FC DAC 1904 Dunajská Streda

(Redirected from DAC 1904 Dunajská Streda)

FC DAC 1904 is a Slovak football team, based in Dunajská Streda. In the 2007 to 2008 season, the team were the west group champions of the Slovak Third League. In the 2008 to 2009 season, after merging with FC Senec, the team entered the Corgoň Liga. The club is strongly supported by the Hungarian minority in Slovakia.[3]

DAC 1904
Full nameFC DAC 1904 Dunaszerdahelyi labdarúgó klub (Hungarian)[1]
Founded1904; 120 years ago (1904)
as Dunaszerdahelyi Atlétikai Club
GroundMOL Aréna
Dunajská Streda
Capacity12,700
OwnerOszkár Világi 90%
city of Dunajská Streda 10%[2]
PresidentTibor Végh
ManagerXisco Muñoz
LeagueNiké Liga
2022–23Fortuna Liga, 2nd of 12
WebsiteClub website
Current season

History edit

 
DAC logo until 2021

The first organized sports club in Dunajská Streda (then Dunaszerdahely, Hungary), the Dunaszerdahelyi Atlétikai Club (Dunajská Streda Athletic Club (DAC)), was founded in 1904. At the time, football was a popular sport. The club survived both world wars and continued to 1953 when the team won the Bratislava district one A grade premiership. In 1968 and 1969, the team advanced in the Western Division of the third league before returning to the regional competition. In the 1977 to 1978 season, the team again entered the third league coming sixth. In the 1978 to 1979 competition, the team came seventh. In the 1979 to 1980 season, the team won their division and was promoted to the Slovak National League (SNL 1 – second level). DAC finally promoted to Czechoslovak First League in 1984–85 season. DAC was 3rd at this league in 1987–88 season and 4th in 1990–91 and 1992–93 seasons. They finished Slovak Superliga as 3rd in 1993–94 season. But, their form was lowered after this season and relegated to second level in 1997–98 season. They immediately returned to top level but relegated again in 1999–00 season. They relegated to 3rd level in 2006–07 season. They immediately returned to 2nd level but relegated again in 2008–09 season. They made successively two promotions and returned to top level in 2013. Since 2013, DAC has been affiliated with ŠK Senec.[4] In 1987, DAC were the Slovak Cup (Slovenský Pohár) and Czechoslovak Cup (Československý Pohár) winners.

Previous names edit

  • 1908: DSE (Dunaszerdahelyi Sport Egylet)
  • 1920: DAC (Dunaszerdahelyi Atlétikai Club)
  • 1933: DTC (Dunaszerdahelyi Torna Club)
  • 1942: DLE (Dunaszerdahelyi Labdarúgó Egyesület)
  • 1948: Sokol
  • 1953: Slavoj
  • 1965: Jednota
  • 1974: DAC
  • 1993: FC DAC
  • 1994: Marat – DAC
  • 1994: 1.FC DAC – Gemer
  • 1996: 1.FC DAC
  • 2000: FK DAC 1904
  • 2014: FC DAC 1904

Source:[5]

1980s edit

In the 1980–81 season, the team came eleventh. In the 1981–82 season, 26,089 attended games. The team won 15 games, lost 11 games and drew in 4 games. In the 1982–83 season, the team's star player Juraj Szikora could not participate in the competition. The team came second, four points behind the premier team, Banská Bystrica. In the 1983–84 season, the team came second, four points behind Petržalka. 8,136 patrons attended a home game where the team beat Petržalka three points to zero. Ladislav Tóth [cs] scored twenty-two points becoming the highest goal scorer of the League for that season. In the 1984–85 season, Karol Pecze coached the team. 10,000 patrons attended the last home gain against Nitra. Ladislav Tóth again scored twenty-two points and won the golden shoe. In the 1985–86 season, the team made its debut in the Czechoslovak First League. The team reaches the quarter-finals and comes eleventh. In the 1986–87 season, the team came fourth in the Slovak League. They won both the Slovak and the Czechoslovak cups. In the 1987 to 1988 season, the team entered the European Cup. In the preliminary round, DAC had two wins against AEL Limassol (Cyprus),1–0 and 5–1. The team's campaign ended in the first round with a defeat to Young Boys Bern (2–1 and 1–3). In the Slovak national league, the team came third. In the 1988–89 season, the team had a 6–0 victory over Östers of Sweden in the first round of the UEFA Cup. In the second round, the team played Bayern Munich. 15,572 patrons attended that game. The team came sixth in the Slovak league. In the 1989–90 season, Anton Dragúň led the team to fourteenth place.

