Slovakia Premier League 2022/2023 Fixtures,Results and Table Standings

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Slovakia Premier League 2022/2023 Fixtures,Results and Table Standings, Slovakia Premier League Table 2022/23, Slovakia Premier League Table 2022/2023, Slovak Super Liga Table 2022/2023, Slovak Super Liga 2022/2023

 

Slovakia Premier League 2022/2023 Fixtures,Results and Table Standings

 

 

Slovakia Premier League 2022/2023 Fixtures

May 24, 2022
Zilina 16:00 Trenčín
DAC 1904 17:30 Liptovský Mikuláš
May 27, 2022
18:00

 

Slovakia Premier League 2022/2023 Results

May 21, 2022
Pohronie 1 - 0 Senica
Slovan Bratislava 2 - 2 Zilina
Spartak Trnava 1 - 0 DAC 1904
Ružomberok 3 - 1 Sereď
Trenčín 2 - 2 Zemplín Michalovce
Liptovský Mikuláš 0 - 2 Zlaté Moravce
May 15, 2022
DAC 1904 2 - 3 Ružomberok
May 14, 2022
Zilina 1 - 2 Spartak Trnava
Sereď 0 - 3 Slovan Bratislava
Zlaté Moravce 1 - 3 Pohronie
Senica 0 - 3 Trenčín
May 13, 2022
Zemplín Michalovce 1 - 2 Liptovský Mikuláš
May 4, 2022
Ružomberok 3 - 0 Zilina
May 1, 2022
Slovan Bratislava 1 - 0 Spartak Trnava
April 30, 2022
Trenčín 5 - 2 Liptovský Mikuláš
Pohronie 1 - 2 Zemplín Michalovce
Senica 0 - 0 Zlaté Moravce
Sereď 0 - 0 DAC 1904
April 26, 2022
Trenčín 4 - 3 Zlaté Moravce

Slovakia Premier League 2022/2023 Table Standings

# Team MP W D L F A G P
1 Slovan Bratislava 22 16 5 1 52 16 +36 53
2 Spartak Trnava 22 13 6 3 29 12 +17 45
3 Ružomberok 22 11 8 3 39 17 +22 41
4 DAC 1904 22 10 6 6 28 23 +5 36
5 Sereď 22 9 5 8 28 28 +0 32
6 Zilina 22 8 6 8 34 33 +1 30
7 Senica 22 7 6 9 21 32 -11 27
8 Trenčín 22 6 7 9 32 33 -1 25
9 Zemplín Michalovce 22 7 2 13 20 31 -11 23
10 Liptovský Mikuláš 22 5 6 11 27 43 -16 21
11 Zlaté Moravce 22 4 7 11 22 36 -14 19
12 Pohronie 22 2 4 16 19 47 -28 10

The Slovak Super Liga is Slovakia’s top football league, which is now renamed as the Fortuna Liga due to a sponsorship deal.  Following the breakup of Czechoslovakia in 1993, it was created. Slovan Bratislava, the current title holders, hold the record for most titles with eleven.

 

Czechoslovakia existed from 1918 to 1939 and 1945 to 1993. Slovak teams competed in the first Slovak championship, Zväzové Majstrovstvá Slovenska, from 1925 to 1933; until 1935-36, no Slovak team competed in the Czechoslovak (professional, state) league. Czech and Slovak clubs competed in separate competitions during the German occupation of Czechoslovakia. [2] K Bratislava, the league’s only Slovak team, was kicked out and replaced by a new Slovak league, the Slovenská liga (1939–1945), in the newly established Slovak Republic.

 

 

Slovakia

Slovakia (/slovaeki, -vk-/) is a country in Europe. (listen);] Slovensko [slensk] (listen) is a landlocked country in Central Europe, formally the Slovak Republic (Slovak: Slovenská republika [slenska republika] (listen). Poland to the north, Ukraine to the east, Hungary to the south, Austria to the southwest, and the Czech Republic to the northwest form the country’s borders. Slovakia’s primarily hilly region covers 49,000 square kilometers (19,000 square miles) and is home to roughly 5.4 million people. Bratislava is the capital and largest city, while Koice is the second largest.

The Slavs first arrived in what is now Slovakia in the fifth and sixth centuries. They were instrumental in the establishment of Samo’s Empire in the seventh century. They founded the Principality of Nitra in the ninth century, which was later captured by the Principality of Moravia to become Great Moravia.

 

Following the dissolution of Great Moravia in the tenth century, the province was absorbed into the Principality of Hungary, which would later become the Kingdom of Hungary in 1000.  Following the Mongol invasion of Europe in 1241 and 1242, most of the territory was destroyed. Béla IV of Hungary, who also settled Germans, helped the area recover, and the Germans became a prominent ethnic group in the area, particularly in what is now central and eastern Slovakia.

The state of Czechoslovakia was founded after World War I and the disintegration of the Austro-Hungarian Empire. During the interwar period, it was the only democratic country in Central and Eastern Europe. Local fascist groups eventually gained power in Slovak regions, and the first Slovak Republic existed as a partially recognized client state of Nazi Germany during World War II. Czechoslovakia was re-established as an independent country at the end of World War II. Czechoslovakia was an independent country that became part of the Soviet-led Eastern Bloc after a coup in 1948. The Prague Spring concluded attempts to liberalize communism in Czechoslovakia, which were destroyed by the Warsaw Pact invasion of Czechoslovakia in August 1968. The Velvet Revolution ended Communist authority in Czechoslovakia peacefully in 1989. After the peaceful dissolution of Czechoslovakia, known as the Velvet Divorce, Slovakia became an independent state on January 1, 1993.

Slovakia is a developed country with a high-income economy that scores extremely well on the Human Development Index. It also scores well on civil rights, press freedom, internet freedom, democratic governance, and peacefulness measures. The country combines a market economy with a comprehensive social security system, offering residents universal health care, free education, and one of the OECD’s longest paid parental leave periods. [11] Slovakia belongs to the European Union, Eurozone, Schengen Area, UN, NATO, CERN, OECD, WTO, Council of Europe, Visegrád Group, and OSCE. There are eight UNESCO World Heritage Sites in Slovakia. It is the world’s largest per-capita automobile manufacturer, with 1.1 million cars produced in 2019, accounting for 43 percent of overall industrial output.

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