|  | |||
| Full name | Futbalový Klub Inter Bratislava a.s. | ||
|---|---|---|---|
| Nickname(s) | žlto-čierni (yellow-blacks) | ||
| Founded | 1 July 1940 (as ŠK Apollo) | ||
| Ground | Stadium FK Stupava, Stupava Stadium Drieňová ulica, Bratislava – Ružinov | ||
| Capacity | 800 1,000 | ||
| Owner | Ján Palenčár | ||
| President | Jozef Barmoš | ||
| Head coach | Andrej Štellár | ||
| League | 3. liga | ||
| 2022–23 | 3. liga (Západ), 14th of 16 | ||
| Website | Club website | ||
|  | |||
FK Inter Bratislava (Slovak pronunciation: [ˈinter ˈbracislaʋa]) is a football club based in Bratislava, Slovakia, temporarily playing its home matches in Stupava.
History
Inter Bratislava was founded in 1940 by the Apollo refinery (later renamed Slovnaft). Following the end of World War II and the re-establishment of Czechoslovakia, the club developed into an important force in Czechoslovak football. While it remains unclear, whether it is Inter Bratislava or FK ŠKP Inter Dúbravka Bratislava, who can claim the successful run of Červená Hviezda Bratislava in the 1950s and early 1960s as its own, club's achievements in the subsequent decades (as TJ Internacionál Slovnaft Bratislava) can be hardly disputed. Between 1962 and 1993 the club spent 29 out of 31 seasons in the Czechoslovak First League, finishing twice as runner-up in the 1970s and winning the Slovak Cup in the seasons 1983–84, 1987–88, and 1989–90. Over these years, a number of Inter players represented Czechoslovakia at senior level. In 1976, Jozef Barmoš, Ladislav Jurkemik, and Ladislav Petráš were in the squad that won the UEFA Euro 1976. Four years later, Barmoš and Jurkemik were also a part of the side that finished third at the 1980 European Championship. In a decade that followed the dissolution of Czechoslovakia, Inter went on to flourish in the newly established top tier of Slovak football as well as in the Slovak Cup, winning the Slovak double in the 1999–2000 and 2000–2001 seasons.
Inter's fall and re-establishment
Inter Bratislava won the 1. liga in the 2008–2009 season and was supposed to be promoted to the Slovak top flight. However, financial problems of the club led its owner Ľubomír Chrenko to sell Inter's licence to FK Senica in June 2009.[1] As a result, players of the senior squad of Inter Bratislava joined Senica, whilst youth teams of Inter were preserved by the Inter Bratislava Civic Association, which had been formed from the Inter Fan Club.[2]
The senior side was re-established in the 2010–2011 season, playing in the V. liga, i.e. the sixth tier of Slovak football.[3] Major changes in the structure of the club were accompanied by Inter's move from the Štadión Pasienky, which had been used by the team since 1967, to the considerably smaller Štadión Drieňová ulica. After playing at the Štadión Drieňová ulica for four seasons, the senior team moved to the Štadión ŠKP Inter Dúbravka in the summer of 2014.[4] The grounds have a capacity of 10,200. Since the season 2015/2016 due to unknown issues the Men team returned to stadium Drieňová ulica and the youth teams remained on Stadium ŠKP Inter Dúbravka. In the autumn part of the season 2016/2017 Inter was playing home matches on the stadium in Petržalka on Marie Curie-Skłodowska street (stadium of FC Petržalka akadémia), but in spring 2017 the team moved to the city of Stupava, where the team owners created the training center for Inter. The future plans are to return to Bratislava, Stupava serving as the training center.
Event timeline
- 1940 – Founded as ŠK Apollo Bratislava
- 1945 – Renamed TKNB Bratislava
- 1948 – Renamed Sokol SNB Bratislava
- 1952 – Renamed TJ Červená Hviezda Bratislava (Red Star)
- 1959 – First European qualification, 1959–60
- 1962 – Merged with TJ Iskra Slovnaft Bratislava and TJ Slovnaft Bratislava
- 1965 – Renamed TJ Internacionál Slovnaft Bratislava
- 1986 – Merged with TJ ZŤS Petržalka into TJ Internacionál Slovnaft ZŤS Bratislava
- 1991 – Renamed AŠK Inter Slovnaft Bratislava
- 2004 – Renamed FK Inter Bratislava
- 2009 – Sold club license of FK Inter Bratislava to FK Senica
- 2009 – Transforming of Inter Fan Club on Inter Bratislava o.z. (Civic association)
- 2014 – Transforming of Inter Bratislava o.z. on FK Inter Bratislava a.s.
