Slovak Super Liga

From Justapedia, unleashing the power of collective wisdom
(Redirected from Fortuna Liga)
Jump to navigation Jump to search
Fortuna liga
File:Fortuna liga logo.png
Founded1993
CountrySlovakia
ConfederationUEFA
Number of teams12
Level on pyramid1
Relegation to2. liga
Domestic cup(s)Slovak Cup
International cup(s)UEFA Champions League
UEFA Europa Conference League
Current championsSlovan Bratislava (12th title)
(2021–22)
Most championshipsSlovan Bratislava (12 titles)
TV partnersDomestic
RTVS
OrangeTV
Markíza
International
Eleven Sports
OneFootball
Websitewww.fortunaliga.sk
Current: 2022–23 Fortuna Liga

The Slovak Super Liga is the top level football league in Slovakia, currently known as the Fortuna Liga due to a sponsorship arrangement.[1] It was formed in 1993 following the dissolution of Czechoslovakia. The record for most titles is eleven, held by Slovan Bratislava, who are the current title holders.

History

Czechoslovakia period

Slovakia was part of Czechoslovakia (1918–1939 and 1945–1993). The first Slovak championship Zväzové Majstrovstvá Slovenska was played between Slovak teams (1925–1933); until 1935-36, no Slovak team played in the Czechoslovak (professional, state) league. During the German occupation of Czechoslovakia, Czech and Slovak clubs competed in their own, separate competitions.[2] The sole Slovak club in the league, ŠK Bratislava, was removed from the league and joined a new Slovak league, the Slovenská liga (1939–1945), in the newly independent Slovak Republic.

Winners:[3]

Slovak winners of the Czechoslovak 1. League

Club Winners Winning Years
SK Slovan Bratislava / NV Bratislava
8
1949, 1950, 1951, 1955, 1969–70, 1973–74, 1974–75, 1991–92
FC Spartak Trnava
5
1967–68, 1968–69, 1970–71, 1971–72, 1972–73
FK Inter Bratislava
1
1958–59

Format

Throughout the Fortuna liga history, the number of clubs competing at the top level in 1996 has increased, in 2000 has been gradually decreased and in 2006 has again increased. Below is a complete record of how many teams played in each season throughout the league's history:

Sponsorship

Period Sponsor Name
1993/94–1996/97 No main sponsor 1. liga
1997/98–2001/02 Reemtsma Mars superliga
2002/03 No main sponsor 1. liga
2003/04–2013/14 Heineken Corgoň liga[4]
2014/15–2022/23 Fortuna Fortuna liga[5]

Current teams (2021–2022)

Team Stadium Capacity or seats
FC DAC 1904 Dunajská Streda MOL Aréna 12,700
FC Spartak Trnava Anton Malatinský Stadium 19,200
FC ViOn Zlaté Moravce Štadión FC ViOn 4,000
AS Trenčín Štadión Sihoť 10,000
FK Senica OMS ARENA Senica 5,070
MFK Ružomberok Štadión pod Čebraťom 4,817
ŠKF Sereď Anton Malatinský Stadium 19,200
MFK Zemplín Michalovce Mestský futbalový štadión 4,440
MŠK Žilina Štadión pod Dubňom 11,258
ŠK Slovan Bratislava Tehelné pole 22,500
FK Pohronie Mestský štadión 2,309
MFK Tatran Liptovský Mikuláš NTC Poprad 5,700

Source for teams:[6]

