FC VSS Košice
Football club
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
FC VSS KoÅ¡ice, formerly 1. FC KoÅ¡ice, was a Slovak football club based in KoÅ¡ice which played in the Slovak 2. Liga during the 2016â17 season. The club officially ceased operations on 27 July 2017.
VSS
as Kassai AC
| Full name | Football Club VSS Košice | ||
|---|---|---|---|
| Nicknames | žlto-modrà (yellow-blue) VSS | ||
| Founded | 1903 as Kassai AC | ||
| Dissolved | 27 July 2017 | ||
| Ground | LokomotÃva Stadium, KoÅ¡ice | ||
| Capacity | 9,000 | ||
| Chairman | Blažej Podolák | ||
| Manager | Jozef Majoroš | ||
| 2016â17 | 2. Liga, 1st | ||
| Website | https://www.fckosice.sk/ | ||
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The club, founded in 1903, has won the Slovak League twice, the Slovak Cup five times and the Czechoslovak Cup once. The most successful eras of the club were in the 1970s and 1990s which they spent mostly in the top tier of Czechoslovak and Slovak Football. Two of the UEFA Euro 1976 champions namely Dušan Galis and Jaroslav Pollák played for Košice.
History
Early history
The club was founded in 1903 as Kassai AC (Slovak: KoÅ¡ický Atletický Klub; Hungarian: Kassai Atlétikai Club). The club's colours were blue and yellow. In the 1910s, the club competed in the Hungarian championship. In 1909 it won the Nemzeti Bajnokság II Championship. Later they played in eastern group in Slovak-Subcarpathian division between 1935 and 1938. In 1939â40 the club played Hungarian League I. Among the most successful Kassai AC players were Szaniszló, Å iÅovský, the Drotár brothers, Klein, Lebenský, Dráb, and Pásztor. For many years, the club was based at the stadium on Sokoljevova Street with a capacity of 16,000 spectators. The stadium was often full. After the end of World War II the city's three clubs Kassai AC, Kassai Törekvés and ÄsÅ K were merged into one club named Jednota KoÅ¡ice. Jednota began playing in the Czechoslovak League in 1945. In the first season, they ended the league as fourth in Group B, which considered as a nice success at the time.
VSS
Kassai AC and Jednota became VSS in 1952. The team got the name from the Slovak word Strojári (lit.â'engineers'), due to the main sponsor being VSS (Východoslovenské strojárne, engineering company). VSS became a stable member of the Czechoslovak First League and their best placing was second in 1970â71. In 1971 and 1973 VSS qualified for the UEFA Cup. In 1971 they won 2â1 against Spartak Moscow in the home leg and they drew 0â0 in Moscow, so that as the first team from Slovakia they progressed to the group stage of the Champions League. Two years later, VSS qualified for the UEFA Cup. Against Honvéd FC they won 1â0 at home and lost 2â5 away. The most successful VSS players include Andrej KvaÅ¡Åák, Titus BubernÃk, Jaroslav Pollák, DuÅ¡an Galis (Euro 1976 Champions both), Anton Å vajlen, Ján PivarnÃk, Jozef Bomba, and Jozef Desiatnik. VSS was renamed ZŤS in 1978.
1990s
The twice Slovak football champions (1997, 1998) were relegated from the premier division in 2003 after the proposed sale of the club to Italian owners[1] in 2001 by the former owner and late VSŽ steelmaking tycoon Alexander RezeÅ¡ fell through. Although RezeÅ¡'s[2] dream to turn 1. FC KoÅ¡ice into a top European club never came true, he managed to lift an average second division team to the first group stage of the UEFA Champions' League in 1997â98. However, the next year's failure to make the same stage of the major European competition, and failure to defend the league title, combined with the change of government which undermined the position of the RezeÅ¡ clan (Alexander RezeÅ¡ was economy minister of VladimÃr MeÄiar's government in 1994â97) represented the beginning of the end of the "millionaires". Their home stadium was the VÅ¡eÅ¡portový areál.[3][4]
1997â98 Champions League campaign
1. FC famously became the first Slovak club to reach the lucrative UEFA Champions League Group Stages when they did so in the 1997â98 season. Also during this Champions League campaign, 1. FC KoÅ¡ice became the first club in the Champions League history to record no points at all in the group stage, losing all their six games.
