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PFC Slavia Sofia

Bulgarian association football club

PFC Slavia Sofia

Summary

Bulgarian association football club

FieldValue
clubnameSlavia Sofia
imagePFC Slavia Sofia.svg
image_size180px
fullnameProfessional Football Club Slavia
nicknameБелите (The Whites)
Добрата стара Славия (The good old Slavia)
Лавината (The Avalanche)
Бялата дама (The White Lady)
founded
groundStadion Aleksandar Shalamanov
capacity25,000
ownerMladen Mihalev
chairmanVentsislav Stefanov
managerRatko Dostanić
leagueFirst League
season2024–25
positionFirst League, 9th of 16
website
pattern_la1_slavia-h-25-26
pattern_b1_slavia-h-25-26
pattern_ra1_slavia-h-25-26
leftarm1FFFFFF
body1FFFFFF
rightarm1FFFFFF
shorts1FFFFFF
socks1FFFFFF
pattern_la2_slavia-3rd-25-26
pattern_b2_slavia-3rd-25-26
pattern_ra2_slavia-3rd-25-26
pattern_sh2_slavia-3rd-25-26
pattern_so2_slavia-3rd-25-26
leftarm2000000
body2000000
rightarm2000000
shorts2000000
socks2000000

Добрата стара Славия (The good old Slavia) Лавината (The Avalanche)

  • Бялата дама* (The White Lady)

PFC Slavia Sofia 1913 () is a Bulgarian professional association football club based in Sofia, which currently competes in the top tier of the Bulgarian football league system, the First League. Slavia's home ground is the Stadion Aleksandar Shalamanov in Ovcha kupel with a capacity of 25,556. The team's colours are white and black. Established on 10 April 1913, Slavia is currently the oldest sports club in Sofia.

Slavia is one of only two Bulgarian football clubs that have never been relegated (the other being Levski Sofia), although the club has been divided into two separate clubs and one of them that carries Slavia records and statistics (Udarnik Sofia) had been expelled to the Second Division, which continued for a season (1951), for no other reason, but politically arranged football reform. The other separate entity (Stroitel Sofia) which is now defunct and regarded as a different club had remained in First Division. Later on the two clubs reunited again.

Domestically, the club has won the Bulgarian Championship seven times and the Bulgarian Cup eight times. They have also been runners-up in the championship ten times and have reached the cup final on three additional occasions. Among the team's international successes are a European Cup Winners' Cup semi-final in 1967 and a quarter-final in 1981, as well as two consecutive Balkans Cup trophies in 1986 and 1988.

Slavia have a rivalry with fellow Sofia-based club Levski Sofia. Matches between the two teams are known as the Oldest capital derby, because Slavia and Levski are the oldest, continuously existing football teams from Sofia. They used to compete regularly for trophies before 1945. More recently, their current main rivals are Lokomotiv Sofia, called the Little capital derby, as well as a rivalry with the city's other club CSKA.

History

On 10 April 1913, a group of young people living near a Russian Monument in Sofia and representatives of the local capital clubs Botev and Razvitie, in a coffee-house – Alabin str. in Sofia, decided to establish an incorporated sports club, the first organized sport club in Sofia. The new incorporated club was named Slavia. Dimitar Blagoev – Palio, a 21-year-old student, was elected as the first president of the club. As members of the first club administrative council were elected Emanuil Geshev, Ferdinand Mihaylov, Tsvyatko Velichkov, Georgi Grigorov and Todor Kalkandzhiev.

A few days later, was elected the first football team of the club – Stefan Lalov, Ilia Georgiev, Emanuil Geshev, Todor Kalkandzhiev, Stefan Chumpalov, Dimitar Blagoev – Palio (all of them from Botev) and Pavel Grozdanov, Ferdinand Mihaylov, Boris Sharankov, Asen Bramchev, Dimitar Cvetkov (all of them from Razvitie). The first sport dresses of the club were white shirts and black shorts. Since 1924, the team has played with white shirts and white shorts and up to present days it is popular as the "White pride". On 11 August 1913, Slavia played its first match, against local club Savata, and won 1–0.

After World War I, Slavia began to become more successful. On 5 June 1928, the club won its first champion title, winning 4–0 in the final match against Vladislav Varna. Slavia won the title five more times until 1946, in 1930, 1936, 1938–39, 1941 and 1943.

