FC Spartak Trnava

(Redirected from FC Spartak Trnava B)

FC Spartak Trnava (Slovak pronunciation: [ˈspartak ˈtr̩naʋa]) is a professional football club based in Trnava, Slovakia. The club competes in Slovak First Football League, the top division in the Slovakian league system, having participated in more seasons than any other club.

Spartak Trnava
Full nameFC Spartak Trnava
Nickname(s)Bíli andeli (The White Angels)
Founded30 May 1923; 101 years ago (1923-05-30) (as TŠS Trnava)
GroundAnton Malatinský Stadium
Capacity18,200
PresidentPeter Macho
ManagerMichal Gašparík
LeagueSlovak First Football League
2023–24Slovak First Football League, 3rd of 12
Websitefcspartaktrnava.com
Current season

Founded in 1923, it is one of the most traditionally successful clubs in the country. It has played its home games since incepton at Anton Malatinský Stadium, located in the very centre of the city. The club's anthem is Il Silenzio and it has been played prior to every home match since late 1960s.

Domestically, the club has won six league titles and eight cups. The most successful era came on the verge of 1960s and 1970s, when club dominated Czechoslovak football, having won the Czechoslovak First League five times in the span of six seasons. During these times, Spartak Trnava also made its name at the international level, having won Mitropa Cup in 1967 and more importantly, progressing to the semi-finals of European Cup in 1969 and quarter-finals in 1973 and 1974 (the former still standing as the record achievement in the competition for Slovak or Czech club). More recently, the club won the Slovak league title in 2018, as well as Slovak cup in 2019, 2022 and 2023.

The club has a large fan-base, having regularly averaged the highest attendance in Slovak football. It has a long-standing rivalry with Slovan Bratislava, with whom it contests a derby.

Spartak's colours are red, black and white. Since early days, the home kit consisted of a red and black striped shirt. Spartak's away kit has traditionally been completely white, giving the club its giving the club its nickname bíli andeli (the white angels in local dialect).

History

edit

The club was founded on 30 May 1923 by the merger of Šk Čechie and ČšŠk into TSS Trnava. After a communist takeover it became affiliated with the metal industry and was renamed to TJ Kovosmalt ("Metal-enamel").

Previous names

edit
  • ŠK Rapid Trnava (1923–39)
  • TSS Trnava (1939–48)
  • Sokol NV Trnava (1948–49)
  • TJ Sokol Kovosmalt Trnava (1949–53)
  • DŠO Spartak Trnava (1953–62)
  • TJ Spartak Trnava (1962–67)
  • TJ Spartak TAZ Trnava (1967–88)
  • TJ Spartak ZŤS Trnava (1988–93)
  • FC Spartak Trnava (1993–present)

Golden era

edit

In 1952, the club gained its current name, but the performance in those years was very unstable, Spartak played the 2nd league and after advancing to the highest competition, they occupied mostly the lower parts of the table. A better position came only in the 1959/60 season, when Spartak took 4th place. The Golden era of Spartak began in the 1966–67 season. The team of legendary coach Anton Malatinský was top of the league by the autumn, but by the end of the season had finished only in third place. Great success was achieved in the Mitropa Cup. Spartak beat teams like Budapest Honvéd, Lazio and Fiorentina and in the final they defeated Újpest of Hungary. In the following season Spartak gained their most memorable European results. They reached the semi-final of the European Cup to face Ajax. It is their greatest success to date.

Ajax  3–0  Spartak Trnava
Cruyff   27'
Swart   52'
Keizer   60'
Report
Attendance: 55,490
Spartak Trnava  2–0  Ajax
Kuna   27', 49' Report
Attendance: 22,938

Ajax won 3–2 on aggregate.

Under the management of Ján Hucko, the team also won a second championship. In 1970–71 and 1971–72, Trnava won their third and fourth championship titles under coaches Valér Švec and Anton Malatinský. The team also reached the quarter-final of the European Cup in 1973 and 1974. The fifth and the last league title in 1972–73 beckoned the end of Spartak's golden era. In 1976, Karol Dobiaš was in the squad that won the UEFA Euro 1976.

