FK Inter Bratislava

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FK Inter Bratislava
Stupava
Stadium Drieňová ulica, Bratislava – Ružinov
Capacity800
1,000
OwnerJán Palenčár
PresidentJozef Barmoš
Head coachAndrej Štellár
League3. liga
2022–233. liga (Západ), 14th of 16
WebsiteClub website

FK Inter Bratislava (Slovak pronunciation:

Stupava
.

History

Inter Bratislava was founded in 1940 by the Apollo

top tier of Slovak football as well as in the Slovak Cup, winning the Slovak double
in the 1999–2000 and 2000–2001 seasons.

Inter's fall and re-establishment

Inter Bratislava won the 1. liga in the 2008–2009 season and was supposed to be promoted to the Slovak top flight. However, financial problems of the club led its owner Ľubomír Chrenko to sell Inter's licence to FK Senica in June 2009.[1] As a result, players of the senior squad of Inter Bratislava joined Senica, whilst youth teams of Inter were preserved by the Inter Bratislava Civic Association, which had been formed from the Inter Fan Club.[2]

The senior side was re-established in the 2010–2011 season, playing in the V. liga, i.e. the sixth tier of Slovak football.[3] Major changes in the structure of the club were accompanied by Inter's move from the Štadión Pasienky, which had been used by the team since 1967, to the considerably smaller Štadión Drieňová ulica. After playing at the Štadión Drieňová ulica for four seasons, the senior team moved to the Štadión ŠKP Inter Dúbravka in the summer of 2014.[4] The grounds have a capacity of 10,200. Since the season 2015/2016 due to unknown issues the Men team returned to stadium Drieňová ulica and the youth teams remained on Stadium ŠKP Inter Dúbravka. In the autumn part of the season 2016/2017 Inter was playing home matches on the stadium in Petržalka on Marie Curie-Skłodowska street (stadium of FC Petržalka akadémia), but in spring 2017 the team moved to the city of Stupava, where the team owners created the training center for Inter. The future plans are to return to Bratislava, Stupava serving as the training center.

Event timeline

  • 1940 – Founded as ŠK Apollo Bratislava
  • 1945 – Renamed TKNB Bratislava
  • 1948 – Renamed Sokol SNB Bratislava
  • 1952 – Renamed TJ Červená Hviezda Bratislava (Red Star)
  • 1959 – First European qualification,
    1959–60
  • 1962 – Merged with TJ Iskra Slovnaft Bratislava and TJ Slovnaft Bratislava
  • 1965 – Renamed TJ Internacionál Slovnaft Bratislava
  • 1986 – Merged with TJ ZŤS Petržalka into TJ Internacionál Slovnaft ZŤS Bratislava
  • 1991 – Renamed AŠK Inter Slovnaft Bratislava
  • 2004 – Renamed FK Inter Bratislava
  • 2009 – Sold club license of FK Inter Bratislava to FK Senica
  • 2009 – Transforming of Inter Fan Club on Inter Bratislava o.z. (Civic association)
  • 2014 – Transforming of Inter Bratislava o.z. on FK Inter Bratislava a.s.

Affiliated clubs

The following clubs are affiliated with FK Inter Bratislava:

Stadium

Former stadium

Stadium Pasienky in Bratislava

Stadium

Pasienky
is a multi-use stadium in Bratislava, Slovakia. It was used mostly for football matches and was the home ground of FK Inter Bratislava. The stadium holds 13,295 people.

Current stadium

Stadium ŠKP Inter Dúbravka in Dúbravka-Bratislava

Since the 2014/2015 season, the home ground of FK Inter Bratislava has been the Štadión ŠKP Inter Dúbravka. Since the season 2015/2016 due to unknown issues the Men team returned to stadium Drieňová ulica and the youth teams remained on Stadium ŠKP Inter Dúbravka. In the autumn part of the season 2016/2017 Inter was playing home matches on the stadium in Petržalka on Marie Curie-Skłodowska street (stadium of FC Petržalka akadémia), but in spring 2017 the team moved to the city of Stupava, where the team owners created the training center for Inter. The future plans are to return to Bratislava, Stupava serving as the training center.

Sponsorship

Period Kit manufacturer Shirt sponsor
1998–2002 hummel Slovnaft
2002–2006 NIKE
2006–2009 Legea Asset
2009–2019 hummel none
2020- Adidas

Honours

Domestic

Czechoslovakia Czechoslovakia

Slovakia Slovakia

European

Mitropa Cup

International Football Cup

Intertoto Cup

Czechoslovak and Slovak Top Goalscorer

The

Slovak League
Top scorer.

