Tσεχία - 3. Liga 03/30 09:15 21 Τρίνετς v Σλοβάτσκο Β’ - View
Tσεχία - 3. Liga 04/06 13:30 22 Σλόβαν Ρόζιτσε v Τρίνετς - View
Tσεχία - 3. Liga 04/13 08:15 23 Τρίνετς v FC Τρίνιτι Ζλιν Β' - View
Tσεχία - 3. Liga 04/19 16:00 24 Χλούτσιν v Τρίνετς - View
Tσεχία - 3. Liga 04/27 08:15 25 Τρίνετς v TJ Σταρτ Μπρνο - View
Tσεχία - 3. Liga 05/01 14:30 26 Φρίτλαντ Ναντ Οστραβίτσι v Τρίνετς - View
Tσεχία - 3. Liga 05/05 14:30 27 ΤΑΤΡΆΝ Μποχούνιτσε v Τρίνετς - View
Tσεχία - 3. Liga 05/12 14:30 28 Τρίνετς v ΣΚ Χράνικε - View
Tσεχία - 3. Liga 05/19 15:00 29 Μπλάνσκο v Τρίνετς - View
Tσεχία - 3. Liga 05/22 15:30 30 Τρίνετς v Φρίντεκ Μίστεκ - View
Tσεχία - 3. Liga 05/26 15:00 31 Τρίνετς v Ζνόιμο - View
Tσεχία - 3. Liga 06/02 15:00 32 ΤΣΣΚ Ουχέρσκι Μπροντ v Τρίνετς - View
Tσεχία - 3. Liga 06/09 15:00 33 Τρίνετς v Μπάνικ Οστράβα Β - View
Tσεχία - 3. Liga 06/16 15:30 34 FC Ζλίνσκο v Τρίνετς - View

Wikipedia - FK Třinec

FK Třinec is a football club based in Třinec, Czech Republic. It plays in the Moravian-Silesian Football League. It is sponsored by the Třinec Iron and Steel Works; in the past the club bore the name of the company.

The club's highest achievement was the presence in the Czechoslovak First League, where the club was present for six seasons in the 1960s and 1970s.

History

Czechoslovak era

Siła Trzyniec, Katowice - 1938

In 1921 Polish population of Třinec (Polish: Trzyniec) founded KS Siła Trzyniec, ethnically Polish sport club. In the same year local German population founded DSV Trzynietz. Two years later Czechs founded their own club SK Třinec. After the communist coup d'état of 1948, communists began to curb the number of organizations in Czechoslovakia and the Polish club was fused to the Czech one in 1952. The club played in the Czechoslovak First League for the first time in the 1963–64 season and returned to play three consecutive seasons there between 1970–71 and 1972–73. Two more seasons in the top flight followed in 1974–75 and 1975–76 before the club was relegated from the top flight.

Czech era

After the dissolution of Czechoslovakia, the club regularly took part in the Czech 2. Liga. An eight year spell there was followed by five years in the third-tier Moravian–Silesian Football League, before a return to the Second Division came in 2006. Another stint in the Second Division followed, this time lasting for six years until relegation in 2012. The club won the Moravian–Silesian Football League in the 2012–13 season.