FK Baník Most 1909 explained

FK Baník Most 1909 was a Czech football club based in the city of Most, approximately 75 kilometres north-west of Prague. The club played top-flight football for the first time in their history in the 2005–06 Czech First League.[1]

The club's home stadium is Fotbalový stadion Josefa Masopusta, which was built in 1961. The opening match of the new stadium was played on 24 May 1961 against English side Liverpool F.C., which won against Most 4–1.

In 2011, Baník Most signed an agreement whereby Arsenal Česká Lípa would function as their farm team.[2]

History

Historical names

Early history and Lower League Football

The club was founded on 19 May 1909, and there were very basic beginnings. Football activity in Most would be interrupted for significant periods of time during World War I and World War II, but even long thereafter, the quality of football in Most remained modest, as Most would play in the lower Czechoslovak leagues from the 1950s all the way through to the 1980s.

In the 1990s though, Most earned two promotions – first to the Bohemian Football League, the third-highest league in the country, then, in the 1996/97 season, to the Czech 2. Liga.

SIAD ownership and First Division Football

In the spring of 2003 the club was bought by Italian industrial gas company SIAD, and the Italian company's involvement sparked a modestly but increasingly successful new era for the club. The club took the name "FK SIAD Most" from the 2003/04 season.

By winning the 2. liga championship in the 2004/05 season, Most finally gained promotion to the Czech First League, for the 2005/06 season. Extensive reconstruction of the club's stadium – which included the installation of a new pitch, 7,500 seats, and floodlights – was completed in time for the club's first match in the top flight. After a slow start, manager Přemysl Bičovský was dismissed, making way for the arrival of Zdeněk Ščasný. Scasny – a highly regarded manager, who had previously been in charge of Czech clubs AC Sparta Prague and FK Viktoria Žižkov and Greek clubs OFI Crete and Panathinaikos FC – helped the club hold its position in the Czech First League, guiding the team to a respectable 10th place in the table.

For the 2006/07 season, the club had high expectations, with the ultimate goal being to finish in the top half of the table, but inconsistency would plague the team throughout the season. The team seemed capable of competing with the league's top sides, especially at home – Most managed to draw with AC Sparta Prague (eventual league champions), defeat Slavia Prague (eventual runners-up) and was overall unbeaten at home against the clubs who would finish in the top 5 league positions – but the team was less efficient when playing away from home, and an even bigger problem was an inability to consistently take full advantage of the relatively weaker sides of the league. This translated into Most finishing the season with a league-high 16 draws, good enough only for a somewhat disappointing 12th place in the league, but the club's top-flight status was secured once again.

At the end of the season the club and manager Zdeněk Ščasný mutually decided to end their relationship,[3] and the club hired Robert Žák, who had previously been in charge of the club's youth set-up.

Honours

Managers and players

Head coaches in club's history

Head coaches in club's history

Notable former players

History in domestic competitions

Czech Republic

SeasonLeaguePlacedPldWDLGFGAGDPtsCup
1993–19943. liga5th34149115245+737[4] First Round
1994–19953. liga6th34159105640+1654Round of 64
1995–19963. liga6th34159105342+1154First Round
1996–19973. liga2nd30611131733style="background: #D0F0C0; text-align:center"-1629Round of 64
1997–19982. liga6th2812793630+643Quarterfinals
1998–19992. liga4th3016864731+1656Round of 16
1999–20002. liga4th30101554332+1145Round of 32
2000–20012. liga8th30911102727038Round of 32
2001–20022. liga9th3099123637style="text-align:center"-136Semifinals
2002–20032. liga10th30911102830style="text-align:center"-238Round of 32
2003–20042. liga9th30115143334style="text-align:center"-138Second Round
2004–20052. liga1st28171015830+2861Quarterfinals
2005–20061. liga10th30106143441style="text-align:center"-736Second Round
2006–20071. liga12th3051693141style="text-align:center"-1031Round of 16
2007–20081. liga16th3048183158style="background: #FFCCCC; text-align:center"-2720Round of 32
2008–20092. liga12th30107133043style="text-align:center"-1337Second Round
2009–20102. liga11th30812103538style="text-align:center"-336Second Round
2010–20112. liga12th30107133546style="text-align:center"-1137Second Round
2011–20122. liga9th30115143144style="text-align:center"-1338First Round
2012–20132. liga14th3087153348style="text-align:center"-1531Second Round
2013–20142. liga12th30107133446style="text-align:center"-1237First Round
2014–20152. liga15th3056192551style="background: #FFCCCC; text-align:center"-2621First Round
2015–20163. liga18th3657242881style="background: #FFCCCC; text-align:center"-5318[5] Second Round
Notes

Notes and References

  1. Book: Jeřábek, Luboš. Český a československý fotbal – lexikon osobností a klubů. Grada Publishing. cs. 2007. Prague, Czech Republic. 978-80-247-1656-5. 128.
  2. News: Česká Lípa je farmou fotbalového Mostu, Jablonec ji nakonec odmítl . cs . idnes.cz . 12 July 2011 . 23 August 2011 . 3 October 2012 . https://web.archive.org/web/20121003032137/http://fotbal.idnes.cz/ceska-lipa-je-farmou-fotbaloveho-mostu-jablonec-ji-nakonec-odmitl-pyk-/fot_dsouteze.aspx?c=A110712_1617077_fot_dsouteze_ten . live .
  3. News: Potvrzeno. Ščasný odchází z Mostu . cs . idnes.cz . 29 May 2007 . 1 January 2012 . 29 July 2014 . https://web.archive.org/web/20140729193127/http://fotbal.idnes.cz/potvrzeno-scasny-odchazi-z-mostu-dlm-/fotbal.aspx?c=A070529_134821_fotbal_rou . live .
  4. Two points for a win in 1993–94.
  5. No points for draws; After 90 minutes games were decided on penalties; two points for winning the penalty shootout and one for losing. Most won 2 and lost 5 such matches.