Year Winner G
1961–62 Czechoslovakia Adolf Scherer 24
1974–75 Czechoslovakia Ladislav Petráš 20
1989–90 Czechoslovakia Ľubomír Luhový 20
1999–00 Slovakia Szilárd Németh 16
2000–01 Slovakia Szilárd Németh 23
1Shared award

Players

Current squad

As of 24 March 2019 Note: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.

No. Pos. Nation Player
1 GK Slovakia SVK Daniel Goga
3 DF Slovakia SVK Andrej Štrba
4 DF Slovakia SVK Tomáš Šalata (vice-captain)
6 DF Slovakia SVK Vojtech Tóth
8 MF Slovakia SVK Patrik Kochan
9 DF Slovakia SVK Andrej Labuda
10 FW Slovakia SVK Martin Vlček
11 FW Slovakia SVK Jakub Šulc (captain)
12 DF Slovakia SVK Patrik Gilian
14 FW Slovakia SVK Patrik Fedor
No. Pos. Nation Player
16 DF Croatia CRO Bruno Bilić
17 MF Slovakia SVK Mário Baldovský
18 MF France FRA Damien Clément Marie
19 MF Hungary HUN Ronald Takács
20 MF Slovakia SVK Lukáš Jacko
22 MF Nigeria NGA Issa Adekunle (on loan from AS Trenčín)
23 MF Curaçao CUW Quintón Christina
24 DF Belgium BEL Charni Ekangamene
25 DF Slovakia SVK Emil Haladej
26 DF Serbia SRB Jovan Pavlović (on loan from AS Trenčín)
30 GK Slovakia SVK Libor Hrdlička (on loan from AS Trenčín)
FW Slovakia SVK Tomáš Majtán

For recent transfers, see

List of Slovak football transfers winter 2018–19
.

Current technical staff

Updated 17 February 2018
Staff Job title
Slovakia Michal Pančík Manager
Slovakia Richard Slezák Assistant manager
Slovakia Roman Kratochvíl Assiatat Manager
Slovakia Jozef Barmoš President
Slovakia Ľubomír Talda general manager
Slovakia Peter Chudina Team Doctor
Slovakia Patrik Dulovič Masseur

Transfers

Inter have produced numerous players who have gone on to represent the

Akratitos F.C. in 2002, Marián Ľalík to Panionios F.C. in 2003, Czech First League (Marek Čech and Peter Babnič to Sparta Prague in 2004 and 2001, Peter Németh to FC Baník Ostrava in 2001), Russian Premier League (Zsolt Hornyák to FC Dynamo Moscow in 2001). The top transfer was agreed in 2001 when 23years old forward and topscorer Szilárd Németh joined Premier League team Middlesbrough F.C.
for a fee €6.75 million which was the highest ever paid to a Slovak club.

Record transfers

Rank Player To Fee Year
1. Slovakia Szilárd Németh England Middlesbrough F.C. €6.75 million* 2001[7]
2. Slovakia Vratislav Greško Germany Bayer 04 Leverkusen €1.0 million 1999[8]
3. Slovakia Marek Čech Czech Republic Sparta Prague €0.6 million* 2004[9]
4. Slovakia Peter Babnič Czech Republic Sparta Prague €0.4 million* 2001[10]

*-unofficial fee

Results

League and domestic cup history

Slovak League only (1993–present)

