 48 trophies till date, including 13 league titles and a record 14 FA Cups.

Arsenal have 13 English top flight titles to their name, making them the third-most successful team behind Man Utd and Liverpool. They, however, won their last title over two decades ago.

London-born Irish defender David O'Leary sits at the top of the list for most Arsenal appearances in history. O'Leary spent 18 years at the club and made 722 appearances in all competitions, ahead of Tony Adams, George Armstrong, and Lee Dixon.

Thierry Henry is Arsenal's leading goalscorer of all-time with 228 goals in 377 games. No other Arsenal player has scored over 200 goals for the club, with Ian Wright sitting in second place (185 goals in 288 games).

Thierry Henry, Cesc Fabregas, Dennis Bergkamp, Mesut Ozil, Robert Pires, and Robin van Persie are among the popular footballing names to have played for Arsenal.

Arsene Wenger, Unai Emery, George Graham, and Herbert Chapman are among the biggest names to have been in charge of Arsenal throughout their notable history.

Arsenal have a pretty unique nickname, called The Gunners. This nickname is a reference to the club's origins in the late 19th century, when a group of workers from the Royal Arsenal armanent factory in Woolwich formed the club. That's also the reason why the Arsenal badge includes a cannon.