Czech Republic 1 Liga Bitcoin Sports Betting
The Czech Futsal First league is the premiere Futsal League in the Czech Republic. The league has 12 active teams under its division and is under the jurisdiction of UEFA Futsal Cup. Betters are now able to bet on their favorite teams using Bitcoins and with the help of the provided by the betting odds below.
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The first Czech football league (1. česká fotbalová lega) is the highest league in Czech football. The Czech football champion is played in the league every year. The 16 participating teams play 30 games each from August to May (15 home and 15 away games). At the end of each season, the last two teams to finish will be relegated and replaced by promotion teams from the second Czech league, the Fotbalová národní league.
The first Czech football league was established in its present form in 1993, when Czechoslovakia was dissolved and it split from a common league with today’s Slovakia. It is thus the successor to the Czechoslovak Football Championship.
From 1997 to 2014, the Gambrinus Brewery, located in Pilsen, was the league’s sponsor. From 2014 to 2016, the first Czech football league bore the name of the lottery and betting provider Synot. The contract with Synot had a term of four years and was to bring the league around CZK 50 million (around EUR 1.8 million) per year. For the 2016/17 season, the online insurance company ePojisteni.cz initially took over the naming rights for two years. However, the Czech wall paint manufacturer HET was able to secure the naming rights for the 2017/18 season after just one year; for the 2018/2019 season, the sponsor is Fortuna (a betting agency).
The dominant teams have always been the two Prague teams Sparta and Slavia, who usually took the first two places in the final table. While Sparta Prague won ten of the fourteen championships held until 2007 as well as in 2010 and 2014, Slavia Prague had to make do with the runners-up title eight times and only became Czech champion in 1996, 2008, 2009 and 2017. In 2004 Baník Ostrava won the title; in 2002, 2006 and 2012 Slovan Liberec. Since 2011 Viktoria Pilsen has been the most successful with five championship titles in 2011, 2013, 2015, 2016 and 2018.
In February 2010, it became known that Czech and Slovak officials were considering the creation of a joint professional league. The associations expect not only a higher sporting quality from a common league, but also marketing opportunities. However, UEFA’s approval of this is unlikely.
League system
The Czech Football Association grants a licence for the 1st and 2nd leagues following a licensing procedure.
While at the end of the season the last two teams of the 1st league relegate to the 2nd league, the first two teams of the 2nd league play in the 1st league in the following season. The teams that finish 15th and 16th in the second league at the end of the season will be relegated to ČFL or MSFL.
Below the first two leagues is the third Czech league. It is played in two seasons (ČFL and MSFL). ČFL (Bohemia) currently plays with 18 teams, MSFL (Moravia and Silesia) with 16 clubs. The champions of both squadrons are promoted to the 2nd league.
International competition
The Czech Republic is currently ranked 13th in the UEFA five-year standings (as of the end of the 2017/18 season), which entitles the champion to participate in the group stage of the Champions League. The runners-up will qualify for the Champions League. The third-placed player will start in the group stage of the Europa League, while the fourth-placed and cup winners will take part in the Europa League qualifiers.
Never before has a Czech club reached the final of a European Cup competition. Sparta Prague’s regular participation in the UEFA Champions League makes it the country’s most internationally renowned club. The best result in the history of the independent Czech league was their elimination in the last sixteen (0-0 and 1-4 against AC Milan) in 2004.
Slavia Prague never reached the group stage of the Champions League except in the 2007/08 season, despite regular participation in the qualifying round. Viktoria Pilsen, on the other hand, was able to enter the group stage of the Champions League in the 2011/12 season as the champions of the previous season. This was made possible by victories over FC Pjunik Yerevan, Rosenborg Trondheim and FC Copenhagen. In the group phase, the team landed behind FC Barcelona and AC Milan, but ahead of BATE Baryssau from Belarus on place 3 and was thus allowed to continue playing in the Europa League. FC Schalke 04 lost in the sixteenth finals after extra time in the second leg.
Three other teams from the Czech league were able to take part in the qualification for the Champions League. Runners-up FK Teplice failed twice in 1999 with 0:1 against Borussia Dortmund, Baník Ostrava did not have enough a 2:1 home win in 2004 to compensate the 0:5 first leg defeat at Bayer 04 Leverkusen. In the 2006/07 season, FK Mladá Boleslav defeated Norwegian Vålerenga Oslo 3-1 and 2-2 in the second qualifying round, but Galatasaray Istanbul 2-5 and 1-1 in the third.
The greatest successes of Czech teams in the UEFA Cup were their entry into the semi-finals of Slavia Prague in 1996 and the quarter-finals of FC Slovan Liberec in 2002.
Spectator interest
Not sold out stadiums like here in Prague are the rule in the Czech Republic.
Exciting championship fights are rather rare in the Czech elite class. Only four times – 2001/02, 2007/08, 2009/10, 2011/12 and in the season 2012/13 – the title was won on the last matchday.
The number of spectators at the Czech league matches is relatively low. Insufficient marketing, a poor infrastructure, violent hooligans on the stands and last but not least bribery cases are factors that are rapidly diminishing spectator interest in the league compared to the past. Despite numerous championship titles, Sparta Prague plays its home games in front of an average of 9,000 spectators, although the home venue would allow a little more than 20,000.
Since the 2010/11 season, the league has recorded an annual increase in visitor numbers. The biggest crowd-pullers in the 2013/14 season were Sparta Prague with an average of 11,340 spectators and Viktoria Pilsen with 10,090 visitors as well as FK Teplice with 6,995 fans per match. The fewest visitors were in the stadiums of FK BAUMIT Jablonec (2,935), FK Dukla Prague (2,765) and 1. SC Znojmo (1,392).