Season Division (Name) Pos./Teams Pl. W D L GS GA P Slovak Cup Europe Top scorer (Goals)
1993–94 1st (
1. liga
)
2/(12) 32 18 4 10 65 45 40 Semi-finals Slovakia Martin Obšitník (14)
1994–95 1st (
1. liga
)
3/(12) 32 14 8 10 47 45 50 Winner UC PR (
MYPA
)
1995–96 1st (
1. liga
)
9/(12) 32 11 7 14 42 45 40 2.R CWC 1.R (Spain Zaragoza) Slovakia Jaroslav Timko (9)
1996–97 1st (
1. liga
)
4/(16) 30 13 9 8 38 35 48 Semi-finals Austria Rolf Landerl (10)
1997–98 1st (
Mars Superliga
)
3/(16) 30 18 6 6 55 25 60 Semi-finals Slovakia Peter Babnič (9)
1998–99 1st (
Mars Superliga
)
2/(16) 30 21 5 4 64 15 68 Quarter-finals UC Q2 (Czech Republic Slavia Prague) Slovakia Peter Babnič (13)
1999–00 1st (
Mars Superliga
)
1/(16) 30 21 7 2 65 16 70 Winner UC 2.R (France FC Nantes) Slovakia Szilárd Németh (16)
2000–01 1st (
Mars Superliga
)
1/(10) 36 25 5 6 73 28 80 Winner CL
UC
Q3 (France Lyon)
2.R (Russia Lokomotiv)
Slovakia Szilárd Németh (23)
2001–02 1st (
Mars Superliga
)
3/(10) 36 16 8 12 53 39 56 Quarter-finals CL
UC
Q3 (Norway Rosenborg)
1.R (Bulgaria Litex)
Slovakia Miroslav Drobňák (9)
2002–03 1st (
1. liga
)
6/(10) 36 12 7 17 48 58 43 1.R Slovakia Miroslav Drobňák (10)
Slovakia Juraj Halenár (10)
2003–04 1st (
Corgoň Liga
)
7/(10) 36 12 9 15 38 44 45 2.R Slovakia Juraj Halenár (9)
2004–05 1st (
Corgoň Liga
)
9/(10) 36 9 11 16 37 60 38 Quarter-finals Slovakia Juraj Halenár (12)
2005–06 1st (
Corgoň Liga
)
9/(10) 36 7 9 20 27 62 30 2.R Slovakia Marián Tomčák (6)
2006–07 1st (
Corgoň Liga
)
13/(16) 36 11 11 14 39 40 44 3.R Slovakia Radoslav Kunzo (6)
2007–08 2nd (1. liga) 3/(12) 33 15 8 10 49 40 53 Quarter-finals Slovakia Tomáš Majtán (16)
2008–09 2nd (1. liga) 1/(12) 33 19 10 4 64 27 67 2.R
2009–10
2010–11 6th (V. liga Seniori BA-Mesto) 1/(12) 22 18 2 2 72 15 56
2011–12 5th (IV. liga Seniori BA-Mesto) 1/(14) 26 16 6 4 62 28 54
2012–13 4th (Majstrovstvá regiónu BA) 7/(16) 30 13 7 10 42 33 46
2013–14 4th (Majstrovstvá regiónu BA) 1/(17) 32 21 9 2 83 24 72
2014–15 3rd (III. liga Bratislava) 6/(16) 30 13 8 9 46 41 47 4.R
2015–16 3rd (III. liga Bratislava) 2/(16) 30 18 6 6 70 20 60 2.R Slovakia Patrik Fedor (13)
2016–17 3rd (III. liga Bratislava) 1/(16) 30 24 4 2 93 11 76 3.R Slovakia Jakub Šulc (23)
2017–18 2nd (DOXXbet liga) 8/(16) 30 12 5 13 45 46 41 5.R Slovakia Erik Prekop (8)
2018–19 2nd (II. liga) 14/(16) 30 8 5 17 37 56 29 4.R Slovakia Jakub Šulc (11)
2019–20 3rd (III. liga) 2/(16) 15 11 2 2 46 16 35 Not enter Slovakia Tomáš Majtán (14)
2020–21 3rd (III. liga) 2/(16) 15 10 1 4 53 21 31 Not enter Slovakia Tomáš Majtán (13)
2021–22 3rd (III. liga) 3/(16) 30 21 6 3 79 18 69 Not enter Slovakia Andrej Labuda (18)
2022–23 3rd (III. liga) 13/(16) 28 8 7 13 34 43 31 3.R Slovakia Tomáš Majtán (6)