Champions

Season Champions Runners-up Third place Top scorer Goals Team
1993–94 Slovan Bratislava (1) Inter Bratislava Dunajská Streda Slovakia Pavol Diňa 19 Dunajska Streda
1994–95 Slovan Bratislava (2) 1. FC Košice Inter Bratislava Slovakia Robert Semenik 18 Dukla Banská Bystrica
1995–96 Slovan Bratislava (3) 1. FC Košice Spartak Trnava Slovakia Robert Semenik 29 1. FC Košice
1996–97 1. FC Košice (1) Spartak Trnava Slovan Bratislava Slovakia Jozef Kožlej 22 1. FC Košice
1997–98 1. FC Košice (2) Spartak Trnava Inter Bratislava Slovakia Ľubomír Luhový 17 Spartak Trnava
1998–99 Slovan Bratislava (4) Inter Bratislava Spartak Trnava Slovakia Martin Fabuš 19 Ozeta Dukla Trenčín
1999–00 Inter Bratislava (1) 1. FC Košice Slovan Bratislava Slovakia Szilárd Németh 16 Inter Bratislava
2000–01 Inter Bratislava (2) Slovan Bratislava MFK Ružomberok Slovakia Szilárd Németh 23 Inter Bratislava
2001–02 MŠK Žilina (1) Matador Púchov Inter Bratislava Slovakia Marek Mintál 21 MŠK Žilina
2002–03 MŠK Žilina (2) Artmedia Bratislava Slovan Bratislava Slovakia Marek Mintál
Slovakia Martin Fabuš
20 MŠK Žilina
Laugaricio Trenčín, MŠK Žilina
2003–04 MŠK Žilina (3) Dukla Banská Bystrica MFK Ružomberok Slovakia Roland Števko 17 MFK Ružomberok
2004–05 Artmedia Bratislava (1) MŠK Žilina Dukla Banská Bystrica Slovakia Filip Šebo 22 Artmedia Petržalka
2005–06 MFK Ružomberok (1) Artmedia Bratislava Spartak Trnava Slovakia Róbert Rák
Slovakia Erik Jendrišek
21 FC Nitra
MFK Ružomberok
2006–07 MŠK Žilina (4) Artmedia Bratislava Slovan Bratislava Slovakia Tomáš Oravec 16 Artmedia Petržalka
2007–08 Artmedia Bratislava (2) MŠK Žilina FC Nitra Slovakia Ján Novák 17 MFK Košice
2008–09 Slovan Bratislava (5) MŠK Žilina Spartak Trnava Slovakia Pavol Masaryk 15 ŠK Slovan Bratislava
2009–10 MŠK Žilina (5) Slovan Bratislava Dukla Banská Bystrica Slovakia Róbert Rák 18 FC Nitra
2010–11 Slovan Bratislava (6) FK Senica MŠK Žilina Slovakia Filip Šebo 22 ŠK Slovan Bratislava
2011–12 MŠK Žilina (6) Spartak Trnava Slovan Bratislava Slovakia Pavol Masaryk 18 MFK Ružomberok
2012–13 Slovan Bratislava (7) FK Senica AS Trenčín Slovakia David Depetris 16 AS Trenčín
2013–14 Slovan Bratislava (8) AS Trenčín Spartak Trnava Slovakia Tomáš Malec 14 AS Trenčín
2014–15 AS Trenčín (1) MŠK Žilina Slovan Bratislava Croatia Matej Jelić
Czech Republic Jan Kalabiška
19 MŠK Žilina
FK Senica
2015–16 AS Trenčín (2) Slovan Bratislava Spartak Myjava Curaçao Gino van Kessel 17 AS Trenčín
2016–17 MŠK Žilina (7) Slovan Bratislava MFK Ružomberok Slovakia Filip Hlohovský
Guinea Seydouba Soumah
20 MŠK Žilina
Slovan Bratislava
2017–18 Spartak Trnava (1) Slovan Bratislava Dunajská Streda Slovakia Samuel Mráz 21 MŠK Žilina
2018–19 Slovan Bratislava (9) Dunajská Streda MFK Ružomberok Slovenia Andraž Šporar 29 Slovan Bratislava
2019–20 Slovan Bratislava (10) MŠK Žilina Dunajská Streda Slovenia Andraž Šporar 12 Slovan Bratislava
2020–21 Slovan Bratislava (11) Dunajská Streda Spartak Trnava Poland Dawid Kurminowski 19 MŠK Žilina
2021–22 Slovan Bratislava (12) MFK Ružomberok Spartak Trnava Slovakia Jakub Kadák 13 AS Trenčín

Source for list of championship winners:[7]

Performance by club

Teams in bold are currently in the Superliga.