1990s edit

In the 1990–91 season, Juraj Szikora coached the team and they came fourth. In the 1991–92 season, the team won the Intertoto Cup in group eight. After twelve days, Szikora was replaced by Vladimír Hrivnák. The team came ninth. In the 1992–93 season, the last year of the Slovak national league, the team was coached by Dušan Radolský. In the 1993–94 season, the first year of the Slovak League, the team, coached by Ladislav Škorpil scores 62 times and comes third. Pavol Diňa is the top scorer with 19 goals. In the UEFA Cup, DAC played Casino Salzburg who defeat them twice with a score zero to two in the first round. In the 1994–95 season, with coach Jozef Valovič, the team comes fourth. In the 1995–96 season, four coaches: Jozef Valovič, Anton Grajcár, Juraj Szikora, and Jozef Adamec, led the team to tenth place from a field of twelve. In the 1996–97 season, the team, coached by Jozef Adamec came fourteenth out of sixteen. In the 1997–98 season, after thirteen years, DAC fell from the Slovak League. Ladislav Škorpil and Dušan Liba coached the team which won five games of thirty and came last out of sixteen teams. In the 1998–99 season, Vladimír Rusnák coached the team and they won the second league. In the 1990–00 season, the first league was reorganized. DAC cam fourteenth in the first league and was relegated to the second league again. The coaches in this season were Viliam Ilko, Anton Grajcár, and Ladislav Kuna.

2000s edit

In the 2000–01 season, DAC was coached by Ladislav Kuna and came fifth in the second league. In 2001–02, the coach, Ladislav Hudec, was replaced after nine rounds by Juraj Szikora. The team came ninth in the second league. In the 2002–03 season, Tibor Szaban coached the team. After half the rounds, the team was three points from dropping to a lower league. Szaban was then replaced by Milan Albrecht. DAC won the next ten games and came eighth. In 2003–04, Juraj Szikora and Dušan Liba were the coaches. The team won nine of fifteen games. At this point, the team was engaged by Iranian sponsors. Robert Pflug became the coach and the team won thirty points. The 2004–05 season begins with Štefan Horný. After fifteen rounds he is replaced by Peter Fieber who was once a player in the team. DAC came eighth. The best game was against Slovan in front of 2,890 fans where DAC won two points to zero. In 2005–06, the Slovak League was again reorganized and DAC dropped from the second league. A series of five coaches (Ladislav Kuna, Peter Fieber, Anton Grajcár, Štefan Zaťko, and Tibor Mičinec) allowed the team twelfth place in their competition. In the 2006–07 season, the first Slovak League was renamed the Corgoň Liga and the second league became the first league in which DAC played the season. Milan Albrecht coaches for rounds one to six and then is replaced by Robert Pflug. In 2007–08, DAC won the second league competition (2. liga) but this was not a nationwide competition. The coaches were Tibor Meszlényi, Peter Fieber and assistant Július Šimon.

Supporters and rivalries edit

 
DAC fans in match against AS Trenčín, on 19 November 2016

DAC supporters are called YBS (Yellow Blue Supporters), biggest rivals are Slovan Bratislava and Spartak Trnava. DAC supporters maintain friendly relations with fans of the Hungarian Ferencváros Budapest.[6] The YBS usually display a banner stating "Dunaszerdahely", the Hungarian name of Dunajská Streda, in the home end and chant in Hungarian, including the Hungarian anthem Himnusz or the popular song Nélküled, which is usually sung by performers before kick off. The Hungarian Tricolour is also usually displayed on the stands of MOL Aréna by the fans.

The preferred use of the Hungarian language from fans and club officials, however, has caused debate in the Slovak society. Slovak National Party MP and former football international Dušan Tittel had stated in a Parliament session: "Going to Dunajská Streda to watch a football game when 9,000 sing the Hungarian anthem, I don't think you'd like it", promoting a bill to make an offense the singing of foreign national anthems. DAC President Oszkár Világi and the club's spokesmen Krisztián Nagy had declared that the club will continue to support the fans and such customs, even in defiance of fines.[7]

Affiliated club edit

The following club is affiliated with DAC:

Honours edit

Domestic edit

  Slovakia

  Czechoslovakia

Slovak League Top Goalscorer edit

Slovak League Top scorer since 1993–94

Year Winner G
1994–95   Pavol Diňa 19
2022–23   Nikola Krstović 18
1Shared award

UEFA ranking edit

This is the current 2022–23 (July 31) UEFA coefficient:

