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GNK Dinamo Zagreb In European Football
This article lists results for GNK Dinamo Zagreb in UEFA, European competition. After winning the first post-Zagreb in World War II, war Zagreb municipal championship held in January and February 1946 and finishing runners-up in the Croatian regional championship (behind HNK Hajduk Split, Hajduk Split), they qualified for the nationwide 1946–47 Yugoslav First League. The club spent their entire existence playing top-flight football, and they soon established themselves as one of the ''Yugoslav Big Four'' (along with Hajduk Split, FK Partizan, Partizan and Red Star Belgrade), finishing runners-up in the inaugural season of the national championship, and then winning Yugoslav titles in 1947–48 Yugoslav First League, 1948, 1953–54 Yugoslav First League, 1954 and 1957–58 Yugoslav First League, 1958. They were the third Yugoslav club to play in an UEFA-sponsored competition (after Partizan in 1955 and Red Star in 1956) and their first UEFA Champions League, European Cup tie wa ...
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GNK Dinamo
Građanski nogometni klub Dinamo Zagreb ( en, Dinamo Zagreb Citizens' Football Club, link=yes, italics=yes), commonly referred to as GNK Dinamo Zagreb or simply Dinamo Zagreb (), is a Croatian professional football club based in Zagreb. Dinamo play their home matches at Stadion Maksimir. They are the most successful club in Croatian football, having won twenty-three Prva HNL titles, sixteen Croatian Cups, six Croatian Super Cups, and one Inter-Cities Fairs Cup. The club has spent its entire existence in top flight, having been members of the Yugoslav First League from 1946 to 1991, and then the Prva HNL since its foundation in 1993. At the end of the World War II, the new communist government of Yugoslavia considered Croatian clubs like HŠK Građanski as fascist and nationalist, because they had operated under the former Independent State of Croatia, which was an Axis member during the war. As such, they were formally disbanded and, in 1945, FD Dinamo was founded as a club t ...
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HNK Hajduk Split
Hrvatski nogometni klub Hajduk Split, commonly referred to as Hajduk Split () or simply Hajduk, is a Croatian professional football club based in Split, that competes in the Croatian First League, the top tier in Croatian football. Since 1979, the club's home ground has been the 34,198-seater Stadion Poljud. The team's traditional home colours are white shirts with blue shorts and blue socks. The idea to form a football club was started by group of Split students who were studying in Prague. After observing a game between Slavia and Sparta Prague, the group gathered at the U Fleků tavern and talked of creating a football club at home. When they returned to Split, they put their plan in motion and Hajduk was founded on 13 February 1911. Between the early 1920s and 1940, Hajduk regularly participated in the Kingdom of Yugoslavia national championship. Following World War II and the formation of the Yugoslav league system in 1946, Hajduk went on to spend the entire SFR Yu ...
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Inter-Cities Fairs Cup
The Inter-Cities Fairs Cup, sometimes referred to as the European Fairs Cup, Fairs Cities' Cup, or simply as the Fairs Cup, was a European football competition played between 1955 and 1971. It is often considered the predecessor to the UEFA Cup (now the UEFA Europa League). The competition was the idea of FIFA vice-president and executive committee member Ernst Thommen, Italian Football Federation president and FIFA executive committee member Ottorino Barassi, and the English Football Association general secretary and president of FIFA from 1961 to 1974, Stanley Rous. As the name suggests, the competition was set up to promote international trade fairs. Friendly games were regularly held between teams from cities holding trade fairs and it was from these games that the competition evolved. The competition was initially only open to teams from cities that hosted trade fairs and where these teams finished in their national league had no relevance. Early competitions also featured ...