1990s

edit

Although Spartak finished 16th (and last) in the last unified Czechoslovak league season in 1992–93, the latter half of the 1990s can be considered the renaissance of football in Trnava. During the 1995–96 season, Spartak finished third and its popularity grew. The 1996–97 season was a memorable one for the fans of Spartak, Karol Pecze almost led the team to its first Slovakian league title but got beaten to it by Košice in the final week of competition. The following season, under new coach Dušan Galis the team again achieved second place and then third place during the 1998–99 season which saw the end of this recovery of footballing prowess in Trnava.

2018–19

edit

In the 2017–18 season, Spartak won the league title for the first time in 45 years. Under the leadership of coach Nestor El Maestro, Trnava won the title three games before the end of the 2017–18 season after a 2–0 victory over Dunajská Streda.[1] The title celebrations took place after the last season match against AS Trenčín (17,113 spectators).[2] They included an autograph session, a ride on the city on an open bus, fireworks and a solemn Holy Mass in the Cathedral sv. Jána Krstiteľa.[3] These were the biggest title celebrations in the history of Slovakia. During the 2018–19 season Spartak reached the UEFA Europa League group stage for the first time. They played against GNK Dinamo Zagreb, Fenerbahçe and R.S.C. Anderlecht. They finished 3rd with a record of 2 wins, 1 draw and 3 losses.

Despite an abysmal league campaign, Spartak managed to win the 2018–19 Slovak Cup.

Honours

edit

Domestic

edit

  Slovakia

  Czechoslovakia

European

edit

Stadium

edit

Anton Malatinský Stadium is located in the centre of Trnava, directly behind the walls of the old town. Formerly known simply as Spartak stadium, it was renamed in 1998 in honour of the club's most successful manager Anton Malatinský.

Stadium underwent a complex reconstruction in 2013–2015. Opening ceremony of the new stadium took place on 22 August 2015. The stadium has capacity of 18,200 spectators.

Affiliated clubs

edit

The following clubs are currently affiliated with Spartak Trnava:

Sponsorship

edit
Period Kit manufacturer Shirt sponsor
?–1991 Puma none
1992–95 Liga
1995–97 Slovakofarma
1997–99 Lotto
1999–00 Puma
2000–01 none
2001–02 HORIZONT
2002–03 none
2003–05 Sony WEGA
2005–06 Uhlsport
2006–07 Sony
2007–08 none
2008–10 Nike
2010–11 Givova Danube Wings
2011–12 TSS Grade
2012–14 Adidas DanubeWings.eu, ŽOS Trnava
2014–15 Škoda Transportation
2015–2018 Škoda, ŽOS Trnava
2019 PN Invest
2019–2020 #DOBRÝ ANJEL
2020–2021 none
2021–2023 Tipsport
2023- Puma

Support

edit
 
Spartak fans in match against AS Trenčín, on 19 May 2018

The main ultras group is called Ultras Spartak. Traditionally, the club has had great support in the city, but it is very popular in the whole region.

The club's official anthem is Il Silenzio. It is played prior to every home match, when the players are entering onto the pitch.

Between 1988 and 2006, Spartak ultras had a mutual friendship with Baník Ostrava fans. Good relations and friendship still persist to this day.

Rivalries

edit

The greatest rival is Slovan Bratislava. The rivalry has a long tradition and the derby is considered the most prestigious match in the Slovak football calendar.

Transfers

edit

Spartak have produced numerous players who have gone on to represent the Slovak national football team. Over the last period there has been a steady increase of young players leaving Spartak after a few years of first team football and moving on to play football in leagues of a higher standard, with the Austrian Football Bundesliga (Július Šimon to FK Austria Wien in 1997, season 1997–98 topscorer Ľubomír Luhový to Grazer AK in 1998), Greece Superleague (Erik Sabo to PAOK in 2015, Peter Doležaj to Olympiacos Volos in 2011), French Ligue 1 (Koro Koné to Dijon FCO in 2012, Adam Jakubech to Lille OSC in 2017), Czech First League (Vladimír Leitner to FK Teplice in 2000, Kamil Susko to FC Baník Ostrava in 2000), Cypriot First Division (Dušan Tittel to AC Omonia in 1999), Norway Tippeligaen (Martin Husár to Lillestrøm SK in 2006), Polish Ekstraklasa (Erik Jendrišek to Crakovia in 2015, Ján Vlasko to Zagłębie Lubin in 2015, Dobrivoj Rusov to Piast Gliwice in 2014, and Ľuboš Kamenár to Śląsk Wrocław in 2016. The top transfer was agreed in 1999 when Miroslav Karhan joined Spanish Real Betis for a fee 2.3 million.

