1946–47 Yugoslav First League

Prva savezna liga
Season 194647
Champions Partizan (1st title)
Relegated Kvarner
Budućnost
Željezničar
14. Oktobar
Nafta
Top goalscorer Franjo Wölfl (28)

The 1946–47 Yugoslav First League season was the first season of the First Federal League (Serbo-Croatian: Prva savezna liga), the top level association football competition of SFR Yugoslavia, which ended the six-year period in which national football competitions were suspended due to World War II. It was also the first season in which the Football Association of Yugoslavia (FSJ) introduced the modern league system which included promotion and relegation between tiers of the football pyramid, as pre-war national championships held between 1927 and 1940 during Kingdom of Yugoslavia employed either a play-off tournament or a mini league format contested by regional champions.

In 1946 both the First and Second Leagues began to use a season long derby to determine the league champion, and an elimination cup to feature a secondary cup champion. With Partizan dominating the league, and then winning the cup shortly after, they are the first ever "double champion" of the Yugoslav First League.

Teams

Team Location Federal Republic Method of qualification
14. Oktobar[A] Niš Socialist Republic of Serbia PR Serbia Serbian championship runners-up
Budućnost Titograd Socialist Republic of Montenegro PR Montenegro Montenegrin championship winners
Dinamo Zagreb[B] Zagreb Socialist Republic of Croatia PR Croatia Croatian championship runners-up
Hajduk Split[C] Split Socialist Republic of Croatia PR Croatia Croatian championship winners
Kvarner[D] Rijeka Socialist Republic of Croatia PR Croatia Istrian play-off winners[D]
Lokomotiva Zagreb Socialist Republic of Croatia PR Croatia Croatian championship third place; Play-off runners-up
Metalac[E] Belgrade Socialist Republic of Serbia PR Serbia Serbian championship third place; Play-off winners
Nafta Lendava Socialist Republic of Slovenia PR Slovenia Slovenian championship winners
Partizan[F] Belgrade Socialist Republic of Serbia PR Serbia Qualified directly, representing the Yugoslav People's Army[F]
Pobeda[G] Skopje Socialist Republic of Macedonia PR Macedonia Macedonian championship winners
Ponziana Trieste Free Territory of Trieste Free Territory of Trieste Qualified directly, representing Free Territory of Trieste
Red Star Belgrade Socialist Republic of Serbia PR Serbia Serbian championship winners
Spartak Subotica Socialist Republic of Serbia PR Serbia Vojvodina championship winners
Željezničar Sarajevo Socialist Republic of Bosnia and Herzegovina PR Bosnia and Herzegovina Bosnia and Herzegovina championship winners

Notes

League table

Rank Club MP W D L GF GA GD P
1 Partizan Belgrade 26 23 1 2 77 17 +60 47
2 Dinamo Zagreb 26 19 4 3 81 26 +55 42
3 Red Star Belgrade 26 18 3 5 66 23 +43 39
4 Hajduk Split 26 16 4 6 57 21 +36 36
5 Metalac Belgrade 26 13 3 10 40 35 +5 29
6 Spartak Subotica 26 11 6 9 40 34 +6 28
7 Lokomotiva Zagreb 26 10 4 12 34 43 -9 24
8 Pobeda Skopje 26 8 6 12 41 49 -8 22
9 Kvarner Rijeka 26 7 7 12 27 42 -15 21
10 Budućnost Titograd 26 7 6 12 44 54 -10 20
11 Ponziana Trieste 26 9 2 15 35 50 -15 20
12 Željezničar Sarajevo 26 7 4 15 31 54 -23 18
13 14. Oktobar Niš 26 4 5 17 26 76 -50 13
14 Nafta Lendava 13 3 2 6' 6 ? ? 11

league topscorer: Franjo Wölfl (Dinamo Zagreb) (28 goals from 24 league match appearances)

CHAMPIONS: FK Partizan (coach: Illés Spitz) player (league matches/league goals)
Stjepan Bobek (23/24)
Miroslav Brozović (23/2)
Bela Palfi (21/4)
Zlatko Čajkovski (20/3)
Kiril Simonovski (19/5)
Franjo Rupnik (18/11)
Prvoslav Mihajlović (18/9)
Aleksandar Atanacković (17/3)
Milivoje Đurđević (17/0)
Franjo Glazer (16/0) (goalkeeper)
Stanislav Popesku (13/0)
Miodrag Jovanović (13/0)
Silvester Šereš (12/2)
Florijan Matekalo (7/3)
Jane Janevski (6/1)
Risto Nikolić (6/0) (goalkeeper)
Vladimir Firm (4/3)
Momčilo Radunović (4/0)
Ratko Čolić (2/0)
Stevan Jakuš (2/0)
Franjo Šoštarić (2/0) (goalkeeper)
Šepe Šutevski (1/0)

Notes

Cup

Round of Sixteen

Partizan Beograd 2 - 0 Proleter Priština

Crvena Zvezda Beograd x - x X

X x - x X

X x - x X

X x - x X

X x - x X

Sloga Novi Sad x - x X

Naša Krila Zemun x - x X

Quarter finals

Naša Krila Zemun x - x X

Partizan Beograd 2 - 1 Crvena Zvezda Beograd

X x - x X

Sloga Novi Sad x - x X

Semi finals

Naša Krila Zemun x - x X

Partizan Beograd 4 - 0 Sloga Novi Sad

Finals

Partizan 2 - 0 Naša Krila Zemun

Stadium: Centralnog doma Jugoslovenske Armije (Stadium JNA)

Attendance: 10,000

Referee: Podupski (Zagreb)

Partizan: Franjo Šoštarić, Miroslav Brozović, Ratko Čolić, Bela Palfi, Miodrag Jovanović, Aleksandar Atanacković, Prvoslav Mihajlović, Stjepan Bobek, Jovan Jezerkić, Momčilo Radunović, Kiril Simonovski.

Naša krila: Popadić, Lazić, Filipović, Grčić, Brnjevarac, Lokošek, Panić, Pečenčić, Zlatković, Damjanović, Borovic

See also

References

  1. 1 2 "Dinamo". Nogometni leksikon (in Croatian). Miroslav Krleža Lexicographical Institute. Retrieved 27 March 2011.
  2. "Maksimir". Nogometni leksikon (in Croatian). Miroslav Krleža Lexicographical Institute. Retrieved 27 March 2011.
  3. "Povijest kluba" (in Croatian). NK Dinamo Zagreb. Retrieved 27 March 2011.
  4. Puric, Bojan (25 January 2000). "Hajduk Split during World War II". Rec.Sport.Soccer Statistics Foundation. Retrieved 27 March 2011.
  5. Čeko, Marko (14 February 2011). "Fifa i strani mediji prenijeli priču o četiri studenta koji su osnovali slavni klub" (in Croatian). Index.hr. Retrieved 27 March 2011.
  6. "Kantrida". Nogometni leksikon (in Croatian). Miroslav Krleža Lexicographical Institute. Retrieved 27 March 2011.
  7. 1 2 Percan, Anton. "Povijest kluba" (in Croatian). NK Istra. Retrieved 27 March 2011.
  8. "Povijest" (in Croatian). NK Rijeka. Retrieved 27 March 2011.
  9. 1 2 3 "Vek romantike" (in Serbian). OFK Belgrade. Retrieved 27 March 2011.
  10. "Lična karta kluba" (in Serbian). OFK Belgrade. Retrieved 27 March 2011.
  11. "Istorija" (in Serbian). FK Partizan. Retrieved 27 March 2011.

External links

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