Rank Team Coefficient
151   Trabzonspor 8.500
152   Hajduk Split 8.500
153   DAC D.Streda 8.500
154   Craiova 8.500
155   Larnaca 8.500

Transfers edit

DAC have produced numerous players who have gone on to represent the Slovak national football team. Over the last periods there has been a steady increase of young players leaving Dunajská Streda after a few years of first team football and moving on to play football in leagues of a higher standard, with the German Bundesliga (András Schäfer to Union Berlin in 2022), Czech First League (Tibor Jančula to Žižkov in 1993, Léonard Kweuke to Sparta in 2010, Dzon Delarge to Liberec in 2012, Erik Pačinda to Plzeň in 2019), Danish Superliga (Pavol Šafranko to Aalborg in 2017, Marko Divković to Brøndby IF in 2022), Austrian Bundesliga (Ján Novota to Rapid Wien in 2011), Polish Ekstraklasa (Tomáš Huk (2019) and Kristopher Vida (2020) to Piast Gliwice, Ľubomír Šatka to Lech Poznań in 2019), American Major League Soccer (Matej Oravec to Philadelphia Union in 2020), Scottish Premiership (Vakoun Issouf Bayo to Celtic F.C. in 2019). The top transfer was agreed in 2023 when forward Nikola Krstović joined Italian US Lecce for a fee of 4.5 million.[9]

Record departures edit

Rank Player To Fee Year
1.   Nikola Krstović   US Lecce €4.5 million* 2023[10]
2.   Vakoun Issouf Bayo   Celtic Glasgow €2.2 million 2019[11]
3.   Eric Ramírez   FC Dynamo Kyiv €1.8 million 2021[12]
4.   Matej Oravec   Philadelphia Union €1 million 2020[13]
  András Schäfer   Union Berlin €1 million* 2022[14]
  Marko Divković   Brøndby IF €1 million 2022[15]
5.   Ľubomír Šatka   Lech Poznań €0.75 million 2019[16]
6.   Léonard Kweuke   Sparta Prague €0.7 million 2010[17]
  Kristopher Vida   Piast Gliwice €0.7 million* 2020[18]

Record arrivals edit

Rank Player From Fee Year
1.   Eric Ramírez   MFK Karviná €500,000* 2019[19]
  Dominik Kružliak   MFK Ružomberok €500,000 2019[20]
2.   Nikola Krstović   Red Star €400,000 2021[21]
3.   Andrija Balić   Udinese Calcio €350,000* 2020[22]
4.   Ivan Dolček   HNK Hajduk Split €325,000 2024[23]
5.   Aleksandar Popović   FK Partizan €210,000 2023[24]