Affiliated clubs
The following clubs are affiliated with FK Inter Bratislava:
 AS Trenčín (2016–present)[5] AS Trenčín (2016–present)[5]
 FKM Stupava (2016–present)[6] FKM Stupava (2016–present)[6]
Stadium
Former stadium

Stadium Pasienky is a multi-use stadium in Bratislava, Slovakia. It was used mostly for football matches and was the home ground of FK Inter Bratislava. The stadium holds 13,295 people.
Current stadium

Since the 2014/2015 season, the home ground of FK Inter Bratislava has been the Štadión ŠKP Inter Dúbravka. Since the season 2015/2016 due to unknown issues the Men team returned to stadium Drieňová ulica and the youth teams remained on Stadium ŠKP Inter Dúbravka. In the autumn part of the season 2016/2017 Inter was playing home matches on the stadium in Petržalka on Marie Curie-Skłodowska street (stadium of FC Petržalka akadémia), but in spring 2017 the team moved to the city of Stupava, where the team owners created the training center for Inter. The future plans are to return to Bratislava, Stupava serving as the training center.
Sponsorship
| Period | Kit manufacturer | Shirt sponsor | 
|---|---|---|
| 1998–2002 | hummel | Slovnaft | 
| 2002–2006 | NIKE | |
| 2006–2009 | Legea | Asset | 
| 2009–2019 | hummel | none | 
| 2020- | Adidas | 
Honours
Domestic
 Czechoslovakia
 Czechoslovakia
- Czechoslovak First League (1944–93)
- 1.SNL (1st Slovak National football league) (1969–1993)
- Winners (1): 1986–87
 
 Slovakia
 Slovakia
- Slovak Super Liga (1993–)
- Slovenský Pohár (Slovak Cup) (1961–)
Individual Club
- The Double (League and Cup):
- Winners (2): 1999–00, 2000–01
 
Czechoslovak and Slovak Top Goalscorer
The Czechoslovak League top scorer from 1944 to 1945 until 1992–93. Since the 1993–94 Slovak League Top scorer.
| 
 | 
- 1Shared award
Europe
International Football Cup (Intertoto Cup)
Players
Current squad
As of 24 March 2019 Note: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.
| 
 | 
 | 
For recent transfers, see List of Slovak football transfers winter 2018–19.
Current technical staff
- Updated 17 February 2018
| Staff | Job title | 
|---|---|
|  Michal Pančík | Manager | 
|  Richard Slezák | Assistant manager | 
|  Roman Kratochvíl | Assiatat Manager | 
|  Jozef Barmoš | President | 
|  Ľubomír Talda | general manager | 
|  Peter Chudina | Team Doctor | 
|  Patrik Dulovič | Masseur | 
Transfers
Inter have produced numerous players who have gone on to represent the Slovak national football team. Over the last period there has been a steady increase of young players leaving Inter after a few years of first team football and moving on to play football in leagues of a higher standard, with the German Bundesliga (Vratislav Greško to Leverkusen in 1999), Turkish Süper Lig (Juraj Czinege to Elazığspor in 2003, Roman Kratochvíl to Denizlispor in 2002), Super League Greece (Miroslav Drobňák to Xanthi F.C. in 2003, Marián Šuchančok to Akratitos F.C. in 2002, Marián Ľalík to Panionios F.C. in 2003, Czech First League (Marek Čech and Peter Babnič to Sparta Prague in 2004 and 2001, Peter Németh to FC Baník Ostrava in 2001), Russian Premier League (Zsolt Hornyák to FC Dynamo Moscow in 2001). The top transfer was agreed in 2001 when 23years old forward and topscorer Szilárd Németh joined Premier League team Middlesbrough F.C. for a fee €6.75 million which was the highest ever paid to a Slovak club.
