TJ Kablo Kladno - Kročehlavy

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Kablo Kročehlavy
Kablo krocehlavy logo.svg
Basic data
Surname TJ Kablo Kladno - Kročehlavy
Seat Kladno
founding 1907
Colours green white
Website kablo-krocehlavy.webz.cz
First soccer team
Venue TJ Kablo Kladno - Kročehlavy
Places 2,000
league Okresní přebor (8th division)
2008/09 3rd place
home


TJ Kablo Kladno - Kročehlavy is a Czech football club from the Central Bohemian town of Kladno . The club, founded in 1907, was one of the strongest amateur clubs in Czechoslovakia between the two world wars . From SK Kročehlavy, as the club was called until 1948, ten Czechoslovak national players emerged. In the 1927/28 season, SK Kročehlavy was the Czechoslovak runner-up for amateurs.

Club history

Difficult beginnings

The club was founded on June 15, 1907 as Sportovní kroužek Achilles Kročehlavy . A short time later, the members of the still young SK Meteor Kročehlavy joined the club . In the early years the club suffered from financial problems and did not have its own space. In the years 1909 and 1910, gaming operations even ceased, after which the situation stabilized.

From Achilles to SK

In March 1913, the SK Achilles changed its name to Sportovní klub Kročehlavy , and in June of the same year the club was finally able to call its own place. In addition, there was participation in the most important competition in Bohemia at the time. In the so-called Charity Cup , the team beat SK Břevnov 3-1 in round one, but ČAFC Vinohrady proved too strong in the second round .

Gaumeister for the first time

In 1918, SK Kročehlavy won the Kladno District Championship without defeat. The district or Gaume championships represented the highest division at this time, with the Central Bohemian Gau, in which all Prague clubs played, was considered unrivaled. In 1919, after the establishment of Czechoslovakia, a final round for the national championship was held. However, SK Kladno qualified as champions of the Kladno district , SK Kročehlavy only finished fourth. A year later the Kladno district was incorporated into the Central Bohemian Gau. The SK Kročehlavy was denied the division into the twelve teams comprehensive top division, in which played in addition to ten Prague clubs of SK Kladno and Sparta Kladno .

In the top division

The year 1921 was successful. The opening of a new sports field was followed by promotion to the top division of the country. There the team finished twelfth. The following year, the Kladno region split off from the Central Bohemia region and played its own championship, which SK Kročehlavy finished second behind Sparta Kladno. The team also won two city cups that year. In 1924 the clubs from Kladno played again with those from Prague and the surrounding area. There was a 22-team first division ( 1. A třída ) and a 24-team second division ( 1. B třída ). Both were not played to the end, but the results - SK Kročehlavy took tenth place in the 1st B třída - but still fully valued.

Successes in the amateur camp

Sk krocehlavy logo.svg

When professionalism was introduced in 1925, SK Kročehlavy remained in the amateur camp as a village club. At that time, Kročehlavy was still an independent municipality, and the association was financially rather weak. From then on, the team played in the highest amateur league, there was no athletic promotion or relegation between the two systems. The championship in the 1. A třída 1927 entitled the team to participate in the final round of the Czechoslovak amateur championship. However, they failed there in the first round with 1: 3 at the eventual winner 1. ČsŠK Bratislava . In the following year, SK Kročehlavy was only third in the championship, but that was enough to participate in the finals. This time the team managed to get into the final via AFK Kolín and ŠK Žilina , where the team was defeated by SK Prostějov, however, with 0-2. In the final in Kladno SK Kročehlavy competed with the following line-up: Alois Šubrt - Žák, R. Dvořák - Huml, Josef Brabec, Josef Ponic - Miloslav Chlíbec, Josef Košťálek, A. Horák, Karel Hejma, Tauber.

Three years later, in 1931, SK Kročehlavy took part again in the finals. In the first round, the green-whites defeated the Slovakian Ligeti SC with 7: 0 and 1: 2, in the semifinals they failed with 0: 2 and 2: 4 at SK Prostějov.

In the summer of 1934, the separation between professional and amateur camps was lifted. The SK Kročehlavy missed the qualification for the new second highest division, the Divize , and played from then on in the third class 1. A třída . The promotion to the Divize succeeded in 1940, there the team took sixth place in the 1940/41 season straight away.

After the Second World War

After the Second World War , SK Kročehlavy played in the second class in 1945/46, 1948 and 1952. This was followed by a deep fall into fifth division in the 1958/59 season. In the 1970s the club was only sixth grade. At the end of the 1980s, an upswing followed, which led to the Divize , which at that time was the fourth highest division. In addition, the team also took part in the Czech Cup and reached the sixteenth finals in each of the 1989/90 and 1990/91 games . At the end of the 1990s, however, the club fell deeper and deeper and only plays eight-class.

statistics

  • Charity Cup : 1913, 1914
  • Amateur championship finals: 1927, 1927/28 , 1930/31
  • Participation in 1. A třída, SFŽ (top division): 1922

Club names

Kablo Kladno - Kročehlavy was founded on June 15, 1907 as Sportovní kroužek Achilles Kročehlavy. The first renaming followed in 1913 in SK Kročehlavy. From 1948 to 1950 the club was called Sokol Kročehlavy, from 1950 to 1952 ZSJ Masna Kročehlavy. With the reorganization of Czechoslovak sport in 1953, the cable manufacturer Kablo took over the sponsorship, the club was accordingly called TJ Spartak Kablo Kladno from 1953. In 1958 the name was changed to TJ Kablo Kročehlavy, and in the 1990s to TJ Kablo Kladno - Kročehlavy.

Well-known former players

  • Václav Brabec-Baron , in the club until 1926, then Sparta Prague, an international match in 1929
  • Jaroslav Burgr , in the club from 1920 to 1926, then Sparta Prague, 55 international matches between 1928 and 1938
  • Antonín Carvan , with the club until 1918, then SK Židenice, Viktoria Žižkov and Sparta Prague, 14 international matches between 1924 and 1930
  • Ferdinand Hajný , in the club until 1919, then Viktoria Žižkov and Sparta Prague, 12 international matches between 1922 and 1929
  • Karel Hejma , with the club until 1929, later Sparta Prague and Slavia Prague, three international matches between 1930 and 1931
  • Václav Horák , later Viktoria Pilsen and Slavia Prague, eleven international matches between 1934 and 1938
  • Karel Kolský , later SK Kladno and Sparta Prague, 13 international matches between 1937 and 1948, later coach a. a. of the Czechoslovak national team
  • Josef Košťálek , with the club until 1926, then Sparta Prague, 42 international matches between 1930 and 1938
  • Ladislav Koubek , with the club until 1940, then Sparta Prague, eight international matches between 1946 and 1955
  • Josef Sedláček , later Sparta Prague, an international match in 1937

swell

  • Jindřich Horák, Lubomír Král: Encyclopedie našeho fotbalu. Sto let českého a slovenského fotbalu. Domací soutěže. Libri, Prague 1997.
  • Josef Jágr and Miroslav Oliverius: Kladno házi. Sto let kladenského fotbalu SK Kladno 1903–2003 . Statutární město Kladno, Kladno 2002.
  • Radovan Jelínek, Miloslav Jenšík et al .: Atlas českého fotbalu od roku 1890. Prague 2005. ISBN 80-901703-3-9
  • History of the club on the official website , Czech