Chelsea's "Big four" part 8
Chelsea's "Big Four": 2018/19 - Champions of Europe again

The Summer of 2018 saw Guardiola focus more on the defensive side. Once again, Jurgen Klopp failed to land his preferred transfer target, as the sale of Phillipe Coutinho to Barcelona came too late to stop Virgil Van Dijk moving to Stamford Bridge for £70,000,000, while Mateo Kovacic and Jorginho also came to Stamford Bridge to bolster the midfield. In place of Van Dijk, Liverpool raided RB Leipzig for Dayot Upemacano and Timo Werner, while Jose Mourinho brought in Fred and Diogo Dalot, Antonio Conte brought Riyad Mahrez to the Etihad, and Arsenal’s new manager Unai Emery, who had replaced the retiring Arsene Wenger, signed Bernd Leno, Sokratis, Lucas Torreira and Matteo Guendouzi. Tottenham, meanwhile, signed nobody.

It looked like it would be business as usual for Chelsea, as they won their opening 10 matches before being held to a 1-1 draw at home to Crystal Palace, while in Europe, they were fed into a tough group with PSG, Napoli and Red Star Belgrade. A goal from Hazard settled the first match in Chelsea’s favour, before Lorenzo Insigne’s late equaliser saw Napoli snatch a point. Then came Red Star Belgrade, and an Eden Hazard hat-trick saw the Serbian outfit dispatched 5-0 at Stamford Bridge, before a 2-0 defeat in Belgrade. By the end of November, Chelsea had been displaced from the top of the league following a 3-2 defeat at White Hart Lane, while a 2-1 defeat in Paris had left the Blues level on points with Napoli with their last match against the Italians at Stamford Bridge. In true Chelsea fashion, the Blues dispatched their opposition 2-0 with goals from Salah and Giroud, although they would lose top spot to PSG who ran riot 4-1 in Belgrade. A defeat at Wolves and a draw at Brighton saw Chelsea drop to 3rd, but they would roar back as Van Dijk got his first Chelsea goal in a 3-1 win at home to Leicester while Timo Werner’s goal for Liverpool at Wolves saw the Reds leapfrog Man City. By New Year’s Eve, it looked like it was turning into one of the closest title races since 1999…

  1. Liverpool 48pts
  2. Chelsea 47pts
  3. Tottenham 45pts
  4. Man City 44pts
  5. Arsenal 37pts
  6. Man Utd 29pts
  7. Watford 28pts
  8. Everton 26pts
  9. Wolves 26pts

Arsenal were struggling for consistency under Unai Emery, while Jose Mourinho had performed his classic 3rd season collapse and had been sacked by Man Utd after a 3-2 loss at Anfield, while Wolves were surprising everyone with a run on the Europa League spots. In the Carabao Cup, Chelsea had barrelled through Liverpool, Derby County and Bournemouth to set up a semi-final against Tottenham, while Man City had been surprisingly eliminated by Leicester City in the quarter finals. Top spot changed hands throughout January, as a brace from Salah gained Chelsea a point from 2-0 down at the Emirates before the Blues scrambled back on top at Bournemouth thanks to a first-minute goal from Aguero and a defensive masterclass from van Dijk and Courtois. The following weekend, a hat-trick from Aguero saw off Huddersfield 6-0, while a brace from Lukaku enabled Man City to come back to beat Arsenal 2-1 while Liverpool slipped further back. Then Chelsea came to the Etihad, and a goal from Salah and Sergio Aguero’s second hat-trick in a row saw Chelsea move clear at the top in a dramatic 4-3 win. In Europe, the Blues had put themselves in good stead as Aguero gave them a 1-0 win over Bayern Munich (as had Manchester City and Tottenham with first leg wins over Barcelona and Borussia Dortmund), but their FA Cup hopes had ended against Man Utd in a penalty shootout a few days after a 2-0 win over Leicester in the Carabao Cup Final. With eight matches left, Chelsea were two points behind Manchester City with a game in hand and having won 2-0 in their second leg with goals from Aguero and van Dijk (Tottenham had beaten Dortmund, while Man Utd had only managed to draw 1-1 in Paris and Man City had lost 5-2 in the Nou Camp.) The top spot continued to change hands, but in April Chelsea would lose 2-1 at Anfield as goals from Werner and Mane overcame one from Salah before Manchester City won the Manchester Derby to move four points clear of Chelsea with Liverpool two points further back. However, Man City then contrived to draw 0-0 at Turf Moor while Chelsea roared to a 4-1 victory at Old Trafford. Then came a pivotal week in Chelsea’s season. On 30th April, Aguero’s opener in the Nou Camp was overturned by a brace from Luis Suarez. On 5th May, Chelsea moved back to the top of the league with a 4-0 win over Watford. A day later, Man City leapfrogged them once more as Vincent Kompany’s piledriver gave them victory over Leicester. On 8th May, De Bruyne took Barcelona apart with two goals and an assist for Aguero before substitute Tammy Abraham put the boot in as Guardiola’s old club were dispatched 4-0 at Stamford Bridge to set up an all-London Champions League Final against Tottenham. The final day of the season had Chelsea fans dreaming as Brighton took the lead against Manchester City just before Aguero gave Chelsea a 1-0 lead at Leicester. Even after Laporte equalised, Chelsea still led on goal difference. But then Mahrez and Gundogan scored in the space of ten minutes, keeping the title in Manchester.

  1. Man City 93pts
  2. Chelsea 91pts
  3. Liverpool 87pts
  4. Tottenham 71pts
  5. Arsenal 67pts
  6. Man Utd 59pts
  7. Wolves 57pts
  8. Watford 51pts
  9. West Ham 51pts

Antonio Conte’s Man City would complete a League and Cup double with a 5-0 demolition of Watford, while Jurgen Klopp would get his first trophy as Liverpool manager with a 3-1 win over Arsenal in the Europa League Final. The Champions League Final, however, ended up over and done with in ten minutes as Hazard and De Bruyne put Chelsea 2-0 ahead before a late goal from Aguero put the icing on the cake. Chelsea had their second European Cup, Guardiola had his third. It would be the last hurrah for the big four, however, as Eden Hazard departed for Real Madrid for over £100,000,000.
 
