1923 Yugoslav Football Championship
The 1923 National Championship (
Kingdom of Serbs, Croats and Slovenes
was the first nationwide domestic football competition. At this point there was no league championship in the modern sense as the competition was held in a single-legged cup format, with participating clubs qualifying via regional playoffs organised by the existing 6 regional football subfederations.
Qualified clubs
Locations of teams in 1923 Yugoslav First League- JSD Bačka (Subotica Football Subassociation)
- Građanski Zagreb(Zagreb Football Subassociation)
- Hajduk Split (Split Football Subassociation)
- Ilirija Ljubljana (Ljubljana Football Subassociation)
- SK Jugoslavija Belgrade (Belgrade Football Subassociation)
- SAŠK Sarajevo (Sarajevo Football Subassociation)
Tournament
Quarter finals
Team 1 | Score | Team 2 |
---|---|---|
2 September 1923 | ||
Jugoslavija | 2–1 | Bačka
|
SAŠK | 4–3 | Hajduk
|
Ilirija
|
1–2 | Građanski
|
Semi finals
Team 1 | Score | Team 2 |
---|---|---|
23 September 1923 | ||
SAŠK | 4–3 | Jugoslavija |
Građanski
|
bye |
Final
Team 1 | Agg.
|
Team 2 | 1st leg | 2nd leg |
---|---|---|---|---|
30 September/1 October 1923 | ||||
Građanski
|
5–3 | SAŠK | 1–1 | 4–2 |
Winning squad
Champions:
HŠK Građanski[1] (coach: Arthur Gaskell)
- Dragutin Vrđuka
- Fritz Ferderber
- Miho Remec
- Jaroslav Schiffer
- Dragutin Vragović
- Rudolf Rupec
- Rudolf Hitrec
- Dragutin Babić
- Stjepan Pasinek
- Antun Pavleković
- Franjo Mantler
- Emil Perška
- Bela Šefer
- Stebl
- Gec
Top scorers
Final goalscoring position, number of goals, player/players and club.[2]
- 1 - 4 goals - Dragan Jovanović (Jugoslavija)
- 2 - 3 goals - Jakupec (SAŠK)
- 3 - 2 goals - Franz Mantler, Dragutin Babić, Emil Perška (all Građanski Zagreb), Nedžad Sulejmanpašić and Dragutin Sieber (SAŠK)
See also
- Yugoslav Cup
- Yugoslav League Championship
- Football Association of Yugoslavia
References
- ^ Rekordi i zanimljivosti YU fudbalskih šampionata 1923-1978;Jugoslovenska fudbalska revija Gool, August 1978
- ^ Gola istina: kraljevi strelaca by Živko Bojanić, pag. 14 (in Serbian)