Record transfers

edit
Rank Player To Fee Year
1.   Miroslav Karhan   Real Betis €2.3 million 1999[6]
2.   Adam Jakubech   Lille OSC €1.0 million* 2017
3.   Erik Jirka   Red Star Belgrade €0.75 million* 2018[7]
4.   Martin Husár   Lillestrøm SK €0.6 million* 2006[8]
  Erik Sabo   PAOK €0.6 million* 2015[9]

*-unofficial fee

Players

edit

Current squad

edit
As of 13 September 2024

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   SVN Žiga Frelih
2 DF   SVK Lukáš Štetina
3 DF   CRO Roko Jureškin
4 DF   CZE Libor Holík
6 MF   SVK Roman Procházka
7 MF   SVK Róbert Pich
8 MF   BEL Milan Corryn
11 MF   NGA Philip Azango
12 DF   CYP Thomas Nikolaou
13 DF   SVK Marek Ujlaky
14 MF   CZE Miloš Kratochvíl
16 MF   SWE Hugo Ahl
17 MF   SVK Jakub Paur
18 DF   SVK Martin Šulek
No. Pos. Nation Player
21 MF   SVK Patrick Karhan
23 MF   CZE Erik Daniel
27 MF   CZE Vojtěch Kubista
28 MF   SVK Martin Bukata
29 DF   SVK Martin Mikovič (captain)
31 GK   SVK Dobrivoj Rusov
33 DF   CZE Filip Twardzik
52 MF   SVK Erik Sabo
57 FW   SVK Michal Ďuriš
72 GK   SVK Martin Vantruba
77 DF   NGA Kazeem Bolaji
80 MF   SVN Adrian Zeljković
97 MF   GHA Kelvin Ofori

For recent transfers, see List of Slovak football transfers summer 2024.

On loan

edit

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

No. Pos. Nation Player
5 DF   SVN Miha Kompan Breznik (at NK Radomlje until 31 December 2024)

Retired numbers

edit

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

No. Pos. Nation Player
9 MF   SVK Ladislav Kuna (posthumous honour)
10 FW   SVK Jozef Adamec (posthumous honour)

Current technical staff

edit
Position Staff
Head coach   Michal Gašparík
Assistant coaches   Marián Hodulík
  Tomáš Prisztács
Goalkeeping coach   Pavel Kamesch
Fitness coach   Michal Kukučka
Custodian   Martin Bohunický
Physiotherapists   Martin Guga
  Andrej Matonok
Masseur   Tomáš Hološka
Club doctors   Marko Bernadič
  Viliam Vadrna

Last updated: 9 March 2024
Source: [1]

Club officials

edit
Position Name
President   Peter Macho
General manager   Martin Hudec
Marketing manager   Pavol Bielik
Technical manager   Michal Maron
PR manager   Patrik Velšic
Youth director   Marián Hýbela
Safety manager   Vladimír Stupala