World Cup 1998 (George UK)
1998 FIFA World Cup

Tournament details
Host country: France
Dates: 10 June – 12 July
Teams: 32 (from 5 confederations)
Venue(s): 10 (in 10 host cities)

Champions: France (1st title)
Runners-up : Brazil
Third place: England
Fourth place: Netherlands

Group Stage

Group A

...Scotland's win over Norway and draw with Morocco, coupled with Norway's failure to beat Brazil in the final match, enabled them to make the round of 16 for the first time in their history...

Group G
...European Champions England topped the group over Romania, while Colombia and Tunisia were unable to reach the last 16 despite Colombia having one win, missing out to Romania on goal difference...

Round of 16
Italy vs Scotland

Vieri scored his fifth goal of the finals and the only one of the game in the 18th minute with exquisite precision, bursting on to Di Biagio's pass 40 yards from goal. Scotland had their moments but failed to finish as Pagliuca made some brilliant saves.

England vs Croatia
Davor Suker's opener was cancelled out by Alan Shearer before the 7th minute of extra time, when Gascoigne danced through the Croatian defence before chipping the ball over the keeper into the net...

Argentina vs Romania
With the score tied at 2–2, Gheorghe Hagi retaliated after being fouled by Diego Simeone and was sent off...

Quarter Finals
Germany vs England

...the match burst into life when Michael Owen drew a red card from Christian Worns, before destroying the depleted German defence with a 50-yard run and deftly finishing to give England the lead before Alan Shearer scored England's second...

Semi Finals
France vs England

Alan Shearer's late header was solely a consolation after Lilian Thuram and Zinedine Zidane had put Les Bleus 3-0 up...

Third Place Playoff
...goals from Paul Gascoigne and Alan Shearer gave England their highest finish at a World Cup since 1966...
 
2003 Nations League Finals (NTF aka Seb)
2003 UEFA Nations League Finals

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The 2003 UEFA Nations League Finals was the final tournament of the 2002-03 Nations League, the third season of the competition. Contested by the four group winners of Nations League A, the tournament was held in England from 5 to 9 June 2003. The tournament consisted of two semi-finals, a third place play-off and a final to determine the champions of the UEFA Nations League.

Holders Italy were unable to defend their title after finishing second in their group behind the Czech Republic, who in the final defeated England 6-5 on penalties following a 2-2 draw after extra-time, to earn their first Nations League title.



Qualified teams

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Host selection

All qualified nations launched bids to host the Finals, with the Czech Republic being quickly rejected due to not fulfilling the stadium capacity requirements. Spain's bid was also rejected shortly afterwards. The bid is believed to have been denied because Portugal, who neighbours Spain, hosted the Finals in 1999 and UEFA wants the tournament to be more widespread whenever possible. Investigative journalists found that there were some financial reasons, too. The only thing holding England and France back was their relatively recent hosting of UEFA Euro 1996 and the 1998 FIFA World Cup respectively. Still, their bids were the only ones remaining. In the end, the UEFA Executive Committee chose England. Diligent lobbying is believed to have been part of the reason for this. The 2003 Finals were played in Liverpool and Manchester from 5 to 9 June, the same dates as the preceding edition. There were concerns about violence and hooliganism between fans of the two rival cities. Had Wembley Stadium not been closed due to reconstruction, London would've hosted the Finals, according to the FA Chairman.



Venues

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Bracket

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2003 UEFA Nations League Finals

View attachment 862782

The 2003 UEFA Nations League Finals was the final tournament of the 2002-03 Nations League, the third season of the competition. Contested by the four group winners of Nations League A, the tournament was held in England from 5 to 9 June 2003. The tournament consisted of two semi-finals, a third place play-off and a final to determine the champions of the UEFA Nations League.

Holders Italy were unable to defend their title after finishing second in their group behind the Czech Republic, who in the final defeated England 6-5 on penalties following a 2-2 draw after extra-time, to earn their first Nations League title.



Qualified teams

View attachment 862787



Host selection

All qualified nations launched bids to host the Finals, with the Czech Republic being quickly rejected due to not fulfilling the stadium capacity requirements. Spain's bid was also rejected shortly afterwards. The bid is believed to have been denied because Portugal, who neighbours Spain, hosted the Finals in 1999 and UEFA wants the tournament to be more widespread whenever possible. Investigative journalists found that there were some financial reasons, too. The only thing holding England and France back was their relatively recent hosting of UEFA Euro 1996 and the 1998 FIFA World Cup respectively. Still, their bids were the only ones remaining. In the end, the UEFA Executive Committee chose England. Diligent lobbying is believed to have been part of the reason for this. The 2003 Finals were played in Liverpool and Manchester from 5 to 9 June, the same dates as the preceding edition. There were concerns about violence and hooliganism between fans of the two rival cities. Had Wembley Stadium not been closed due to reconstruction, London would've hosted the Finals, according to the FA Chairman.



Venues

View attachment 862790



Bracket

View attachment 862780
Even against Czechia, it still ain't coming home :coldsweat:
 
Euro timeline (Neoteros)
An alternate timeline of the UEFA European Championship, based on an alternate history/fan fiction by a friend of mine - spot the POD. :p

Year
Host​
Champions​
Runners-up​
1960FranceSoviet Union (1)France
1964SpainSpain (1)Soviet Union
1968ItalyItaly (1)England
1972BelgiumWest Germany (1)Soviet Union
1976CroatiaCzechia (1)West Germany
1980EnglandWest Germany (2)Belgium
1984West GermanyFrance (1)Spain
1988Denmark/Norway/SwedenNetherlands (1)Soviet Union
1992SpainCroatia (1)Germany
1996GreeceGermany (3)Czechia
2000Belgium/NetherlandsItaly (2)France
2004Austria/HungaryGreece (1)Netherlands
2008Ireland/ScotlandSpain (2)Germany
2012Poland/UkraineSpain (3)Italy
2016FrancePortugal (1)France
2020Bulgaria/RomaniaItaly (3)England
2024Germany
2028Albania/Montenegro
2032Italy/Turkey

The POD:

The Biennio Rosso becomes an actual socialist revolution, resulting in the creation of an Italian Council Republic as a multi-party democratic socialist state (the various elements of Italian socialism are able to cooperate enough to prevent a Fascist takeover, but not enough to prevent their usual bickering, with plenty of compromises being necessary); Italian aid plays a key role in the survival of the Spanish Republic. The dire economic situation of both countries prevents them from joining World War II until 1943, when they aid the Americans in their invasion of Nazi-held Europe, partly out of sheer anti-Stalinist spite (the USSR having tried to subvert both revolutions) and partly to reassure the world that they're democratic socialist states, thank you very much.