Record transfers
| Rank | Player | To | Fee | Year | 
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1. |  Szilárd Németh |  Middlesbrough F.C. | €6.75 million* | 2001[7] | 
| 2. |  Vratislav Greško |  Bayer 04 Leverkusen | €1.0 million | 1999[8] | 
| 3. |  Marek Čech |  Sparta Prague | €0.6 million* | 2004[9] | 
| 4. |  Peter Babnič |  Sparta Prague | €0.4 million* | 2001[10] | 
*-unofficial fee
Results
League and domestic cup history
Slovak League only (1993–present)
- Season - Division (Name) - Pos./Teams - Pl. - W - D - L - GS - GA - P - Slovak Cup - Europe - Top scorer (Goals) - 1993–94 - 1st (1. liga) - 2/(12) - 32 - 18 - 4 - 10 - 65 - 45 - 40 - Semi-finals  Martin Obšitník (14) Martin Obšitník (14)- 1994–95 - 1st (1. liga) - 3/(12) - 32 - 14 - 8 - 10 - 47 - 45 - 50 - Winner - UC - PR (  MYPA) MYPA)- 1995–96 - 1st (1. liga) - 9/(12) - 32 - 11 - 7 - 14 - 42 - 45 - 40 - 2.R - CWC - 1.R (  Zaragoza) Zaragoza) Jaroslav Timko (9) Jaroslav Timko (9)- 1996–97 - 1st (1. liga) - 4/(16) - 30 - 13 - 9 - 8 - 38 - 35 - 48 - Semi-finals  Rolf Landerl (10) Rolf Landerl (10)- 1997–98 - 1st (Mars Superliga) - 3/(16) - 30 - 18 - 6 - 6 - 55 - 25 - 60 - Semi-finals  Peter Babnič (9) Peter Babnič (9)- 1998–99 - 1st (Mars Superliga) - 2/(16) - 30 - 21 - 5 - 4 - 64 - 15 - 68 - Quarter-finals - UC - Q2 (  Slavia Prague) Slavia Prague) Peter Babnič (13) Peter Babnič (13)- 1999–00 - 1st (Mars Superliga) - 1/(16) - 30 - 21 - 7 - 2 - 65 - 16 - 70 - Winner - UC - 2.R (  FC Nantes) FC Nantes) Szilárd Németh (16) Szilárd Németh (16)- 2000–01 - 1st (Mars Superliga) - 1/(10) - 36 - 25 - 5 - 6 - 73 - 28 - 80 - Winner - CL 
 UC- Q3 (  Lyon) Lyon)
 2.R ( Lokomotiv) Lokomotiv) Szilárd Németh (23) Szilárd Németh (23)- 2001–02 - 1st (Mars Superliga) - 3/(10) - 36 - 16 - 8 - 12 - 53 - 39 - 56 - Quarter-finals - CL 
 UC- Q3 (  Rosenborg) Rosenborg)
 1.R ( Litex) Litex) Miroslav Drobňák (9) Miroslav Drobňák (9)- 2002–03 - 1st (1. liga) - 6/(10) - 36 - 12 - 7 - 17 - 48 - 58 - 43 - 1.R  Miroslav Drobňák (10) Miroslav Drobňák (10)
  Juraj Halenár (10) Juraj Halenár (10)- 2003–04 - 1st (Corgoň Liga) - 7/(10) - 36 - 12 - 9 - 15 - 38 - 44 - 45 - 2.R  Juraj Halenár (9) Juraj Halenár (9)- 2004–05 - 1st (Corgoň Liga) - 9/(10) - 36 - 9 - 11 - 16 - 37 - 60 - 38 - Quarter-finals  Juraj Halenár (12) Juraj Halenár (12)- 2005–06 - 1st (Corgoň Liga) - 9/(10) - 36 - 7 - 9 - 20 - 27 - 62 - 30 - 2.R  Marián Tomčák (6) Marián Tomčák (6)- 2006–07 - 1st (Corgoň Liga) - 13/(16) - 36 - 11 - 11 - 14 - 39 - 40 - 44 - 3.R  Radoslav Kunzo (6) Radoslav Kunzo (6)- 2007–08 - 2nd (1. liga) - 3/(12) - 33 - 15 - 8 - 10 - 49 - 40 - 53 - Quarter-finals  Tomáš Majtán (16) Tomáš Majtán (16)- 2008–09 - 2nd (1. liga) - 1/(12) - 33 - 19 - 10 - 4 - 64 - 27 - 67 - 2.R - 2009–10 - 2010–11 - 6th (V. liga Seniori BA-Mesto) - 1/(12) - 22 - 18 - 2 - 2 - 72 - 15 - 56 - 2011–12 - 5th (IV. liga Seniori BA-Mesto) - 1/(14) - 26 - 16 - 6 - 4 - 62 - 28 - 54 - 2012–13 - 4th (Majstrovstvá regiónu BA) - 7/(16) - 30 - 13 - 7 - 10 - 42 - 33 - 46 - 2013–14 - 4th (Majstrovstvá regiónu BA) - 1/(17) - 32 - 21 - 9 - 2 - 83 - 24 - 72 - 2014–15 - 3rd (III. liga Bratislava) - 6/(16) - 30 - 13 - 8 - 9 - 46 - 41 - 47 - 4.R - 2015–16 - 3rd (III. liga Bratislava) - 2/(16) - 30 - 18 - 6 - 6 - 70 - 20 - 60 - 2.R  Patrik Fedor (13) Patrik Fedor (13)- 2016–17 - 3rd (III. liga Bratislava) - 1/(16) - 30 - 24 - 4 - 2 - 93 - 11 - 76 - 3.R  Jakub Šulc (23) Jakub Šulc (23)- 2017–18 - 2nd (DOXXbet liga) - 8/(16) - 30 - 12 - 5 - 13 - 45 - 46 - 41 - 5.R  Erik Prekop (8) Erik Prekop (8)- 2018–19 - 2nd (II. liga) - 14/(16) - 30 - 8 - 5 - 17 - 37 - 56 - 29 - 4.R  Jakub Šulc (11) Jakub Šulc (11)- 2019–20 - 3rd (III. liga) - 2/(16) - 15 - 11 - 2 - 2 - 46 - 16 - 35 - Not enter  Tomáš Majtán (14) Tomáš Majtán (14)- 2020–21 - 3rd (III. liga) - 2/(16) - 15 - 10 - 1 - 4 - 53 - 21 - 31 - Not enter  Tomáš Majtán (13) Tomáš Majtán (13)- 2021–22 - 3rd (III. liga) - 3/(16) - 30 - 21 - 6 - 3 - 79 - 18 - 69 - Not enter  Andrej Labuda (18) Andrej Labuda (18)- 2022–23 - 3rd (III. liga) - 13/(16) - 28 - 8 - 7 - 13 - 34 - 43 - 31 - 3.R  Tomáš Majtán (6) Tomáš Majtán (6)
European competition history
| Season | Competition | Round | Country | Club | Home | Away | Aggregate | 
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1959–60 | European Cup | Preliminary round |  | F.C. Porto | 2–1 | 2–0 | 4–1 | 
| 1. Round |  | Rangers F.C. | 1–1 | 3–4 | 4–5 | ||
| 1960 | Mitropa Cup | Group |  | Tatabányai Bányász | 3–3 | 1–2 | 4–5 | 
| 1961–62 | Mitropa Cup | Group | |||||
|  | Slovan Nitra | 3–4 | |||||
|  | SV Stickstoff | 8–2 | |||||
|  | FC Torino | 4–2 | |||||
| 1967–68 | Mitropa Cup | 1. Round |  | FC Tatabánya | 7–0 | 1–3 | 8–3 | 
| Quarter-finals | .svg.png.webp) | Red Star Belgrade | 3–2 | 0–3 | 3–5 | ||
| 1968–69 | Mitropa Cup | 1. Round |  | Palermo | 3–0 | 0–1 | 3–1 | 
| Quarter-finals |  | Admira Wien | 1–1 | 2–2 | 3–3(a) | ||
| Semi-finals |  | Vasas SC | 1–0 | 2–2 | 3–2 | ||
| Final |  | Sklo Union Teplice | 4–1 | 0–0 | 4–1 | ||
| 1969–70 | Mitropa Cup | 1. Round |  | First Vienna | 6–1 | 6–1 | |