Slavia won its first Bulgarian Cup in 1952. By winning the 1963 Bulgarian Cup Final, Slavia qualified for the European Cup Winners' Cup, the club's first appearance in European competition. They were drawn against Hungarian club MTK Budapest in the first round. Slavia were eliminated from the competition 2–1 on aggregate. Its most important achievements in Europe during 1966–67 Cup Winners' Cup campaign when Slavia eliminated Swansea City, Strasbourg and Servette, before being eliminated by Rangers in the semi-finals. The team consisted of great players such as goalkeeper Simeon Simeonov, Ivan Davidov, Aleksandar Shalamanov, Dimitar Largov, Dimitar Kostov and Aleksandar Vasilev.

In 1969, Slavia was merged with Lokomotiv Sofia under the name ZhSK Slavia. Two years later, the two clubs split again after a split was supported by 100,000 fans.

[[Andrey Zhelyazkov]] in 1981

In the 1980–81 season, led by Chavdar Tsvetkov and Andrey Zhelyazkov, Slavia reached the quarter-finals of the Cup Winners' Cup before losing 6–3 on aggregate to Feyenoord. In 1986, Slavia won Balkans Cup, defeating Greek side Panionios 5–3 on aggregate in the final. In 1988, Slavia won the Balkans Cup for the second time.

In 1994, Stoyan Kotsev, the former Slavia midfielder, was appointed as the club's new manager. After finishing fourth in 1995, they went on to win the A PFG title in 1995–96. Slavia finished with five points more than second-placed Levski Sofia. This marked Slavia's first Bulgarian title since 1943. In the 2010–11 season, Slavia reached the Bulgarian Cup final, defeating Ludogorets Razgrad, Etar 1924, Chernomorets Burgas and Pirin Blagoevgrad en route. However, they lost the final 1–0 to CSKA Sofia.

In 2018, Slavia won the Bulgarian Cup for the eight time in its history, defeating rivals Levski Sofia at the Vasil Levski National Stadium after a penalty shootout. This enabled the team to play in the 2018-19 UEFA Europa League second qualifying round. In the second qualifying round, Slavia eliminated Finnish side FC Ilves. However, in the third qualifying round, they lost to Hajduk Split of Croatia, thus being eliminated.

The 2019–20 season was very successful for Slavia. The team finished in third place, qualifying for the Europa League playoff. Slavia clinched the third place in the last round of the season, defeating champions Ludogorets 3–1 at home, while Levski Sofia lost 1–2 to Lokomotiv Plovdiv, thus making Slavia third. This was Slavia's best placement since the 1996–97 season.

League positions

ImageSize = width:1600 height:70 PlotArea = left:10 right:10 bottom:30 top:10 TimeAxis = orientation:horizontal format:yyyy DateFormat = dd/mm/yyyy Period = from:01/07/1948 till:01/07/2026 ScaleMajor = unit:year increment:2 start:1949 Colors = id:bl1 value:rgb(0.5,0.8,0.5) id:bl2 value:rgb(0.9,0.9,0.3) id:rs value:rgb(0.8,0.6,0.6) id:rn value:rgb(0.9,0.1,0.1)

