# 34 Sturm Graz (Home, 2008/2009)
I guess Sturm Graz first got football fans attention not because their good Champions League campaigns, but because they named their stadium after Arnold Schwarzenneger. That's right, the muscle-man, and austrian-born Governor of California was important enough in his home region to see the local stadium holding his long name.
The stadium was built in 2000 and 2001, when Sturm was doing quite well both in domestic and european competitions. I do remember them playing in the Champions League, and I found out about their ground's bizarre name in a UEFA magazine, when I was no more than 10 or something. It didn't make much sense back then, either.
Look at how much money they spent in those letters. |
Amazing. |
Yep, that saved them a lot of money. |
I got the shirt a few months ago, as a Christmas gift from my girlfriend. It was the perfect thing, and there's no way I could complain, as I picked it myself. I've seen many on eBay, but I was really into this one. It was a special design for to celebrate the club's centenary, and is plain black. But the sponsors make sure it looks a bit colourful.
Overall, it's a nice shirt. It's not that usual to find european shirts with such big sponsors, except in Scandinavia. They do have some heavy sponsored kits.
The special logo 1909-2009. |
Here's a old Sturm Graz kit that might be familiar to some of you:
It'd be cool to get that one.
Anyway, after very tough years (when the club faced severe financial problems), things seem to be back on track in Graz. They were champions last year, beating favourites Red Bull Salzburg and Austria Wien. Nice one.
And here comes the best part: do you know who's leading Sturm Graz to glory right now? The legendary FRANCO FODA. A former German international, that was never a star anywhere, except in Portugal. His name is some kind of myth around here: many people believed he didn't really exist, but yes, Franco FODA is here to stay. In case you don't speak portuguese, imagine his name was Franco Fuck. It'd be funny, right?
Foda first came to public notoriety in Portugal when Benfica played against Bayer Leverkusen (Champions League or UEFA Cup). I'm too young to remember the match, but people say journalists were quite embarassed and tried to figure out nice ways to say his name without saying FODA. Not easy.
But Franco is not the only Foda in Sturm. His son, Sandro Foda, currently plays for the Graz side too. I'm sure he'll face a portuguese team sometime: it's destiny.
Here's Sandro Foda in a nice shirt. |
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