Tournament details | |
---|---|
Country | Bulgaria |
Final positions | |
Champions | Levski Sofia (5th cup) |
Runner-up | CSKA Sofia |
Tournament statistics | |
Top goal scorer(s) | Todor Takev (Levski) Kostadin Blagoev (CSKA) Dimitar Palev (Spartak Pl) (3 goals) |
The 1950 Bulgarian Cup was the 10th season of the Bulgarian Cup (in this period the tournament was named Cup of the Soviet Army). [1] Levski Sofia won the competition after three games in the final against CSKA Sofia. [2]
Team 1 | Score | Team 2 |
---|---|---|
Levski Sofia | 3–1 | Sportist Svoge |
Lokomotiv Sofia | 4–2 | Spartak Varna |
Chernomorets Burgas | 0–1 | Slavia Sofia |
Dunav Ruse | 0–2 | Spartak Pleven |
Akademik Sofia | 3–0 (w/o) | Minyor Pernik |
Marek Dupnitsa | 1–3 | Cherveno Zname Sofia |
Lokomotiv Plovdiv | 0–1 (a.e.t.) | CSKA Sofia |
Torpedo Pleven | 2–2 (a.e.t.) | Spartak Sofia |
Replay | ||
Torpedo Pleven | 0–3 | Spartak Sofia |
Team 1 | Score | Team 2 |
---|---|---|
CSKA Sofia | 2–0 | Lokomotiv Sofia |
Spartak Pleven | 4–0 | Slavia Sofia |
Levski Sofia | 3–0 | Spartak Sofia |
Akademik Sofia | 3–0 | Cherveno Zname Sofia |
Team 1 | Score | Team 2 |
---|---|---|
Spartak Pleven | 0–1 | Levski Sofia |
CSKA Sofia | 0–0 (a.e.t.) | Akademik Sofia |
Replay | ||
CSKA Sofia | 4–1 | Akademik Sofia |
Levski Sofia | 1−1 (a.e.t.) | CSKA Sofia |
---|---|---|
Hranov 61' | Panayotov 76' |
Levski Sofia | 1−1 (a.e.t.) | CSKA Sofia |
---|---|---|
Takev 75' | Bozhkov 2' |
Levski Sofia | 1−0 (a.e.t.) | CSKA Sofia |
---|---|---|
Tomov 99' |
The 1947 Balkan Cup, officially called the Balkan and Central European Championship, was played between May and October 1947 between Albania, Romania, Bulgaria, Yugoslavia and Hungary. It was Hungary's first participation in the tournament, in which it won all the matches.
The 1948 Balkan Cup, officially called the Balkan and Central European Championship, was played between April and November 1948 between Albania, Romania, Bulgaria, Yugoslavia, Hungary, Poland and Czechoslovakia. It was Poland and Czechoslovakia's first and only participation in the tournament, which was not completed. Hungary was leading the table at the time it was abandoned.
The 1968 Bulgarian Cup final was the 28th final of the Bulgarian Cup, and was contested between Spartak Sofia and Beroe Stara Zagora on 6 June 1968 at Vasil Levski National Stadium in Sofia. Spartak won the final 3–2 after extra time, claiming their first ever Bulgarian Cup title.
The 1953 Bulgarian Cup final was the 13th final of the Bulgarian Cup, and was contested between Lokomotiv Sofia and Levski Sofia on 25 November 1953 at Vasil Levski National Stadium in Sofia. Lokomotiv won the final 2–1, claiming their second national cup title.
The 1947 Bulgarian Cup final was the 7th final of the Bulgarian Cup, and was contested between Levski Sofia and Botev Plovdiv on 1 June 1947 at Yunak Stadium in Sofia. Levski Sofia won the final 1–0.
The 1950 Bulgarian Cup final was the 10th final of the Bulgarian Cup. It was contested by Levski Sofia and CSKA Sofia. It took three matches at People's Army Stadium to determine a winner. The first took place on 26 November, the second on 27 November and the third on 3 December 1950. The cup was won by Levski Sofia. They won the 2nd replay 1–0 after extra time.
The 1954 Bulgarian Cup final was the 14th final of the Bulgarian Cup, and was contested between CSKA Sofia and Slavia Sofia on 7 November 1954 at Vasil Levski National Stadium in Sofia. CSKA won the final 2–1, claiming their second national cup title.
The 1965 Bulgarian Cup final was the 25th final of the Bulgarian Cup, and was contested between CSKA Sofia and Levski Sofia on 8 September 1965 at Ovcha Kupel Stadium in Sofia. CSKA won the final 3–2.
The 1967 Bulgarian Cup final was the 27th final of the Bulgarian Cup, and was contested between Levski Sofia and Spartak Sofia on 16 July 1967 at Vasil Levski National Stadium in Sofia. Levski won the final 3–0.
The 1971 Bulgarian Cup final was the 31st final of the Bulgarian Cup, and was contested between Levski Sofia and Lokomotiv Plovdiv on 25 August 1971 at Bulgarian Army Stadium in Sofia. Levski won the final 3–0.
The 1969 Bulgarian Cup final was the 29th final of the Bulgarian Cup, and was contested between CSKA Sofia and Levski Sofia on 30 April 1969 at Vasil Levski National Stadium in Sofia. CSKA won the final 2–1.
The 1966–67 Bulgarian Cup was the 27th season of the Bulgarian Cup. Levski Sofia won the competition, beating Spartak Sofia 3–0 in the final at the Vasil Levski National Stadium.
The 1964–65 Bulgarian Cup was the 25th season of the Bulgarian Cup. CSKA Sofia won the competition, beating Levski Sofia 3–2 in the final at the Ovcha Kupel Stadium.
The 1968–69 Bulgarian Cup was the 29th season of the Bulgarian Cup. CSKA Sofia won the competition, beating Levski Sofia 2–1 in the final at the Vasil Levski National Stadium.
The 1970–71 Bulgarian Cup was the 31st season of the Bulgarian Cup. Levski Sofia won the competition, beating Lokomotiv Plovdiv 3–0 in the final at the Bulgarian Army Stadium.
The 1979–80 Bulgarian Cup was the 40th season of the Bulgarian Cup. Slavia Sofia won the competition, beating Beroe Stara Zagora 3–1 in the final at the Vasil Levski National Stadium.
The 1953 Bulgarian Cup was the 13th season of the Bulgarian Cup. Lokomotiv Sofia won the competition, beating Levski Sofia 2–1 in the final at the Vasil Levski National Stadium in Sofia.
The 1954 Bulgarian Cup was the 14th season of the Bulgarian Cup. CSKA Sofia won the competition, beating Slavia Sofia 2–1 in the final at the Vasil Levski National Stadium in Sofia.
The 1947 Bulgarian Cup was the 7th season of the Bulgarian Cup. In the tournament entered the 10 winners of regional cup competitions. Levski Sofia won the competition, beating Botev Plovdiv 1–0 in the final at the Yunak Stadium in Sofia.
The 1949 Bulgarian Cup was the 9th season of the Bulgarian Cup. Levski Sofia won the competition, beating CSKA Sofia 2–1 in the 2nd replay after a 1–1 draw in the final and 2–2 draw in the 1st replay.