1. FC KoÅ¡ice are best known outside their homeland for their two clashes with Manchester United in the 1997â98 European Champions League group stages. Manchester United won both legs with the same score, 3â0. During this brief campaign in Europe's most prestigious club competition, KoÅ¡ice suffered a tragedy when midfielder Milan Ävirk was killed and striker Albert Rusnák was seriously injured in a car crash.[5]
Recent history
2003â04 season, on the brink of financial collapse and relegation from the second division, the owners of 1. FC, were offered help by the president of Steel Trans LiÄartovce Blažej Podolák,[6] one of the favourites to advance to the premier league that season. Steel Trans also paid for the Äermeľ stadium in KoÅ¡ice, where all former 1. FC teams â now under the protective wings of LiÄartovce played their matches. In 2004â05 season 1.FC KoÅ¡ice in effect became reserve team of Steel Trans LiÄartovce, playing in the third division, group East. KoÅ¡ice, the second largest city in Slovakia, now had no club in the top two divisions (although many can remember two in the Czechoslovak federal league).
Reformed on 17 June 2005, FC Steel Trans LiÄartovce was renamed MFK KoÅ¡ice. They ended the season gaining promotion back to the first division. In subsequent years MFK had minor successes, yet failed to win the league.
In 2008/09 season, the club won its first trophy in some 11 years, by beating Artmedia Petržalka in the final match of the Slovak Cup, in Senec. The match ended in a 3â1 win, with goals scored by Marko MilinkoviÄ (28th minute), Róbert Cicman (56th minute) and Ján Novák (69th minute). The win granted KoÅ¡ice the right to compete in 2009-10 UEFA Europa League, which they entered in the Third qualifying round, in which they defeated FK Slavija Sarajevo 5â1 on aggregate, with Novák scoring two goals. In the subsequent Play-off, to which 3 of 4 Slovak teams qualified (KoÅ¡ice, Žilina and Slovan), KoÅ¡ice faced AS Rome, who were the 6th team of Serie A 2008-09. With the first match being played in KoÅ¡ice, the home side managed to stun the opponent by an early 5th-minute goal by MilinkoviÄ, although thanks to two goals by Totti (the first coming from a controversial penalty) and Menez the away side took a 3â1 lead by 67th minute. However Ján Novák scored two goals, 71st and 81st minute, the second from a penalty, to complete the 3â3 draw against Rome. The following day, the headlines read: "Novák almost overshadowed Totti". It was one of the most memorable results of the club in recent history. In 2009, Nemanja MatiÄ completed the biggest transfer in the history of the club, when he left for Chelsea, for an estimated â¬5.5 million and by mid-2010s, he became one of the biggest and most recognised midfielders in Europe.
MFK KoÅ¡ice won the Cup in 2013â14, yet their campaign in 2014-15 Europa League did not match the success of the 2009-10 Europa League, with KoÅ¡ice losing two matches against Slovan Liberec, 0â4 on aggregate.
Return to FC VSS Košice
In June 2015, MFK KoÅ¡ice returned to the name of FC VSS KoÅ¡ice, after being relegated to the Slovak Second Division for 2015â16 season, even the club finished 6th in the 2014-15 Fortuna Liga, 19 points above the relegation zone and . The relegation was caused as, then MFK KoÅ¡ice, failed to obtain a license, after financial difficulties and debts. The change of the name occurred to popularity of the "VSS" acronym from the Communist era, when it represented "Východoslovenské Strojárne" (Easter Slovak Engineering Works - a large employer in KoÅ¡ice and the nearby region). The firm however went bankrupt in 2013 and as a result the acronym was given a new meaning: V - VernosÅ¥, S- Sila, S- Sláva - (Faithfulness - Power - Glory). The club hoped to return to Slovak top division within a season.
While winning the Eastern Group of 2015-16 DOXXbet liga with 2 points lead over Tatran PreÅ¡ov, the club finished 2nd overall (Championship Group), only 2 points behind their archrivals Tatran PreÅ¡ov, which celebrated the return to the top division after three seasons in the DOXXbet Liga. KoÅ¡ice failed to get promoted for failing to pay off their liabilities towards Ivan ÄokoviÄ, who played for MFK between 2010 and 2012, and had three decisive points deducted from their score in the Championship Group by the SFZ, based on verdict by FIFA.