Club Winners Runners-up Championship seasons Runners-Up seasons
Slovan Bratislava
12
5
1993–94, 1994–95, 1995–96, 1998–99, 2008–09, 2010–11,
2012–13, 2013–14, 2018–19, 2019–20, 2020–21, 2021–22
2000–01, 2009–10, 2015–16, 2016–17, 2017–18
MŠK Žilina
7
5
2001–02, 2002–03, 2003–04, 2006–07, 2009–10, 2011–12, 2016–17 2004–05, 2007–08, 2008–09, 2014–15, 2019–20
VSS Košice
2
3
1996–97, 1997–98 1994–95, 1995–96, 1999–00
Petržalka
2
3
2004–05, 2007–08 2002–03, 2005–06, 2006–07
Inter Bratislava
2
2
1999–00, 2000–01 1993–94, 1998–99
AS Trenčín
2
1
2014–15, 2015–16 2013–14
Spartak Trnava
1
3
2017–18 1996–97, 1997–98, 2011–12
MFK Ružomberok
1
1
2005–06 2021–22
Dunajská Streda
2
2018–19, 2020–21
FK Senica
2
2010–11, 2012–13
Matador Púchov
1
2001–02
Dukla Banská Bystrica
1
2003–04

Titles by city

City Titles Winning Clubs
Coat of Arms of Bratislava.svg Bratislava
16
Slovan Bratislava (12), Inter Bratislava (2), Artmedia Petržalka (2)
Coat of Arms of Žilina.svg Žilina
7
MŠK Žilina (7)
Coat of Arms of Košice.svg Košice
2
VSS Košice (2)
Coat of Arms of Trenčín.svg Trenčín
2
AS Trenčín (2)
Coat of Arms of Ružomberok.svg Ružomberok
1
MFK Ružomberok (1)
Coat of Arms of Trnava.svg Trnava
1
Spartak Trnava (1)

All-Time Table

The All-time table is an overall record of all match results, points, and goals of every team that has played in Slovak Super Liga since its inception in 1993. The table as of the end of 2021–22 season. Teams in bold are part of the 2022–23 Fortuna liga.top-flight. There is no club that played all seasons in top-flight. The best clubs in that respect - MŠK Žilina and Spartak Trnava missed 1 season, Slovan Bratislava missed 2 seasons.

Pos Team S P W D L F A GD Pts
1 Slovan Bratislava 27 878 497 201 180 1570 852 718 1692
2 MŠK Žilina 28 942 457 210 275 1610 1027 583 1568
3 Spartak Trnava 28 932 424 214 292 1292 1018 274 1480
4 MFK Ružomberok 25 848 327 237 284 1106 1030 76 1221
5 AS Trenčín 22 743 294 161 286 1093 1040 53 1046
6 VSS Košice 19 616 241 148 227 835 799 36 863
7 DAC Dunajská Streda 19 602 206 150 246 720 860 (-140) 762 *
8 Dukla Banská Bystrica 19 616 197 169 250 725 786 (-61) 751
9 FC Petržalka 14 463 204 114 145 676 561 115 726
10 Inter Bratislava 14 454 203 102 149 667 519 148 693
11 FC Nitra 18 572 177 128 299 607 875 (-268) 644
12 Tatran Prešov 16 515 148 143 224 529 734 (-205) 577
13 FK Senica 14 448 147 113 186 510 619 (-138) 556
14 ViOn Zlaté Moravce 15 481 131 116 236 497 743 (-246) 517
15 MFK Dubnica 13 424 119 117 188 436 604 (-168) 473
16 Zemplín Michalovce 8 250 71 62 115 268 399 (-131) 275
17 Matador Púchov 6 216 70 53 93 235 294 (-59) 263
18 Chemlon Humenné 7 216 71 43 102 238 323 (-85) 246
19 Baník Prievidza 7 216 59 44 113 239 369 (-130) 212
20 Spartak Myjava 5 132 55 27 50 167 177 (-10) 192
21 iClinic Sereď 5 155 49 39 67 176 237 (-61) 186
22 Železiarne Podbrezová 5 160 47 37 66 166 222 (-56) 183
23 Lokomotíva Košice 5 156 48 37 71 180 241 (-61) 174
24 JAS Bardejov 5 154 45 24 85 159 232 (−73) 159
25 FC Rimavská Sobota 4 126 35 29 62 129 193 (−64) 134
26 FK Pohronie 4 123 26 42 55 128 179 (-51) 120
27 FC Senec 3 91 18 28 45 85 152 (−67) 82
28 Tatran Liptovský Mikuláš 1 32 11 7 14 42 57 (-15) 40
29 MFK Skalica 1 33 6 6 21 30 62 (-32) 24