PlotData= bar:Position width:16 color:white align:center from:01/07/1948 till:01/07/1949 shift:(0,-4) text:4 from:01/07/1949 till:01/07/1950 shift:(0,-4) text:2 from:01/07/1948 till:01/07/1950 color:green shift:(0,14) text: "A Group" from:01/07/1950 till:01/07/1951 shift:(0,-4) text:1 from:01/07/1950 till:01/07/1951 color:white shift:(0,14) text: "B Group" from:01/07/1951 till:01/07/1952 shift:(0,-4) text:8 from:01/07/1952 till:01/07/1953 shift:(0,-4) text:5 from:01/07/1953 till:01/07/1954 shift:(0,-4) text:2 from:01/07/1954 till:01/07/1955 shift:(0,-4) text:2 from:01/07/1955 till:01/07/1956 shift:(0,-4) text:4 from:01/07/1956 till:01/07/1957 shift:(0,-4) text:6 from:01/07/1957 till:01/07/1958 shift:(0,-4) text:5 from:01/07/1958 till:01/07/1959 shift:(0,-4) text:2 from:01/07/1959 till:01/07/1960 shift:(0,-4) text:4 from:01/07/1960 till:01/07/1961 shift:(0,-4) text:11 from:01/07/1961 till:01/07/1962 shift:(0,-4) text:5 from:01/07/1962 till:01/07/1963 shift:(0,-4) text:10 from:01/07/1963 till:01/07/1964 shift:(0,-4) text:3 from:01/07/1964 till:01/07/1965 shift:(0,-4) text:3 from:01/07/1965 till:01/07/1966 shift:(0,-4) text:3 from:01/07/1966 till:01/07/1967 shift:(0,-4) text:2 from:01/07/1967 till:01/07/1968 shift:(0,-4) text:5 from:01/07/1968 till:01/07/1969 shift:(0,-4) text:5 from:01/07/1969 till:01/07/1970 shift:(0,-4) text:3 from:01/07/1970 till:01/07/1971 shift:(0,-4) text:6 from:01/07/1971 till:01/07/1972 shift:(0,-4) text:4 from:01/07/1972 till:01/07/1973 shift:(0,-4) text:3 from:01/07/1973 till:01/07/1974 shift:(0,-4) text:8 from:01/07/1974 till:01/07/1975 shift:(0,-4) text:3 from:01/07/1975 till:01/07/1976 shift:(0,-4) text:5 from:01/07/1976 till:01/07/1977 shift:(0,-4) text:4 from:01/07/1977 till:01/07/1978 shift:(0,-4) text:5 from:01/07/1978 till:01/07/1979 shift:(0,-4) text:4 from:01/07/1979 till:01/07/1980 shift:(0,-4) text:2 from:01/07/1980 till:01/07/1981 shift:(0,-4) text:7 from:01/07/1981 till:01/07/1982 shift:(0,-4) text:3 from:01/07/1982 till:01/07/1983 shift:(0,-4) text:12 from:01/07/1983 till:01/07/1984 shift:(0,-4) text:14 from:01/07/1984 till:01/07/1985 shift:(0,-4) text:7 from:01/07/1985 till:01/07/1986 shift:(0,-4) text:3 from:01/07/1986 till:01/07/1987 shift:(0,-4) text:5 from:01/07/1987 till:01/07/1988 shift:(0,-4) text:4 from:01/07/1988 till:01/07/1989 shift:(0,-4) text:11 from:01/07/1989 till:01/07/1990 shift:(0,-4) text:2 from:01/07/1990 till:01/07/1991 shift:(0,-4) text:3 from:01/07/1991 till:01/07/1992 shift:(0,-4) text:10 from:01/07/1992 till:01/07/1993 shift:(0,-4) text:14 from:01/07/1993 till:01/07/1994 shift:(0,-4) text:9 from:01/07/1994 till:01/07/1995 shift:(0,-4) text:4 from:01/07/1995 till:01/07/1996 shift:(0,-4) text:1 from:01/07/1996 till:01/07/1997 shift:(0,-4) text:3 from:01/07/1997 till:01/07/1998 shift:(0,-4) text:5 from:01/07/1998 till:01/07/1999 shift:(0,-4) text:7 from:01/07/1999 till:01/07/2000 shift:(0,-4) text:6 from:01/07/2000 till:01/07/2001 shift:(0,-4) text:6 from:01/07/2001 till:01/07/2002 shift:(0,-4) text:6 from:01/07/2002 till:01/07/2003 shift:(0,-4) text:4 from:01/07/2003 till:01/07/2004 shift:(0,-4) text:5 from:01/07/2004 till:01/07/2005 shift:(0,-4) text:5 from:01/07/2005 till:01/07/2006 shift:(0,-4) text:7 from:01/07/2006 till:01/07/2007 shift:(0,-4) text:5 from:01/07/2007 till:01/07/2008 shift:(0,-4) text:7 from:01/07/2008 till:01/07/2009 shift:(0,-4) text:9 from:01/07/2009 till:01/07/2010 shift:(0,-4) text:6 from:01/07/2010 till:01/07/2011 shift:(0,-4) text:11 from:01/07/2011 till:01/07/2012 shift:(0,-4) text:8 from:01/07/2012 till:01/07/2013 shift:(0,-4) text:8 from:01/07/2013 till:01/07/2014 shift:(0,-4) text:9 from:01/07/2014 till:01/07/2015 shift:(0,-4) text:9 from:01/07/2015 till:01/07/2016 shift:(0,-4) text:4 from:01/07/1951 till:01/07/2016 color:green shift:(0,14) text: "A Group" from:01/07/2016 till:01/07/2017 shift:(0,-4) text:11 from:01/07/2017 till:01/07/2018 shift:(0,-4) text:9 from:01/07/2018 till:01/07/2019 shift:(0,-4) text:8 from:01/07/2019 till:01/07/2020 shift:(0,-4) text:3 from:01/07/2020 till:01/07/2021 shift:(0,-4) text:11 from:01/07/2021 till:01/07/2022 shift:(0,-4) text:6 from:01/07/2022 till:01/07/2023 shift:(0,-4) text:8 from:01/07/2023 till:01/07/2024 shift:(0,-4) text:10 from:01/07/2024 till:01/07/2025 shift:(0,-4) text:9 from:01/07/2025 till:01/07/2026 shift:(0,-4) text: from:01/07/2016 till:01/07/2026 color:green shift:(0,14) text: "First League"

