1973–74 in Belgian football
The 1973–1974 season was the 71st season of competitive football in Belgium. RSC Anderlechtois won their 16th Division I title.[1] KSV Waregem won the Belgian Cup against second division club KSK Tongeren (4-1).[2] The Belgium national football team finished their 1974 FIFA World Cup qualification campaign at the second place of their group behind the Netherlands, with the same number of points but a smaller goal difference.[3] They thus did not qualify for the 1974 FIFA World Cup finals in West Germany. The Belgian Women's First Division was won by R Saint-Nicolas FC Liège.
Overview
Belgium continued their qualifying campaign for the 1974 FIFA World Cup with a win over Norway and a draw against the Netherlands. They thus finished the qualifications with 10 points, level with the Netherlands. However, since the Netherlands had scored 24 goals for only 2 goals conceded, and Belgium had scored 12 goals (for 0 goals conceded), the Netherlands qualified for the World Cup finals instead of Belgium.
At the end of the season, the number of teams in Division I was increased from 16 to 20, and the Royal Belgian Football Association introduced the Belgian Second Division Final Round, a double round-robin tournament contested by 4 teams, the top 2 of which would qualify for the next season Division I. The bottom 2 teams of Division I (K Lierse SK and K Sint-Truidense VV) as well as the 4th and 5th-placed teams in Division II (KAS Eupen and KFC Winterslag) were invited to play this final round.[4] K Lierse SK and KFC Winterslag finished respectively 1st and 2nd and qualified for the Division I, together with the top 3 teams in Division II (ROC de Montignies-sur-Sambre, ASV Oostende KM and KSC Lokeren) as well as R Charleroi SC (13th-placed team). The bottom 2 teams of the final round were relegated to Division II (K Sint-Truidense VV and KAS Eupen).
The last club in Division II (KAA Gent) was relegated to Division III, to be replaced by both Division III winners and runners-up as well as one of the two 3rd-placed teams (K Waterschei SV Thor Genk, VG Oostende, R Tilleur FC, R Albert Elisabeth Club Mons and RAA Louviéroise).
The bottom club of each Division III league (AS Herstalienne, RCS Verviétois, R Dinant FC and RCS La Forestoise) were relegated to the Promotion, to be replaced by the winner and runner-up of each Promotion league (K Stade Leuven, VC Rotselaar, CS Andennais, RJS Bas-Oha, KAV Dendermonde, K Willebroekse SV, K Zonhoven VV and KFC Verbroedering Geel).
National team
Date | Venue | Opponents | Score[5] | Comp | Belgium scorers |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
October 31, 1973 | Stade Emile Versé, Brussels (H) | Norway | 2-0 | WCQ | Léon Dolmans, Raoul Lambert |
November 18, 1973 | Olympic Stadium, Amsterdam (A) | Netherlands | 0-0 | WCQ | |
March 13, 1974 | Friedrich-Ludwig-Jahn-Sportpark, Berlin (A) | East Germany | 0-1 | F | |
April 17, 1974 | Stade de Sclessin, Liège (H) | Poland | 1-1 | F | Wilfried Van Moer |
May 1, 1974 | Charmilles Stadium, Genève (A) | Switzerland | 1-0 | F | |
June 1, 1974 | Klokke Stadion, Bruges (H) | Scotland | 2-1 | F | Roger Henrotay, Raoul Lambert |
Key
- H = Home match
- A = Away match
- N = On neutral ground
- F = Friendly
- WCQ = World Cup qualification
- o.g. = own goal
European competitions
Club Brugge KV beat Floriana FC of Malta in the first round of the 1973–74 European Champion Clubs' Cup (won 8-0 at home, 2-0 away) but lost in the second round to FC Basel of Switzerland (won 2-1 at home, lost 4-6 away).
RSC Anderlechtois lost in the first round of the 1973–74 European Cup Winners' Cup to FC Zürich of Switzerland on away goals (won 3-2 at home, lost 0-1 away).
The following clubs qualified to play the 1973–74 UEFA Cup: Standard Club Liégeois (2nd-placed in the championship), R White Daring Molenbeek (3rd) and K Beerschot VAV (4th).
In the first round, Standard beat Ards FC of Northern Ireland (lost 2-3 away, won 6-1 at home) and RWDM beat RCD Espanyol of Spain (won 3-0 away, lost 1-2 at home), but K Beerschot VAV lost to Vitoria FC of Portugal (lost both legs 0-2).
In the second round, Standard beat FC Universitatea Craiova of Romania (won 2-0 at home, drew 1-1 away) but RWDM lost to Vitoria FC on away goals (lost 0-1 away, won 2-1 at home).
Standard were finally eliminated by Feyenoord Rotterdam of the Netherlands in the third round on away goals (won 3-1 at home, lost 0-2 away).
Honours
Competition | Winner |
---|---|
Division I | RSC Anderlechtois |
Cup | KSV Waregem |
Women Division I | R Saint-Nicolas FC Liège |
Division II | ROC de Montignies-sur-Sambre |
Division III | K Waterschei SV Thor Genk and VG Oostende |
Promotion | K Stade Leuven, CS Andennais, KAV Dendermonde and K Zonhoven VV |
Final league tables
Division I
- 1973-74 Top scorer: Hungarian Attila Ladynski (RSC Anderlechtois) with 22 goals[6]
- 1973 Golden Shoe: Maurice Martens (RR White - R White Daring Molenbeek)[7]
References
- ↑ http://www.footbel.com/documents/COMPETITIES/Eindklassementen/S1973-1974FR.pdf FA website
- ↑ http://www.footbel.com/fr/Competitites/statistieken/bekerfinales/heren_2.html FA Website
- ↑ http://www.footbel.com/fr/nationale_elftallen/statistieken_1/per_datum.html FA website
- ↑ "Archived copy". Archived from the original on 2011-05-14. Retrieved 2010-10-20. RSSSF Archive
- ↑ Belgium score given first
- ↑ http://www.footbel.com/fr/Competitites/statistieken/topschutters.html FA Website
- ↑ http://www.footbel.com/fr/Competitites/statistieken/gouden_schoen.html FA Website