Records

edit

League history

edit
  • Czechoslovak First League (1948–93)
Season League Pos./Teams Played Wins Draws Losses Score Points Managers Top scorer (goals)
1964–65 Czechoslovak First League 10th/14 26 8 8 10 33:36 24 Anton Malatinský Anton Hrušecký (7)
Valér Švec (7)
1965–66 Czechoslovak First League 6th/14 26 12 3 11 34:26 27 Anton Malatinský Valér Švec (9)
1966–67 Czechoslovak First League 3rd/14 26 16 2 8 53:26 34 Anton Malatinský Jozef Adamec (21)
1967–68 Czechoslovak First League 1st/14 26 15 5 6 57:26 35 Anton Malatinský Jozef Adamec (18)
1968–69 Czechoslovak First League 1st/14 26 17 5 4 50:21 39 Ján Hucko Adam Farkaš (13)
1969–70 Czechoslovak First League 2nd/16 30 15 10 5 55:23 40 Ján Hucko Jozef Adamec (16)
1970–71 Czechoslovak First League 1st/16 30 17 6 7 52:27 40 Valér Švec Jozef Adamec (16)
1971–72 Czechoslovak First League 1st/16 30 17 10 3 60:25 44 Anton Malatinský Jozef Adamec (14)
1972–73 Czechoslovak First League 1st/16 30 16 7 7 47:20 39 Anton Malatinský Ladislav Kuna (9)
1973–74 Czechoslovak First League 7th/16 30 8 13 9 32:31 29 Anton Malatinský Ladislav Kuna (7)
Jozef Adamec (7)
1974–75 Czechoslovak First League 6th/16 30 12 6 12 32:36 30 Anton Malatinský Tibor Jančula (7)
1975–76 Czechoslovak First League 10th/16 30 12 5 13 35:32 29 Anton Malatinský Jozef Adamec (6)
1976–77 Czechoslovak First League 14th/16 30 9 8 13 26:47 26 Milan Moravec Ladislav Kuna (5)
1977–78 Czechoslovak First League 9th/16 30 8 12 10 26:31 28 Viliam Novák Viliam Martinák (5)
Michal Gašparík (5)
1978–79 Czechoslovak First League 12th/16 30 7 13 10 34:37 27 Valér Švec Michal Gašparík (9)
1979–80 Czechoslovak First League 7th/16 30 11 10 9 35:35 32 Valér Švec Marián Brezina (8)
1980–81 Czechoslovak First League 10th/16 30 13 3 14 36:43 29 Kamil Majerník Marián Brezina (6)
1981–82 Czechoslovak First League 14th/16 30 10 4 16 31:41 24 Kamil Majerník Michal Gašparík (6)
Jozef Medgyes (6)
1982–83 Czechoslovak First League 8th/16 30 12 6 12 29:39 30 Justín Javorek Michal Gašparík (8)
1983–84 Czechoslovak First League 8th/16 30 12 6 12 29:39 30 Justín Javorek Michal Gašparík (8)
1983–84 Czechoslovak First League 7th/16 30 11 7 12 43:50 29 Justín Javorek Michal Gašparík (10)
1984–85 Czechoslovak First League 9th/16 30 10 9 11 33:39 29 Justín Javorek Jozef Dian (6)
1985–86 Czechoslovak First League 10th/16 30 9 9 12 25:32 27 Stanislav Jarábek Michal Gašparík (5)
1986–87 Czechoslovak First League 11th/16 30 12 3 15 41:52 27 Stanislav Jarábek Attila Belanský (9)
1987–88 Czechoslovak First League 10th/16 30 11 7 12 38:42 29 Stanislav Jarábek Attila Belanský (4)
Ivan Hucko (4)
Jaroslav Hutta (4)
1988–89 Czechoslovak First League 12th/16 30 10 7 13 36:46 27 Stanislav Jarábek Igor Klejch (12)
1989–90 Czechoslovak First League 15th/16 30 4 10 16 23:62 21 Ladislav Kuna
Dušan Radolský
Ján Gabriel (4)
1990–91 1.SNL 1st 30 17 7 6 65:25 41 Valér Švec
1991–92 Czechoslovak First League 14th/16 30 6 9 15 21:59 21 Valér Švec Ján Solár (4)
Marek Ujlaky (4)
1992–93 Czechoslovak First League 16th/16 30 3 10 17 24:60 16 Valér Švec
Richard Matovič
Július Zemaník (6)
  • Slovak First League (1993–present)
Season League Pos./Teams Played Wins Draws Losses Score Points Managers Top scorer (Goals)