| Quarter-finals |  | Wacker Innsbruck | 3–0 | 0–1 | 3–1 | ||
| Semi-finals |  | Honvéd | 2–1 | 1–0 | 3–1 | ||
| Final |  | Vasas SC | 2–1 | 1–4 | 3–4 | ||
| 1975–76 | UEFA Cup | 1. Round |  | Real Zaragoza | 5–0 | 3–2 | 8–2 | 
| 2. Round |  | AEK Athens | 2–0 | 1–3 | 3–3(a) | ||
| 3. Round |  | Stal Mielec | 1–0 | 0–2 | 1–2 | ||
| 1977–78 | UEFA Cup | 1. Round |  | SK Rapid Wien | 0–1 | 3–0 | 3–1 | 
| 2. Round | .svg.png.webp) | Grasshoppers | 1–0 | 1–5 | 2–5 | ||
| 1983–84 | UEFA Cup | 1. Round |  | Rabat Ajax F.C. | 10–0 | 6–0 | 16–0 | 
| 2. Round | .svg.png.webp) | Radnički Niš | 3–2 | 0–4 | 3–6 | ||
| 1984–85 | European Cup Winners' Cup | 1. Round |  | FC Kuusysi | 2–1 | 0–0 | 2–1 | 
| 2. Round |  | Everton | 0–1 | 0–3 | 0–4 | ||
| 1988–89 | European Cup Winners' Cup | 1. Round |  | CSKA Sofia | 2–3 | 0–5 | 2–8 | 
| 1990–91 | UEFA Cup | 1. Round |  | Avenir Beggen | 5–0 | 1–2 | 6–2 | 
| 2. Round |  | 1. FC Köln | 0–2 | 1–0 | 1–2 | ||
| 1994–95 | UEFA Cup | Preliminary round |  | MYPA | 0–3 | 1–0 | 1–3 | 
| 1995–96 | UEFA Cup Winners' Cup | Qualifying round |  | Valletta F.C. | 5–2 | 0–0 | 5–2 | 
| 1. Round |  | Real Zaragoza | 0–2 | 1–3 | 1–5 | ||
| 1998–99 | UEFA Cup | 1. Qualifying round |  | KF Tirana | 2–0 | 2–0 | 4–0 | 
| 2. Qualifying round |  | Slavia Prague | 2–0 | 0–4 | 2–4 | ||
| 1999–00 | UEFA Cup | Qualifying round |  | KS Bylis | 3–1 | 2–0 | 5–1 | 
| 1. Round |  | Rapid Wien | 1–0 | 2–1 | 3–1 | ||
| 2. Round |  | FC Nantes | 0–3 | 0–4 | 0–7 | ||
| 2000–01 | UEFA Champions League | 2. Qualifying round |  | FC Haka | 1–0(aet) | 0–0 | 1–0 | 
| 3. Qualifying round |  | Olympique Lyonnais | 1–2 | 1–2 | 2–4 | ||
| 2000–01 | UEFA Cup | 1. Round |  | Roda JC Kerkrade | 2–1 | 2–0 | 4–1 | 
| 2. Round |  | Lokomotiv Moscow | 1–2 | 0–1 | 1–3 | ||
| 2001–02 | UEFA Champions League | 2. Qualifying round |  | Slavia Mozyr | 1–0 | 1–0 | 2–0 | 
| 3. Qualifying round |  | Rosenborg | 3–3 | 0–4 | 3–7 | ||
| 2001–02 | UEFA Cup | 1. Round |  | Litex Lovech | 1–0 | 0–3 | 1–3 | 
Player records
Most goals
| # | Nat. | Name | Goals | 
|---|---|---|---|
| 1 |  | Jozef Levický | 100 | 
| 2 |  | Adolf Scherer | 99 | 
| 3 |    | Ľubomír Luhový | 76 | 
| . |  | Milan Dolinský | 76 | 
| 5 |  | Ladislav Petráš | 65 | 
| 6 |  | Juraj Szikora | 56 | 
| 7 |  | Mikuláš Krnáč | 51 | 
| 8 |  | Marián Tomčák | 48 | 
| 9 |  | Titus Buberník | 47 | 
| . |  | Ladislav Kačáni | 47 | 
Notable players
Had international caps for their respective countries. Players whose name is listed in bold represented their countries while playing for Inter.
