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1993–94 Slovak Superliga


FieldValue
competition1. Liga
season1993–94
dates14 August 1993 – 15 June 1994
winnersŠK Slovan Bratislava
relegatedFC Nitra
continentalcup1[UEFA Cup](1994-95-uefa-cup)
continentalcup1 qualifiersŠK Slovan Bratislava
[1. FC Tatran Prešov](1-fc-tatran-presov)
Inter Bratislava
league topscorerPavol Diňa
(19 goals)
biggest home winInter 7:1 Lokomotíva
biggest away winTrnava 0:4 B.Bystrica
highest scoringInter 7:1 Lokomotíva
Prešov 4:4 D.Streda
matches192
total goals512
average attendance3,474
prevseason[1992–93](1992-93-czechoslovak-first-league)
nextseason[1994–95](1994-95-slovak-superliga)

1. FC Tatran Prešov Inter Bratislava (19 goals) Prešov 4:4 D.Streda The 1993–94 Slovak First Football League season was the first edition of top flight Slovak First Football League annual football competition in Slovak football following the dissolution of Czechoslovakia on 1 January 1993. The season started on 14 August 1993 and ended on 15 June 1994.

Overview

The 1993–94 Slovak Superliga was formed based on the six teams that competed in the 1992–93 Czechoslovak First League (Slovan Bratislava, DAC 1904 Dunajsk Streda, Inter Bratislava, Tatran Prešov, FC Nitra, Spartak Trnava) and the six best teams of the 1992–93 Slovak National Football League (the Czechoslovak second-tier competition) (1. FC Košice, Dukla Banská Bystrica, ŠK Žilina, Baník Prievidza, Chemlon Humenné, Lokomotíva Košice). These 12 teams contested home-and-away regular league matches totalling 22 games. The top six clubs then formed a promotion/championship group and the bottom six a relegation group, each group playing 10 more games.

It was a historic season for Slovak football as it was the first season to take place since the breakup of the former Czechoslovakia. Three Slovak teams qualified for European club competitions: Slovan Bratislava and DAC Dunajská Streda (both in the UEFA Cup), as well as 1.FC Košice (Cup Winners Cup). Of these only Košice (a second-tier team that had to take part in the qualifying round) managed to get past their first hurdle (Košice would ultimately be eliminated in the first round proper by Besiktas from Turkey).

At the end of the season two teams were entitled to enter the newly added qualifying round of the UEFA Cup, and one team would take part in the qualifying round of the Cup Winners Cup. These European places would go on to Tatran Presov (Cup Winners Cup), and two clubs from the capital Bratislava: Slovan (denied a place in the revamped Champions League due to insufficient coefficient) and Inter (who actually would have entered the Champions League qualifying round had they become champion).

Teams

Stadiums and locations

TeamHome cityStadiumCapacity
1. FC KošiceKošiceVšešportový areál30,312
Chemlon HumennéHumennéChemlon Stadion10,000
Dukla Banská BystricaBanská BystricaSNP Stadium10,000
DAC 1904 Dunajská StredaDunajská StredaMestský štadión - DAC Dunajská Streda16,410
Inter Slovnaft BratislavaBratislavaŠtadión Pasienky12,000
Lokomotíva KošiceKošiceLokomotíva Stadium9,000
FC NitraNitraŠtadión pod Zoborom11,384
MFK Petrimex PrievidzaPrievidzaFutbalový štadión Prievidza6,000
MŠK ŽilinaŽilinaŠtadión pod Dubňom11,181
Slovan BratislavaBratislavaTehelné pole30,085
Spartak TrnavaTrnavaŠtadión Antona Malatinského18,448
[Tatran Prešov](1-fc-tatran-presov)PrešovTatran Štadión14,000

Regular season

League table

Results

Championship group

League table

Results

Relegation group

League table

Results

Season statistics

Top scorers

RankPlayerClubGoals
1SVK Pavol DiňaDAC Dunajska Streda19
2SVK Martin ObšitníkInter Bratislava14
SVK Mikuláš RadványiDAC Dunajska Streda
4SVKŠK Žilina13
SVK Ivan ŠefčíkŠK Žilina

References

References

  1. a.s., Petit Press. "Streleckým rekordérom stále Róbert Semeník".
Info: Wikipedia Source

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