1993–94 Slovak First League 7th/12 32 8 12 12 25:32 28 Ladislav Jurkemik, Justín Javorek   Marián Klago (5)
  Milan Malatinský (5)
1994–95 Slovak First League 6th/12 32 12 8 12 43:35 44 Karol Pecze   Stanislav Moravec (7)
1995–96 Slovak First League 3rd/12 32 19 6 7 54:32 63 Karol Pecze   Marek Ujlaky (11)
1996–97 Slovak First League 2nd/16 30 21 6 3 66:24 69 Karol Pecze   Július Šimon (14)
1997–98 Slovak First League 2nd/16 30 20 6 4 61:34 66 Dušan Galis   Ľubomír Luhový (17)
1998–99 Slovak First League 3rd/16 30 19 7 4 59:20 64 Dušan Galis, Peter Zelenský   Fábio Gomes (9)
1999–00 Slovak First League 4th/16 30 15 8 7 38:21 53 Anton Jánoš   Fábio Gomes (10)
2000–01 Slovak First League 10th/10 36 8 10 18 39:62 34 Anton Jánoš, Peter Zelenský
Stanislav Jarábek
  Marek Ujlaky (9)
2001–02 2nd league 1st/16 30 18 7 5 61:22 61 Ladislav Molnár, Rastislav Vincúr
Jozef Adamec
  Miroslav Kriss (12)
2002–03 Slovak First League 4th/10 36 15 11 10 55:47 56 Jozef Adamec   Vladimír Kožuch (12)
2003–04 Slovak First League 4th/10 36 15 8 13 46:46 53 Miroslav Svoboda, Stanislav Jarábek
Vladimír Ekhardt
  Miroslav Kriss (11)
2004–05 Slovak First League 5th/10 36 12 10 14 39:37 46 Jozef Vukušič, Milan Lešický   Pavol Masaryk (9)
2005–06 Slovak First League 3rd/10 36 21 5 10 57:31 68 Jozef Adamec   Miroslav Kriss (12)
2006–07 Slovak First League 9th/12 36 13 10 13 40:46 49 Jozef Bubenko, Jozef Adamec
Jozef Šuran, Ivan Hucko
  Miroslav Kriss (7)
2007–08 Slovak First League 4th/12 33 15 7 11 52:40 52   Josef Mazura, Jozef Adamec   Ľubomír Bernáth (9)
2008–09 Slovak First League 3rd/12 33 15 10 8 45:38 55   Vladimir Vermezović, Karol Pecze   Vladimír Kožuch (8)
2009–10 Slovak First League 7th/12 33 12 5 16 52:46 41 Karol Pecze, Ľuboš Nosický
Milan Malatinský, Peter Zelenský
  Peter Doležaj (9)
2010–11 Slovak First League 4th/12 33 13 10 10 40:30 49 Dušan Radolský, Peter Zelenský   Koro Koné (10)
2011–12 Slovak First League 2nd/12 33 19 8 6 44:22 65   Pavel Hoftych   Martin Vyskočil (9)
2012–13 Slovak First League 11th/12 33 8 11 14 34:51 35   Pavel Hoftych, Peter Zelenský
Vladimír Ekhardt
  Martin Vyskočil (6)
2013–14 Slovak First League 3rd/12 33 16 5 12 47:42 53 Juraj Jarábek   Erik Sabo (10)
2014–15 Slovak First League 4th/12 33 16 8 9 53:31 56 Juraj Jarábek   Erik Sabo (11)
  Ján Vlasko (11)
2015–16 Slovak First League 4th/12 33 16 6 11 49:41 54 Juraj Jarábek, Branislav Mráz
Ivan Hucko, Miroslav Karhan
  David Depetris (15)
2016–17 Slovak First League 6th/11 30 12 7 11 34:37 43 Miroslav Karhan   Robert Tambe (6)
  Erik Jirka (6)
2017–18 Slovak First League 1st/12 32 20 4 8 41:28 64   Nestor El Maestro   Marvin Egho (7)
2018–19 Slovak First League 7th/12 32 10 8 14 35:35 37   Radoslav Látal,   Michal Ščasný   Kubilay Yilmaz (9)
2019–20 Slovak First League 4th/12 27 10 5 12 30:32 35   Ricardo Chéu, Marián Šarmír   Alex Sobczyk (8)
2020–21 Slovak First League 3rd/12 32 17 4 11 48:37 55 M.Šarmír, Norbert Hrnčár, Michal Gašparík   Bamidele Yusuf (9)
2021–22 Slovak First League 3rd/12 32 17 9 6 36:17 60 Michal Gašparík   Milan Ristovski (8)
2022–23 Slovak First League 3rd/12 32 15 7 10 55:38 52 Michal Gašparík   Abdulrahman Taiwo (14)
2023–24 Slovak First League 3rd/12 32 18 3 11 47:29 57 Michal Gašparík   Michal Ďuriš (10)

