FK Bohumín

The FK Bohumín is a Czech football club based in the Moravian-Silesian city Bohumín. It was founded in 1931 as AFK Nový Bohumín. He played from 1972 to 1974 and from 1976 to 1983 in the 2nd Czechoslovak League, and from 1993 to 1995 in the 2nd Czech league.

Club history

Only in 1928 it came in Bohumín establishing a Czech football clubs, until then, there were only associations of the German-speaking population. However Slezká Slavia Bohumín was only a short time. In the spring of 1931, the AFK Nový Bohumín was established, which was to become the most successful club of the city. Until the beginning of the Second World War, which broke the competitions, the AFK shuttled between the third and fourth power level.

After the takeover by the Communist Party in 1948, the club came under the patronage of the local steel mills and traded from now on under the name AFK Banska a hutní Bohumín. In September 1949, the steelworks in Bohumínské Zelezarny Gustav Klimenta was renamed shortly BŽGK, the club name changed accordingly in TJ BŽGK Bohumín. Four years later, it came to the biggest reorganization in the Czechoslovak sports, all the clubs that were subordinate to an operation of mining or iron and steel processing, were called Banik. Consequently, the new club name was TJ Banik BŽGK Bohumín. 1958 attacked again the politics of the sport one. It came to the merger of the two state-owned enterprises and BŽGK Drátovný Bohumín, the new company was called Železárny a drátovny Bohumín, ZD short, thus widening the club in TJ ZD Bohumín has been renamed.

In the season 1958/59 ZD Bohumín succeeded in rising to the third-highest division. Before the season 1969/70 was the third league, previously reduced with 16 teams from six groups with 14 team to three groups, with a fifth place in Group D succeeded ZD Bohumín the qualification. From the beginning the team played with the front, was 1969/70 Fifth and 1970/71 second. In the following season Bohumín reached the hitherto biggest success in club history with the rise in the national second Czechoslovak league. The team was able to take advantage of the underrated freshman in the 1972/73 season for himself and finished seventh. The following year proved to be true the statement that the second year is often harder. As Table Bohumín dismounted. Even after two years managed to rise again, this time the team was able to hold up to 1983 in the second division.

In the last scheduled time of Czechoslovakia in 1992/93 ZD Bohumín took second place in the MSFL and thus qualified for the second league of the Czech Republics in 1993, / 94th There, the team finished only second to last place, secured the league but due to an expansion of the field to 18 teams. For use came Dragan Jankulovski, brother of the international's Marek Jankulovski this season.

Before the 1994 season the club won the Brno businessman Josef Tetur and whose company dipole as a new sponsor, the club played a short time as FC dipole Bohumín before it was renamed to FC Coring Bohumín. The 13th place was not enough in the season 1994/95 with five losers to hold the class. Tetur withdrew from the association, the financially weakened and renamed SK Bohumín, even in the MSFL was not competitive. Only the exclusion of FC Pares Prušánky saved the team that won only four times in the course of the 1995/96 season, before a new descent. The only followed a year later and also in the fourth division could the team, now back under the symbol ZD Bohumín antretend not hold.

In fünftklassigen Přebor Bohumín played with varying success, the descent was, for example, 2003/04, but closer than the rise. July 1, 2006, the club merged with another club, therefore, out of town, the FC Rapid Skřečoň for FK Bohumín and settled on the place over.

League membership Czechoslovakia

League affiliation Czech Republic

Statistics

  • 2 Czech League 1993/94 and 1994/ 95:

Well-known former players

  • Petr Drozd
  • Martin Guzik
  • Michal Guzik
  • Kamil Janšta
  • Bohuš Keler
  • František Kunzo
  • Milan Lednicky
  • Jaroslav Netolička
  • Marek Poštulka
  • Pavel Srníček
  • Pavol Švantner

Club name

336292
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