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Some clubs in the list have undergone slight name changes for administrative or technical purposes but still have the same representative team. (For example Lokomotiv 1926 (Plovdiv) in the list throughout the years has been officially named NFC Lokomotiv (Plovdiv) , FC Lokomotiv Plovdiv 1936 , PFC Lokomotiv 1926 Plovdiv , etc. [ 2 ] ) Thus, the ...
Football is the most popular sport in Sofia, the capital of Bulgaria. Sofia was the first city in the country to have an organized football championship, which was created in 1921. [1] Teams from Sofia have been crowned national champions on 70 occasions in the 90 seasons between 1924 and 2013. [2]
Bulgaria portal; Subcategories. This category has the following 6 subcategories, out of 6 total. C. Conegliano German F.C. (1 C, 1 P) PFC CSKA Sofia (4 C, 8 P)
Bulgarian reserve football teams (10 P)! ... PFC Levski Sofia (4 C, 9 P) FC Lovech ... Pages in category "Football clubs in Bulgaria"
The old BFU headquarters in Sofia. The Bulgarian Football Union (Bulgarian: Български футболен съюз, romanized: Bǎlgarski futbolen sǎyuz; BFS) is the governing body of association football in Bulgaria, and a member of UEFA since 1954.
The First Professional Football League (Bulgarian: Първа професионална футболна лига, romanized: Parva Profesionalna Futbolna Liga), commonly known as Parva Liga or Bulgarian First League (currently known as the efbet League for sponsorship reasons), [1] is a professional association football league, being the top tier of Bulgarian football league system.
Note 2: Botev Plovdiv took the place of Levski Sofia as, following riots during the Bulgarian Cup final, the Sofia club was barred from entering European competitions. Note 3: Bulgarian clubs did not enter the Champions League during these seasons due to the restructuring of the competition by UEFA , with entry limited to Europe's top 24 countries.
Four days later, Bulgaria earned a hard-fought 0–0 draw away to the Czech Republic. As a result, the team climbed from 96th in the FIFA World Rankings, their lowest position in history, to 40th in November 2012. Penev's players hosted and defeated Malta 6–0 under heavy snowfall. Four days later, Bulgaria drew Denmark 1–1 in Copenhagen.