European competitions

edit
Season Competition Round Club Home Away Aggregate
1960 Mitropa Cup Group   Roma 2–0 0–1 2–1
1962 Mitropa Cup Group   Vojvodina 0–0 1–0 1–0
Group   Vasas 2–2 0–5 2–7
Group   Fiorentina 1–6 3–4 4–10
1966–67 Mitropa Cup First round   Budapest Honvéd 4–0 1–1 5–1
Quarter-finals   Lazio 1–0 1–1 2–1
Semi-finals   Fiorentina 2–0 1–2 3–2
Final   Újpesti Dózsa 3–1 2–3 5–4
1967–68 Mitropa Cup First round   Roma 2–1 1–1 3–2
Quarter-finals   Željezničar Sarajevo 2–1 2–2 4–3
Semi-finals   Vardar 4–1 2–2 6–3
Final   Red Star Belgrade 1–0 1–4 2–4
1967–68 UEFA Cup Winners' Cup First round   Lausanne-Sports 2–0 2–3 4–3
Second round   Torpedo Moscow 1–3 0–3 1–6
1968–69 European Cup First round   Steaua București 4–0 1–3 5–3
Second round   Reipas Lahti 7–1 9–1 16–2
Quarter-finals   AEK Athens 2–1 1–1 3–2
Semi-finals   Ajax 2–0 0–3 2–3
1969–70 European Cup First round   Hibernians 4–0 2–2 6–2
Second round   Galatasaray 1–0 0–1 1–1 (cf)
1970–71 Inter-Cities Fairs Cup First round   Marseille 2–0 0–2 2–2 (4–3) (p)
Second round   Hertha 3–1 0–1 3–2
Third round   Köln 0–1 0–3 0–4
1971–72 European Cup First round   Dinamo București 2–2 0–0 2–2 (ag)
1972–73 European Cup Second round   Anderlecht 1–0 1–0 2–0
Quarter-finals   Derby County 1–0 0–2 1–2
1973–74 European Cup First round   Viking 1–0 2–1 3–1
Second round   Zorya Voroshilovgrad 0–0 1–0 1–0
Quarter-finals   Újpesti Dózsa 1–1 1–1 2–2 (3–4) (p)
1974 Intertoto cup Group   Wisła Kraków 0–0 2–2
Group   AIK 2–1 1–0
Group   VÖEST Linz 2–1 0–1
1975 Intertoto cup Group   KB 6–1 5–1
Group   Belenenses 2–2 1–2
Group   Amsterdam 2–0 1–1
1975–76 UEFA Cup Winners' Cup First round   Boavista 0–0 0–3 0–3
1976 Intertoto cup Group   Åtvidaberg 3–1 3–1
Group   Lillestrøm 5–1 1–1
Group   Austria Salzburg 2–0 3–1
1979 Intertoto cup Group   Esbjerg 2–0 1–0
Group   Kalmar 1–0 1–0
Group   First Vienna 3–0 1–1
1984 Intertoto cup Group   Zürich 2–0 1–2
Group   Ferencváros 1–1 1–3
Group   Austria Klagenfurt 3–1 4–2
1986–87 UEFA Cup Winners' Cup First round   Stuttgart 0–0 0–1 0–1
1996 UEFA Intertoto Cup Group   Čukarički Stankom 3–0
Group   Daugava 6–0
Group   Karlsruhe 1–1
Group   Universitatea Craiova 1–2
1997–98 UEFA Cup First qualifying round   Birkirkara 3–1 1–0 4–1
Second qualifying round   PAOK 0–1 3–5 3–6
1998–99 UEFA Cup Winners' Cup Qualifying round   Vardar 2–0 1–0 3–0
First round   Beşiktaş 2–1 0–3 2–4
1999–00 UEFA Cup Qualifying round   Vllaznia 2–0 1–1 3–1
First round   Grazer AK 2–1 0–3 2–4
2003 UEFA Intertoto Cup First round   Pobeda 1–5 1–2 2–7