S = Number of seasons; P = Matches played; W = Matches won; D = Matches drawn; L = Matches lost; F = Goals for; A = Goals against; GD = Goal difference; Pts = Points
aSpartak Myjava withdrew from the league on 21 December 2016, and their results from season 2016-17 were expunged.

  • DAC had 6 points deducted in 2013/14 season.

League at 2022–23:

2022–23 Slovak First Football League
2022–23 2. Liga (Slovakia)
2022–23 3. Liga (Slovakia)
4. Liga (Slovakia)
5. Liga (Slovakia)
Clubs that no longer exist

All time top scorers

The table is accurate as of the end of the 2015–16 season.

# Name Clubs Goals
1. Juraj Halenár Inter Bratislava (35), Artmedia (33), Slovan Bratislava (57) 125
2. Róbert Semeník Dukla B. Bystrica (72), 1.FC Košice (43), FC Nitra (5) 120
3. Pavol Masaryk Spartak Trnava (10), Slovan Bratislava (45), MFK Ružomberok (28), FK Senica (2), MFK Skalica (2) 87
4. Marek Ujlaky Spartak Trnava (79), Slovan Bratislava (2), FC Senec (3), ViOn Z. Moravce (2) 86
5. Szilárd Németh Slovan Bratislava (25), 1.FC Košice (21), Inter Bratislava (39) 85

In European competitions

UEFA coefficients

The following data indicates Slovak coefficient rankings between European football leagues.[8]

Transfers

Fortuna liga have produced numerous players who have gone on to represent the Slovak national football team. Over the last period there has been a steady increase of young players leaving Fortuna liga after a few years of first team football and moving on to play football in leagues of a higher standard.

Record departures

Rank Player From To Fee Year
1. Slovakia Szilárd Németh Inter Bratislava England Middlesbrough F.C. €6.75 million* 2001[11]
2. Slovenia Andraž Šporar Slovan Bratislava Portugal Sporting CP €6 million[A] 2020[12]
3. Slovakia László Bénes MŠK Žilina Germany Mönchengladbach €5.5 million* 2016[13]
4. Slovakia Róbert Boženík MŠK Žilina Netherlands Feyenoord €4.6 million* 2020[14]
5. Slovakia Dávid Hancko MŠK Žilina Italy Fiorentina €4.5 million* 2018[15]
6. Slovakia Peter Dubovský Slovan Bratislava Spain Real Madrid €4.3 million* (110 mil. SKK) 1993[16]
7. Brazil Wesley AS Trenčín Belgium Club Brugge €4.2 million* 2016[17]
8. Slovakia Tomáš Hubočan MŠK Žilina Russia Zenit Saint Petersburg €3.8 million 2008[18]
9. Slovakia Matúš Bero AS Trenčín Turkey Trabzonspor €3.5 million* 2016[19]
10. Slovakia Dominik Greif Slovan Bratislava Spain RCD Mallorca €2.5 million* 2021[20]
Slovakia David Strelec Slovan Bratislava Italy Spezia Calcio €2.5 million 2021[21]
11. Slovakia Miroslav Karhan Spartak Trnava Spain Real Betis €2.3 million 1999[22]
12. Slovakia Vladimír Kinder Slovan Bratislava England Middlesbrough €2.2 million (64 mil. SKK) 1996[23]
Ivory Coast Vakoun Issouf Bayo DAC Dunajská Streda Scotland Celtic €2.2 million* 2019[24]
13. Nigeria Hilary Gong AS Trenčín Netherlands Vitesse €2.0 million 2018[25]
Poland Jakub Kiwior MŠK Žilina Italy Spezia €2.0 million* 2021[26]
14. Venezuela Eric Ramírez DAC Dunajská Streda Ukraine FC Dynamo Kyiv €1.8 million 2021[27]
15. Serbia Nemanja Matić MFK Košice England Chelsea €1.75 million 2009[28]
  1. ^ Fee may eventually rise above €7 million.