*-unofficial fee

Sponsorship edit

Results edit

League and Cup history edit

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 (Mars Superliga) 3/(12) 32 13 10 9 62 47 36 Semi-finals UC 1.R (  Casino Salzburg)   Pavol Diňa (19)
1994–95 1st (Mars Superliga) 4/(12) 32 13 7 12 41 42 46 Runners-up   Jozef Ürge (4)
  Vladimír Weiss (4)
  Tibor Zsákovics (4)
  Zsolt Kianek (4)
1995–96 1st (Mars Superliga) 10/(12) 32 10 3 19 41 76 33 2nd round   Eugen Bari (8)
1996–97 1st (Mars Superliga) 14/(16) 30 9 7 14 29 45 34 Quarter-finals   Milan Rimanovský (9)
1997–98 1st (Mars Superliga) 16/(16) 30 5 6 19 26 51 21 1st round   Jaroslav Mašek (4)
1998–99 2nd (1. Liga) 1/(16) 34 21 6 7 62 29 69 2nd round   Mikuláš Radványi (20)
1999–00 1st (Mars Superliga) 14/(16) 30 6 9 15 24 42 27 Quarter-finals   Mikuláš Radványi (6)
  Július Šimon (6)
2000–01 2nd (1. Liga) 5/(18) 34 16 7 11 43 41 55 1st round   Ladislav Suchánek (14)
2001–02 2nd (1. Liga) 8/(16) 30 11 10 9 42 38 43 1st round   Vladimír Veselý (7)
2002–03 2nd (1. Liga) 8/(16) 30 11 8 11 39 40 41 1st round   Miroslav Kozák (9)
2003–04 2nd (1. Liga) 11/(16) 30 11 6 13 36 44 39 1st round   Peter Bognár (9)
2004–05 2nd (1. Liga) 6/(16) 30 12 6 12 33 45 42 1st round   Peter Bognár (5)
2005–06 2nd (1. Liga) 12/(16) 30 7 6 17 27 51 27 1st round   Lukáš Rohovský (4)
2006–07 2nd (1. Liga) 9/(12) 36 9 12 15 32 46 39 1st round   Siradji Sani (6)
2007–08 3rd (2.Liga) 1/(16) 30 18 3 8 54 29 57 3rd round   Ladislav Belkovics (11)
2008–09 1st (Corgoň Liga) 9/(12) 33 9 9 15 32 59 36 Quarter-finals   Leonard Kweuke (11)
2009–10 1st (Corgoň Liga) 10/(12) 33 7 12 14 28 47 33 Semi-finals   Samuel Koejoe (7)
2010–11 1st (Corgoň Liga) 9/(12) 33 9 9 15 24 39 36 2nd round   Zoltán Harsányi (4)
2011–12 1st (Corgoň Liga) 12/(12) 33 5 1 27 21 63 16 2nd round   John Delarge (8)
2012–13 2nd (2. Liga) 1/(12) 33 19 8 6 41 26 65 2nd round   Stanislav Velický (8)
2013–14 1st (Corgoň Liga) 11/(12) 33 8 8 17 29 57 261 3rd round   Ákos Szarka (4)
2014–15 1st (Fortuna Liga) 8/(12) 33 9 12 12 32 44 39 Semi-finals   Ákos Szarka (5)
2015–16 1st (Fortuna Liga) 7/(12) 33 12 7 14 38 42 43 Quarter-finals   Erik Pačinda (10)
2016–17 1st (Fortuna Liga) 7/(12) 30 10 12 8 37 34 42 Quarter-finals   Erik Pačinda (8)
2017–18 1st (Fortuna Liga) 3/(12) 32 16 9 7 46 32 57 Quarter-finals   Erik Pačinda (10)
2018–19 1st (Fortuna Liga) 2/(12) 32 19 6 7 63 37 63 1/8 finals EL 2.QR (  Dinamo Minsk)   Kristopher Vida (11)
2019–20 1st (Fortuna Liga) 3/(12) 27 15 5 7 42 28 50 Semi-Finals EL 2.QR (  Atromitos)   Zsolt Kalmár (9)
2020–21 1st (Fortuna Liga) 2/(12) 32 19 8 5 66 38 65 Quarter-finals EL 3.QR (  LASK)   Eric Ramírez (16)
2021–22 1st (Fortuna Liga) 4/(12) 32 12 10 10 39 37 46 3rd Round ECL 2.QR (  FK Partizan)   Nikola Krstović (7)
2022–23 1st (Fortuna Liga) 2/(12) 32 20 7 5 54 29 67 4th Round ECL 3.QR (  FCSB)   Nikola Krstović (18)

1 Deducted six points at the end of the season due to match-fixing.

European competition history edit

UEFA-administered edit

Season Competition Round Country Club Home Away Agg.
1987–88 Cup Winners' Cup Q   AEL Limassol 1–0 5–1 6–1
1.R   Young Boys 2–1 1–3 3–4
1988–89 UEFA Cup 1.R   Östers IF 0–2 6–0 6–2
2.R   Bayern Munich 1–3 0–2 1–5
1993–94 UEFA Cup 1.R   Casino Salzburg 0–2 0–2 0–4
2018–19 UEFA Europa League 1QR   Dinamo Tbilisi 1–1 2–1 3–2
2QR   Dinamo Minsk 1–3 1–4 2–7
2019–20 UEFA Europa League 1QR   Cracovia 1–1 2–2 (a.e.t) 3–3 (a)
2QR   Atromitos 1–2 2–3 3–5
2020–21 UEFA Europa League 1QR   FH 2–0
2QR   Jablonec 5–3 (a.e.t)
3QR   LASK 0–7
2021–22 UEFA Europa Conference League 2QR   Partizan 0–2 0–1 0–3
2022–23 UEFA Europa Conference League 1QR   Cliftonville 2–1 3–0 5–1
2QR   Víkingur Gøta 2–0 2–0 4–0
3QR   FCSB 0–1 0–1 0–2
2023–24 UEFA Europa Conference League 1QR   Dila Gori 2–1 0–2 2–3