Players

Current squad

**

For recent transfers, see Transfers summer 2025 and Transfers winter 2025–26.

Foreign players

Up to twenty foreign nationals can be registered and given a squad number for the first team in the Bulgarian First League, however only five non-EU nationals can be used during a match day. Those non-EU nationals with European ancestry can claim citizenship from the nation their ancestors came from. If a player does not have European ancestry he can claim Bulgarian citizenship after playing in Bulgaria for 5 years. EU Nationals EU Nationals (Dual citizenship)

  • ALG FRA Yanis Guermouche
  • BUL BRA Diego Ferraresso
  • FRA DRC Lévi Ntumba
  • FRA CPV Jordan Semedo
  • FRA CIV Mouhamed Dosso Non-EU Nationals
  • SRB Marko Miletić
  • SRB Nikola Savić

Supporters

There is one remaining ultras group called Boys Sofia, a name referring to the fact the traditional support is from the south of the city; in the past there were multiple other groups. They have a long standing friendship with BSC Young Boys and FC VSS Kosice.They also have friendships with Bulgarians PFC Cherno more Varna and PFC Dobrudzha. The traditional rivalry has been with Levski Sofia, also known as Oldest capital derby, however in recent decades Lokomotiv Sofia has become the major rival. The derby between them is called Little capital derby. The other city rivalry is with CSKA Sofia.

Stadium

Main article: Ovcha Kupel Stadium

[[Slavia Stadium]] in 2011

In the first ten years after Slavia was founded, the club played in the stadium of his predecessor SC Razvitie. On 3 October 1923, Slavia became the owner of land to the Russian Monument in Sofia, where was the first ground of the club. They played their home games there for the next few decades, until they moved to southwest Sofia in the 1960s.

On 12 March 1958, started the construction of Slavia Stadium. Mayor of the sixth area in Sofia and president of the Slavia women's basketball team, Dimitar Tinev, presided at the laying in place of the first stone. The stadium is built in a residential area Ovcha Kupel, served by regular bus services 6 km from Sofia city centre. Slavia Stadium has undergone many changes over the years and it presently has a capacity of 25,556.

Honours

National

European

Main article: PFC Slavia Sofia in European football

  • Balkans Cup
  • Cup Winners Cup
  • UEFA Intertoto Cup
    • First place in group four: 1977

Board of directors

NameRole
Bulgaria Mladen MihalevOwner
Bulgaria Ventseslav StefanovChairman
Bulgaria Vesko SabevManaging Director
Bulgaria Angel SlavkovYouth Academy Director

Technical staff

NameRole
Serbia Ratko DostanićHead Coach
Bulgaria Martin KushevAssistant Coach
Bulgaria Radostin StanevGoalkeeping Coach
Bulgaria Kiril DinchevConditioning Coach
Bulgaria Deniz YilmazPhysiotherapist
Bulgaria Viktor RakovskiPhysiotherapist
Bulgaria Ivan ZlatevPhysiotherapist
Bulgaria Tsvetomir ValerievAnalyst
Bulgaria Svetoslav KostadinovTeam manager
Bulgaria Ventsislav SavovKit Manager

