Pärnu JK

Estonian football club


title: "Pärnu JK" type: doc version: 1 created: 2026-02-28 author: "Wikipedia contributors" status: active scope: public tags: ["defunct-football-clubs-in-estonia", "women's-football-clubs-in-estonia", "1989-establishments-in-estonia", "association-football-clubs-established-in-1989", "sport-in-pärnu", "pärnu-jk", "association-football-clubs-disestablished-in-2020", "2020-disestablishments-in-estonia"] description: "Estonian football club" topic_path: "sports" source: "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pärnu_JK" license: "CC BY-SA 4.0" wikipedia_page_id: 0 wikipedia_revision_id: 0

::summary Estonian football club ::

::data[format=table title="Infobox football club"]

FieldValue
clubnamePärnu
imageLogo of Pärnu JK.png
upright0.8
fullnamePärnu Jalgpalliklubi
founded
dissolved12 January 2020
groundPärnu Rannastaadion
capacity1,501
managerAnastassia Morkovkina
Kristina Bannikova
leagueNaiste Meistriliiga
season2017
position1st
websitehttp://www.parnujk.ee
body1094B9B
leftarm1FFFFFF
rightarm1FFFFFF
shorts1000000
socks1094B9B
::

| clubname = Pärnu | image = Logo of Pärnu JK.png | upright = 0.8 | caption = | fullname = Pärnu Jalgpalliklubi | nickname = | founded = | dissolved = 12 January 2020 | ground = Pärnu Rannastaadion | capacity = 1,501 | chairman = | manager = Anastassia Morkovkina Kristina Bannikova | league = Naiste Meistriliiga | season = 2017 | position = 1st | website = http://www.parnujk.ee |pattern_b1= |body1= 094B9B |pattern_la1= |leftarm1= FFFFFF |pattern_ra1= |rightarm1=FFFFFF |shorts1=000000 |socks1=094B9B |pattern_b2= |body2= |pattern_la2= |leftarm2= |pattern_ra2= |rightarm2= |shorts2= |socks2= Pärnu Jalgpalliklubi, commonly known as PJK, or simply as Pärnu, was a women's football team based in Pärnu, Estonia. Having won a record 13 Naiste Meistriliiga titles, 6 Estonian Women's Cups and 7 Estonian Women's Supercups, the team stepped down from women's football in 2019. The club's home ground was Pärnu Rannastaadion.

The club announced their dissolvement at the end of December 2019 and played their last game on 12 January 2020.

The club's men's team currently plays in the third division Esiliiga B. ::figure[src="https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/2/22/Pärnu_JK_naiskond.IMG_3215.JPG" caption="Pärnu JK - VfL Wolfsburg, 2013/14 UEFA Women's Champions League"] ::

History

Pärnu Jalgpalliklubi was founded in 1989. The team won their first league title in the 1994–95 season. Pärnu made their European debut in the 2004–05 UEFA Women's Cup, finishing fourth in their group in the first qualifying round. In the 2013–14 UEFA Women's Champions League, Pärnu finished as runners-up in their group and advanced to the knockout-stage, where they were defeated by eventual champions VfL Wolfsburg 0–27 on aggregate.

Players

First-team squad

:As of 13 August 2018.

Honours

Record in UEFA competitions

All results (home, away and aggregate) list Pärnu's goal tally first.

::data[format=table]

CompetitionRoundClubHomeAwayAggregate
2004–05First qualifying roundHUN Viktória FC-Szombathely0–4
BLR Bobruichanka Bobruisk (Host)1–2
MDA Codru Anenii Noi1–5
2005–06First qualifying roundFIN FC United (Host)0–2
NOR Røa1–9
ISL Valur1–8
2006–07First qualifying roundSRB Masinac Classic Niš1–6
BEL Rapide Wezemaal0–7
Slovenia Pomurje (Host)1–7
2007–08First qualifying roundBUL NSA Sofia1–3
BLR Universitet Vitebsk0–6
GRE PAOK (Host)2–3
2011–12Qualifying roundSLO Krka Novo Mesto (Host)2–1
SPA Rayo Vallecano1–4
IRE Peamount United1–5
2012–13Qualifying roundKAZ BIIK Kazygurt0–3
BUL NSA Sofia0–2
SRB Spartak Subotica (Host)0–1
2013–14Qualifying roundGRE PAOK3–1
FIN PK-35 Vantaa (Host)0–0
MKD Biljanini Izvori3–1
Round of 32GER VfL Wolfsburg0–140–130–27
2014–15Qualifying roundHUN MTK0–3
SVN Pomurje0–4
MNE Ekonomist (Host)2–1
2015–16Qualifying roundROU Olimpia Cluj0–4
SVN Pomurje (Host)1–2
MNE Ekonomist2–1
2016–17Qualifying roundROU Olimpia Cluj1–7
POL Medyk Konin (Host)0–1
MNE Breznica2–2
2017–18Qualifying roundBEL Standard Liège0–2
NED Ajax1–2
LAT Rīgas FS2–0
2018–19Qualifying roundMDA ȘS Anenii Noi2–0
ALB Vllaznia1–3
BIH Sarajevo (Host)1–2
::

References

References

  1. "Ajalugu". Pärnu.
  2. "Pärnu Rannastaadion". Estonian Football Association.
  3. (12 January 2020). "Piiroja Pärnu JK lõpust: see ei olnud rahaliselt enam võimalik".
  4. (16 October 2013). "Swedish relief as Wolfsburg set record". [[UEFA]].
  5. "Pärnu JK (N)". Estonian Football Association.

::callout[type=info title="Wikipedia Source"] This article was imported from Wikipedia and is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 License. Content has been adapted to SurfDoc format. Original contributors can be found on the article history page. ::

defunct-football-clubs-in-estoniawomen's-football-clubs-in-estonia1989-establishments-in-estoniaassociation-football-clubs-established-in-1989sport-in-pärnupärnu-jkassociation-football-clubs-disestablished-in-20202020-disestablishments-in-estonia