European competition history

Season Competition Round Country Club Home Away Aggregate
1959–60
European Cup
Preliminary round Portugal
F.C. Porto
2–1 2–0 4–1
1. Round Scotland Rangers F.C. 1–1 3–4 4–5
1960 Mitropa Cup Group Hungary
Tatabányai Bányász
3–3 1–2 4–5
1961–62 Mitropa Cup Group
Czechoslovakia Slovan Nitra 3–4
Austria SV Stickstoff 8–2
Italy
FC Torino
4–2
1967–68 Mitropa Cup 1. Round Hungary
FC Tatabánya
7–0 1–3 8–3
Quarter-finals Socialist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia Red Star Belgrade 3–2 0–3 3–5
1968–69 Mitropa Cup 1. Round Italy
Palermo
3–0 0–1 3–1
Quarter-finals Austria
Admira Wien
1–1 2–2 3–3(a)
Semi-finals Hungary Vasas SC 1–0 2–2 3–2
Final Czech Republic
Sklo Union Teplice
4–1 0–0 4–1
1969–70 Mitropa Cup 1. Round Austria First Vienna 6–1 6–1
Quarter-finals Austria Wacker Innsbruck 3–0 0–1 3–1
Semi-finals Hungary Honvéd 2–1 1–0 3–1
Final Hungary Vasas SC 2–1 1–4 3–4
1975–76
UEFA Cup
1. Round Spain Real Zaragoza 5–0 3–2 8–2
2. Round Greece AEK Athens 2–0 1–3 3–3(a)
3. Round Poland Stal Mielec 1–0 0–2 1–2
1977–78
UEFA Cup
1. Round Austria SK Rapid Wien 0–1 3–0 3–1
2. Round Switzerland Grasshoppers 1–0 1–5 2–5
1983–84
UEFA Cup
1. Round Malta Rabat Ajax F.C. 10–0 6–0 16–0
2. Round Socialist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia Radnički Niš 3–2 0–4 3–6
1984–85
European Cup Winners' Cup
1. Round Finland FC Kuusysi 2–1 0–0 2–1
2. Round England Everton 0–1 0–3 0–4
1988–89
European Cup Winners' Cup
1. Round Bulgaria CSKA Sofia 2–3 0–5 2–8
1990–91
UEFA Cup
1. Round Luxembourg Avenir Beggen 5–0 1–2 6–2
2. Round Germany 1. FC Köln 0–2 1–0 1–2
1994–95
UEFA Cup
Preliminary round Finland
MYPA
0–3 1–0 1–3
1995–96 UEFA Cup Winners' Cup Qualifying round Malta Valletta F.C. 5–2 0–0 5–2
1. Round Spain Real Zaragoza 0–2 1–3 1–5
1998–99
UEFA Cup
1. Qualifying round Albania KF Tirana 2–0 2–0 4–0
2. Qualifying round Czech Republic Slavia Prague 2–0 0–4 2–4
1999–00
UEFA Cup
Qualifying round Albania
KS Bylis
3–1 2–0 5–1
1. Round Austria Rapid Wien 1–0 2–1 3–1
2. Round France FC Nantes 0–3 0–4 0–7
2000–01 UEFA Champions League 2. Qualifying round Finland FC Haka 1–0(
aet
)
0–0 1–0
3. Qualifying round France Olympique Lyonnais 1–2 1–2 2–4
2000–01
UEFA Cup
1. Round Netherlands Roda JC Kerkrade 2–1 2–0 4–1
2. Round Russia Lokomotiv Moscow 1–2 0–1 1–3
2001–02 UEFA Champions League 2. Qualifying round Belarus Slavia Mozyr 1–0 1–0 2–0
3. Qualifying round Norway Rosenborg 3–3 0–4 3–7
2001–02
UEFA Cup
1. Round Bulgaria Litex Lovech 1–0 0–3 1–3

Player records

Most goals

# Nat. Name Goals
1 Czechoslovakia Jozef Levický 100
2 Czechoslovakia Adolf Scherer 99
3 Czechoslovakia Slovakia Ľubomír Luhový 76
. Czechoslovakia Milan Dolinský 76
5 Czechoslovakia Ladislav Petráš 65
6 Czechoslovakia Juraj Szikora 56
7 Czechoslovakia Mikuláš Krnáč 51
8 Czechoslovakia Marián Tomčák 48
9 Czechoslovakia Titus Buberník 47
. Czechoslovakia Ladislav Kačáni 47

Notable players

Had international caps for their respective countries. Players whose name is listed in bold represented their countries while playing for Inter.

Past (and present) players who are the subjects of Wikipedia articles can be found here.

Managers

References

  1. ^ "Prvé mužstvo FK Inter zaniklo, hráči so zmluvou idú do Senice" (in Slovak). Profutbal. 18 June 2009. Archived from the original on 10 November 2014. Retrieved 9 November 2014.
  2. ^ "Inter nezanikol, logo žlto-čiernych zachránili pre deti" (in Slovak). Profutbal. 17 July 2009. Archived from the original on 10 November 2014. Retrieved 9 November 2014.
  3. ^ "Návrat Interu Bratislava, od sezóny 2010/11 na scéne aj A-tím" (in Slovak). Profutbal. 29 April 2010. Archived from the original on 10 November 2014. Retrieved 9 November 2014.
  4. ^ "Tradičný klub sa vracia, Inter Bratislava má postupový hetrik" (in Slovak). Šport. 31 July 2014. Retrieved 9 November 2014.
  5. ^ "Tlačová konferencia AS Trenčín pred jarnou časťou sezóny". astrencin/youtube.com (in Slovak). Archived from the original on 2021-12-22. Retrieved 2016-03-10.
  6. ^ "Bratislavský Inter nadviazal po Trenčíne spoluprácu aj s FK Stupava". profutbal.sk (in Slovak). Retrieved 2016-02-24.
  7. ^ "Szilárd Németh: Príbeh posledného gólového slovenského útočníka". 10 January 2018.
  8. ^ "TOP 10 najdrahších prestupov slovenských futbalistov". 22 July 2016.
  9. ^ "Marek Čech prestúpil do Sparty za 15 miliónov českých korún". 9 April 2005.
  10. ^ "Sparťan Peter Babnič v Tatrách".

External links