Budapesti VSC

Budapesti Vasutas Sport Club
Full name Budapesti Vasutas Sport Club-Zugló 1911
Founded 1911
Ground Szőnyi úti Stadion, Budapest
Ground Capacity 10,000
Manager András Hernády
League BLSZ III
Website Club home page

The Budapesti VSC (Vasutas Sport Club, en. Railway Sports Club), or just short BVSC, is a Hungarian sports club from the capital Budapest. The club was founded in 1911. Its football section became closed in 2001, while other sections that are still operational are table tennis, wrestling, water polo. The table tennis department won the European Cup of 1980 and several national championships.

The football team reached in the years 1996 and 1997 twice the Hungarian Cup final and was runner up in the national championship in 1996.

History

On 18 July 2012, BVSC started an adult team after 10 years of pause. The team are going to compete in the Budapest Labdarugó Szövetség IV.[1][2]

Name changes

As most other Hungarian sports clubs BVSC was subject to numerous changes of its name throughout its history. Here is a list of names that were in use by the club:

1998/1999 Squad

Note: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.

No. Position Player
- Hungary GK János Koszta
- Hungary GK Gábor Nagy
- Hungary GK Ferenc Rott
- Hungary DF Zoltán Balog
- Ukraine DF Oleksandr Bondarenko
- Hungary DF Csaba Gelbmann
- Hungary DF János Kertész
- Hungary DF Csaba László
- Hungary DF Tibor Pomper
- Ukraine DF Miroslav Resko
- Hungary DF Csaba Szakos
- Hungary DF Ferenc Szaszovszky
- Hungary DF Zoltán Vincze
- Federal Republic of Yugoslavia MF Djordje Bajic
- Hungary MF Balázs Bérczy
- Ukraine MF Viktor Brovcenko
No. Position Player
- Hungary MF Krisztián Csillag
- Hungary MF Lajos Détári
- Hungary MF Attila Forrai
- Hungary MF Krisztián Füzi
- Hungary MF Zoltán Molnár
- Hungary MF Attila Polonkai
- Hungary MF Dénes Rósa
- Romania MF Daniel Usvat
- Romania FW Cătălin Anghel
- Hungary FW Zsolt Aubel
- Hungary FW Levente Bozsik
- Hungary FW Zsolt Füzesi
- Hungary FW István Kiss
- Hungary FW Károly Potemkin
- Hungary FW Szabolcs Szegletes
- Hungary FW Gábor Szilágyi

Honours

Managers

Transfers

In

# Pos Player From Fee Date
# GKHungary Gábor Nagy Stadler FC Free Summer 1998
# DFHungary János Kertész Stadler FC Free Summer 1998
# DFHungary Tibor Pomper Ferencvárosi TC Loan Return Summer 1998
# DFUkraine Miroslav Resko Stadler FC Free Summer 1998
# DFHungary Csaba Szakos Miskolci VSC Undisclosed Summer 1998
# DFHungary Ferenc Szaszovszky Pécsi MFC Undisclosed Summer 1998
# DFHungary Zoltán Vincze Stadler FC Free Summer 1998
# MFFederal Republic of Yugoslavia Djordje Bajic FK Radnički Niš Undisclosed Summer 1998
# MFUkraine Viktor Brovcenko PFC Nyva Vinnytsia Undisclosed Summer 1998
# MFHungary Zoltán Molnár Stadler FC Free Summer 1998
# MFHungary Attila Polonkai Szeged LC Loan Return Summer 1998
# FWHungary Zsolt Füzesi Stadler FC Free Summer 1998
# FWHungary Szabolcs Szegletes Veszprémi LC Undisclosed Summer 1998

UEFA Cup Winners' Cup

Season Competition Round Country Club Home Away Aggregate
1997–98 UEFA Cup Winners' Cup Qualifying Round Liechtenstein FC Balzers 2–0 3–1 5–1
1. Round Spain Real Betis 0–2 0–2 0–4

UEFA Cup

Season Competition Round Country Club Home Away Aggregate
1996–97 UEFA Cup Qualifying Round Wales Barry Town FC 3–1 1–3 4–4(p)

Record by country of opposition

CountryPldWDLGFGAGDWin%
Liechtenstein Liechtenstein 2 2 0 0 5 1 +4 100.000
Spain Spain 2 0 0 2 0 4 −4 00.00
Wales Wales 2 1 0 1 4 4 +0 50.00
Totals 6 3 0 3 9 9 0 50.00

P – Played; W – Won; D – Drawn; L – Lost

Famous Athletes

Other sports

References

External links

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the 11/28/2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.