Dissolution
The club officially ceased operations on 27 July 2017. In August, the club's supporters' group announced their intention to reestablish the club and enter Slovak Sixth League for the 2018â19 season. They later decided to support a new club in KoÅ¡ice, FC KoÅ¡ice. They also talk about VSS succession.[7]
Affiliated clubs
Home stadium
The stadium is in the Äermeľ district, a multi-use stadium in KoÅ¡ice, Slovakia. It is currently used mostly for football matches as the home ground of VSS KoÅ¡ice since 1997. The stadium holds 10,787 (8,787 seated) spectators and was built in 1970. Initially, the stadium had been used by LokomotÃva KoÅ¡ice, while 1.FC KoÅ¡ice (now VSS) have played there since 1997. The Slovakia national football team has hosted a few matches at this stadium which now no longer meets UEFA criteria for international games.
New stadium
The club planned construction of the new stadium for 13,000 spectators in neighbourhood of demolished VÅ¡eÅ¡portový areál stadium.[9] The estimated cost of the stadium is â¬18.5 million.[10] The owner od stadium is KoÅ¡ická Futbalová aréna (KFA), city of KoÅ¡ice owned 85% and club VSS KoÅ¡ice owned 15%. The construction will start in 2017. If the schedule is met, the first matches could be played by mid-2019.[11]
Supporters and rivalries

VSS KoÅ¡ice's most important rivalry is with FC LokomotÃva KoÅ¡ice. The match between them is called, KoÅ¡ické Derby (KoÅ¡ice Derby). VSS KoÅ¡ice and LokomotÃva KoÅ¡ice are both among historically the most successful football teams in the country. The next biggest rivalry is with 1. FC Tatran PreÅ¡ov. Matches between these two clubs are referred to as the Eastern Slovak derby (Východniarske derby). They also have rivalries with Å K Slovan Bratislava, FC Spartak Trnava and MÅ K Žilina. VSS KoÅ¡ice supporters are called Viva KoÅ¡ice. VSS KoÅ¡ice supporters maintain friendly relations with fans of MFK ZemplÃn Michalovce, Czech Sparta Prague and Slavia Sofia.[12]
Historical names
| Club name | Period |
|---|---|
| Kassai Athletikai Club (KAC) | 1903â08 |
| Merged with Kassai Sport Egyesület, renamed Kassai Atlétikai Sport Egyesület (KASE) | 1908â11 |
| Merged with Jogász Sport Egyesület | 1911â18 |
| SK Sparta KoÅ¡ice | 1918â38 |
| Kassai Atlétikai Club (KAC) | 1938â42 |
| Merged with Kassai Rákóczi SE, renamed Kassai Rákóczi Atlétikai Club | 1942â45 |
| Disbanded and then refounded as SK Jednota KoÅ¡ice | 1945â52 |
| TJ Spartak VSS | 1952â56 |
| TJ Spartak | 1956â57 |
| TJ Jednota | 1957â62 |
| TJ VSS | 1962â79 |
| ZŤS | 1979â90 |
| Å K Unimex Jednota VSS | 1990â92 |
| 1. FC | 1992â04 |
| MFK | 2005â15 |
| FC VSS | 2015â17 |
Note: The club played 2004â05 season as Steel Trans LiÄartovce reserve squad.
Honours

- Czechoslovak First League (1925 â 1938, 1945 â 1993)
Runners-up (1): 1970â71
- Czechoslovak Cup (1961â1993)
- 1.SNL (1st Slovak National football league) (1969â1993)
Winners (3): 1973â74, 1977â78, 1992â93
- Slovak First Football League (1939 â 1944, 1993 â Present)
- Slovak Cup (1961 â Present)
- Slovak Super Cup (1993 â Present)
Winners (1): 1997
Runners-up (3): 1998, 2009, 2014
- Slovak Second Division (1993 â Present)
Czechoslovak and Slovak Top Goalscorer
The Czechoslovak League top scorer from 1944â45 until 1992â93. Since the 1993â94 Slovak League Top scorer.
