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1. FC Slovácko





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(Redirected from 1. FC Synot)
 


1. FC Slovácko is a Czech football club based in Uherské Hradiště. The team was established in 1927 as SK Staré Město and on 1 July 2000 as 1. FC Synot, which was a merger of the original club with FC Slovácká Slavia Uherské Hradiště.[1] Since 2009 the club has played in the Czech First League. Slovácko have won one Czech Cup, and reached the cup final a further two times.

1. FC Slovácko
Full name1. FC Slovácko, a.s.
Founded1927; 97 years ago (1927),
asSK Staré Město
GroundMěstský fotbalový stadion,
Uherské Hradiště
Capacity8,121
ChairmanPetr Pojezný
ManagerRoman West
LeagueCzech First League
2023–246th of 16
WebsiteClub website

Home colours

Away colours

History

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Established in 1927 as SK Staré Město, the club played exclusively in the lower levels of Czechoslovak and later Czech football.

Staré Město won the Moravian–Silesian Football League in the 1996–97 season and were promoted to the Czech 2. Liga in 1997.[2] The club won promotion from the Czech 2. Liga in 2000, clinching promotion five matches before the end of the season.[3] This marked the start of the club's first-ever spell in the country's top flight.[1] The club merged with Slovácká Slavia Uherské Hradiště in 2000, the resultant club becoming 1. FC Synot.[1] During the club's first seasons in the Czech First League, they took part in European competition a number of times, playing in the UEFA Intertoto Cup on three occasions. In the summer of 2004, the club officially changed its name to 1. FC Slovácko.[4] Slovácko reached the final of the 2004–05 Czech Cup, losing 2–1 to winners Baník Ostrava.

The club played for seven years in the Czech First League before being relegated in 2007.[5] The club went on to play two years in the second division, being promoted despite finishing 10th in the 2008–09 Czech 2. Liga, as second-placed side that season, Čáslav, sold Slovácko their license for the top flight.[6] The same season, the club again reached the final of the Czech Cup, losing the final of the 2008–09 Czech CuptoTeplice.

In the 2021/22 season, the club finished in 4th place on 68 points ahead of FC Banik Ostrava in 5th. They also won the Czech Cup for the first time in the club's history after defeating Sparta Prague 3–1 with goals from Václav Jurečka and Petr Reinberk who scored twice, and qualified for the UEFA Europa League.[7]

Historical names

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Players

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Current squad

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As of 17 July 2024[8]

Note: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.

No. Pos. Nation Player
2 DF   NGA Abuchi Onuoha
4 DF   CZE Tomáš Břečka
5 DF   SVK Filip Vaško
6 DF   CZE Stanislav Hofmann
7 MF   BRA Dyjan
8 MF   CZE Aleš Kočí
9 FW   CZE Filip Vecheta
10 MF   CZE Michal Trávník
11 MF   CZE Milan Petržela
13 MF   CZE Michal Kohút
14 DF   IRQ Merchas Doski
15 MF   SVK Patrik Blahút
17 FW   CZE Matyáš Kozák (on loan from Sparta Prague)
18 MF   KOR Seung-bin Kim
No. Pos. Nation Player
19 MF   CZE Jakub Křišťan
20 MF   CZE Marek Havlík
21 DF   CZE Daniel Holásek
22 FW   CUW Rigino Cicilia
23 DF   CZE Petr Reinberk
24 MF   CZE Pavel Juroška
26 MF   CZE Filip Souček (on loan from Sparta Prague)
27 FW   AUT Marko Kvasina
28 MF   CZE Vlastimil Daníček
29 GK   CZE Milan Heča
30 GK   CZE Tomáš Fryšták
33 GK   CZE Alexandr Urban
99 MF   EST Vlasiy Sinyavskiy
DF   ANG Gigli Ndefe

Out on loan

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Note: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.

No. Pos. Nation Player
GK   CZE Jiří Borek (atVyškov)
No. Pos. Nation Player
DF   CZE Vojtěch Bartoš (atProstějov)

Notable former players

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Reserves

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As of 2023–24, the club's reserve team 1. FC Slovácko B plays in the Moravian-Silesian Football League (3rd tier of Czech football system).

Player records in the Czech First League

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As of 26 May 2024.[9]

Highlighted players are in the current squad.

Most clean sheets

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# Name Clean sheets
1   Petr Drobisz 56
2   Milan Heča 40
3   Matouš Trmal 22

Managers

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  • Dušan Radolský (2001–2002)
  • Milan Bokša (2002)
  • Radek Rabušic (2002–2003)
  • Karel Jarolím (July 2003 – June 2005)
  • Ladislav Molnár (Dec 2004 – Nov 2005)
  • Stanislav Levý (Nov 2005 – June 2006)
  • Jiří Plíšek (June – Nov 2006)
  • Pavel Malura (Nov 2006 – Jan 2008)
  • Leoš Kalvoda (Jan – July 2008)
  • Ladislav Jurkemik (July – Dec 2008)
  • Josef Mazura (Dec 2008 – Dec 2009)
  • Miroslav Soukup (Jan 2010 – Aug 2012)
  • Svatopluk Habanec (Aug 2012 – May 2016)
  • Stanislav Levý (June 2016 – Sep 2017)
  • Michal Kordula (Sep 2017 – Nov 2018)
  • Martin Svědík (Nov 2018 – June 2024)
  • Roman West (June 2024 –present)
  • History in domestic competitions