*-unofficial fee

Record arrivals

Rank Player From To Fee Year
1. Nigeria Rabiu Ibrahim Belgium Gent Slovan Bratislava €1.0 million 2017[29]
2. Hungary Dávid Holman Hungary Debrecen Slovan Bratislava €0.7 million 2017
Trinidad and Tobago Lester Peltier Slovakia AS Trenčín Slovan Bratislava €0.7 million 2012[30]
Slovakia Marek Špilár Slovakia Tatran Prešov 1.FC Košice €0.7 million (20mil SKK)* 1997[31]
Hungary András Telek Hungary Ferencváros 1.FC Košice €0.7 million (20mil SKK)* 1997[31]
3. Slovenia Kenan Bajrić Slovenia Olimpija Ljubljana Slovan Bratislava €0.6 million 2018[32][33]
Slovenia Andraž Šporar Switzerland Basel Slovan Bratislava €0.6 million 2018[34][35][36]
Slovakia Samuel Štefánik Netherlands NEC Nijmegen Slovan Bratislava €0.6 million 2014

The Golden Star

Based on an idea of Umberto Agnelli, the honor of Golden Star for Sports Excellence was introduced to recognize sides that have won multiple championships or other honours by the display of gold stars on their team badges and jerseys.

The current officially sanctioned Fortuna liga stars are:

References

  1. ^ "Fortuna liga: Standings". Slovakia: National League. FIFA. Archived from the original on 21 January 2012. Retrieved 23 February 2012.
  2. ^ "Where's My Country? Czech clubs in the German football structure 1938–1944". Rsssf.com. Archived from the original on 3 March 2016. Retrieved 27 January 2016.
  3. ^ "Slovakia - List of Champions". www.rsssf.com. Archived from the original on 6 September 2015. Retrieved 1 May 2018.
  4. ^ a.s., Petit Press. "Dnes prvýkrát na futbalovú Corgoň ligu". sme.sk. Archived from the original on 8 July 2017. Retrieved 1 May 2018.
  5. ^ Teraz.sk (20 May 2014). "Najvyššia futbalová súťaž mení názov, novým partnerom bude Fortuna". teraz.sk. Archived from the original on 30 June 2017. Retrieved 1 May 2018.
  6. ^ "Tímy". Fortuna liga. Archived from the original on 5 October 2017. Retrieved 1 May 2018.
  7. ^ Karel Stokkermans (10 June 2011). "Slovak Republic: I liga SR". Slovakia - List of Champions. RSSSF. Archived from the original on 6 September 2015. Retrieved 17 November 2011.
  8. ^ "UEFA European Cup Coefficients Database". Bert Kassies. Retrieved 23 August 2019.
  9. ^ "UEFA Country Ranking 2019 – kassiesA – Xs4all". Kassiesa.net. Retrieved 21 July 2022.
  10. ^ UEFA.com. "Club coefficients | UEFA Coefficients". UEFA.com. Retrieved 2021-02-02.
  11. ^ "Szilárd Németh: Príbeh posledného gólového slovenského útočníka". 10 January 2018.
  12. ^ https://profutbal.sk/clanok/239709-sporar-uz-v-lisabone-absolvoval-prehliadku-som-stastny-ze-som-tu[dead link]
  13. ^ "Bénesov rekordný prestup zo Slovenska, viac než päť miliónov! | ProFutbal.sk". profutbal.sk.
  14. ^ s, SPORT SK, s r o & Ringier Axel Springer Slovakia a. "Boženík definitíne hráčom Feyenoordu". Šport.sk. Archived from the original on 2020-01-27. Retrieved 2020-01-27.
  15. ^ s, SPORT SK, s r o & Ringier Axel Springer Slovakia a. "Dávid Hancko po prestupe do Fiorentiny aj o tom, ako sestričky v nemocnici hovorili o Škriniarovi". Šport.sk.
  16. ^ "Greško bol najdrahší". Nový Čas. 5 August 2006.
  17. ^ "Rekordny trencan". sportovymagazin.sk. Retrieved 2016-06-11.
  18. ^ "Hubo?an zo ?iliny do Petrohradu za 120 mili?nov! - Profutbal.sk". Archived from the original on 3 March 2016. Retrieved 5 October 2016.
  19. ^ "Sportove noviny". Markiza. Archived from the original on 2016-07-24. Retrieved 2016-07-21.
  20. ^ "Greif viac dostal než odrobil. Weiss vysvetlil, prečo napriek výhradám pokračujú Ratao a Bajrič".
  21. ^ "POTVRDENÉ: Slovan opúšťa talent, z TOP ligy príde 7-miestna suma!". 31 August 2021.
  22. ^ "Trnava prestupom Saba pekne zarobila: Tromfne niekto rekord Hubočana?". www1.pluska.sk. August 11, 2015.
  23. ^ a.s, Petit Press. "Rekord držal pätnásť rokov. Greško už nie je najdrahším Slovákom". sport.sme.sk.
  24. ^ a.s, Petit Press. "Bayo prestúpil do Celticu, ide o najväčší transfer v histórii Dunajskej Stredy". sport.sme.sk.
  25. ^ "DPG Media Privacy Gate".
  26. ^ "MŠK Žilina definitívne opúšťa opora stredu obrany. Smeruje za Davidom Strelcom".
  27. ^ "Slovenská liga prichádza o ďalšie veľké meno. Opora Dunajskej Stredy do ukrajinského veľkoklubu".
  28. ^ a.s, Petit Press. "Do Košíc prišiel zadarmo, Chelsea stál Matič desiatky miliónov eur". sport.sme.sk.
  29. ^ s, SPORT SK, s r o & Ringier Axel Springer Slovakia a. "Potvrdené! Ibrahim Rabiu do Slovana Bratislava za rekordnú sumu". Šport.sk.
  30. ^ "Slovan vyhodil hore komínom približne dva milióny eur". 25 December 2015.
  31. ^ a b "Tri slovenské ochutnávky v Lige majstrov za 25 rokov. A čo bolo potom?". Aktuality.sk.
  32. ^ "Bajrič za 600-tisíc hráčom Slovana".
  33. ^ "Slovan hlási posilu do defenzívy, Bajrič bol pre "belasých" prvou voľbou | ProFutbal.sk". Archived from the original on 2020-01-24. Retrieved 2020-01-24.
  34. ^ "Andraž Šporar na lane veľkoklubu: Koľko môže Slovan zarobiť? | Šport7.sk". 16 December 2019.
  35. ^ "Šporar sa vyjadril k prestupu do Trabzonsporu | ProFutbal.sk". Archived from the original on 2020-01-24.
  36. ^ "EFotbal.cz » Zahraničí : Na Šporara se stojí řada a jsou v ní i velkokluby. Nejdražší přestup ze slovenské ligy se blíží".

External links

it:Campionato slovacco di calcio