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1968–69 Yugoslav First League
The 1968–69 Yugoslav First League season was the 23rd season of the First Federal League ( sh, Prva savezna liga), the top level association football league of SFR Yugoslavia, since its establishment in 1946. Eighteen teams contested the competition, with Red Star winning their ninth national title. Teams Due to the expansion of the format from 16 to 18 teams at the end of the previous season no one was relegated. Bor and Čelik were promoted from the 1967–68 Yugoslav Second League. League table Results Top scorers See also * 1968–69 Yugoslav Second League * 1968–69 Yugoslav Cup External linksYugoslavia Domestic Football Full Tables {{DEFAULTSORT:1968-69 Yugoslav First League Yugoslav First League seasons Yugo The Yugo (), also marketed as the Zastava Koral (, sr-Cyrl, Застава Корал) and Yugo Koral, is a subcompact car, subcompact hatchback formerly manufactured by Zastava Automobiles, at the time a Yugoslavia, Yugoslav corporation. . ...
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1959–60 Yugoslav First League
The 1959–60 Yugoslav First League season was the 14th season of the First Federal League ( hbs, Prva savezna liga), the top level association football league of SFR Yugoslavia, since its establishment in 1946. Twelve teams contested the competition, with Red Star winning their sixth title. Teams At the end of the previous season Željezničar and Vardar were relegated. They were replaced by OFK Belgrade and Sloboda Tuzla. League table Results Top scorers See also *1959–60 Yugoslav Second League * 1959–60 Yugoslav Cup References External linksYugoslavia Domestic Football Full Tables {{DEFAULTSORT:1959-60 Yugoslav First League Yugoslav First League seasons Yugo The Yugo (), also marketed as the Zastava Koral (, sr-Cyrl, Застава Корал) and Yugo Koral, is a subcompact car, subcompact hatchback formerly manufactured by Zastava Automobiles, at the time a Yugoslavia, Yugoslav corporation. ... 1959–60 in Yugoslav football ...
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Yugoslav Cup
The Yugoslav Cup ( hr, Pokal Jugoslavije; sr, Куп Југославије; sl, Pokal Jugoslavije, mk, Куп на Југославија), officially known between 1923 and 1940 as the King Alexander Cup ( sh-Latn-Cyrl, Kup kralja Aleksandra, Куп краља Александра, and between 1947 and 1991 as the Marshal Tito Cup ( sh-Cyrl-Latn, Куп маршала Тита, Kup maršala Tita; sl, Pokal maršala Tita; mk, Куп на маршал Тито), was one of two major football competitions in Yugoslavia, the other one being the Yugoslav League Championship. The Yugoslav Cup took place after the league championships when every competitive league in Yugoslavia had finished, in order to determine which teams are ranked as their corresponding seeds. The Marshal Tito Cup trophy was based on a design by Branko Šotra. Kingdom of Yugoslavia (1923–1940) The pre-WW II competition in the then Kingdom of Slovenes, Croats and Serbs (renamed Kingdom of Yugoslavia at the ...
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Dukla Prague
Dukla Prague ( cz, Dukla Praha) was a Czechoslovakia, Czech association football, 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 UEFA Champions League, 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 FIFA World Cup, 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 Ballon d'Or (1956–2009), 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. Dukla Pra ...
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Czechoslovak Socialist Republic
The Czechoslovak Socialist Republic, ČSSR, formerly known from 1948 to 1960 as the Czechoslovak Republic or Fourth Czechoslovak Republic, was the official name of Czechoslovakia from 1960 to 29 March 1990, when it was renamed the Czechoslovak Federative Republic, sk, Česko-slovenská federatívna republika, ČSFR. On 23 April 1990, it became the Czech and Slovak Federative Republic, sk, Česká a Slovenská Federatívna Republika, ČSFR. From 1948 until the end of November 1989, the country was under Communist rule and was regarded as a satellite state in the Soviet sphere of interest. Following the coup d'état of February 1948, when the Communist Party of Czechoslovakia seized power with the support of the Soviet Union, the country was declared a socialist republic when the Ninth-of-May Constitution became effective. The traditional name (''Czechoslovak Republic''), along with several other state symbols, were changed on 11 July 1960 following the implementation of t ...