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    Czech Republic

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    Season League Placed Pld W D L GF GA GD Pts Cup
    1993–94 3. liga 6th 30 14 5 11 44 38 +6 33
    1994–95 3. liga 4th 30 14 8 8 44 33 +11 50
    1995–96 3. liga 4th 28 13 7 8 52 40 +12 46
    1996–97 3. liga 1st 28 20 6 2 61 22 +39 66
    1997–98 2. liga 4th 30 14 4 10 42 34 +8 46 Round of 32
    1998–99 2. liga 3rd 30 20 7 3 64 26 +38 67 Round of 64
    1999–00 2. liga 1st 30 24 4 2 76 29 +47 76 Round of 64
    2000–01 1. liga 11th 30 9 10 11 37 35 +2 37 Round of 16
    2001–02 1. liga 11th 30 10 6 14 31 38 –7 36 Round of 32
    2002–03 1. liga 8th 30 11 7 12 39 40 –1 40 Round of 32
    2003–04 1. liga 5th 30 14 6 10 43 37 +6 48 Round of 32
    2004–05 1. liga 13th 30 10 14 6 30 22 +8 32 Runners-up
    2005–06 1. liga 7th 30 9 11 10 29 28 +1 38 Quarter-finals
    2006–07 1. liga 16th 30 3 10 17 20 39 –19 19 Quarter-finals
    2007–08 2. liga 5th 30 13 9 8 40 27 +13 48 Round of 32
    2008–09 2. liga 10th 30 9 12 9 25 29 –4 39 Runners-up
    2009–10 1. liga 14th 30 8 6 16 28 42 –14 30 Round of 64
    2010–11 1. liga 12th 30 8 7 15 27 43 –16 31 Round of 64
    2011–12 1. liga 7th 30 12 5 13 29 32 –3 41 Round of 16
    2012–13 1. liga 9th 30 10 7 13 37 41 –4 37 Quarter-finals
    2013–14 1. liga 6th 30 11 7 12 43 40 +3 40 Round of 16
    2014–15 1. liga 9th 30 10 7 13 43 46 -3 37 Quarter-finals
    2015–16 1. liga 8th 30 12 4 14 37 51 -14 40 Round of 64
    2016–17 1. liga 12th 30 6 14 10 29 38 -9 32 Round of 32
    2017–18 1. liga 12th 30 6 13 11 23 32 -9 31 Quarter-finals
    2018–19 1. liga 11th 35 13 6 16 43 47 -4 45 Round of 16
    2019–20 1. liga 10th 32 11 9 12 37 39 -2 42 Quarter-finals
    2020–21 1. liga 4th 34 19 6 9 58 33 +25 63 Round of 16
    2021–22 1. liga 4th 34 21 5 9 57 37 +20 63 Winners
    2022–23 1. liga 5th 35 13 11 11 40 46 -6 50 Quarter-finals
    2023–24 1. liga 6th 35 12 8 15 45 56 -11 44 Round of 32

    Notes: † Twelve points were taken off from Slovácko as a result of proven corruption.

    Honours

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    European record

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    Season Competition Round Opposition Home Away Aggregate
    2001 UEFA Intertoto Cup Second round   Universitatea Craiova 3–2 2–2 5–4  
    Third round   Rennes 4–2 0–5 4–7  
    2002 UEFA Intertoto Cup First round   Tiraspol 4–0 0–0 4–0  
    Second round   Helsingborg 4–0 0–2 4–2  
    Third round   Sochaux 0–3 0–0 0–3  
    2003 UEFA Intertoto Cup Second round   OFK Beograd 1–0 3–3 4–3  
    Third round   Wolfsburg 0–1 0–2 0–3  
    2021–22 UEFA Europa Conference League Second qualifying round   Lokomotiv Plovdiv 1–0 0–1 1–1 (2–3 p)  
    2022–23 UEFA Europa League Third qualifying round   Fenerbahçe 1–1 0–3 1–4  
    UEFA Europa Conference League Play-off round   AIK 3–0 1–0 4–0  
    Group stage   Partizan 3–3 1–1 4th  
      1. FC Köln 0–1 2–4
      Nice 0–1 2–1

    Club records

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    Czech First League records

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    References

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    1. ^ a b c Jeřábek, Luboš (2007). Český a československý fotbal – lexikon osobností a klubů (in Czech). Prague, Czech Republic: Grada Publishing. p. 184. ISBN 978-80-247-1656-5.
  • ^ "Czech Republic 1996/97". RSSSF. Retrieved 28 February 2013.
  • ^ "Fotbalisté Synotu postupují do první ligy". idnes.cz (in Czech). Mladá fronta DNES. 6 May 2000. Retrieved 19 January 2013.
  • ^ "Vazba Synot – Slovácko zůstává pevná". idnes.cz (in Czech). Mladá fronta DNES. 9 July 2004. Retrieved 19 January 2013.
  • ^ "Slovácko padá. Kam, to samo neví". idnes.cz (in Czech). Mladá fronta DNES. 14 May 2007. Retrieved 19 January 2013.
  • ^ "Slovácko se vrací do ligy, koupilo postup od Čáslavi". Deník (in Czech). 10 June 2009. Retrieved 31 March 2012.
  • ^ Nekvinda, David (19 May 2022). "'Nadšení, emoce, slzy, radost.' Slovácko slaví po triumfu v poháru největší úspěch v klubové historii". iRozhlas.cz (in Czech). Czech Radio. Retrieved 29 May 2023.
  • ^ "A-tým – soupiska" (in Czech). 1.FC Slovácko.
  • ^ "Detailed stats". Fortuna liga.
  • edit

    Retrieved from "https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=1._FC_Slovácko&oldid=1235565075"
     



    Last edited on 19 July 2024, at 23:52  





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    This page was last edited on 19 July 2024, at 23:52 (UTC).

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