AS Trenčín






















































AS Trenčín
logo
Full name Asociácia športov Trenčín a.s.[1]
Founded 1992; 27 years ago (1992)
as TJ Ozeta Dukla Trenčín
Ground
Štadión na Sihoti,
Trenčín
Capacity 3,500
Owner Tscheu La Ling
Chairman Róbert Rybníček
Manager Vladimír Cifranič
League Fortuna Liga
2017–18 Fortuna Liga, 5th
Website Club website

















Home colours














Away colours




Current season







AS Trenčín (Slovak pronunciation: [ˈa: ˈɛs ˈtrɛntʃiːn] (About this soundlisten)) is a Slovak sports club in the town of Trenčín, most known for its football department. The first team currently plays in the Slovak Super Liga after winning the 2010–11 Slovak First League. The club plays its home games at the Štadión na Sihoti with a capacity of 4,500 spectators.




Contents






  • 1 History


    • 1.1 Events timeline




  • 2 Honours


    • 2.1 Domestic


    • 2.2 Czechoslovak and Slovak Top Goalscorer


    • 2.3 European




  • 3 Affiliated clubs


  • 4 Supporters


  • 5 Sponsorship


    • 5.1 Club partners




  • 6 Current squad


    • 6.1 Out on loan 2018–19




  • 7 Managers


    • 7.1 Current technical staff


      • 7.1.1 UEFA Ranking






  • 8 Transfers


    • 8.1 Record transfers




  • 9 Results


    • 9.1 League and Cup history


    • 9.2 European competition history




  • 10 Player records


    • 10.1 Most goals




  • 11 Notable players


  • 12 Managers


  • 13 Previous kits


  • 14 References


  • 15 External links





History


The football team was established in 1992 as TJ Ozeta Dukla Trenčín and started in the third division of the Czechoslovak competition, finishing one place below TTS Trenčín. Afterwards both clubs merged. Later, the club spent three seasons (1994–97) in the second division in Slovakia.[2] Since 1997, Trenčín has continuously played in the Slovak first division.


In 2002 the club changed its name to FK Laugaricio Trenčín, and one year later became FK AS Trenčín (Araver a Synot Trenčín).


The club's biggest success so far was winning the national title in the 2014–15 season and reaching second place in the 2013–14 season. Trenčín has also made four appearances in the Intertoto Cup (1998, 1999, 2000 and 2002). It is owned by former Dutch international Tschen La Ling.[3] After 11 seasons in the top level the club was relegated after the 2007–08 season.[2]


In July 2015, FK AS Trenčín together with women's handball team HK Štart Trenčín was merged into Asociácia športov Trenčín.[4]



Events timeline



  • 1992: Founded as TJ Ozeta Dukla Trenčín

  • 1995: Renamed FK Ozeta Dukla Trenčín

  • 2002: Renamed Laugaricio Trenčín

  • 2003: Renamed FK AS Trenčín (Araver a Synot Trenčín)

  • 2015: Renamed AS Trenčín (Asociácia športov Trenčín)





Honours



Domestic


Czechoslovakia Czechoslovakia



  • Czechoslovak First League (1925–93)


    • Runners-up (1): 1962–63 1


    • Third Place (1): 1967–68 1



Slovakia Slovakia




  • Slovak League (1993–Present)


    • Winners (2): 2014–15, 2015–16


    • Runners-up (1): 2013–14




  • Slovak Cup (1961–Present)

    • Winners (3): 19781, 2014–15, 2015–16



  • Slovakian Second Division (1993–Present)


    • Winners (1): 2010–11


    • Runners-up (3): 1997, 2008–09, 2009–10




1 – As Jednota Trenčín



Czechoslovak and Slovak Top Goalscorer


The Czechoslovak League top scorer from 1944–45 until 1992–93. Since the 1993–94 Slovak League Top scorer.






































