KAMK Prague
   HOME

TheInfoList



OR:

Prague Speedway has consisted of several former motorcycle speedway teams and stadia and the current team known as
AK Markéta Praha Automotoklub Markéta Praha is a Czech motorcycle speedway team based in Prague, Czech Republic. The team race at the Markéta Stadium. History Following the end of World War II, the Czechoslovak military began forming sports teams and reg ...
, who race at the Markéta Stadium.


History


1928 to 1992

The origins of speedway in Prague can be traced back to races held at the
Stadion Letná The Letná Stadium ( cs, Stadion Letná ), is a association football, football stadium in Prague. It is the home venue of AC Sparta Prague and often hosts the home matches of the Czech Republic national football team. The stadium's capacity ...
, starting on 9 June 1928 and these were soon followed by meetings at the
Great Strahov Stadium The Great Strahov Stadium ( cs, Velký strahovský stadion) is a stadium in the Strahov district of Prague, Czech Republic. It was built for displays of synchronized gymnastics on a massive scale, with a field three times as long as and three ...
on 14 May 1933 and the Žižkov TJ Sokol Stadium on 11 April 1934. Following the end of World War II, the Czechoslovak military began forming sports teams and regional and national competitions. In 1953, a law (following the Soviet model) determined that all clubs should be voluntary sports societies, with athletes being allocated to clubs according to their civic occupations. The first Czechoslovak Team Speedway Championship was held in 1956 and featured two teams from Prague, Rudá Hvězda Praha (Red Star Prague), associated with the Czechoslovak police force and KAMK Prague, who were based at the ČAFC stadium in Spořilov. The two teams finished first and second respectively in the inaugural league season. Red Star then dominated the league during the period 1957 to 1962, when many teams carried the
Svazarm Svazarm or Union for Cooperation with the Army (Czech: Svaz pro spolupráci s armádou / Svazarm, Slovak: Zväz pre spoluprácu s armádou / Zväzarm), was, in Communist Czechoslovakia, the largest "paramilitary" organisation, although many of the ...
prefix to their club names. Despite the league competition ending in 1963, the Czechoslovak Individual Championship continued and Red Star rider Luboš Tomíček Sr. was the county's leading rider, winning five consecutive titles. Additionally the first World Championship event held in Prague was a continental qualifying round during the
1963 Individual Speedway World Championship The 1963 Individual Speedway World Championship was the 18th edition of the official World Championship to determine the world champion rider. Ove Fundin extended his record by winning a fourth world crown. Fellow Sweden Björn Knutsson finished ...
, held at the Great Strahov Stadium on 9 May. In 1965 and 1966, the FK Viktoria Stadion held speedway, used by the Victoria Speedway Club Praha (VSC). VSC was the new name for the Prague team that raced primarily at Spořilov again from 1967 and included riders such as Antonín Kasper Sr.,
František Ledecký František Ledecký (born 3 November 1940) is a Czech former motorcycle speedway rider. He was capped by the Czechoslovak national speedway team. Career Ledecký began his speedway career training at the ČAFC stadium in the Spořilov area ...
, Václav Verner and
Bohumír Bartoněk Bohumír Bartoněk (born 10 May 1939) is a former international speedway rider from Czechoslovakia. Speedway career Bartoněk reached the final of the Speedway World Team Cup in the 1960 Speedway World Team Cup, he won a bronze medal despite n ...
. When the league restarted in 1967, VSC emerged as the new champions but the Red Star team began to dominate again the following season and VSC were homeless by 1970. In 1971, VSC found a new home at Letňa Avia in
Čakovice Čakovice (German ''Tschakowitz'') is a municipal district (''městská část'') in Prague Prague ( ; cs, Praha ; german: Prag, ; la, Praga) is the capital and List of cities in the Czech Republic, largest city in the Czech Republic, and t ...
and were called Zizkov Prague before taking the name AMK Čakovice in the late 1970s. The venue also hosted a final round of the Czechoslovak Individual Championship eight times from 1973 to 1983. Meanwhile, the city's Red Star team based at the Markéta Stadium continued to dominate all competition and continually won the league title. It was not until the fall of Real socialism in the
Eastern Bloc The Eastern Bloc, also known as the Communist Bloc and the Soviet Bloc, was the group of socialist states of Central and Eastern Europe, East Asia, Southeast Asia, Africa, and Latin America under the influence of the Soviet Union that existed du ...
countries, that clubs began to choose names of their own, Red Star became Olymp Praha and then much later AK Markéta Praha.


After Dissolution

Following the
Dissolution of Czechoslovakia The dissolution of Czechoslovakia ( cs, Rozdělení Československa, sk, Rozdelenie Česko-Slovenska) took effect on December 31, 1992, and was the self-determined split of the federal republic of Czechoslovakia into the independent countries o ...
the Czech Republic Team Championship began in 1992. AMK Čakovice competed during 1992 and 1993 but then folded and the Letňa Avia became solely a football ground. The demise of the Čakovice club left the Markéta Stadium as the sole remaining speedway venue in Prague. The Great Strahov Stadium had last hosted speedway on 2 September 1973, the ČAFC stadium in Spořilov had been demolished to make way for a road and the Stadion Letná and FK Viktoria Stadion had long since removed their speedway tracks. As the only Prague club, AK Markéta Praha continue to compete strongly in the Czech Republic Extraliga, winning the league in 2022.


References

{{coord missing, Czech Republic Sport in Prague Buildings and structures in Prague Sports venues in Prague Speedway venues in the Czech Republic Speedway teams in the Czech Republic Sports clubs and teams in Czechoslovakia