FK Bohumín

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FK Bohumín
Fkcoringbohumin.gif
Basic data
Surname FK Bohumín
Seat Bohumín , Czech Republic
founding 1931
Colours blue White
First soccer team
Venue FK Bohumín Stadium
Places nb
league 5th league
(Moravskoslezský přebor)
2006/07 6th place
home
Away

The FK Bohumín is a Czech football club from the Moravian-Silesian city Bohumín . It was founded in 1931 as AFK Nový Bohumín . He played from 1972 to 1974 and from 1976 to 1983 in the 2nd Czechoslovak League, and from 1993 to 1995 in the 2nd Czech League .

Club history

It was not until 1928 that a Czech football club was founded in Bohumín, until then there were only clubs for the German-speaking population . However, Slezká Slavia Bohumín existed only for a short time. In the spring of 1931 the AFK Nový Bohumín was founded, which should become the most successful club in the city. Until the beginning of the Second World War , which interrupted the competitions, the AFK shuttled between the third and fourth performance level.

After the Communist Party came to power in 1948 , the association came under the patronage of the local steelworks and henceforth operated under the name AFK Baňská a hutní Bohumín . In September 1949 the steelworks in Bohumínské železárny Gustava Klimenta , BŽGK for short, was renamed, the name of the association changed accordingly to TJ BŽGK Bohumín . Four years later there was the biggest reorganization in Czechoslovakian sport, all clubs that were subordinate to mining or iron or steel processing were given the name Baník . The new club name was therefore TJ Baník BŽGK Bohumín . In 1958 politics once again intervened in sport. The two state-owned companies BŽGK and Drátovný Bohumín merged , the new company was called Železárny a drátovny Bohumín , or ŽD for short , and the association was accordingly renamed TJ ŽD Bohumín .

In the 1958/59 season ŽD Bohumín managed to rise to the third highest division. Before the 1969/70 season, the third division, so far from six groups of 14 teams each was reduced to three groups of 16 teams, with a fifth place in group D ŽD Bohumín succeeded in qualifying. The team played in the front right from the start, finishing fifth in 1969/70 and second in 1970/71. In the following season, Bohumín achieved the greatest success in the club's history with promotion to the nationwide 2nd Czechoslovak League. The team was able to take advantage of the underrated newcomer in the 1972/73 season and came in seventh. In the following year, the statement that the second year is often more difficult came true. As bottom of the table Bohumín was relegated. Already after two years they were promoted again, this time the team was able to hold onto the second highest division until 1983.

In the last joint season of Czechoslovakia 1992/93 ŽD Bohumín finished second in the MSFL and qualified for the 2nd division of the Czech Republic 1993/94. There the team only finished penultimate, but secured relegation due to an expansion of the field of participants to 18 teams. Dragan Jankulovski, the brother of the national player Marek Jankulovski, also played this season .

Before the 1994 season, the club won the Brno entrepreneur Josef Tetur and his company Dipol as a new sponsor, the club played for a short time as FC Dipol Bohumín before it was renamed FC Coring Bohumín . The 13th rank was not enough in the 1994/95 season with five relegated members to keep the class. Tetur withdrew from the club, which, financially weakened and renamed SK Bohumín, was not competitive in the MSFL . Only the exclusion of FC Pares Prušánky saved the team, which won only four times during the 1995/96 season, from relegation again. That followed only a year later and the team, now again under the abbreviation ŽD Bohumín, could not hold up in the fourth division.

In the fifth- rate Přebor , Bohumín played with varying degrees of success, but was closer to relegation, for example, in 2003/04 than promotion. On July 1, 2006, the club therefore merged with another club from the city, FC Rapid Skřečoň to FK Bohumín and also moved to its place.

League affiliation Czechoslovakia

71/72 72/73 73/74 74/75 75/76 76/77 77/78 78/79 79/80 80/81 81/82 82/83 83/84 84/85 85/86 86/87 87/88 88/89 89/90 90/91 91/92 92/93
1st League
2nd league 7th 16. 4th 4th 6th 9. 8th. 13. 14th
3rd league 1. 2. 1. 4th 7th 5. 6th 6th 5. 10. 3. 5. 2.

League membership Czech Republic

93/94 94/95 95/96 96/97 97/98 98/99 99/00 00/01 01/02 02/03 03/04 04/05 05/06 06/07 07/08
1st League
2nd league 15th 13.
3rd league 15th 15th
4th league 16.
5th league 5. 11. 6th 7th 8th. 14th 12. 10. 6th

statistics

  • 2nd Czech League 1993/94 and 1994/95:
league space Games Victories draw Defeats Gates Points
2nd league 1993/94 15th place 30th 6th 6th 18th 22:60 18th
2nd division 1994/95 13th place 34 14th 4th 16 46:52 46

Well-known former players

Club names

  • 1931 AFK Nový Bohumín
  • 1948 AFK Baňská a hutní Bohumín
  • 1949 TJ BŽKG Bohumín
  • 1953 TJ Baník BŽKG Bohumín
  • 1958 TJ ŽD Bohumín
  • 1993 FC ŽD Bohumín
  • 1994 FC Dipol Bohumín
  • 1994 Coring Bohumín FC
  • 1996 SK Bohumín
  • 199? ŽD Bohumín
  • 2006 FK Bohumín

Individual evidence

  1. Bohumínské fotbalové kluby se spojily v alles Karvinský deník from April 4, 2006, in Czech, last accessed on February 13, 2008
  2. Druhá fotbalová liga? Zatím to není ani sen Karvinský deník from June 24, 2006, in Czech, last accessed on February 13, 2008

literature

  • Jindřich Horák, Lubomír Král: Encyclopedie našeho fotbalu. Sto let českého a slovenského fotbalu. Domací soutěže. Libri, Prague 1997.
  • Radovan Jelínek, Miloslav Jenšík et al .: Atlas českého fotbalu od roku 1890. Prague 2005. ISBN 80-901703-3-9
  • Výbor FO TJ ŽDB (Ed.): 50 let fotbalového oddilu TJ ŽDB. Železárny a drátovny np Bohumín, 1981.