During World War II, the Chetniks gain the upper hand in Yugoslavia, but their collaborationist misdeeds end up getting the state partitioned between a NATO-aligned Croatia (whose territory more or less coincides with that of the IRL collaborationist state), an Italy/Spain-aligned Albania and Montenegro (the latter under a restored Njegoš dynasty, Elena of Montenegro/Savoy having made a similar deal with the Italian government to the one she stuck with Mussolini IRL, partly because her very Christian conscience couldn't stomach the crimes the desperate anti-socialist forces committed during the civil war), and a rump Serbia (minus Kosovo, Albanian-speaking Macedonian localities, and what few Hungarian localities remained in Vojvodina) in the Soviet sphere.
 
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An alternate timeline of the UEFA European Championship, based on an alternate history/fan fiction by a friend of mine - spot the POD. :p

Year
Host​
Champions​
Runners-up​
1960FranceSoviet Union (1)France
1964SpainSpain (1)Soviet Union
1968ItalyItaly (1)England
1972BelgiumWest Germany (1)Soviet Union
1976CroatiaCzechia (1)West Germany
1980EnglandWest Germany (2)Belgium
1984West GermanyFrance (1)Spain
1988Denmark/Norway/SwedenNetherlands (1)Soviet Union
1992SpainCroatia (1)Germany
1996GreeceGermany (3)Czechia
2000Belgium/NetherlandsItaly (2)France
2004Austria/HungaryGreece (1)Netherlands
2008Ireland/ScotlandSpain (2)Germany
2012Poland/UkraineSpain (3)Italy
2016FrancePortugal (1)France
2020Bulgaria/RomaniaItaly (3)England
2024Germany
2028Albania/Montenegro
2032Italy/Turkey
Interesting. No Yugoslavia in 1976 - and how would Croatia be awarded hosting rights? Surely there are other more suitable hosts?

Greece in 1996?

How does Albania/Montenegro have the capacity to host in 2028?
 
Interesting. No Yugoslavia in 1976 - and how would Croatia be awarded hosting rights? Surely there are other more suitable hosts?

Greece in 1996?

How does Albania/Montenegro have the capacity to host in 2028?
Yeah. Aside from Maksimir in Zagreb, all the other venues would be too small, aside from maybe Gradski Vrt in Osijek (But even that one was ancient by '76). Plus, Poljud in Split wouldn't be built until' 1979.
 
Yeah. Aside from Maksimir in Zagreb, all the other venues would be too small, aside from maybe Gradski Vrt in Osijek (But even that one was ancient by '76). Plus, Poljud in Split wouldn't be built until' 1979.

I updated the post with the POD - not the most plausible one, since the fic's supposed to be an excuse for Nadia and Porco Rosso characters to hang out in a socialist Italy, but Albania, Croatia and Montenegro end up avoiding Soviet and Titoist rule after World War II, with Croatia being firmly in the NATO camp, while Albania and Montenegro are basically mini-mes of ATL Italy and Spain, being multi-party democratic socialist states that are as socially liberal as the modern-day capitalist states of western Europe, but whose economics are largely in the hands of cooperatives.

There's some questionable behaviour in the fic however, such as the straight up slaughter of the Mafia in Italy (exceeding even Mussolini's treatment of it, not even children were spared - the author of said slaughter being an anime character whose name escapes me right now), and the fact that Eritrea, Libya and Somalia are still closely tied to Italy, albeit as highly autonomous regions where the original deal between the Italian government and the Senussi rebels (dual Italian/Libyan citizenship and self-government) was kept and expanded.
 
Euro 2000 (George UK)
UEFA Euro 2000

Host countries Belgium
Netherlands
Dates 10 June – 2 July
Teams 16
Venue(s) 8 (in 8 host cities)

Champions France (2nd title)
Runners-up Italy

...UEFA Euro 2000 Group A...

England won the group ahead of Portugal, while Germany were surprisingly eliminated...

PosTeamPldWDLGFGAGDPtsQualification
1
23px-Flag_of_England.svg.png
England
321053+27Advance to knockout stage
2
23px-Flag_of_Portugal.svg.png
Portugal
320152+36
3
23px-Flag_of_Romania.svg.png
Romania
302135−22
4
23px-Flag_of_Germany.svg.png
Germany
301215−41

...Quarter Finals...
In the first quarter final, England defeated Turkey 2-0 with a brace from Alan Shearer...

...Semi Finals...
France and Italy both emerged victorious from their semi-finals against difficult opposition to reach the final. France beat England 2–1 after extra-time; Alan Shearer gave England the lead in the 19th minute, which they held until just after half-time, when Thierry Henry equalised. The game went to extra-time and looked to be heading for a penalty shootout until Zidane struck the golden goal in the 117th minute.
 
Arsenal FC
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Name: Arsenal Football Club
City: London
Nicknames: the Gunners
Home ground: Highbury
Capacity: 42,000
League: Football League First division
Rivals: Tottenham Hotspurs (North London Derby), Manchester United, Liverpool

HONORS

DOMESTIC

First Division: 1930-1931, 1932-1933, 1934-1935, 1937-1938, 1939-1940, 1941-1942, 1942-1943, 1947-1948, 1951-1952, 1988-1989, 1990-1991, 1997-1998, 2001-2002, 2003-2004, 2022-2023

FA Cup: 1906-1907, 1926-1927, 1929-1930, 1931-1932, 1933-1934, 1934-1935, 1935-1936, 1937-1938, 1939-1940, 1943-1944, 1970-1971, 1997-1998, 2003-2004, 2004-2005, 2014-2015

League Cup: 1993-1994



EUROPEAN

Champions League: best finish semi-finals 1998-1999

UEFA Cup: best finosh runner-up 1969-1970, 1984-1985, 1985-1986 and 1999-2000

Cup Winners Cup: best finish runner-up 1994-1995

Intertoto Cup: 2020-2021

Woolwich Arsenal was formed in october 1886, by munitions workers stationed in the heart of the royal arsenal complex. They became the first sputhern club to be admitted into the football league, starting inthe second division and reaching thebfidst in 1904. Financial difficulties and the arrival of more accessible clubs for london citizens led the club close to bankruptcy in 1910, with businessmen Henry Norris and William Hall saving the club and moving it to its iconic home at Highbury, where they still play to this day, sharing it with North London Rugby club Saracens.