|
- 1Shared award
Sponsorship
| Period | Kit manufacturer | Shirt sponsor |
|---|---|---|
| 1996â1997 | lotto | VSŽ |
| 1997â1998 | Nike | |
| 1998â1999 | Kappa | VSŽ Holding |
| 1999â2000 | Omini | |
| 2000â2001 | Nike | none |
| 2001â2002 | Erreà | |
| 2002â2003 | Nike | |
| 2003â2004 | RSC | |
| 2004â2005 | Jako | STEEL TRANS |
| 2005â2007 | Puma | |
| 2007â2008 | Adidas | |
| 2008â2009 | Umbro | |
| 2009â2012 | Givova | |
| 2012â2014 | Nike | |
| 2014â2016 | Jako | |
| 2016-2017 | none |
Club partners
source[13]
- STEEL TRANS
- City of Košice
Transfers
VSS 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 KoÅ¡ice after a few years of first team football and moving on to play football in leagues of a higher standard, with the Czech First League (Szilárd Németh and Miroslav SoviÄ to AC Sparta Prague, VladimÃr Labant, Dávid Å kutka and Matúš KozáÄik to SK Slavia Prague, Kamil Äontofalský to Bohemians 1905 in 1999; Marek Å pilár to FC BanÃk Ostrava in 2000), Greece Super League (VladimÃr JanoÄko to Skoda Xanthi in 2000), German 2. Bundesliga (Jozef Kožlej to SpVgg Greuther Fürth in 1998), Israel League (Ruslan Lyubarskyi to Maccabi Netanya F.C. in 2000), Polish Ekstraklasa (Ondrej Duda to Legia Warsaw in 2014), Portugal Primeira Liga (UroÅ¡ MatiÄ to S.L. Benfica in 2013). The top transfer was agreed in 2009 when Nemanja MatiÄ joined English FC Chelsea for a fee of â¬1.75 million,.[14]
Record departures
| Rank | Player | To | Fee | Year |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1. | â¬1.75 million | 2009[14] | ||
| 2. | â¬1.3 million (35mil.CZK) | 1997[15] | ||
| 3. | â¬0.35 million* | 2011[16] | ||
| â¬0.35 million* | 2014[17] |
*-unofficial fee
Record arrivals
| Rank | Player | From | Fee | Year |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1. | â¬0.7 million (20mil SKK)* | 1997[18] | ||
| 1. | â¬0.7 million (20mil SKK)* | 1997[18] |
*-unofficial fee
Results
League and Cup history
Slovak League only (1993â2017)
Season Division (Name) Pos./Teams Pl. W D L GS GA P Slovak Cup Europe Top Scorer (Goals) 1993â94 1st (Mars Superliga) 6/(12) 32 8 11 13 35 54 27 Quarter-finals CWC 1R (
BeÅiktaÅ J.K.)? 1994â95 1st(Mars Superliga) 2/(12) 32 15 7 10 54 42 50 Quarter-finals UI Group 10 (2nd)
Pavol DiÅa (13)1995â96 1st (Mars Superliga) 2/(12) 32 21 2 9 62 33 65 1st round UC PR (
Ãjpest FC)
Róbert SemenÃk (29)1996â97 1st (Mars Superliga) 1/(16) 30 21 7 2 61 19 70 1st round UC 1QR (
Celtic F.C.)
Jozef Kožlej (22)1997â98 1st (Mars Superliga) 1/(16) 30 21 5 4 71 24 68 Runners-up CL Group stage (Group B,4th)
Jozef Kožlej (14)1998â99 1st (Mars Superliga) 4/(16) 30 19 4 7 51 26 61 2nd Round CL
UC2QR (
Brøndby IF)
1R (
Liverpool F.C.)
Ruslan Lyubarskyi (12)1999â00 1st (Mars Superliga) 2/(16) 30 19 4 7 57 31 61 Runners-up
Ruslan Lyubarskyi (15)2000â01 1st (Mars Superliga) 9/(10) 36 10 7 19 42 61 37 1st Round UC 1R (
Grazer AK)
Vladislav Zvara (8)2001â02 1st (Mars Superliga) 9/(10) 36 6 13 17 30 62 31 1st Round
Radoslav ZabavnÃk (6)2002â03 1st (Slovak Super Liga) 10/(10) 36 6 12 18 41 64 30 2nd Round