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UEFA Champions League
The UEFA Champions League (abbreviated as UCL, or sometimes, UEFA CL) is an annual club football competition organised by the Union of European Football Associations (UEFA) and contested by top-division European clubs, deciding the competition winners through a round robin group stage to qualify for a double-legged knockout format, and a single leg final. It is one of the most prestigious football tournaments in the world and the most prestigious club competition in European football, played by the national league champions (and, for some nations, one or more runners-up) of their national associations. Introduced in 1955 as the (French for European Champion Clubs' Cup), and commonly known as the European Cup, it was initially a straight knockout tournament open only to the champions of Europe's domestic leagues, with its winner reckoned as the European club champion. The competition took on its current name in 1992, adding a round-robin group stage in 1991 and allowing mul ...
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1957–58 Yugoslav First League
The 1957–58 Yugoslav First League season was the 12th season of the First Federal League ( hbs, Prva savezna liga), the top level association football league of SFR Yugoslavia, since its establishment in 1946. Fourteen teams contested the competition, with Dinamo Zagreb winning their third title and qualifying for the 1958–59 European Cup. At the end of season four teams were relegated instead of the usual two because the Football Association of Yugoslavia decided to reduce the league to 12 teams for the following season. Teams At the end of the previous season FK Sarajevo and Lokomotiva were relegated from top level. They were replaced by Željezničar and RNK Split. League table Results Winning squad Champions: *Dinamo Zagreb (coach: Gustav Lechner) players (league matches/league goals): * Ivica Banožić 18 (0) *Aleksandar Benko 12 (8) *Tomislav Crnković 25 (0) *Vladimir Čonč 20 (4) * Emil Ferković 5 (0) * Franjo Gašpert 22 (7) *Drago Hmelina 8 (1) * Iva ...
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1953–54 Yugoslav First League
The First Federal League of Yugoslavia's 1953/1954 season was the highest level football competition held in communist Yugoslavia between 1953 and 1954. The league was won by Croatian side NK Dinamo Zagreb. Teams Due to the league's expansion from 12 to 14 teams two clubs were relegated and four teams were promoted at the end of the previous season. League table Results Winning squad Champions: *Dinamo Zagreb (coach: Ivan Jazbinšek) players (league matches/league goals): * Ivica Banožić 3 (0) *Aleksandar Benko 21 (13) * Zvonimir Cimermančić 2 (0) * Dragutin Cizarić 9 (0) *Tomislav Crnković 20 (0) *Željko Čajkovski 24 (13) *Vladimir Čonč 26 (13) *Dionizije Dvornić 26 (16) * Emil Ferković 10 (0) * Drago Horvat 6 (0) * Ivan Horvat 20 (0) * Dragutin Kukec 3 (0) *Luka Lipošinović 10 (3) * Vladimir Majerović 10 (0) *Lav Mantula 21 (2) *Stojan Osojnak 10 (9) * Branko Režek 23 (2) *Zvonko Strnad 1 (0) * Josip Šikić 25 (0) Top scorers See also * 1953–54 Y ...
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1947–48 Yugoslav First League
Teams Changes from last season ;Teams promoted from 1946–47 Yugoslav Second League: * Sarajevo ;Teams relegated from 1946–47 Yugoslav First League: *9th place: Kvarner (Rijeka) * 10th place: Budućnost (Titograd) * 12th place: Željezničar (Sarajevo) * 13th place: 14. Oktobar (Niš) * 14th place: Nafta Lendava Overview Notes *FK Pobeda participating in the 1946-47 season was renamed FK Vardar after fussion with another local club FK Makedonija. *FK Pobeda after ending the 1946-47 season at the 8th place has won the relegation play-offs against FK Sloga Novi Sad and remained in the League under the new name FK Vardar. *CS Ponziana was relegated at the 1946-47 season but was readmitted to the first league instead of better placed S.C.F. Quarnero, due to the political need to have Triest-based club in the Yugoslav league, as a propaganda tool. League table Results Winning squad Champions: *Dinamo Zagreb (coach: Karl Mütsch) players (league matches/league goals ...
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