1953 PFC Cherno More Varna season

Last updated
Cherno More Varna
1953 season
Manager Ivan Mokanov
Republican Football Group A 3rd
Bulgarian Cup Quarterfinals
Top goalscorer Vasil Dosev (7) [1]

The 1953 season was Cherno More's second consecutive season in Republican Football Group A after being administratively relegated in 1949 and returning to the top flight in 1952. [2] The club competed as VMS Stalin after Varna was renamed after the Soviet dictator in December 1949. [3] Cherno more finished in 3rd place which was the club's highest post-war league finish until it was matched in 2008-2009.

Contents

Republican Football Group A

Matches

12 April 1953Round 5 VMS Stalin 3–2 VVS Sofia Varna
31 May 1953Round 12 VMS Stalin 2–0 DNA Plovdiv Varna
7 July 1953Round 13 Udarnik Sofia 0–2 VMS Stalin Sofia
10 July 1953Round 15 Dinamo Sofia 1–0 VMS Stalin Sofia
15 August 1953Round 20 VVS Sofia 2–1 VMS Stalin Sofia
26 August 1953Round 27 DNA Plovdiv 1–1 VMS Stalin Plovdiv
7 September 1953Round 23 VMS Stalin 1–2 Spartak Sofia Varna
11 September 1953Round 28 VMS Stalin 3–0 Udarnik Sofia Varna
17 September 1953Round 26 Stroitel Sofia 0–1 VMS Stalin Sofia
23 September 1953Round 25 VMS Stalin 2–0 Spartak Pleven Varna
27 September 1953Round 19 VMS Stalin 0–0 Lokomotiv Plovdiv Varna
13 October 1953Round 18 Lokomotiv Sofia 2–0 VMS Stalin Sofia
20 October 1953Round 30 VMS Stalin 0–0 Dinamo Sofia Varna

League standings

PosTeamPldWDLGFGAGDPts
1 Levski Sofia (C)2819544822+2643
2 CSKA Sofia 2818646423+4142
3 Cherno More Varna 2812792920+931
4 Lokomotiv Plovdiv 2891363029+131
5 Slavia Sofia 2891274233+930
Source: rsssf.com
(C) Champion

Results summary

OverallHomeAway
PldWDLGFGAGDPtsWDLGFGAGDWDLGFGAGD
2812792920 +943932198 +113471012 −2

Bulgarian Cup

Round 1 VMS Stalin 2–1 Akademik Stalin Varna
Round 2 VMS Stalin 1–1 (a.e.t.) Etar Veliko Tarnovo
Round 2 Replay VMS Stalin 3–0 Etar Veliko Tarnovo
Quarterfinals VMS Stalin 0–1 Spartak Plovdiv

Squad

Pos.Nat.Name
GKFlag of Bulgaria.svg  BUL Ivan Derventski
GKFlag of Bulgaria.svg  BUL Lyuben Tashev
DFFlag of Bulgaria.svg  BUL Dimitar Stefanov
DFFlag of Bulgaria.svg  BUL Gocho Rusev
DFFlag of Bulgaria.svg  BUL Todor Nikolov
DFFlag of Bulgaria.svg  BUL Blagoy Filipov
MFFlag of Bulgaria.svg  BUL Nikola Popov
MFFlag of Bulgaria.svg  BUL Ivan Shulev
MFFlag of Bulgaria.svg  BUL Nikola Aleksiev
MFFlag of Bulgaria.svg  BUL Ivan Pirgov
FWFlag of Bulgaria.svg  BUL Spas Kirov
FWFlag of Bulgaria.svg  BUL Vasil Dosev
FWFlag of Bulgaria.svg  BUL Borislav Kovachev
FWFlag of Bulgaria.svg  BUL Kiril Bogdanov
FWFlag of Bulgaria.svg  BUL Dimitar Yovchev
FWFlag of Bulgaria.svg  BUL Todor Terzistoev
FWFlag of Bulgaria.svg  BUL Dimitar Samsarov
FWFlag of Bulgaria.svg  BUL Georgi Dimitrov

[5]

Related Research Articles

<span class="mw-page-title-main">PFC Cherno More Varna</span> Association football club

Cherno More is a Bulgarian professional association football club based in the city of Varna, which currently competes in Bulgaria's primary football competition, the First League. Founded on March 3, 1913, as an association football branch of the larger sports society SC Galata, the club has spent the majority of its existence playing in the top tier of Bulgarian football.

Statistics of Bulgarian A Football Group in the 1986–1987 season.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">National Basketball League (Bulgaria)</span> Basketball league

The National Basketball League (NBL) is the highest professional basketball league in Bulgaria. The current league was founded in 2008, though the first-tier level existed since 1942 and was previously called the Bulgarian A Division. The games in the NBL are played under FIBA rules. The most successful team in NBL history is PBC Academic, which has won 26 national titles.

The 2010–11 A Group was the 87th season of the Bulgarian national top football division, and the 63rd of A Group as the top-tier football league in the country. The season commenced on 31 July 2010 and ended with the last games on 28 May 2011. The winter break was between the weekends around 29 November 2010 and 26 February 2011. Litex Lovech had defended their 2009/10 A Group title and became champions for 2 years in a row.

