Czechoslovak football championship 1919
Mistrovství ČSF 1919 | |
master | Sparta Prague |
Teams | 4th |
Games | 6th |
Gates | 28 (ø 4.67 per game) |
← Středočeská župa 1918 |
The Czechoslovak football championship 1919 (officially: Mistrovství ČSF ) was the second championship held in Czechoslovakia after 1918 only regional championships were played. After Czechoslovakia was founded on October 28, 1918 , there were two football associations in the young state in 1919 . On the one hand the Bohemian Association ČSF (Český svaz footballový), founded in 1901 , and on the other hand the Slovak Association SzLSz.
There was no official national championship. The Bohemian Association played its own championship without the Slovak clubs, in which the winners of the four Gaume championships took part.
qualification
In Central Bohemia (Středočeská župa) Sparta Prague won , in Kladno (Kladenská župa) the SK Kladno , in West Bohemia (Západočeská župa) the FK Olympia Pilsen and in East Bohemia (Východočeská župa) the SK Hradec Králové .
Finals
The final round was held from September 12 to November 9, 1919. The winner without losing points was AC Sparta Prague, which was the unofficial champion of Czechoslovakia for the first time.
Closing table
Pl. | society | Sp. | S. | U | N | Gates | Quota | Points |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1. | Sparta Prague | 3 | 3 | 0 | 0 | 17: 0 | ∞ | 6-0 |
2. | SK Kladno | 3 | 1 | 1 | 1 | 5: 4 | 1.25 | 3: 3 |
3. | FK Olympia Pilsen | 3 | 1 | 1 | 1 | 4: 7 | 0.57 | 3: 3 |
4th | SK Hradec Králové | 3 | 0 | 0 | 3 | 2:17 | 0.12 | 0: 6 |
Placement criteria: 1st points - 2nd goal quotient
Crosstab
1919 | SPA | KLA | Postcode | HRA |
---|---|---|---|---|
Sparta Prague | 2-0 | - | 10-0 | |
SK Kladno | - | - | - | |
FK Olympia Pilsen | 0: 5 | 1: 1 | 3: 1 | |
SK Hradec Králové | - | 1: 4 | - |
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.