- Past (and present) players who are the subjects of Wikipedia articles can be found here.
 Peter Babnič Peter Babnič
 Jozef Barmoš Jozef Barmoš
 Titus Buberník Titus Buberník
 Ján Čapkovič Ján Čapkovič
 Marek Čech Marek Čech
 Jaroslav Červeňan Jaroslav Červeňan
 Erik Čikoš Erik Čikoš
 Marián Čišovský Marián Čišovský
 Juraj Czinege Juraj Czinege
 Marián Dirnbach Marián Dirnbach
 Milan Dolinský Milan Dolinský
 Miroslav Drobňák Miroslav Drobňák
 Peter Dzúrik Peter Dzúrik
  Peter Fieber Peter Fieber
 Kazimír Gajdoš Kazimír Gajdoš
 Vratislav Greško Vratislav Greško
 Juraj Halenár Juraj Halenár
 Ján Hlavatý Ján Hlavatý
 Zsolt Hornyák Zsolt Hornyák
 Miroslav Hýll Miroslav Hýll
 Quintón Christina Quintón Christina
 Justín Javorek Justín Javorek
 Bartolomej Juraško Bartolomej Juraško
 Ladislav Jurkemik Ladislav Jurkemik
 Ladislav Kačáni Ladislav Kačáni
 Filip Kiss Filip Kiss
 Tomáš Košický Tomáš Košický
 Jaroslav Košnar Jaroslav Košnar
 Roman Kratochvíl Roman Kratochvíl
 Marek Krejčí Marek Krejčí
 Mikuláš Krnáč Mikuláš Krnáč
 Rolf Landerl Rolf Landerl
   Bozhin Laskov Bozhin Laskov
 Jozef Levický Jozef Levický
 Alias Lembakoali Alias Lembakoali
   Ľubomír Luhový Ľubomír Luhový
 Štefan Matlák Štefan Matlák
 Milan Malatinský Milan Malatinský
 Jozef Móder Jozef Móder
   Ladislav Molnár Ladislav Molnár
 Pavol Molnár Pavol Molnár
 Stanislav Moravec Stanislav Moravec
 Gustáv Mráz Gustáv Mráz
 Peter Mráz Peter Mráz
 Ján Mucha Ján Mucha
 Peter Németh Peter Németh
 Szilárd Németh Szilárd Németh
 Anton Obložinský Anton Obložinský
 Martin Obšitník Martin Obšitník
 Michal Pančík Michal Pančík
 Ladislav Pavlovič Ladislav Pavlovič
 Mário Pečalka Mário Pečalka
 Ladislav Petráš Ladislav Petráš
 Peter Petráš Peter Petráš
 Attila Pinte Attila Pinte
 Lubomír Pokluda Lubomír Pokluda
 Andrej Porázik Andrej Porázik
 Siradji Sani Siradji Sani
 Adolf Scherer Adolf Scherer
 Ivan Schranz Ivan Schranz
 Ján Solár Ján Solár
 Filip Šebo Filip Šebo
 Pavol Sedlák Pavol Sedlák
 Ondrej Šmelko Ondrej Šmelko
 Marián Šuchančok Marián Šuchančok
 Kamil Susko Kamil Susko
 Juraj Szikora Juraj Szikora
 Jiří Tichý Jiří Tichý
 Ivan Trabalík Ivan Trabalík
 Rudolf Urban Rudolf Urban
 Jozef Valachovič Jozef Valachovič
 Vladimír Weiss Vladimír Weiss
   Vladimír Weiss sr. Vladimír Weiss sr.
 Vladimír Weiss jr. Vladimír Weiss jr.