Not UEFA-administered edit

Season Competition Round Country Club Home Away
1987 Intertoto Cup Group 4   FC Tatabánya 0–1 1–6
  AC Bellinzona 4–0 0–2
  Næstved 2–2 2–3
1988 Intertoto Cup Group 5   IFK Norrköping 5–1 0–1
  Young Boys 3–1 1–5
  Szombathelyi Haladás 3–0 0–0
1991 Intertoto Cup Group 8   FC Rapid București 3–0 0–1
  Botev Plovdiv 4–1 3–1
1992 Mitropa Cup 1.R   BVSC Budapest 0–0 (5–6)(p)
1993 Intertoto Cup Group 4   Malmö FF 0–0
  Bayer Uerdingen 2–0
  OB Odense 0–3
  Videoton 1–7
1994 Intertoto Cup Group 7   Trelleborg 2–0
  Grasshoppers 0–3
  MSV Duisburg 0–1
  Aalborg BK 1–3

Current squad edit

As of 6 March 2024[26]

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   BRA Filipe
4 DF   HUN Krisztián Keresztes
5 MF   SEN Pape Cheikh Diop
7 MF   CZE Aleš Čermák
8 MF   SVK Milan Dimun
9 FW   CRO Ivan Dolček
10 MF   SYR Ammar Ramadan
11 FW   CRO Bartol Barišić
14 FW   EST Oliver Jürgens
16 DF   BRA Mateus Brunetti
17 DF   CGO Yhoan Andzouana
18 DF   ESP Alex Méndez
19 FW   CIV Fernand Gouré (on loan from   Westerlo)
20 MF   UKR Ihor Kharatin
No. Pos. Nation Player
21 DF   HUN Márk Csinger
22 FW   GHA Brian Oddei
23 FW   HUN Damir Redzic (on loan from   Ferencváros)
24 MF   SVK Christián Herc
25 DF   CZE Filip Kaša
27 MF   HUN Milán Vitális
28 FW   SEN Moussa Koné (on loan from   LASK )
33 DF   UKR Taras Kacharaba
41 GK   SRB Aleksandar Popović
46 FW   SVK Matej Trusa
66 MF   SVK Miroslav Káčer
77 DF   POL Konrad Gruszkowski
80 FW   SRB Željko Gavrić
91 DF   FRA Romaric Yapi
99 GK   SVK Samuel Petráš

For recent transfers, see List of Slovak football transfers summer 2023 and
List of Slovak football transfers winter 2023-24

Retired numbers edit

12 – The 12th man (reserved for the club supporters)

Out 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
33 DF   SVK Damián Kachút (at Šamorín until 30 June 2024)
DF   ROU Márk Kovács (at  Győr until 30 June 2024)
DF   ARG Luciano Vera (at   Győr until 30 June 2024)
43 DF   SVK Norbert Urblík (at   Győr until 30 June 2024)
MF   SVK Mikulas Demjanovic (at Šamorín until 30 June 2024)
No. Pos. Nation Player
MF   SVK Máté Szolgai (at Mezőkövesd until 30 June 2024)
FW   HUN Norbert Balogh (at   Kisvárda until 30 June 2024)
FW   HUN Ákos Szendrei (at   Kecskemét until 30 June 2024)
FW   GRE Giannis Niarchos (at MFK Zemplín Michalovce until 30 June 2024)

Staff edit

Technical staff edit

Source:[27]

Position Staff
Manager   Xisco Muñoz
Assistant Manager   Roberto Cuesta Roman
Assistant Manager   Balázs Borbély
Fitness Coach   Miquel Gomila Andreu
Fitness Coach   Joseba Barrenetxea
Goalkeeper Coach   Adrià Riera
Team Doctor   Borja Acevedo
Team Doctor   Gerard Domínguez
Masseur   Guillermo Pedraza
Physiotherapist   Imanol Iriarte
Custodian   Rodrigo Osorio
Team Director   Llorenç Medina

Management edit

Position Staff
Owner     Oszkár Világi
Vice-President   Barnabáš Antal
Team Manager   Dušan Chytil
Sport Director   Jan van Daele
Head Scout     Roland Kovács

Player records edit

Most goals edit

# Nat. Name Goals
1   Ladislav Tóth 74
2   Mikuláš Radványi 60
3   Pavol Diňa 49
4   Zsolt Kalmár 43
5   Erik Pačinda 32
6   Kristopher Vida 29
  Nikola Krstović
7   Tibor Mičinec 27
9   Július Šimon 26
10   Marko Divković 25

Players whose name is listed in bold are still active.

Notable players edit

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

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

Former head coaches edit

References edit

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External links edit