Year
Winner
G

1964–65

Czechoslovakia Pavol Bencz
19

1998–99

Slovakia Martin Fabuš
19

2002–03

Slovakia Martin Fabuš
201

2012–13

Slovakia David Depetris
16

2013–14

Slovakia Tomáš Malec
14

2015–16

Curaçao Gino van Kessel
17

1Shared award


European Union European



  • Mitropa Cup

    • Runners-up (1): 1966 1


1 – As Jednota Trenčín



Affiliated clubs


The following clubs are affiliated with AS Trenčín:




  • Netherlands VSV TONEGIDO (2007–08)[5]


  • Slovakia Baník Horná Nitra (2011–present)[6]


  • Slovakia Slovan Nemšová (2012–present)[7]


  • Netherlands Ajax (2012–present)[8]


  • Netherlands AGOVV Apeldoorn (2012–13)[9]


  • Nigeria GBS Academy (2014–present) [10]


  • Slovakia FK Inter Bratislava (2016–present)[11]



Supporters


The club has a fairly large support in the country and have an active ultras group. They have a fierce rivalry with Spartak Trnava and Slovan Bratislava. The club is one of the very few in the region with politically left-wing fans.[12] Trenčín supporters maintain friendly relations with some fans of Czech Bohemians 1905.[13]



Sponsorship



































































Period
Kit manufacturer
Shirt sponsor
????–97

ATAK
Ozeta
1998–99

Kappa
1999–02

Adidas
2003–05

none
2005–06

Umbro
SYNOT
2006–08

none
2008–09
FITSHAPE
2009–10
Royal
2010–12
KROON
2012–14

Nike

AEGON
2015–2017

Adidas
2017
EDART
2018
MAGIC club
2018-
ORION TIP


Club partners












Current squad


As of 22 February 2019[14]Note: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.


































































































No.

Position
Player
1

Slovakia

GK

Denis Chudý
2

Slovakia

DF

Lukáš Skovajsa
3

Trinidad and Tobago

DF

Keston Julien
4

Nigeria

MF

Abdul Zubairu
5

Nigeria

DF

Reuben Yem
6

Slovakia

DF

Martin Šulek
7

Bosnia and Herzegovina

FW

Hamza Čataković
9

Slovakia

MF

Jakub Paur
10

Netherlands

MF

Desley Ubbink
11

Netherlands

MF

Joey Sleegers
12

Slovakia

GK

Libor Hrdlička
14

Nigeria

FW

Emeka Umeh
15

Ghana

MF

Osman Bukari
16

Slovakia

MF

Jakub Kadák
























































































No.

Position
Player
17

Croatia

MF

Ante Roguljić
18

Netherlands

MF

Philippe van Arnhem
22

Slovakia

DF

Adrián Slávik
23

Ghana

MF

Mohammed Lamine
24

Slovakia

GK

Igor Šemrinec (Vice-captain)
25

Netherlands

MF

Aschraf El Mahdioui
28

Slovakia

DF

Marián Pišoja
37

Slovakia

DF

Peter Kleščík (Captain)
46

Belgium

MF

Milan Corryn
49

Slovakia

MF

Milan Kvocera
55

Serbia

DF

Erhan Mašović


Slovakia

DF

Adam Laczkó


Slovakia

GK

Peter Urminský


For recent transfers, see List of Slovak football transfers summer 2018.

and List of Slovak football transfers winter 2018-19.



Out on loan 2018–19


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
































No.

Position
Player


Slovakia

FW

Erik Prekop (at FC Petržalka akadémia)


Nigeria

FW

Issa Adekunle (at Inter Bratislava)


Slovakia

MF

Tomáš Svečula (at Inter Bratislava)




























No.

Position
Player


Serbia

DF

Jovan Pavlović (at Inter Bratislava)


Ukraine

GK

Oleksandr Morgos (at Inter Bratislava)


Croatia

FW

Antonio Mance (at Nantes)



Managers




Current technical staff


As of 3 June 2018


























































Staff
Job title

Slovakia Vladimír Cifranič
Manager

Slovakia Richard Slezák
Assistant manager

Slovakia Juraj Ančic
Assistant manager

Netherlands Gideon van der Wee
Tech assistant

Slovakia Ľubomír Reiter
U19 coach

Slovakia Tomáš Belic
Goalkeeping coach

Germany Matthias Kohler
Consultant

Slovakia Jozef Hollý
Team Leader

Slovakia Drahoslav Bočák
Team Manager

Slovakia Branislav Haviernik
Scout

Slovakia Dr Jozef Takáč
Team Doctor

Slovakia Peter Gašperák
Physiotherapist

Slovakia Jozef Liška
Masseur


UEFA Ranking


This is the current 2018–19 (August 31) UEFA coefficient:

































Rank
Team
Coefficient
157
Belgium Charleroi
6.940
158
Slovakia FC Spartak Trnava
6.500
159
Slovakia AS Trenčín