2004 UEFA Intertoto Cup First round   Debrecen 3–0 1–4 4–4 (ag)
Second round   Sloboda Tuzla 2–1 1–0 3–1
Third round   Slaven Koprivnica 2–2 0–0 2–2 (ag)
2006–07 UEFA Cup First qualifying round   Karvan 0–1 0–1 0–2
2008–09 UEFA Cup First qualifying round   WIT Georgia 2–2 0–1 2–3
2009–10 UEFA Europa League First qualifying round   Inter Baku 2–1 3–1 5–2
Second qualifying round   Sarajevo 1–1 0–1 1–2
2011–12 UEFA Europa League First qualifying round   Zeta 3–0 1–2 4–2
Second qualifying round   Tirana 3–1 0–0 3–1
Third qualifying round   Levski Sofia 2–1 1–2 3–3 (5–4) (p)
Play-off round   Lokomotiv Moscow 1–1 0–2 1–3
2012–13 UEFA Europa League Second qualifying round   Sligo Rovers 3–1 1–1 4–1
Third qualifying round   Steaua București 0–3 1–0 1–3
2014–15 UEFA Europa League First qualifying round   Hibernians 5–0 4–2 9–2
Second qualifying round   Zestaponi 3–0 0–0 3–0
Third qualifying round   St. Johnstone 1–1 2–1 3–2
Play-off round   Zürich 1–3 1–1 2–4
2015–16 UEFA Europa League First qualifying round   Olimpic Sarajevo 0–0 1–1 1–1 (a)
Second qualifying round   Linfield 2–1 3–1 5–2
Third qualifying round   PAOK 1–1 0–1 1–2
2016–17 UEFA Europa League First qualifying round   Hibernians 3–0 3–0 6–0
Second qualifying round   Shirak 2–0 1–1 3–1
Third qualifying round   Austria Wien 0–1 1–0 1–1 (4–5) (p)
2018–19 UEFA Champions League First qualifying round   Zrinjski Mostar 1–0 1–1 2–1
Second qualifying round   Legia Warsaw 0–1 2–0 2–1
Third qualifying round   Red Star Belgrade 1–2 (a.e.t) 1–1 2–3
2018–19 UEFA Europa League Play-off round   Olimpija Ljubljana 1–1 2–0 3–1
Group D   Anderlecht 1–0 0–0 3rd place
7pts
  Fenerbahçe 1–0 0–2
  Dinamo Zagreb 1–2 1–3
2019–20 UEFA Europa League First qualifying round   Radnik Bijeljina 2–0 0–2 2–2 (3–2 p)
Second qualifying round   Lokomotiv Plovdiv 3–1 0–2 3–3 (a)
2021–22 UEFA Europa Conference League First qualifying round   Mosta 2–0 2–3 4–3
Second qualifying round   Sepsi OSK 0–0 1–1 (a.e.t.) 1–1 (4–3 p)
Third qualifying round   Maccabi Tel Aviv 0–0 0–1 0−1
2022–23 UEFA Europa Conference League Second qualifying round   Newtown 4–1 2–1 6–2
Third qualifying round   Raków Częstochowa 0–2 0–1 0–3
2023–24 UEFA Europa Conference League Second qualifying round   Auda 4–1 1–1 5−2
Third qualifying round   Lech Poznań 3–1 1–2 4–3
Play-off round   SC Dnipro-1 1–1 2–1 (a.e.t) 3–2
Group H   FC Nordsjælland 0–2 1–1 4th place
1pt
  Fenerbahçe 1–2 0–4
  Ludogorets 1–2 0–4
2024–25 UEFA Conference League Second qualifying round   Sarajevo 3–0 0–0 3−0
Third qualifying round   Wisła Kraków 3–1 1–3 (a.e.t.) 4–4 (11–12 p)