Notable stats

RankNameNatGamesActive
1Andrey ZhelyazkovBUL338No
2Atanas AleksandrovBUL317No
3Iliyaz AlievBUL306No
4Bozhidar GrigorovBUL301No
5Georgi GugalovBUL293No
6Ivan HaydarlievBUL264No
7Aleksandar ShalamanovBUL262No
8Galin IvanovBUL258Yes
9Chavdar TsvetkovBUL255No
10Ivan IlievBUL247No
RankNameNatGoalsActive
1Andrey ZhelyazkovBUL136No
2Bozhidar GrigorovBUL128No
3Chavdar TsvetkovBUL104No
4Aleksandar VasilevBUL100No
Petar AleksandrovBUL100No
6Dobromir TashkovBUL97No
7Atanas AleksandrovBUL59No
8Iliyaz AlievBUL55No
9Martin KushevBUL53No
10Galin IvanovBUL52Yes
RankNameNatGoalsActive
1938Krum MilevBUL12No
1952Dimitar IsakovBUL10No
1954Dobromir TashkovBUL25No
1958Dobromir TashkovBUL9No
1959Aleksandar VasilevBUL13No
1997Todor PramatarovBUL26No

Managerial history

This is a list of the last Slavia managers:

NameNatFromToHonours
Dobromir TashkovBUL19631969
Dobromir TashkovBUL19731974
Hristo MladenovBUL19781980
Oleh BazylevychUSSR19871988
Stoyan KotsevBUL199419971 Bulgarian Cup
1 Bulgarian title
Miroslav MironovBULOct 1999May 2000
Žarko OlarevićSERMay 200023 Nov 2000
Kiril KachamanovBUL23 Nov 200025 Sept 2001
Žarko OlarevićSER25 Sept 200118 Dec 2002
Miodrag JešićSER18 Dec 200223 Aug 2003
Ratko DostanićSER24 Aug 200323 Sept 2004
Atanas DzhambazkiBUL23 Sept 200429 March 2005
Petar HoubchevBUL29 March 200510 Nov 2005
Alyosha AndonovBUL10 Nov 20052 July 2006
Ratko DostanićSER3 July 200626 Dec 2006
Alyosha AndonovBUL26 Dec 20066 June 2007
Stevica KuzmanovskiMKD6 June 20072 June 2009
Velislav VutsovBUL2 June 200918 May 2010
Emil VelevBUL19 May 201028 May 2011
Martin KushevBUL28 May 201129 Nov 2012
Velislav VutsovBUL30 Nov 20125 June 2013
Asen BukarevBUL5 June 201320 Oct 2013
Milen RadukanovBUL21 Oct 201331 Aug 2014
Ivan KolevBUL1 Sep 201430 Nov 2015
Vladimir Ivanov (caretaker)BUL30 Nov 201518 Dec 2015
Aleksandr TarkhanovRUS18 Dec 20152 Nov 2016
Vladimir IvanovBUL3 Nov 201611 May 2017
Zlatomir ZagorčićBULSER11 May 20171 September 20201 Bulgarian Cup
Martin KushevBUL7 September 202017 September 2020
Aleksandr TarkhanovRUS17 September 202012 April 2021
Zlatomir ZagorčićBULSER12 April 20214 May 2023
Angel Slavkov (caretaker)BUL4 May 202323 June 2023
José Mari BakeroSpain23 June 2023September 2023
Zlatomir ZagorčićBULSERSeptember 2023October 2025
Ratko DostanićSEROctober 2025

References

References

  1. (10 April 2008). "Славия започва с топка назаем". 7sport.net.
  2. (10 April 2013). "Slavia Sports Club turns 100". bnr.bg.
  3. (10 April 2013). "Zhelyazkov salutes centurions Slavia Sofia". [[UEFA]].
  4. "Славия в надпреварата за Балканската клубна купа". pfcslavia.com.
  5. (25 May 2011). "Bulgarian Cup win ends CSKA Sofia drought". [[UEFA]].
  6. "Агитката на Йънг Бойс издигна знаме в чест на стогодишнината на Славия (снимка)". Sportal.bg.
  7. "Young Boys Bern@Slavia Sofia Ultras in Udine".
  8. Blitz.bg/Sport. "Славия и Локомотив в опашкарско столично дерби".
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