The roots of the north london derby against the Tottenham Hotspurs started in 1919, when Arsenal was controversially chosen over Tottenham to be promoted into the newly expanded first division depsite them finishing in 5th place. This move would prove fruitful for Arsenal, as attemdance records would be broken at their new home at highbury, which meant that the club's budget would grow exponentially, meaning that they eventually became knonw as the "Bank of England" club, spending large sums (for the time) on both players and Huddersfield Town's all-conquering manager, Herbert Chapman.


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Herbert Chapman


The latter, known for his uncoventional and innovative (for the time) approach to tactics and preparation, would appoint former player Tom Whittaker as the club's new trainer and his protege, and with stars such as Cliff Bastin, Eddie Hapgood, David Jack and Alex James, Arsenal would claim their first piece of silverware, the FA Cup in 1927, which would end up being the prelude to an extended period of dominance of the english gane for over two decades, winning league title and FA Cups left and right, first under Chapman from 1925 to his appointment as England manager in 1947 for the 1948 european championships, and then, under Tom Whittakerfrom 1947 to 1956, where they would win two more league titles in 1948 and 1952.


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Alex James lifting the FA Cup


During Chapman's tenure at Arsenal, radical inventions such as floodlights for night matches, shirt numbers to recognise players on the pitch and extensive usage of physiotherapists were each brought into the game, and Chapman also frequently hosted friendly matches against foreign sides such as Racing Paris from France, Austria Wien and the Austrian Wunderteam of the 30s, along with becoming the first english manGer to sign a foreign player when he personally overviewed the transfer of dutch goalkeeper Gerard Keyser. The famed Art Deco stands at Highbury and its scoreboard were also innovations of Chapman.

With Chapman and Whittaker leaving in the 50s, Arsenal's fortunes waned, turing into a mid-table side for much of the 50s and 60s. Now knocked down a peg, the club appointed physio Bertie Mee as new manager alongside Don Howe as assistant, and with new players like Bob McNab and future manager George Graham, Arsenal got bakc to the top half of the table and disputed their first league cup finals in 1968 and 1969, to losing efforts. In fact, the Arsenal sides of the late 60s and early 70s were best described as some of the best sides to never win the league title, with an incredibly close call against Don Revie's Leeds United in 1971 the closest they ever gotten to, losing on the penultimate week in a 1-0 loss agaisnt Spurs and Leeds United winning their last game to snatch the title. The FA Cup, won in that same year, was the consolation prize.

In europe, Arsenal reached their first european final in 1970, where they would lose to belgian side Anderlecht in the inter-cities fairs cup final despite a brave comeback effort at home in the second leg.


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Liam Brady, Arsenal's franchise player in the 70s

The 70s would see Arsenal stay competitive, with players like Pat Jennings, Frank Stapleton, Graham Rix and Liam Brady reaching three consecutive FA Cup finals from 1978 to 1980, losing all of them, while three of the aformentioned four players would all leave the club by the early 80s, with Brady to Juventus, Stapleton to Manchester United and Jennings betraying the club to go to Tottenham.

The appointment of former West Brom player Barry Hughes, who previously managed in Holland, would prove to be a turning point in Arsenal's fortunes in the 80s, for Hughes would bring with him a very talented teenager from Amsterdam that mesmerised him to England. His name? Ruud Gullit.

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A 19-year old Gullit at Haarlem, the club which Barry Hughes coached before taking him to Arsenal.


Despite questions surrounding spending £200,000 pound on a teenager, and a foreign one, at that, Hughes's decision would pay off big time, for Gullit and his versatility: at times Center back, Midfielder and goalscoring poacher extraordinaire, would revitalise Arsenal back to regular top 5 finishes in the league and leading them to two consecutive UEFA Cup final in 1985 and 1986, where they would both times lose to Real Madrid of La Quinta del Buitre.



In 1986, George Graham succeeded Barry Hughes as manager. The scotsman correctly guessed that Arsenal couldn't break into the top 4 and lost the two UEFA Cup finals due to their defensive fragilities, and so, Graham would sign Nigel Winterburn, Lee Dixon and Steve Bould for that purpose, forming a tough back five alongside Tony Adams and captain David O'Leary, while Gullit would serve as a left winger in an attacking trio with Alan Smith and David Rocastle. Then, the following year, Graham would complete his midfield by signing, at the request of Gullit, disgruntled Ajax midfielder/defender Frank Rijkaard to partner young Michael Thomas.

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the Arsenal defense, pictured here in 1997-1998


With this squad in tow, Arsenal would emerge as Liverpool's main title rivals in 1988-1989, with Gullit and Rijkaard continuing their amazing form from Euro 1988 and the back 5 only rivaling AC Milan as the best defensive unit in europe. On the last day of the league, Arsenall needed to not only win, but also win by two goals to beat Liverpool to the title on goal difference. After Gullit scored the first, the match ended up deadlocked until the last minute of extra time, where Gullit delivered a through ball to Michael Thomas with everything up to grasps now, and Thomas buried it past Grobelaar to win Arsenal's first league title in 37 years!

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This also meant that Arsenal would participate in the european cup for the first time ever, in 1989-1990. Unfortunately, they would bow out in the second rouns fo the competition against Marseille 3-1 on aggregate, while they would surrender the league to Liverpool once again.

With Paul Merson's emergence, George Graham repositioned Gullit as Alan Smith's strike partner in a 4-4-2, with Merson and Rocastle on the wings, Rijkaard and Thomas in the middle and the back four of Adams, Bould, Dixon and Winterburn protecting new goalkeeper David Seaman from West Ham. With that squad, Arsenal formed the msot complete team in England, utterly thrashing the 1990-1991 league and only losing once all season.

