Mjällby, a modest team from a remote fishing village by the Baltic Sea, has achieved one of the most surprising feats in European football by winning the Swedish league title last Monday. The 2-0 victory against IFK Gothenburg secured Mjällby an insurmountable 11-point lead, with three matchdays remaining in the Allsvenskan, the top tier of Swedish football.
This unexpected triumph has been compared to Leicester’s in the English Premier League in 2016, a fairytale story.
This is the first major trophy for Mjällby, a club from the south coast of Sweden, whose team is mainly made up of locally born players. They play their matches in a stadium with a capacity of 6,000 spectators in the nearby village of Hällevik, with a population of around 800 inhabitants, and whose budget is much smaller than that of the larger teams in the country.Just nine years ago, Mjällby was one match away from being relegated to the fourth Swedish division. The team held on, achieved consecutive promotions in 2018 and 2019, and has been revitalized by the decisions and strategies implemented by Magnus Emeus, a local businessman who became president in 2015. This season, Mjällby, led by Anders Torstensson, a school principal, has only lost one match and has 66 points, just one short of Malmö’s total record in the 101-year history of the Allsvenskan. Mjällby will participate in the qualifying rounds of the Champions League next season. It will be the first time the team competes in a European competition. The match in Gothenburg was briefly delayed in stoppage time because some Mjällby fans jumped from the stand housing the away supporters, apparently ready to jump onto the field in celebration. They returned to the stands after an appeal from the Mjällby players.This is something I never thought would happen in my life. I am incredibly grateful to be part of this group. We showed that the collective can take you incredibly far.
Jacob Bergström, Mjällby forward