6.500
160
Luxembourg F91 Dudelange
6.250
161
Azerbaijan Gabala FK
6.250

  • Full list


Transfers


AS 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 Trenčín after a few years of first team football and moving on to play football in leagues of a higher standard, with the Russian Football Premier League (Martin Škrteľ to Zenit in 2004, František Kubík to Kuban in 2011), Belgian Pro League (Moses Simon, Haris Hajradinović (booth 2014), Rabiu Ibrahim (2016), Samuel Kalu (2017), Rangelo Janga (2018) and Philip Azango (2018) to Gent, Wesley to Club Brugge in 2016, Kingsley Madu and Aliko Bala to Zulte Waregem in 2016,2017 James Lawrence to Anderlecht in 2018), Danish Superliga (Stanislav Lobotka and Ramón to FC Nordsjælland in 2015, Fanendo Adi to Copenhagen in 2013), Dutch Eredivisie (Hilary Gong to SBV Vitesse in 2018), Greece Superleague (Jairo to PAOK in 2015), Norway Tippeligaen (Tomáš Malec to Lillestrøm SK in 2016), Czech First League (Aldo Baéz to Slavia Prague in 2014 and season 2015-16 league topscorer Gino van Kessel in 2016). The top transfer was agreed in 2016 when 20 years old talented midfielder Matúš Bero joined Turkish Trabzonspor for a fee €3.5 million.



Record transfers












































Rank
Player
To
Fee
Year
1.
Slovakia Matúš Bero

Turkey Trabzonspor
€3.5 million* 2016[15]
2.
Curaçao Gino van Kessel

Czech Republic Slavia Prague
€1.5 million* 2016[16][17]
3.
Brazil Wesley

Belgium Club Brugge
€1.0 million* 2016[18]
4.
Nigeria Moses Simon

Belgium Gent
€0.8 million* 2015[19]

Brazil Jairo

Greece PAOK
€0.8 million* 2015[20]

*-unofficial fee



Results



League and Cup history


Slovak League only (1993–present)


















































































































































































































































































































































































































































Season
Division (Name)
Pos./Teams
Pl.
W
D
L
GS
GA
P

Domestic Cup
Europe
Top Scorer (Goals)

1993–94
3rd (3. Liga Západ)

1/(16)
30
21
6
3
62
19

48
3R




1994–95
2nd (1. Liga)

7/(16)
30
13
5
12
54
40

44
1R



Slovakia Formanko (16)

1995–96
2nd (1. Liga)

9/(16)
30
10
7
13
41
42

37
1R




1996–97
2nd (1. Liga)

2/(18)
34
24
2
8
68
30

74
1R




1997–98
1st (Mars Superliga)

4/(16)
30
14
5
9
47
31

53
2R



Slovakia Martin Fabuš (16)

1998–99
1st (Mars Superliga)

5/(16)
30
15
8
7
53
25

53
1R

UI
2R (Russia Baltika)

Slovakia Martin Fabuš (19)

1999–00
1st (Mars Superliga)

5/(16)
30
13
8
9
38
29

47
2R

UI
1R (Republic of Macedonia Pobeda)

Slovakia Jozef Valachovič (7)

2000–01
1st (Mars Superliga)

8/(10)
36
11
6
19
35
59

39
2R

UI
1.R (Latvia Dinaburg)

Slovakia Marián Klago (6)

2001–02
1st (Mars Superliga)

5/(10)
36
15
9
12
45
43

54
2R



Slovakia Martin Fabuš (9)

2002–03
1st (Superliga)

9/(10)
36
11
5
20
48
69

38
2R

UI
1R (Croatia Slaven Belupo)

Slovakia Milan Ivana (10)

2003–04
1st (Corgoň Liga)

5/(10)
36
13
9
14
37
43

48
1R



Slovakia Stanislav Velický (7)

2004–05
1st (Corgoň Liga)

8/(10)
36
12
7
17
36
50

43
2R



Slovakia Ivan Lietava (9)

2005–06
1st (Corgoň Liga)

7/(10)
36
11
9
16
31
49

42
Quarter-finals



Slovakia Jaroslav Kamenský (6)

2006–07
1st (Corgoň Liga)

11/(12)
36
8
11
17
31
49

35
2R



Slovakia Juraj Czinege (4)

