1973–74 A Group

A Group
Season 1973–74
Champions Levski Sofia
(12th title)
Relegated Beroe
Spartak Varna
European Cup Levski
UEFA Cup Lokomotiv Plovdiv
Etar
Matches played 240
Goals scored 632 (2.63 per match)
Top goalscorer Petko Petkov
(20 goals each)

Statistics of Bulgarian A Football Group in the 1973–1974 season.

Overview

It was contested by 16 teams, and Levski Sofia won the championship.[1]

League standings

PosClubPWDLFAPtsQualification or relegation
1Levski Sofia3021545830471974–75 European Cup first round
2CSKA Sofia3019835427461974–75 Cup Winners' Cup first round
3Lokomotiv Plovdiv3013894936341974–75 UEFA Cup first round
4Etar Veliko Tarnovo30137103830331974–75 UEFA Cup first round
5Lokomotiv Sofia301299353233
6Akademik Sofia3011109373832
7Botev Vratsa3012612424830
8Slavia Sofia3010812363328
9Cherno More Varna3011613424228
10Botev Plovdiv3071310364227
11Pirin Blagoevgrad3011514294327
12Yantra Gabrovo3010515404925
13Minyor Pernik3071112284525
14Spartak Pleven3071013324324
15Beroe Stara Zagora307716504621Relegation to B Group
16Spartak Varna307617264820Relegation to B Group

Champions

Levski Sofia
Goalkeepers
Bulgaria Stefan Staykov 27 (0)
Bulgaria Biser Mihaylov 4 (0)
Defenders
Bulgaria Georgi Ganev 2 (0)
Bulgaria Kiril Ivkov 28 (2)
Bulgaria Georgi Todorov 19 (0)
Bulgaria Dobromir Zhechev 27 (1)
Bulgaria Stefan Aladzhov 27 (0)
Bulgaria Toni Dzheferski 4 (0)
Bulgaria Milko Gaydarski 23 (0)
Midfielders
Bulgaria Stefan Pavlov 30 (3)
Bulgaria Georgi Dobrev 15 (0)
Bulgaria Voyn Voynov 29 (8)
Bulgaria Tsvetan Veselinov 19 (6)
Bulgaria Ivan Stoyanov 26 (1)
Bulgaria Vasil Mitkov 21 (5)
Forwards
Bulgaria Emil Spasov 1 (0)
Bulgaria Pavel Panov 28 (11)
Bulgaria Georgi Tsvetkov 17 (7)
Bulgaria Kiril Milanov 29 (12)
Bulgaria Chavdar Trifonov 10 (1)
Manager
Bulgaria Dimitar Doychinov

Top scorers

Rank Scorer Club Goals
1 Bulgaria Petko Petkov Beroe Stara Zagora 20
2 Bulgaria Stefan Bogomilov Cherno More Varna 19
3 Bulgaria Dimitar Tsekov Etar Veliko Tarnovo 17
4 Bulgaria Georgi Vasilev Lokomotiv Plovdiv 15
Bulgaria Krasen Marinov Yantra Gabrovo
6 Bulgaria Hristo Bonev Lokomotiv Plovdiv 14
7 Bulgaria Georgi Kamenov Botev Vratsa 13
Bulgaria Dinko Dermendzhiev Botev Plovdiv
9 Bulgaria Kiril Milanov Levski Sofia 12
Bulgaria Atanas Mihaylov Lokomotiv Sofia
Bulgaria Georgi Minchev Spartak Varna

References

External links

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the Tuesday, January 26, 2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.