Sadly, this would be the final season of Gullit at Arsenal, for he would sign with Sampdoria in the 1991 off-season. Crystal Palace's Ian Wright would sign on as Gullit's replacement, but Arsenal's offensive output, mainly provided by Gullit, would sadly evaporate over the years as Graham became increasingly more conservative in his approach, leading to fans and the media calling the side "Boring, boring Arsenal". A league cup win in 1994 proved to be Graham's last title as Arsenal manager, for Rijkaard would leave for Ajax the following summer, to be replaced by swede Stefan Schwarz from Benfica and the USA's standout midfielder/defender Alexis Lalas. 1994-1995 would see Arsenal reach the 1995 cup winners cup final against Real Zaragosa. In a defensive-minded game, both sides remained deadlocked until Zaragosa's Nayim's long-range shot attempt soemgow got past a distracted Seaman in the dying minutes of the game to win the cup for the spanish side.

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As Arsenal was threatened to be left behind in the first sivision by the ressurgent Man Utd, Aston Villa, The free-spending Newcastle and even their crosstown rivals Chelsea, Arsenal president David Dein entered negotiations with Barcelona's outgoing coach Johan Cruyff during a dinner with him. Seeking ti change Arsenal's image and pushing the club into the modern age, Dein appointed Cruyff as manager in 1996, with the high-profile signings of Dennis Bergkamp from Inter Milan and Phillip Cocu from PSV Eindhoven coming along with the Dutch icon.

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Johan Cruyff


From the get-go, Cruyff would modernize Arsenal's training methods and instore discipline into the squad, with Tony Adams crediting his eventual recovery from alcoholism to Cruyff's new training methods. In his first season in charge, Cruyff's Arsenal would play really well, but some pieces were missing, and they would end up in 4th behind Liverpool, Newcastle and Manchester United.

With the signing of Marc Overmars and free agent Patrick Kluivert, both from double european champions Ajax, 1997-1998 would see Total Football take over English Football, with Cruyff and his 3-4-3 diamond formation, with Bergkamp acting as the number ten behind the attacking trio of Overmars, Kluivert and Ray Parlour up front, Arsenal would defeat Manchester United for the league title on a dramatic showdown in April, when David Platt, coming as a substitute, woudl deliver what would end up being the title sealing goal for the north london club, with an easy win over Everton on the last matchday confirming the gunners's first tiel since 1990-1991. A few days later, an Overmars brace at Wembley against Newcastle would bring Arsenal the FA Cup, its first since 1971, to score a domestic double for the north london club.

While they would bow out to the surprise winners Dynamo Kiev and Andriy Shevchenko in the 98-99 champions league semi-final, Arsenal would become perennial contenders under Cruyff's tenure, winning the league in 2001-2002 and another double in 2003-2004, with Patrick Kluivert becoming a goal machine, dennis bergkamp and his classy style of play wowing crowds all over England, and the ever reliable defense of Adams, Keown, Winterburn, Seaman and Dixon making way, as the new millenium approached, for academy graduates like Matthew Upson, Stuart Taylor, Ashley Cole, Justin Hoyte and Jermaine Pennant, and shrewd signings like Giovanni Van Bronckhorst from Feyenoord in 1998 to replace Michael Thomas, and free agent Sol Campbell from Tottenham in 2001.

One last FA Cup won on penalties against Chelsea in 2004-2005 would end up being Cruyff's last club title, for he would finally become manager of the Dutch National team in 2006. From then on, Arsenal, under the likes of Louis Van Gaal and, later, Michael Laudrup, would become the perennial 4th place finishers of the First Division, with the likes of Pennant, Tomas Rosicky, Theo Walcott and Robin Van Persie the offensive leaders while new blood like Kieran Gibbs, Justin Hoyte's brother Gavin, Fabrice Muemba, polish keeper Wojech Sczezny, Jack Wilshere and Aaron Ramsey making their mark into the first team.

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Ramsey and Wilshere


2013-2014, under Laudrup, would see Arsenal take part in the 5-horse title race for the league title, boosted by one of Van Persie and Walcott's last great seasons and the midfield generalship of Wilshere, Ramsey and Mikel Arteta. Sadly, those promises would end up unfulfilled, for a slump late in the season would cost them the league title and they would lose to a resilient Hull City in the FA Cup final in a stunning upset.

Still, Laudrup stayed put, and the signing of Alexis Sanchez, as well as Callum Chambers and Gabriel Paulista on the defensive front, would bring Arsenal to FA Cup glory in 2014-2015, but they would miss out on the league title in 2015-2016 to the surprising Leicester City.

Transfer flops such as Christian Benteke and Skhodran Mustafi, Jack Wilshere's sudden retirement and the club letting go of Laudrup, Sczezny, Sanchez and Ramsey would send the club down to mid-table and force a complete rebuild from the ground up.

With Mikel Arteta, a new coach, taking over, Arsenal reassembled the squad with younger players from the academy such as Aaron Ramsdale, Ainsley Maitland-Niles, Reiss Nelson, Bukayo Saka and Eddie Nketiah, along with defenders Takehiro Tomiyasu and Kieran Tierney, and pre-established squad players Rob Holding, Hector Bellerin, Chambers and Mohamed Elneny, Arsenal got back to prominence in a losing effort in the 2020 FA Cup final against Chelsea, but the squad would grow from strength to strength the more this young generation gained experience, especially after England's run in the 2020 euros.


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The young Arsenal squad


This all culminated in the 2022-2023 season, where Arsenal, after almost 20 years of waiting, finally won its 15th league title in dominant fashion, taking advantage of Tottenham and Liverpool's decline in form. They were so far ahead in the league, that not even a late challenge from Chelsea and the surprising Brentford of Christian Eriksson, Jack Grealish's Aston Villa and a spirited Brighton could disturb Arsenal's return to glory.


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Castillian League (Mildtryth)
A list of Castillan football champions on the TL i'm currently writing (the idea is that while, politically, there is a Spain, the football leagues and national teams in Castille, Aragon and Navarra remain separate):

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Hawkaussie's World Cup timeline (1906-1962)
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So this is my timeline results in terms of the World Cup as of 1964 (which is the current year in ITTL so I will do a quick break of every tournament to date.