 Ľudovít Zlocha Ľudovít Zlocha
Managers
 József Ember (1953) József Ember (1953)
 František Kolman (1954–55) František Kolman (1954–55)
 Theodor Reimann (1955–57) Theodor Reimann (1955–57)
 Karol Borhy (1958–1960) Karol Borhy (1958–1960)
 Arnošt Hložek (1962–1966) Arnošt Hložek (1962–1966)
 Ladislav Kačáni (1967–1970) Ladislav Kačáni (1967–1970)
 Jozef Marko (1970–1972) Jozef Marko (1970–1972)
 František Skyva (1972) František Skyva (1972)
 Valér Švec (1972–1978) Valér Švec (1972–1978)
 Michal Vičan (1978–1980) Michal Vičan (1978–1980)
 Justín Javorek (1980–1982) Justín Javorek (1980–1982)
 Arnošt Hložek (1982–1984) Arnošt Hložek (1982–1984)
 Štefan Šimončič (1984) Štefan Šimončič (1984)
 Michal Vičan (1984–1986) Michal Vičan (1984–1986)
 Karol Kögl (1986–1988) Karol Kögl (1986–1988)
 Vladimír Hrivnák (1988) Vladimír Hrivnák (1988)
 Jozef Adamec (1989–1991) Jozef Adamec (1989–1991)
 Jozef Jankech (1991–1992) Jozef Jankech (1991–1992)
 Jozef Adamec (1992–1993) Jozef Adamec (1992–1993)
 Ladislav Petráš (1994) Ladislav Petráš (1994)
 Karel Brückner (1995) Karel Brückner (1995)
 Jozef Adamec (1995) Jozef Adamec (1995)
 Jozef Valovič (1996) Jozef Valovič (1996)
 Jozef Bubenko (1996–2002) Jozef Bubenko (1996–2002)
 Jozef Valovič (1996) Jozef Valovič (1996)
 Jozef Bubenko (1996–2002) Jozef Bubenko (1996–2002)
 Jozef Barmoš (2004–2005) Jozef Barmoš (2004–2005)
 Ladislav Jurkemik (2006–2008) Ladislav Jurkemik (2006–2008)
 Vladimír Koník (2007–2009) Vladimír Koník (2007–2009)
 Peter Fieber (2009) Peter Fieber (2009)
 Jozef Barmoš (2009–2016) Jozef Barmoš (2009–2016)
 Richard Slezák (2016–2017) Richard Slezák (2016–2017)
 Jozef Barmoš (2017) Jozef Barmoš (2017)
 Jozef Brezovský (2018) Jozef Brezovský (2018)
 Miroslav Jantek (2018–2019) Miroslav Jantek (2018–2019)
 Michal Pančík (2019–2021) Michal Pančík (2019–2021)
 Ladislav Hudec (2022) Ladislav Hudec (2022)
 Andrej Štellár (2023-) Andrej Štellár (2023-)
References
- ↑ "Prvé mužstvo FK Inter zaniklo, hráči so zmluvou idú do Senice" (in Slovak). Profutbal. 18 June 2009. Retrieved 9 November 2014.
- ↑ "Inter nezanikol, logo žlto-čiernych zachránili pre deti" (in Slovak). Profutbal. 17 July 2009. Archived from the original on 10 November 2014. Retrieved 9 November 2014.
- ↑ "Návrat Interu Bratislava, od sezóny 2010/11 na scéne aj A-tím" (in Slovak). Profutbal. 29 April 2010. Archived from the original on 10 November 2014. Retrieved 9 November 2014.
- ↑ "Tradičný klub sa vracia, Inter Bratislava má postupový hetrik" (in Slovak). Šport. 31 July 2014. Retrieved 9 November 2014.
- ↑ "Tlačová konferencia AS Trenčín pred jarnou časťou sezóny". astrencin/youtube.com (in Slovak). Archived from the original on 2021-12-22. Retrieved 2016-03-10.
- ↑ "Bratislavský Inter nadviazal po Trenčíne spoluprácu aj s FK Stupava". profutbal.sk (in Slovak). Retrieved 2016-02-24.
- ↑ "Szilárd Németh: Príbeh posledného gólového slovenského útočníka". 10 January 2018.
- ↑ "TOP 10 najdrahších prestupov slovenských futbalistov". 22 July 2016.
- ↑ "Marek Čech prestúpil do Sparty za 15 miliónov českých korún". 9 April 2005.
- ↑ "Sparťan Peter Babnič v Tatrách".
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