ĽubomÃr Mati (10)2003â04 2nd (1. Liga) 16/(16) 30 4 5 21 36 75 17 1st Round ? 2004â05 3rd (2. Liga) Did not enter
Pavol Piatka (23)2005â06 2nd (1. Liga) 1/(16) 30 23 4 3 67 12 73 2nd Round
Pavol Piatka (22)2006â07 1st (CorgoÅ Liga) 5/(12) 28 10 5 13 31 35 35 2nd Round
Jaroslav Kolbas (7)2007â08 1st (CorgoÅ Liga) 6/(12) 33 13 6 14 45 44 45 Semi-finals
Ján Novák (17)2008â09 1st (CorgoÅ Liga) 4/(12) 33 14 10 9 48 42 52 Winner
Ján Novák (12)2009â10 1st (CorgoÅ Liga) 11/(12) 33 8 9 13 32 57 33 Quarter-finals EL P-O (
A.S. Roma)
Ján Novák (12)2010â11 1st (CorgoÅ Liga) 10/(12) 33 8 9 16 28 44 33 2nd Round
Marko MilinkoviÄ (5)2011â12 1st (CorgoÅ Liga) 11/(12) 33 6 11 16 25 40 29 Quarter-finals
Erik PaÄinda (6)2012â13 1st (CorgoÅ Liga) 5/(12) 33 12 11 10 38 33 47 Quarter-finals
Dávid Å kutka (13)2013â14 1st (CorgoÅ Liga) 5/(12) 33 13 7 13 41 40 46 Winners
Erik PaÄinda (8)2014â15 1st (Fortuna Liga) 6/(12)1 33 11 8 14 43 48 41 Quarter-finals EL 2QR (
Liberec)
Nermin HaskiÄ (10)2015â16 2nd (DOXXbet liga) 2/(24) 30 18 5 7 48 23 56 2 Quarter-finals
Kamil KaraÅ¡ (10)2016â17 2nd (DOXXbet liga) 1/(24) 30 19 4 7 40 27 61 3rd Round
MojmÃr TrebuÅák (4)
1 MFK KoÅ¡ice did not obtain a licence for the 2015â16 season 2 VSS KoÅ¡ice was docked 3 points for nonâpayment obligations.
European competition
UEFA-administered
| Season | Competition | Round | Opponent | Agg. | Home leg | Away leg |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1971â72 | UEFA Cup | 1st. Round | 2â3 | 2â1 | 0â2 | |
| 1973â74 | UEFA Cup | 1st. Round | 3â5 | 1â0 | 2â5 | |
| 1993â94 | Cup Winners' Cup | Qualifying | 3â1 | 2â1 | 1â0 | |
| 1st. Round | 2â3 | 2â1 | 0â2 | |||
| 1995 | UEFA Intertoto Cup | Group Stage | N/a | 1â1 | N/a | |
| N/a | N/a | 5â3 | ||||
| N/a | 3â2 | N/a | ||||
| N/a | N/a | 1â1 | ||||
| 1995â96 | UEFA Cup | Preliminary | 1â3 | 0â1 | 1â2 | |
| 1996â97 | UEFA Cup | Preliminary | 6â2 | 2â1 | 4â1 | |
| Qualifying | 0â1 | 0â0 | 0â1 | |||
| 1997â98 | Champions League | 1st. Qualifying | 4â0 | 3â0 | 1â0 | |
| 2nd. Qualifying | 2â1 | 2â1 | 0â0 | |||
| Group Stage | 4th | 0â3 | 0â3 | |||
| 0â1 | 2â3 | |||||
| 0â1 | 0â2 | |||||
| 1998â99 | Champions League | 1st. Qualifying | 13â1 | 8â0 | 5â1 | |
| 2nd. Qualifying | 1â2 | 0â2 | 1â0 | |||
| UEFA Cup | 1st. Round | 0â8 | 0â3 | 0â5 | ||
| 2000â01 | UEFA Cup | Qualifying | 4â3 | 1â1 | 3â2 | |
| 1st. Round | 2â3 | 2â3 | 0â0 | |||
| 2009â10 | Europa League | 3rd. Qualifying | 5â1 | 3â1 | 2â0 | |
| Play-off | 4â10 | 3â3 | 1â7 | |||
| 2014â15 | Europa League | 2nd. Qualifying | 0â4 | 0â1 | 0â3 |
| Competition | Pld | W | D | L | GF | GA | GD |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Champions League | 14 | 6 | 1 | 7 | 22 | 17 | +5 |
| Europa League | 4 | 2 | 1 | 1 | 9 | 11 | â2 |
| UEFA Cup | 16 | 5 | 3 | 8 | 18 | 28 | â10 |
| Cup Winners' Cup | 4 | 3 | 0 | 1 | 5 | 4 | +1 |
| UEFA Intertoto Cup | 4 | 2 | 2 | 0 | 10 | 7 | +3 |
| Total | 42 | 18 | 7 | 17 | 64 | 67 | â3 |
Key â Pld: Played, W: Won, D: Drawn, L: Lost, GF: Goals For, GA: Goals Against, GD: Goal Difference.