1906: The first World Cup which is the main POD of the timeline and sees an South American nation wins in a shock to the European footballing World. The British nations don't fare well with them sending an under-strength squad to compete.
1910: The first of two attempts in going with a knockout format and sees England win the trophy against a Belgian side that was deemed unlucky to lose that match.
1914: England (as Great Britain) don't actually compete at the 1912 Olympics as European football improve to the point that they are battling close to the British counterparts and it delivered with a shock of Denmark taking out the title.
1922: The first World Cup after the war and a limited turnout for the nations that were mainly neutral during the war. Belgium would defeat the Netherlands in what is a repeat of the 1920 Olympic Games
1926: This was the first World Cup to feature qualifying with 38 teams attempting to qualify for fourteen spots with hosts and the defending champions automatically qualifying. Uruguay in their dominance during the 1920s would take out the cup with the Dutch missing out for a second time.
1930: The first South American World Cup and for the Netherlands the eventual relief of winning the World Cup as that finals appearance gets over Argentina who was making their first final. This was also the first World Cup to have seeding with the FIFA World Rankings being introduced in 1928.
1934: At home, Italy becomes the first team to win the World Cup at home with some suspicious events occurring during the group stage. This would be also the last time that a British nation would compete separately as they would unify in 1950.
1938: Complete domination from Italy scoring fifteen goals in four games which included a 5-0 win against Bulgaria in the Round of 16 and a 5-1 win over Portugal in the semis.
1950: The only time that the tournament (to date) that it has gone over 16 nations and technically the first to be held in two nations with Denmark hosting matches for their group. Not that mattered as they went out in the group stage. Sweden becomes the second team to win at home defeating a Great Britain squad without Scotland.
1954: Another tournament, another new winner with Hungary finally deserving of the title that they would have won in OTL if it wasn't for West Germany (who would only make an appearance at the 1962 World Cup), their opponents Romania being the sort of West Germany in this situation with the extra exposure due to the 1952 Olympics where they got silver.
1958: Brazil first trophy with a young Pele in the squad as he made his first appearance in the quarter-finals after an injury ruled him out of the group stage.
1962: The first time that the tournament went outside of South America/Europe duo with Mexican FA president Joaquín Soria Terrazas wanting support of a tournament outside of the major two which was then agreed to. The other major event was the coin toss that occurred in the third place playoff between the Netherlands and Great Britain which was done after 120 minutes and was the second time that it was done and is possibly the last with FIFA looking into replays for knockout matches for the 1966 World Cup.
 
AC Sparta Prague
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Name: Athletic Club Sparta Praha
Nicknames: Iron Sparta, the Reds, Boys from Letna
Founded: 16 November 1893
Home ground: Letna Stadium
Capacity: 19,416


Honours:

Domestic (49)

Czechoslovak league (29): 1925/26, 1926/27, 1931/32, 1935/36, 1937/38, 1938/39, 1945/46, 1947/48, 1952, 1953, 1954, 1957/58, 1964/65, 1966/67, 1983/84, 1986/87, 1987/88, 1989/90, 1990/91, 1993/94, 1994/95, 1996/97, 1997/98, 1998/99, 1999/00, 2000/01, 2002/03, 2004/05, 2022/23

Czechoslovak Cup (15): 1963-64, 1971/72, 1975/76, 1979/80, 1983/84, 1987/88, 1988/89, 1991/92, 1995/96, 2003/04, 2005/06, 2006/07, 2007/08, 2013/14, 2019/20

Bohemian Championship (4): 1912, 1919, 1922, 1943/44

Czechoslovak Supercup (1): 2014

Continental (2)

European Cup/European Champions League: Runners-up (1991/92)

Cup Winners Cup: Semi-finals (1972/73, 1996/97)

UEFA Cup/Europa League: Semi-finals (2014/15)

Mitropa Cup (2): 1927, 1935

Early history (1893-1914)

At the close of 1893, a small group of young people based around three brothers – Václav, Bohumil and Rudolf Rudl – had the idea of setting up a sports club. They founded the Athletic Club of Královské Vinohrady . The first chairman was Maxmilián Švagrovský , originally from Roudnice nad Labem . At that time, Vinohrady was still an independent, wealthy town outside Prague, and therefore the new club expected generous support from the town hall.

The support of the Vinohrady town hall was zero, and when it did not even offer them land for a new stadium, the club decided to change its location. This was approved at the general meeting on August 9 , 1894 in the Demínka cafe. During the meeting, Vladimír Horejc stood up and uttered the famous words: " Let our club be called AC Sparta from now on!" On 16 November, the founders' meeting approved the club's articles of association and one month later, on 17 December, the first annual general meeting took place. Soon after that, the Athletic Club Sparta came up with its tricolour, in which blue symbolises Europe, red and yellow being the symbols of the Royal City of Prague. In 1896, Sparta would play its first match against their soon-to-be greatest rivals - Slavia.

The 1896 Sparta team
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However, Sparta’s financial situation during its early years was continuously dire, with the club having to play with black shirts just because they were the cheapest option, while their best player Jan Košek switched to Slavia due to the clubs’ situation. In the autumn of 1904, however, there was a split in Slavia and not only Košek but also the famous winger Jindřich Baumruk and Rudolf Krummer came to Sparta . Sparta suddenly became the best team in the whole of Austria-Hungary , which they confirmed when they beat First Vienna 7:2 and 7:0 and beat BTK Budapest 4:1 at Christmas . The biggest sensation, however, was when Sparta lost to the winner of the English league, Newcastle United , only 2:3. However, the former famous players returned to the stitched jersey, and Sparta's glory took over for the time being. That very same year, Sparta would gain its first ever stadium in Letna.

Sparta's historical stadium in Letna
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In 1906, club president Dr. Petřík was in England where he saw the famous Woolwich Arsenal play with their red jerseys and decided to bring one set to Prague. At that time, he did not realise he was setting up one of the club's greatest traditions. Together with the red jerseys, Sparta players wear white shorts and black socks.

With the establishment of the Bohemian Championship, Slavia and Sparta began to dominate the competition, with the “Dual S” taking over the city of Prague, while the two rivaling teams exchanged championships. One of the first memorable results in this period was Sparta’s 3-1 win against the Stitched, inspired by Vaclav Pilat. However, the 1912 title was soon forgotten, as Europe fell into the Great War.

