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Showing posts from July, 2025

RANKED: The 2025/26 Czech First League Home Kits

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The 2025/26 season is officially upon us, and for this week's blog, I'm heading down a different path from the norm. Last season, I made a Czech kit ranking into a Twitter thread , but this season, I'm turning it into a blog - mainly because there's currently too much month at the end of my money to attend the games I'd initially planned to attend and subsequently write about. Add to that the fact that the game I'd planned on attending and writing about has been called off because of the weather. I must now own at least twenty football shirts, and I'll gladly admit collecting them is a bit of an addiction. Despite calling myself a Zbrojovka fan, the only Czech shirts I own are a Sigma Olomouc home shirt from 2021-22, and a Czech national team shirt. Zbrojovka's shirt for this season may be the next one for my collection - perhaps in future I'll do a blog on some of my personal favourites in that collection. But for now, here's a ranking of all si...

Through the Mill: kicking off Slovenia's top-flight season with Radomlje

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Domzale Stadium - home of Domzale and Radomlje for the 2025/26 season  Slovenia's a country whose football teams are often ignored. Go ahead, name all the Slovenian teams you know of. Okay, so admittedly a lot of my readers will likely know more than the average football fan, but the point remains that we don't hear a lot about the likes of Olimpija Ljubljana, Maribor, Celje et al. At least that was the case in years gone by. Thanks in part to the Europa Conference League, Slovenian football is starting to get the recognition it deserves. The performances of two of the above mentioned teams - Olimpija and Celje - really helped boost the coefficient, as both teams progressed from impressive league stages to reach the knockout stage. LASK, HJK, and Larne were defeated by the side from Slovenia's capital before a 1-0 aggregate loss to Bosnia-Herzegovina's Borac Banja Luka (I promise that's not a tongue twister). Despite mustering one fewer win in the group stage (Istan...

Kop of the World: Europa Conference League football on the Istrian Coast

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Koper players celebrate an excellent 4-2 aggregate win over their Bosnian counterparts Let me begin today's blog with the exciting news that the Slovenian League sees the return of the 'metal derby' between Koper and Aluminij. Okay, so I'll freely admit it's not a thing unless you're a fellow footballing oddball like myself who listens to The Sweeper podcast, but it should be. In any case, following a recent trip to Ireland, which hopefully you've read about one or two (or perhaps even all three or four) of my recent blogs, I fancied something else. Ever since I found out I'd have the entire summer off paid on getting my current job a year ago, I spent the whole year plotting and planning the European qualifying ties I could potentially attend. Not to the detriment of my excellent  lesson plans I should clarify... The first of those centred around that aforementioned trip to Ireland, which I figured would be the perfect place to start. I could first of a...

Can't Buy Me Larne: Conference League Fever in Ballymena

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 From meeting a man called Jurgen in Lurgan, to experiencing Conference League Fever in Ballymena, this whole trip has been something of a Dr Seuss book. In all fairness, it's likely to feel just as crazy by the time I'm at Belfast International Airport. What started in Cork and Cobh last Wednesday ends in Ballymena before a mad dash to the airport for a 6am flight back to Stansted on Friday morning. Suffice to say, I'll be sleeping my Friday away in an attempt to compensate for airlines and their ridiculous departure times (as well as Stansted's lack of any quick/direct Stevenage connection). And of course I'll be doing similar on the following Tuesday night before getting a 7am flight (seriously, get a grip airlines) from Gatwick to Ljubljana for another Conference League adventure involving Koper. But that's another story for another day. For now, our focus is on Larne, and the aim this summer given my flexibility is to see as many European ties in the qualif...

Solitude is Bliss: A testimonial at Ireland's oldest club

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Solitude - home of Cliftonville  Some 145 years ago, football on the Emerald Isle became a reality on Cliftonville Street in Belfast. The first club on the island were formed in the shape of Cliftonville, whose storied history is well worth a deep dive into. That said, we may get into that a little more later on. For now, the 2025/26 season is well under way for me following trips to Drogheda United and Glenavon  and the next stop will be Belfast, where Cliftonville are based along with a host of other clubs. I'm sure the likes of Glentoran, Linfield and Crusaders will receive a visit from me somewhere along the way, but on this, the fifth day of my Irish adventure, I would be set to take in a third game in as many days. Spending all of yesterday pretending to be a journalist at Glenavon took a lot out of me, but thankfully I could take it a little easier after this match, with the next one set to be Larne's Europa Conference League qualifier against Auda in Ballymena. Much l...

The Unofficial European Cup 1960-61 Preliminary Round Second Leg...

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The Cold War claimed many victims, none more so than Glenavon of Northern Ireland. Back in 1960, the Lurgan based side made the European Cup, with the preliminary round throwing up a tie against Wismut Karl Marx Stadt of East Germany. You can probably guess how it unfolded, in that it didn't unfold at all. The Lurgan Blues were unable to travel beyond the Iron Curtain, meaning Wismut Karl Marx Stadt (now known as Erzgebirge Aue) received a walkover into Round One without even kicking a ball. But why did the East German side go through? Well, it was a familiar tale of the side with more limited finances being punished. UEFA allowed both legs to be played in neutral venues, but Glenavon simply couldn't afford to travel, and so we were left with a game that never was.  End of story? Well, not quite. We may be 65 years beyond this miscarriage of justice, but believe it or not, this tie still isn't over. A year ago, Glenavon traveled to Aue to replay this first leg, where they w...