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1977 – TJ Slavia IPS Praha (Tělovýchovná jednota Slavia Inženýrské průmyslové stavby Praha) 1978 – SK Slavia IPS Praha (Sportovní klub Slavia Inženýrské průmyslové stavby Praha) 1991 – SK Slavia Praha (Sportovní klub Slavia Praha – fotbal, a.s.)
Sparta Prague: 10 10 0 0 70 6 +64 30 Qualification for championship group: 2 Slavia Prague: 10 9 0 1 43 10 +33 27 3 Slovácko: 10 7 0 3 36 10 +26 21 4 Slovan Liberec: 10 5 1 4 24 22 +2 16 5 Viktoria Plzeň: 10 1 4 5 10 29 −19 7 Qualification for relegation group: 6 Lokomotiva Brno H. H. 10 1 2 7 10 36 −26 5 7 FC Praha 10 1 2 7 10 51 −41 5 ...
Slavia Prague, Sparta Prague: Matches played: 80: Goals scored: 327 (4.09 per match) Top goalscorer: Marjolen Nekesa (23) Biggest home win: Slavia Prague 12–0 Baník Ostrava Sparta Prague 12–0 Lokomotiva Brno: Biggest away win: Lokomotiva Brno 0–11 Slavia Prague: Highest scoring: Slavia Prague 12–0 Baník Ostrava Sparta Prague 12–0 ...
Slavia lineup in 2017, before the game against Stjarnan. However, rivals Sparta Prague gained the upper hand in the new Czech League following the dissolution of Czechoslovakia . Slavia won the championship for the first time in 2003 [ 1 ] and played the 2003-04 UEFA Women's Cup , where it was knocked out in the group stage by defending ...
The 2024–25 season is the 132nd season in the history of SK Slavia Prague, and the club's 32nd consecutive season in Czech First League.In addition to the domestic league, the team is scheduled to participate in the Czech Cup, the UEFA Champions League and the UEFA Europa League.
SK Slavia Prague (Czech: SK Slavia Praha, pronounced [ˈslaːvɪja ˈpraɦa]) is a Czech professional football club founded in 1892 in the city of Prague. The club's first appearance in UEFA competitions was in the 1974–75 European Cup Winners' Cup .
Pos. Player Transferred from Fee Date Source FW: Muhamed Tijani: Baník Ostrava: €1,260,000 21 June 2023 [3]FW: Mojmír Chytil: Sigma Olomouc: Undisclosed 30 June 2023
Café Slavia. Café Slavia is a café in Prague, Czech Republic, located on the corner of Národní street and Smetanovo nábřeží, next to the Vltava river and opposite the National Theatre. It was opened in August 1884. [1] Poet and novelist Rainer Maria Rilke regularly spent time in the café. [2]