Iron Sparta (1918-1939)

Shortly after World War I, a team was put together that triggered off the famous period of the 1920s and '30s referred to as "Iron Sparta". For the 1920 Olympics, Czechoslovakia’s National Football team consisted of 10 Sparta players, and 1922 saw the Spartans achieve their second title in the Bohemian championship. Perhaps most notably, Sparta beat Barcelona and 1. FC Nurnberg in a continental tournament at their home soil. In 1924, a football league in Czechoslovakia was established in the mid-twenties and the club collected title after title. However this was not without controversy, as Sparta lost the 1926 title by the merit of goal difference, where a result from the first match was annulled. In that match, Sparta won against Bohemians 7:1, but in a replay won 3:2. Still, during this era, Sparta had players like Antonin Hojer, Jaroslav Červeny, František Hochmann, Jaroslav Burgr, Josef Silný, Josef Čtyroký, Josef Koštalek and Oldrich Nejedly, who was the top scorer of the 1934 World Cup.

The milestones of the first golden period of the club's history are two Central European Cup titles, which in the '20 and the '30s enjoyed the same recognition as that of today's Champions League, while domestically - Sparta dominated the 1930s with major rivals Slavia Prague, winning four league titles. However, the annexation of Czechoslovakia brought a major change in the country’s football scene, and Sparta would only manage to win one league title during this period before the war ended.

Sparta's all-conquering 1935 squad
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The "Good old days" (1945-1967)
Following the end of the war, the “Double S” continued to dominate the proceeding years in Czechoslovak football, with Sparta garnering a great squad of new, young players like goalkeeper Andre Houška, Miroslav Zuzanek, Jiří Hejský , Zdeněk Procházka and Oldřich Menclík , Josef Crha , Arnošt Pazdera , Jiří Pešek and Antonín Rýgr, who were accompanied with “The three veterans” - Karel Senecký , Vlastimil Preis and Ladislav Koubek. Shockingly though, Sparta then suffered two consecutive seasons in the late 50s where they were threatened by relegation, just like Slavia, but they quickly recovered.

Led by Karel Kolsky and later Vaclav Ježek, who led Czechoslovakia to its Gold Medal in the 1976 Euros - Sparta won three trophies in the 1960s and achieved one of its biggest successes in the European scene, reaching the quarter-finals of the 1965-66 European Cup, where they won 4-1 against dominant Yugoslav side Partisan Belgrade, but the Spartans then lost 5-0 in the returning leg. Nonetheless, this generation of Sparta saw players like Andrej Kvašnak, Tadeusz Kraus, Jiri Tichy, Antonin Kramerius, Pavel Kouba. In 1972/73 edition of the Cup Winners Cup, Sparta had another near-miss in Europe when the reached the semi-finals after beating Schalke 04, Standard Liege and Cork Hibernians, but they were powerless against AC Milan. However, aside from this performance, the 1970s were not kind to Sparta.

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Crisis in 70s and 80s dominance

That same year, an 11th place served as a warning for the club, but two years later the crisis reached its peak and Sparta was relegated to the 2nd league (from 15th place) for the first time (and for the last time) in its history. She returned to the top league in a year, but even then she mostly played at the bottom of the table. During this period, Sparta became a “Cup club”, with the reds winning three Czechoslovak cups.

In 1980 , Sparta finished tenth in the league, but already a year later there was a visible improvement and a move to the top half of the table. New players arrived - for example, the very popular Jaroslav "Bobby" Pollák , Petr Slaný from Baník, Josef Jarolím , Milan Vdovjak , Vlastimil Calta , Jan Berger and Jozef Chovanec. However, the definitive turning point came with the return of Václav Ježek to the bench. Ježek started building a new team. Around the experienced Berger and Chovanec, he lined up promising youngsters - Jan Stejskal in goal, František Straka and Julio Bielik in defense, Ivan Hašek and Michal Bílek in reserve, Stanislav Griga and Tomáš Skuhravý in attack. The team went on to dominate the Czechoslovak league, winning four titles in the 80s along with three cups, and reached respectable results in the European competitions, most notably a quarter-final in the 1983-84 UEFA Cup, where the club played against eventual champions Hajduk Split, who managed to win at the last seconds of extra time. Coincidentally, Hajduk was another club formed in Prague, and their founder Luka Kaliterna promised back in 1911 that Hajduk would “beat Sparta at home and become the greatest club in Europe”. The late 80s weren’t as kind though, with Sparta losing 5-1 to Steaua Bucharest in 1988, which nowadays symbolizes Sparta’s apparent agony in Europe.

The moment Sparta conceeded against Hajduk
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1992-present day

Still, the early 90s saw Sparta score its greatest result in Europe when they reached the Finals of the 1991/92 European Cup, knocking out Rangers, Marseille, and then playing with Dynamo Kyiv, before surprisingly knocking out Barcelona in the Semi-finals. At the final, Sparta played a tight match against Sampdoria, but a mistake by Sparta's defense gave a chance, and in the end the Reds lost 1-0 at extra time. Further European successes came in the subsequent seasons, while Sparta achieved its greatest period by winning 7 national titles and one cup. Led by Dušan Uhrin, this period saw players like Jiri Novotny, Petr Vrabec , tireless worker Michal Hornák and Horst Siegl. However, the greatest players of this period ended up being Pavel Nedved, Tomaš Rosicky, Jan Koller, Jaromir Blažek and Tomaš Repka. Sparta was by now a regular contender in the European Champions League, and the 2000s saw Sparta continue on to dominate the Czechoslovak league, while achieving another great result in the Champions league when they reached the semi-finals in 2001/02 and 2003-04.