2007–08
1st (Corgoň Liga)

12/(12)
33
3
7
23
26
77

16
3R



ArgentinaSlovakia David Depetris (4)

2008–09
2nd (1. liga)

2/(12)
33
19
9
5
74
27

66
1R



ArgentinaSlovakia David Depetris (21)

2009–10
2nd (1. liga)

2/(12)
27
13
11
3
53
21

50
3R



Slovakia Filip Hlohovský (7)
Paraguay Jorge Salinas (7)

2010–11
2nd (1. liga)

1/(12)
33
22
6
5
77
30

72
3R



ArgentinaSlovakia David Depetris (31)

2011–12
1st (Corgoň Liga)

5/(12)
33
12
12
9
51
49

48
3R



Trinidad and Tobago Lester Peltier (11)

2012–13
1st (Corgoň Liga)

3/(12)
33
14
11
8
52
34

18
3R



ArgentinaSlovakia David Depetris (16)

2013–14
1st (Corgoň Liga)

2/(12)
33
19
6
8
74
35

63
2R

EL
Q3 (Romania Astra)

Slovakia Tomáš Malec (14)

2014–15
1st (Fortuna Liga)

1/(12)
33
23
5
5
67
28

74
Winner

EL
Q3 (England Hull City)

Brazil Jairo (8)

2015–16
1st (Fortuna Liga)

1/(12)
33
26
3
4
73
28

81
Winner

CL
Q2 (Romania Steaua București)

Curaçao Gino van Kessel (17)

2016-17
1st (Fortuna Liga)

4/(12)
30
14
5
11
53
48

47
Quarter-finals

CL
EL
Q3 (Poland Legia Warsaw)
PO (Austria Rapid Wien)

Curaçao Rangelo Janga (14)

2017-18
1st (Fortuna Liga)

5/(12)
31
14
6
11
73
47

48
4R

EL
Q2 (Israel Bnei Yehuda)

Curaçao Rangelo Janga (14)

2018–19
1st (Fortuna Liga)










EL
PO (Cyprus AEK Larnaca)



European competition history


Until 1992 played as Jednota Trenčín















































































































































































































Season
Competition
Round
Club
Home
Away
Aggregate

1966

Mitropa Cup
1. Round

Austria Admira Wien
4–0
1–2

5–2
1/4 Final

Socialist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia Red Star Belgrade
3–1
1–0

4–1
Semi-final

Hungary Vasas
1–0


Final

Italy Fiorentina

0–1


1967–68

Mitropa Cup
1 .Round

Socialist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia Željezničar
0–1
0–0

0–1

1998

Intertoto Cup
1. Round

Latvia Dinaburg
1–1
4–1

5–1
2. Round

Russia Baltika
0–1
0–0

0–1

1999

Intertoto Cup
1. Round

Republic of Macedonia Pobeda
3–1
1–3

4–4 (p)