Notable players

edit

Had international caps for their respective countries. Players whose name is listed with a bold represented their countries while playing for Spartak.

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

Player records

edit

Manager history

edit
Name Nat. Years
Otto Horký   1939–40
Bruno Veselý   1940–41
Otto Horký   1941–42
Štefan Hadraba   1942–44
Ervín Kováč   1945–48
Anton Malatinský   1948–50
Karol Fekete   1950–52
Jozef Marko   1952–54
František Novotný   1955
Alexander Fekete   1955–56
Anton Malatinský   1956–60
Jozef Hagara   1960
Bozhin Laskov   1961
Alexander Lančarič   1961
František Gažo   1962–63
Anton Malatinský   1963–68
Ján Hucko   1968–70
Valér Švec   1970–71
Anton Malatinský   1971–76
Milan Moravec   1976–77
Viliam Novák   1977–78
Valér Švec   1978–80
Kamil Majerník   1980–82
Justín Javorek   1982–85
Stanislav Jarábek   1985–88
Name Nat. Years
Ladislav Kuna   1988–90
Valér Švec   1990–92
Ivan Haščík   1993
Richard Matovič   1993
Ladislav Jurkemik   1993–94
Justín Javorek   1994
Karol Pecze   1994–97
Dušan Galis   1997–99
Peter Zelenský   1999
Anton Jánoš   1999–2000
Peter Zelenský   2000–01
Stanislav Jarábek   2001
Ladislav Molnár   2001
Rastislav Vincúr   2001
Jozef Adamec   2002–03
Miroslav Svoboda   2003
Stanislav Jarábek   2003–04
Vladimír Ekhardt   2004
Jozef Vukušič   2004
Milan Lešický   2004–05
Jozef Adamec   2005–06
Jozef Bubenko   2006
Jozef Adamec   2006
Jozef Šuran   2007
Ivan Hucko   2007
Name Nat. Years
Josef Mazura   2007–08
Jozef Adamec   2008
Vladimir Vermezović   2008
Karol Pecze   2008–09
Peter Zelenský   2009
Ľuboš Nosický   2009
Milan Malatinský   2010
Peter Zelenský   2010
Dušan Radolský   2010–11
Peter Zelenský   2011
Pavel Hoftych   2011–12
Peter Zelenský   2012–13
Vladimír Ekhardt   2013
Juraj Jarábek   2013–15
Branislav Mráz   2015
Ivan Hucko   2015–16
Miroslav Karhan   2016–17
Nestor El Maestro   2017–18
Radoslav Látal   2018
Michal Ščasný   2019
Ricardo Chéu   2019–20
Marián Šarmír   2020
Norbert Hrnčár   2020
Michal Gašparík   2021–present

References

edit
  1. ^ "Spartak Trnava vs DAC 2:0 05/05/2018". rowdie.co.uk. Archived from the original on 31 January 2021. Retrieved 25 January 2021.
  2. ^ s, SPORT SK, s r o & Ringier Axel Springer Slovakia a (19 May 2018). "VIDEO: Trenčín zvíťazil na ihrisku majstrovskej Trnavy". Šport.sk (in Slovak). Archived from the original on 30 January 2021. Retrieved 25 January 2021.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
  3. ^ a.s, Petit Press. "Spartak zverejnil program majstrovských osláv, fanúšikovia sa majú na čo tešiť". mytrnava.sme.sk (in Slovak). Archived from the original on 30 January 2021. Retrieved 25 January 2021.
  4. ^ "V Trnave výhodná dohoda dvoch klubov – Spartaka a Lokomotívy | FutbalPortal.sk". futbalportal.net. Archived from the original on 6 October 2016. Retrieved 19 July 2016.
  5. ^ "Futbal: PFK Piešťany a Spartak Trnava budú spolupracovať". zpiestan.sk (in Slovak). Archived from the original on 25 September 2020. Retrieved 24 August 2020.
  6. ^ "Trnava prestupom Saba pekne zarobila: Tromfne niekto rekord Hubočana?". www1.pluska.sk. 11 August 2015. Archived from the original on 7 August 2020. Retrieved 9 September 2019.
  7. ^ "(FOTO) JIRKA NA "MARAKANI" ZA 750.000 EVRA! Poznati svi detalji transfera Slovaka u Zvezdu!". INFORMER. Archived from the original on 16 January 2021. Retrieved 9 September 2019.
  8. ^ "Káder pod drobnohľadom: Spartak Trnava | FutbalPortal.sk". futbalportal.net. Archived from the original on 9 January 2021. Retrieved 3 August 2016.
  9. ^ "Z Trnavy do Solúna za 600-tisíc! Za koho dostane Spartak peknú sumu?". www1.pluska.sk. 10 August 2015. Archived from the original on 5 September 2019. Retrieved 9 September 2019.
edit