After finishing 2nd in the Group, Sparta encountered AC Milan in the Round of 16, whom they managed to pass by the virtue of the away goals rule. Thus marching to the quarter-finals where they reached Rosenborg. After losing 4-1, Sparta achieved a phenomenal comeback to win 4-0 at the Letna Stadium, thus placing themselves in the Semi-finals where they only missed out by one goal against a Jose Mourinho-led Porto side. This turned out to be Sparta’s peak though, as the club went on to struggle in the subsequent seasons in the league, and it took until the 2013/14 cup triumph for Sparta to win its new trophy in 6 years. From 2005 onwards, Sparta had won 5 Czechoslovak cups, and the Reds were usually struggling in Europe, with the club’s best player becoming the young and formidable Patrick Schick. Finally, in 2023, after a heartstopping finish in the Czechoslovak league, Sparta managed to win the championship against Slavia Prague, by the virtue of goal difference. In a seemingly poetic justice, Sparta had won in the same way that cost them the title 100 years ago. The best players of this squad were Jan Kuchta, Ladislav Krejči, Tomaš Čvančara, Casper Nielsen and Matej Kovar.
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Hajduk Split (Kinnikuniverse)
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Name: Hajduk Split
City: Split, Croatia
Nickname: Bili (the whites), Majstori S Mora (masters of the sea)
Home grounds: Stadion Poljud
Capacity: 33,987
League: Balkans Premier League


HONORS

DOMESTIC

Yugoslav First League/Balkans Premier League: 1926-1927, 1928-1929, 1949-1950, 1951-1952, 1952-1953, 1954-1955, 1973-1974, 1974-1975, 1978-1979, 1992-1993, 1993-1994, 1994-1995, 2000-2001

Yugoslav/Balkans Cup: 1966-1967, 1971-1972, 1972-1973, 1973-1974, 1975-1976, 1976-1977, 1983-1984, 1986-1987, 1990-1991, 1994-1995, 1999-2000, 2002-2003, 2021-2022, 2022-2023

EUROPEAN

European Cup/Champions League: 1979-1980

UEFA Cup: best finish runner-up 1983-1984

Cup Winners Cup: best finish Semi-Finals 1991-1992 and 2022-2023


The idea to form a football club was started by group of Split students who were studying in Prague. After observing a game between Slavia and Sparta Prague, the group gathered at the U Fleků tavern and talked of creating a football club at home. When they returned to Split, they put their plan in motion and Hajduk was founded on 13 February 1911.


Hajduk's first opponent were Calcio Spalato, the club of an autonomist party in Split, and the match ended with a 9–0 (6–0) victory for Hajduk. The first to score for Hajduk was Šime Raunig, legend has it – with his knee.

Hajduk entered the Yugoslav League system in 1923, where in their first season in the pyramid, they lit up their division by losing only once. They quickly rose up to the first division, where they would win their first two league titles in 1927 and 1929. The squad was so strong, that 10 out of the starting 11 of Yugoslavia came from Hajduk's starting 11, with the exception of the goalkeeper, who was Italian.

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Hajduk in the late 20s


Following a barren spell in the depressing 30s, Hajduk came back in 1940-1941, winning the league title with only 3 losses. The 40s would see Hajduk become a regular contender for the slavic championship, with the crowning achievement being the undefeated season in 1950. Three more title would follow in 1952, 1953 and 1955, which meant that Hajduk performed in the first ever European Cup, where they would eliminate Portuguese champions Belenese, but lose to Alfredo Di Stefano amd Laszlo Kubala's Barcelona in the quarter-finals.


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The invincble Hajduk of 1950


The 60s would prove to be a frustrating time for Hajduk fans, for the club would fall as low as 10th in the league, with only the 1967 yugslav cup victory, the club's first title in that competition, proving to be the only light of hope in an otherwise dire decade.

The 70s would start with the appointment if the man who would bring the club its greatest ever years: Revolutionary coach Tomislav Ivic, considered by many to be one of the father of modern football tactics. In 1970-1971, Hajduk almost won the title with a young team, only for Slavia Sarajevo to stela it at the dead. This would be followed by a dominant perido where the club would win domestic cups left and right and three league titles in 1974, 1975 and 1979.



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Tomislav Ivic, the architect of Hajduk's golden age


1979-1980 would see the club's finest hour. They would defeat the likes of Kevin Keegan and and Franz Beckenbauer's Hamburg, Vujadin Boskov's Sporting Gijon and Brian Clough's Nottingham Forrest to win their only European cup title in their history.



Unfortunately, the season after, Tomislav Ivic would leave for the ambitious project at RC Paris in France, and Hajduk's move to the Poljud Stadium would end up putting a curse on them for the rest of the decade. The one shining beacon were cup wins in 1984 and 1987, as was the 1983-1984 UEFA Cup run, where they defeated Tottenham Hotspurs in the semi-final, but alas, Brian Clough would avenge the 1980 European cup final defeat in the final, with John Metgod scoring a thunderous game-winning free kick for Nottingham.

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The curse would be broken in 1990-1991, where the club won the Yugoslav cup and reached the semis of the cup winners cup the following season, losing to Wenger's Monaco, then in 1992-1993, where Hajduk won their first league title in 14 years, led by future Lazio star Alen Boksic and the defense of Igor Stimac and Slaven Bilic. it would be followed by two successive league titles, including their second ever domestic double in 1994-1995. Some cups and one more league title in 2000-2001 followed before the club would enter a tailspin, as financial mismanagement by the owners brought the club almost to the brink of bankruptcy, wherenot from significant donations from both the city of split, the club's fans and former players.

Hajduk survived, but would endure a long rebuilding process, as their fellow big 4 rivals Jugoslavia Belgrade, BSK Belgrade and especially their fierce rivals Gradanski Zagreb gain higher grounds in the Balkans, with even Concordia Zagreb achieving notable success in recent years.

But now, under the returning former player Slaven Bilic, Hajduk has been climbing back to the top step by step, winning back to back Balkans cups in 2022 and 2023 with a young squad that looks extremely promising, as evidenced by their unexpected run to the semi-finals of the 2022-2023 Cup Winners Cup, where they lost to eventual champions Chelsea.


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Wait how does that the Balkan League work, would it be just be like the Yugoslav League in OTL but going to the present day?
 
Wait how does that the Balkan League work, would it be just be like the Yugoslav League in OTL but going to the present day?
Well, the way i thought about it (along with discussing it with Arupinium on discord) is that the balkan nations would have their own national teams like IRL, but that the clubs would still be competing in one league pyramid, but since Yugoslavia doesn't exist anymore, then it's just the Balkans Premier League.

It's basically inspired by the ABA basketball league:

 
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