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Belgian football club From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Racing White Daring Molenbeek, also known as RWD Molenbeek and often referred to as RWDM, is a Belgian professional football club based in Molenbeek-Saint-Jean, Brussels. As of the 2024–25 season, the club plays the second after relegation from the 2023–24 Belgian Pro League, the club's first season back in the top flight. The club is seen in Belgium as a continuation of previous clubs with the same name that went out of business.
You can help expand this article with text translated from the corresponding article in Dutch. (February 2024) Click [show] for important translation instructions.
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Full name | Racing White Daring Molenbeek | ||
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Founded | 2015 | (takeover)||
Ground | Edmond Machtens Stadium | ||
Capacity | 12,266 | ||
Owner | John Textor | ||
Head coach | Yannick Ferrera | ||
League | Challenger Pro League | ||
2023–24 | Belgian Pro League, 15th of 16 (relegated) | ||
Website | https://www.rwdm.be/nl/ | ||
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The club was founded in 1951 as Standard Wetteren. In 2015, Wetteren folded and merged with another club, liberating the matricule which was sold to people wanting to revive the former RWDM with matricule 47 which folded in 2002. As such the new club was named RWDM47. The club quickly rose through the ranks, winning two consecutive promotions from the fifth to the third tier. In December 2021, the club announced that it had come under the ownership of American business executive John Textor, who also holds stakes in English side Crystal Palace, Brazilian side Botafogo and French side Lyon.[1]
RWDM's academy is considered one of the best in Belgium, and many footballers have come from there, notably Adnan Januzaj and Michy Batshuayi to name a few Belgian internationals as well as a few internationals for other countries.[2][3]
On 13 May 2023, RWDM secured promotion to the Belgian Pro League by winning the Challenger Pro League title in a narrow 1–0 victory over RSCA Futures, with Mickaël Biron scoring the winning goal.[4][5] They went straight back down at the end of their first season back in the top flight.
RWDM's traditional rival is Union Saint-Gilloise,[6] which goes back to the 19th century when RWDM were known as Daring Club.[7] RWDM also have a rivalry with RSC Anderlecht, with just 3 kilometres separating the two clubs and the fixtures often taking over the mantle of the "Derby of Brussels" in the professional era due to Union's relative decline. RWDM also have rivalries with Eendracht Aalst, Lierse,[8] and RFC Liège.[9]
RWDM drew support from across the Belgian capital due to its merger of 4 teams, as well as in the Periphery, where many Brusseleirs migrated to, in contrast to the more locally based Saint-Gilles support and the nationwide Anderlecht support.[10] It had high attendances for a big part of its existence as RWDM, until financial troubles and the subsequent changeover with Johan Vermeesch in charge of the new club led to the name change to FC Brussels,[11] and caused a split in the fanbase. During their years as FC Brussels, the Ultra group Brussels Power 05 emerged,[12] while many of the "old school" casuals "Brussels Boys" boycotted. These days both supporter groups sit in the same Bloc A.
Note: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules; some limited exceptions apply. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.
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Note: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules; some limited exceptions apply. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.
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Position | Staff |
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Chairman & Owner | John Textor |
President | Thierry Dailly |
Head Coach | Yannick Ferrera |
Assistant Coach | Pepijn Mertens Siebe van der Bosch |
Goalkeeper Coach | Thierry Berghmans |
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