Not UEFA-administered
| Season | Competition | Round | Opponent | Home leg | Away leg |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1964â65 | Intertoto Cup | Group B3 | 4â2 | 0â3 | |
| 0â0 | 3â0 | ||||
| 3â2 | 1â1 | ||||
| 1965â66 | Intertoto Cup | Group B2 | 0â3 | 0â1 | |
| 4â3 | 0â3 | ||||
| 2â7 | 2â0 | ||||
| 1966â67 | Intertoto Cup | Group B5 | 1â3 | 4â0 | |
| 3â0 | 0â6 | ||||
| 2â0 | 2â2 | ||||
| 1967 | Intertoto Cup | Group B6 | 0â0 | 2â1 | |
| 4â0 | 1â1 | ||||
| 3â1 | 1â1 | ||||
| 1968 | Intertoto Cup | Group B4 | 2â3 | 2â0 | |
| 1â0 | 3â2 | ||||
| 1â0 | 3â1 | ||||
| 1969 | Intertoto Cup | Group 8 | 0â4 | 4â0 | |
| 2â1 | 1â1 | ||||
| 3â1 | 4â0 | ||||
| 1970 | Intertoto Cup | Group A5 | 0â1 | 2â0 | |
| 1â1 | 3â0 | ||||
| 4â1 | 2â0 | ||||
| 1974 | Intertoto Cup | Group 9 | 1â1 | 1â3 | |
| 6â1 | 3â1 | ||||
| 6â0 | 2â2 | ||||
| 1976 | Intertoto Cup | Group 11 | 0â1 | 0â2 | |
| 1â2 | 2â3 | ||||
| 2â0 | 1â0 |
Reserve team
MFK KoÅ¡ice B was the reserve team of MFK KoÅ¡ice. They recently played in the Slovak 3. Liga (Eastern division), with their best performance being in Slovak Second Division. MFK KoÅ¡ice "B" played home matches at Barca stadium, near KoÅ¡ice. MFK KoÅ¡ice"B" stopped functioning before the 2014â15 season.
Player records
Most goals
| # | Nat. | Name | Goals |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Ján Strausz | 115 | |
| 2 | Dušan Galis | 59 | |
| 2 | Ján Novák | 59 | |
| 4 | Jozef Kožlej | 52 | |
| 5 | Róbert SemenÃk | 43 |
Notable players
Had international caps for their respective countries. Players whose name is listed in bold represented their countries while playing for the club.
Past players who are the subjects of Wikipedia articles can be found here.
Bohumil Andrejko
Mário Bicák
Miloš Belák
Marián BochnoviÄ
Jozef Bomba
Jaroslav Boroš
Titus BubernÃk
Martin Bukata
Matúš Äonka
Kamil Äontofalský
Ondrej DaÅko
Jozef Desiatnik
Pavol DiÅa
Karol Dobay
Ondrej Duda
Miroslav DrobÅák
Peter Dzúrik
ĽubomÃr Faktor
Alexander Felszeghy
Anton Flešár
Dušan Galis
Nermin HaskiÄ
Michal Hipp
František Hoholko
Zsolt Hornyák
Tomáš Huk
VladimÃr JanoÄko
Martin Juhar
Marián Kello
Jaroslav Kolbas
Jésus Konnsimbal
Matúš KozáÄik
Ivan Kozák
Ján Kozák jr.
Jozef Kožlej
Andrej KvaÅ¡Åák
VladimÃr Labant
Martin LipÄák
Pavol MajernÃk
Jozef Majoroš
Nemanja MatiÄ
UroÅ¡ MatiÄ
Marko MilinkoviÄ
Ladislav Molnár
Jean-Pierre Morgan
Milan Nemec
Szilárd Németh
Ján Novák
Martin ObÅ¡itnÃk
Tomáš Oravec
Erik PaÄinda
Michal PanÄÃk (born 1971)
Jozef Pisár
Ján PivarnÃk
Jaroslav Pollák
Karol Praženica
Martin Prohászka
Marek Rodák
Albert Rusnák
Štefan Rusnák
Marek Sapara
Boris SekuliÄ
Miroslav Seman
Róbert SemenÃk
Adolf Scherer
Július Šimon
Peter Šinglár
Anton Å oltis
Miroslav SoviÄ
Marek Špilár
Anton Å vajlen
Jozef Å tafura
Ján Strausz
Ladislav Tamáš
András Telek
Darko Tofiloski
Dušan Tóth
Rudolf Urban
Blažej VaÅ¡Äák
VladimÃr Weiss sr.
Radoslav ZabavnÃk
Tibor Zátek
Vladislav Zvara
Managerial history
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