The Czechoslovak women's football championships was a competition in Czechoslovakia in women's football. The competition was organized divided between the two Czechoslovakia nations (Czech Republic and Slovakia) until 1988, the inter-national finals were played in the following years with the Czech teams winning all five of them.
The first known Czechoslovak women's football teams were founded in Brno in the 1930s. [1] Sparta Praha and Slavia Praha formed teams in the 1960s. The first international competition in Czechoslovakia was organized in 1966 titled O srdce Mladého světa (Of the Mladý svět heart). The national championships were organized in Slovakia in 1967 and in 1969 in the Czech Republic. The Czechoslovak finals were introduced in the 1988/89 season.
Season | Champions of Czech Republic | Champions of Slovak Republic |
---|---|---|
1967/68 | - | Rapid Bratislava |
1968/69 | - | Dukla ZPA Prešov |
1969/70 | Slavia Praha | Dukla ZPA Prešov |
1970/71 | Slavia Praha | Dukla ZPA Prešov |
1971/72 | Slavia Praha | Dukla ZPA Prešov |
1972/73 | Uhelné sklady Praha | Dukla ZPA Prešov |
1973/74 | Slavia Praha | Skloplast Trnava |
1974/75 | Slavia Praha | Skloplast Trnava |
1975/76 | Sparta Praha | Skloplast Trnava |
1976/77 | Sparta Praha | Skloplast Trnava |
1977/78 | Sparta Praha | Skloplast Trnava |
1978/79 | Slavia Praha | Skloplast Trnava |
1979/80 | Sparta Praha | Skloplast Trnava |
1980/81 | Sparta Praha | Slávia SSM Holíč |
1981/82 | Sparta Praha | Agrostav Spišská Nová Ves |
1982/83 | Slavia Praha | Slávia SSM Holíč |
1983/84 | Sparta Praha | Skloplast Trnava |
1984/85 | Sparta Praha | Slávia SSM Holíč |
1985/86 | Sparta Praha | Skloplast Trnava |
1986/87 | Slavia Praha | Slávia SSM Holíč |
1987/88 | Slavia Praha | Skloplast Trnava |
Season | Champions of Czechoslovakia | Champions of Czech Republic | Champions of Slovak Republic |
---|---|---|---|
1988/89 | Sparta Praha | Sparta Praha | Skloplast Trnava |
1989/90 | Sparta Praha | Sparta Praha | Skloplast Trnava |
1990/91 | Sparta Praha | Sparta Praha | Slávia SSM Holíč |
1991/92 | Slavia Praha | Slavia Praha | Slávia Filosof Bratislava |
1992/93 | Slavia Praha | Slavia Praha | FC Košice |
In 1908, the International Ice Hockey Federation, an international organization that still runs most of the international hockey tournaments today, was established. In Slovakia, Canadian-styled ice hockey was popularized during the European Championships in High Tatras in 1925.
Josef Masopust was a Czech football player and coach. He played as midfielder and was a key player for Czechoslovakia, helping them reach the 1962 FIFA World Cup Final. He was capped 63 times, scoring ten goals for his national team.
Dukla Prague was a Czech football club from the city of Prague. Established in 1948 as ATK Praha, the club won a total of 11 Czechoslovak league titles and eight Czechoslovak Cups, and in the 1966–67 season, reached the semi-finals of the European Cup. As late as 1985–86 they reached the UEFA Cup Winners' Cup semi-final and they also made a great impact in the American Challenge Cup competition in New York City with four wins between 1961 and 1964. The club sent seven players to the silver medal-winning Czechoslovakia national team in the 1962 World Cup, in a year which saw them win the fifth of their domestic league titles as well as their player Josef Masopust be named European Footballer of the Year. Between the start of the competition in 1955 and 1991, Dukla played more matches in the European Cup than any other team in Czechoslovakia.
The Czechoslovakia national football team represented Czechoslovakia in men's international football from 1919 to 1993. The team was controlled by the Czechoslovak Football Association, and the team qualified for eight World Cups and three European Championships. It had two runner-up finishes in World Cups, in 1934 and 1962, and won the European Championship in the 1976 tournament.
The Football Association of the Czech Republic, or colloquially the Czech Football Association, is the governing body of association football in the Czech Republic based in Prague. It organizes the lower-level league competitions in the country and the Czech Cup.
Antonín Puč was a Czech footballer who played as a forward; he is the all-time leading scorer for the Czechoslovak national team.
Hockey Club Sparta Praha, commonly known as HC Sparta Prague, is a Prague-based Czech professional ice hockey team playing in the Czech Extraliga. The club has won four Czech championships (most recently in 2007) and four Czechoslovak championships, as well as two Spengler Cups, making it one of the most successful hockey clubs in Czech history. The team HC Sparta Praha plays its home games at O2 Arena, the largest arena in the country.
The Czech Cup, officially known as the MOL Cup for sponsorship reasons, is the major men's football cup competition in the Czech Republic. It is organised by the Czech Football Association.
Jozef Adamec was a Slovak football forward and manager.
The Czechoslovak First Ice Hockey League was the elite ice hockey league in Czechoslovakia from 1936 until 1993, when the country split into the Czech Republic and Slovakia. The Slovak Extraliga and Czech Extraliga formed from the split.
Jozef Barmoš is a Slovak former football coach and former player. He played in defence for Czechoslovakia, and won 52 international caps.
This article discusses the structure of football leagues in the Czech Republic. These leagues are organised by The Football Association of the Czech Republic (FAČR). Football is the most popular sport in the Czech Republic.
The First Czechoslovak Republic, often colloquially referred to as the First Republic, was the first Czechoslovak state that existed from 1918 to 1938, a union of ethnic Czechs and Slovaks. The country was commonly called Czechoslovakia, a compound of Czech and Slovak; which gradually became the most widely used name for its successor states. It was composed of former territories of Austria-Hungary, inheriting different systems of administration from the formerly Austrian and Hungarian territories.
The Czech Republic women's national tennis team is the representative national team of the Czech Republic in Billie Jean King Cup competition. The Czech Republic team in its current incarnation began competing in 1993. It is seen as the primary successor to the Czechoslovak team, and not Slovakia, even though the Czechoslovak team included both Czech and Slovak players.
The Czech Ice Hockey Association, also known by the shortened name Czech Ice Hockey, is the governing body of ice hockey and sledge hockey in Czechia. It is a member of the International Ice Hockey Federation (IIHF) and controls the majority of organized ice hockey in the Czech Republic.
The 1938–39 Czechoslovak First League, officially the Statni Liga, was the 15th season of the Czechoslovak First League, the first tier of league football in Czechoslovakia.
SK Slavia Praha Ženy is a Czech women's football team from Prague representing SK Slavia Prague. It competes in the Czech First Division.
Policejní Volejbalový Klub Olymp Praha is a professional Czech women's volleyball club based in Prague and currently playing in the Czech Women's Volleyball Extraliga, the highest Czech league. During the Czechoslovakia era, the club was called Rudá Hvězda Praha and had its most successful period.
The Czechoslovakian Women's Volleyball Championship was an annual competition for women's volleyball teams in Czechoslovakia. The Championship were held from the year 1931 to 1992. The most titles has been won by Praha team "Ruda Hvezda" - with 12.
The Czechoslovakian Men's Volleyball Championship was an annual competition for the men's volleyball teams in Czechoslovakia. It was held from 1924 to 1992. The most number of titles is in the account of the Praha team "Ruda Hvezda" with 10.