2000

Intertoto Cup
1. Round

Latvia Dinaburg
0–3
0–1

0–4

2002

Intertoto Cup
1. Round

Croatia Slaven Belupo
3–1
0–5

3–6

2013–14

UEFA Europa League

2Q

Sweden IFK Göteborg
2–1
0–0

2–1

3Q

Romania Astra Giurgiu
1–3
2–2

3–5

2014–15

UEFA Europa League

2Q

Serbia Vojvodina
4–0
0–3

4–3

3Q

England Hull City
0–0
1–2

1–2

2015–16

UEFA Champions League

2Q

Romania Steaua București
0–2
3–2

3–4

2016–17

UEFA Champions League

2Q

Slovenia NK Olimpija
2–3
4–3

6–6

3Q

Poland Legia Warsaw
0–1
0–0

0–1

UEFA Europa League

PO

Austria Rapid Wien
0–4
2–0

2–4

2017–18

UEFA Europa League

1Q

Georgia (country) Torpedo Kutaisi
5–1
3–0

8–1

2Q

Israel Bnei Yehuda
1–1
0–2

1–3

2018–19

UEFA Europa League

1Q

Montenegro Budućnost Podgorica
1−1
2−0

3–1

2Q

Poland Górnik Zabrze
4−1
1−0

5−1

3Q

Netherlands Feyenoord
4−0
1−1

5−1

PO

Cyprus AEK Larnaca
1−1
0−3

1−4


Player records



Most goals







































#
Nat.
Name
Goals
1

Argentina Slovakia

David Depetris
86
2

Czechoslovakia

Pavol Bencz
72
3

Czechoslovakia

Vojtech Masný
65
4

Slovakia

Martin Fabuš
59
5

Curaçao

Gino van Kessel
33


Notable players


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


For full list, see Category:FK AS Trenčín players





  • Nigeria Fanendo Adi


  • Czechoslovakia Milan Albrecht


  • Slovakia Juraj Ančic


  • Jamaica Leon Bailey


  • Czechoslovakia Dušan Bartovič


  • Czechoslovakia Pavol Bencz


  • Slovakia Matúš Bero


  • Czechoslovakia Ivan Bilský


  • China Yin Congyao


  • Slovakia Kamil Čontofalský


  • Slovakia Juraj Czinege


  • Slovakia David Depetris


  • Slovakia Marián Dirnbach


  • Slovakia Peter Doležaj


  • Slovakia Martin Fabuš


  • Slovakia Ľubomír Faktor


  • Nigeria Reuben Gabriel


  • Slovakia Roman Gergel


  • Slovakia Dávid Guba


  • Bosnia and Herzegovina Haris Hajradinović


  • Slovakia Róbert Hanko


  • Slovakia Filip Hlohovský


  • Slovakia Filip Hološko


  • Slovakia Jakub Holúbek


  • Slovakia Csaba Horváth


  • Slovakia Jaroslav Hrabal


  • Nigeria Rabiu Ibrahim


  • Slovakia Milan Ivana


  • Curaçao Rangelo Janga


  • Czechoslovakia Ladislav Józsa


  • Slovakia Jozef Juriga


  • Nigeria Samuel Kalu


  • Czechoslovakia Ján Kapko


  • Slovakia Marek Kaščák


  • Slovakia Karol Kisel


  • Slovakia Rastislav Kostka


  • Slovakia František Kubik


  • Slovakia Dušan Kuciak


  • Slovakia Lukáš Kyselica


  • Bulgaria Czechoslovakia Bozhin Laskov


  • Wales James Lawrence


  • Slovakia Martin Lipčák


  • Slovakia Stanislav Lobotka


  • Slovakia Filip Lukšík


  • Nigeria Kingsley Madu


  • Austria Stefan Maierhofer


  • Slovakia Tomáš Malec


  • Czechoslovakia Vojtech Masný


  • Slovakia Róbert Mazáň


  • Slovakia Patrik Mišák


  • Czechoslovakia Vladimír Mojžiš


  • Slovakia Peter Németh


  • Nigeria Uche Nwofor


  • Czechoslovakia Emil Pažický


  • Slovakia Juraj Piroska


  • Trinidad and Tobago Lester Peltier


  • Slovakia Andrej Porázik


  • Serbia Milan Rundić


  • Paraguay Jorge Salinas


  • Nigeria Moses Simon


  • Czechoslovakia Miroslav Siva


  • Slovakia Anton Šoltis


  • Slovakia Martin Škrtel


  • Slovakia Ondrej Šmelko


  • Slovakia Samuel Štefánik


  • Slovakia Peter Štyvar


  • Slovakia Martin Šulek


  • Czechoslovakia Anton Švajlen


  • Slovakia Jozef Valachovič


  • Curaçao Gino van Kessel




Managers













Previous kits





























The first home Ozeta Dukla kit, worn in 1994–95.


















The first away Ozeta Dukla kit, worn in 1994–95.


















The typical Ozeta Dukla kit, as worn in 1996–03.


















The alternative Ozeta Dukla kit, as worn in 1996–03.


















The home FK Laugaricio kit and the older FK AS kit, worn in 2003–08.


















The away FK Laugaricio kit and the older FK AS kit, worn in 2003–08.