The 2010–11 Bulgarian Cup was the 29th official season of the Bulgarian annual football knockout tournament. The competition began in September 2010 with the matches of the Preliminary Round and ended the final in May 2011. Beroe Stara Zagora are the defending champions.

The 2007–08 season was PFC CSKA Sofia's 57th season in A Group. This article shows player statistics and all matches that the club have and will play during the 2007–08 season.

The 2011–12 Bulgarian Cup was the 30th official season of the Bulgarian annual football knockout tournament. The competition began in September 2011 with the matches of the Preliminary Round and ended with the final in May 2012. CSKA Sofia were the defending champions, but lost to Septemvri Simitli in the quarterfinals. Ludogorets Razgrad won the title, after defeating Lokomotiv Plovdiv in the final.

The 2012–13 Bulgarian Cup was the 31st official season of the Bulgarian annual football knockout tournament. The competition began on 13 October 2012 with the matches of the Preliminary Round and ended with the final on 15 May 2013. Ludogorets Razgrad were the defending champions, but were eliminated by CSKA Sofia in the second round. Beroe Stara Zagora won the title, their second overall, after defeating Levski Sofia in the final by penalties.

Football is the most popular sport in Sofia, the capital of Bulgaria. Sofia was the first city in the country to have an organized football championship, which was created in 1921. Teams from Sofia have been crowned national champions on 70 occasions in the 90 seasons between 1924 and 2013. As of the late 20th and early 21st centuries, there are four teams from Sofia which have been constant participants in the top national division – Levski, CSKA, Slavia and Lokomotiv. All four have managed to reach the latter stages of European competitions on several occasions, the best of which are CSKA's two European Cup semi-finals in 1967 and 1982, and Slavia's Cup Winners' Cup semi-final in 1967.

The 2004–05 Bulgarian Cup was the 65th season of the Bulgarian Cup. Levski Sofia won the competition, beating CSKA Sofia 2–1 in the final at the Vasil Levski National Stadium in Sofia.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">2003–04 Bulgarian Cup</span> Football tournament season

The 2003–04 Bulgarian Cup was the 64th season of the Bulgarian Cup. Litex Lovech won the competition, beating CSKA Sofia 6–5 on penalties in the final at the Vasil Levski National Stadium in Sofia.

The 2016–17 Third Amateur Football League season was the 67th season of the Bulgarian Third Amateur Football League. The league is equivalent to the third level of the Bulgarian football pyramid, with a total of four divisions within it. The divisions themselves are geographically separated into Northwest, Northeast, Southeast, and Southwest. This was the first season following the 2016 reorganization of the Bulgarian football league system, which saw the emergence of new a competition format, including the First and Second Professional Football Leagues.

This page covers all relevant details regarding PFC Cherno More Varna for all official competitions inside the 1981–82 season. These are A Group and Bulgarian Cup.

The 1957 season marked the immediate return of Cherno More to the top flight of Bulgarian football after the club was dramatically relegated in 1955. The club started the season as SCNA Varna, Sport Club of the People's Army, but was renamed to Botev Varna in June 1957.

The 1958 season was Cherno More's second consecutive season in A Group after the dramatic survival in 1957. The club competed as Botev Varna. The Republican Section for Football, having decided in favor of reorganizing the league to a fall-to-spring cycle, halted the season on 6 July 1958 with the teams having played each other once. League leaders CDNA were declared champions and no teams were relegated.

The 1960-61 season marked the immediate return of Cherno More to the top flight of Bulgarian football after the club finished bottom of A Group in 1958-1959.

The 1955 season was Cherno More's fourth successive season in the Republican Football Group A. The club competed as VMSStalin after Varna was renamed after the Soviet dictator in December 1949.

The 1988–89 B Group was the thirty-third season of the Bulgarian B Football Group, the second tier of the Bulgarian football league system. A total of 20 teams contested the league.

The 2001–02 Bulgarian Cup was the 62nd season of the Bulgarian Cup. Levski Sofia won the competition, beating CSKA Sofia 3–1 in the final at the Stadion Slavia in Sofia.

The 2021–22 Bulgarian Cup was the 40th official edition of the Bulgarian annual football knockout tournament. It was sponsored by Sesame and known as the Sesame Kupa na Bulgaria for sponsorship purposes. The competition began on 4 September 2021 with the preliminary round and finished with the final on 15 May 2022. CSKA Sofia were the defending cup winners. They reached the final for 3rd consecutive time, but lost to Levski Sofia, who won the cup for a record 26th time and also qualified for the second qualifying round of the 2022–23 UEFA Europa Conference League.

References

  1. http://www.retro-football.bg/sites/default/files/books/almanah_1954.pdf pp.50
  2. http://www.retro-football.bg/sites/default/files/books/almanah_1954.pdf pp.41-44
  3. "The names of Varna". Archived from the original on 2011-05-18.
  4. http://www.retro-football.bg/sites/default/files/books/almanah_1954.pdf pp.65-66
  5. http://www.retro-football.bg/sites/default/files/books/almanah_1954.pdf p.44