Skip to content
Surf Wiki
Save to docs
sports

From Surf Wiki (app.surf) — the open knowledge base

1968–69 in Belgian football

none


none

FieldValue
countryBelgium
soccerno
season1968–69
prevseason1967–68
nextseason1969–70
flagiconyes

The 1968–69 season was the 66th season of competitive football in Belgium. Standard Club Liégeois won their 4th Division I title. No Belgian club managed to pass the second round of the European competitions, though for the first time 6 Belgian clubs qualified (1 more club qualified for the Inter-Cities Fairs Cup). K Lierse SK won the Belgian Cup final against RR White (2-0). The Belgium national football team continued their 1970 FIFA World Cup qualification campaign with 3 home wins against all other Group 6 teams (Finland, Yugoslavia and Spain) and a draw in Spain. Belgium qualified for the 1970 FIFA World Cup finals in Mexico with one match to go. For the first time since the 1954 FIFA World Cup, Belgium would qualify for a major tournament.

Overview

At the end of the season, RFC Malinois and R Daring Club Molenbeek were relegated to Division II and were replaced by ASV Oostende KM and R Crossing Club Molenbeek from Division II.

The bottom 2 clubs in Division II (KFC Herentals and RFC Sérésien) were relegated to Division III, to be replaced by KRC Mechelen and KSV Sottegem from Division III.

The bottom club of each Division III league (K Wezel Sport FC after a play-off game against ACV Brasschaat, K Olympia SC Wijgmaal, R Entente Sportive Jamboise and RRC de Gand) were relegated to Promotion, to be replaced by Kortrijk Sport, VC Westerlo, RAA Louviéroise and AS Eupen from Promotion.

National team

DateVenueOpponentsScore*CompBelgium scorers
October 9, 1968Regenboogstadion, Waregem (H)Finland6-1WCQWilfried Puis (2), Odilon Polleunis (3), Léon Semmeling
October 16, 1968Stade Emile Versé, Brussels (H)Yugoslavia3-0WCQJohan Devrindt (2), Odilon Polleunis
December 11, 1968Santiago Bernabéu Stadium, Madrid (A)Spain1-1WCQJohan Devrindt
February 23, 1969Stade de Sclessin, Liège (H)Spain2-1WCQJohan Devrindt (2)
April 16, 1969Heysel Stadium, Brussels (H)Mexico2-0FWilfried Puis, Paul Van Himst
  • Belgium score given first

Key

  • H = Home match
  • A = Away match
  • N = On neutral ground
  • F = Friendly
  • WCQ = World Cup qualification
  • o.g. = own goal

European competitions

RSC Anderlechtois beat Glentoran FC of Northern Ireland in the first round of the 1968–69 European Champion Clubs' Cup (won 3-0 at home, drew 1-1 away) but were eliminated in the second round by Manchester United FC (lost 0-3 away, won 3-1 at home).

RFC Brugeois lost in the first round of the 1968–69 European Cup Winners' Cup to West Bromwich Albion FC on away goals (won 3-1 at home, lost 0-2 away).

For the first time, 4 Belgian clubs entered the 1968–69 Inter-Cities Fairs Cup: KSV Waregem beat Atlético Madrid of Spain on away goals (lost 1-2 away, won 1-0 at home), Standard Club Liégeois was defeated by Leeds United (drew 0-0 at home, lost 2-3 away), K Beerschot VAV by DWS of the Netherlands (drew 1-1 at home, lost 1-2 away) and R Daring Club Molenbeek by Panathinaikos FC of Greece (won 2-1 at home, lost 0-2 away).

In the second round, KSV Waregem lost to Legia Warszawa of Poland (won 1-0 at home, lost 0-2 away).

Honours

CompetitionWinner
Division IStandard Club Liégeois
CupK Lierse SK
Division IIASV Oostende KM
Division IIIKRC Mechelen and KSV Sottegem
PromotionKortrijk Sport, VC Westerlo, RAA Louviéroise and AS Eupen

Final league tables

Premier Division

Main article: 1968–69 Belgian First Division

  • 1968-69 Top scorer: Hungarian Antal Nagy (Standard Club Liégeois) with 20 goals
  • 1968 Golden Shoe: Odilon Polleunis (K Sint-Truidense VV)

References

References

  1. http://www.footbel.com/documents/COMPETITIES/Eindklassementen/S1968-1969FR.pdf {{Webarchive. link. (2011-07-16 FA website)
  2. http://www.footbel.com/fr/nationale_elftallen/statistieken_1/per_datum.html {{Webarchive. link. (2011-01-18 FA website)
Info: Wikipedia Source

This article was imported from Wikipedia and is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 License. Content has been adapted to SurfDoc format. Original contributors can be found on the article history page.

Want to explore this topic further?

Ask Mako anything about 1968–69 in Belgian football — get instant answers, deeper analysis, and related topics.

Research with Mako

Free with your Surf account

Content sourced from Wikipedia, available under CC BY-SA 4.0.

This content may have been generated or modified by AI. CloudSurf Software LLC is not responsible for the accuracy, completeness, or reliability of AI-generated content. Always verify important information from primary sources.

Report