References





  1. ^ AS Trenčín (7 July 2015). "Už nie sme iba futbal, sme Asociácia športov - AS Trenčín" – via YouTube..mw-parser-output cite.citation{font-style:inherit}.mw-parser-output .citation q{quotes:"""""""'""'"}.mw-parser-output .citation .cs1-lock-free a{background:url("//upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/6/65/Lock-green.svg/9px-Lock-green.svg.png")no-repeat;background-position:right .1em center}.mw-parser-output .citation .cs1-lock-limited a,.mw-parser-output .citation .cs1-lock-registration a{background:url("//upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/d/d6/Lock-gray-alt-2.svg/9px-Lock-gray-alt-2.svg.png")no-repeat;background-position:right .1em center}.mw-parser-output .citation .cs1-lock-subscription a{background:url("//upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/a/aa/Lock-red-alt-2.svg/9px-Lock-red-alt-2.svg.png")no-repeat;background-position:right .1em center}.mw-parser-output .cs1-subscription,.mw-parser-output .cs1-registration{color:#555}.mw-parser-output .cs1-subscription span,.mw-parser-output .cs1-registration span{border-bottom:1px dotted;cursor:help}.mw-parser-output .cs1-ws-icon a{background:url("//upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/4/4c/Wikisource-logo.svg/12px-Wikisource-logo.svg.png")no-repeat;background-position:right .1em center}.mw-parser-output code.cs1-code{color:inherit;background:inherit;border:inherit;padding:inherit}.mw-parser-output .cs1-hidden-error{display:none;font-size:100%}.mw-parser-output .cs1-visible-error{font-size:100%}.mw-parser-output .cs1-maint{display:none;color:#33aa33;margin-left:0.3em}.mw-parser-output .cs1-subscription,.mw-parser-output .cs1-registration,.mw-parser-output .cs1-format{font-size:95%}.mw-parser-output .cs1-kern-left,.mw-parser-output .cs1-kern-wl-left{padding-left:0.2em}.mw-parser-output .cs1-kern-right,.mw-parser-output .cs1-kern-wl-right{padding-right:0.2em}


  2. ^ ab "Trenčín po 11 sezónach zostupuje do druhej najvyššej súťaže" Archived 2011-07-19 at the Wayback Machine (in Slovak)


  3. ^ "AS TRENČÍN - Oficiálne stránky futbalového klubu". 2 January 2007. Archived from the original on 2007-01-02.


  4. ^ "Trenčianska AS bude pracovať podľa filozofie futbalového klubu". Sport.sme.sk. Petit Press, a.s. 28 July 2015. Retrieved 16 October 2015.


  5. ^ "Breuk Ling en Tonegido". ad.nl (in Dutch). Retrieved 2014-08-19.


  6. ^ "FC Baník Horná Nitra sa stal partnerom prvoligového klubu AS Trenčín". prievidza.sme.sk (in Slovak). Retrieved 2011-08-27.


  7. ^ "AS Trenčín bude spolupracovať s Nemšovou". astrencin.sk (in Slovak). Archived from the original on 2013-09-27. Retrieved 2012-07-03.


  8. ^ "Podpísali sme zmluvu o spolupráci s Ajaxom!". astrencin.sk (in Slovak). Archived from the original on 2013-09-27. Retrieved 2012-12-07.


  9. ^ "Budeme spolupracovať s holandským AGOVV". astrencin.sk (in Slovak). Archived from the original on 2013-09-27. Retrieved 2012-01-25.


  10. ^ http://astn.sk/clanek.asp?id=Azango-nespokojny-s-miestom-na-lavicke--6102


  11. ^ "Tlačová konferencia AS Trenčín pred jarnou časťou sezóny". youtube.com (in Slovak). Retrieved 2016-02-24.


  12. ^ "Góral Żywiec skroił 2 flagi! - Stadionowi Oprawcy - Największy serwis o Polskich Kibicach".


  13. ^ http://www.aktuality.sk/clanok/360981/futbalovi-chuligani-kto-do-koho-kope/


  14. ^ First team squad list Archived January 21, 2012, at the Wayback Machine


  15. ^ "Sportove noviny". Markiza. Archived from the original on 2016-07-24. Retrieved 2016-07-21.


  16. ^ "Van Kessel prestupil". sportinak.sk. Retrieved 2016-07-13.


  17. ^ https://profutbal.sk/clanok/218276-van-kessel-stal-slaviu-praha-vraj-40-milionov-zilina-by-ho-nechcela-ani-zadarmo


  18. ^ "Góly - body - sekundy". RTVS.sk. Retrieved 2016-06-11.


  19. ^ s., P E R E X, a. (27 April 2015). "O nigérijský talent, ktorý vybrúsili v Trenčíne, sa pobijú európski giganti - Pravda.sk".


  20. ^ "Útočník Trenčína Jairo prestupil do PAOK Solún". 9 August 2015.




External links



  • Official website (in Slovak) (in English)









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