FC DAC 1904 is a Slovak professional football club based in Dunajská Streda which competes in the Slovak First Football League. In the 2007âÂÂ08 season, they were the west group champions of the Slovak Third League. In the 2008âÂÂ09 season, after merging with FC Senec, they entered the top division. The club is strongly associated with and supported by the Hungarian minority in Slovakia.
The first organized sports club in Dunajská Streda (then Dunaszerdahely, Hungary), the Dunaszerdahelyi Atlétikai Club (Dunajská Streda Athletic Club (DAC)), was founded in 1904. At the time, football was a popular sport. The club survived both world wars and continued to 1953 when the team won the Bratislava district one A grade premiership. In 1968 and 1969, the team advanced in the Western Division of the third league before returning to the regional competition. In the 1977 to 1978 season, the team again entered the third league coming sixth. In the 1978 to 1979 competition, the team came seventh. In the 1979 to 1980 season, the team won their division and was promoted to the Slovak National League (SNL 1 â second level). DAC finally promoted to Czechoslovak First League in 1984âÂÂ85 season. DAC was 3rd at this league in 1987âÂÂ88 season and 4th in 1990âÂÂ91 and 1992âÂÂ93 seasons. They finished Slovak Superliga as 3rd in 1993âÂÂ94 season. But, their form was lowered after this season and relegated to second level in 1997âÂÂ98 season. They immediately returned to top level but relegated again in 1999âÂÂ00 season. They relegated to 3rd level in 2006âÂÂ07 season. They immediately returned to 2nd level but relegated again in 2008âÂÂ09 season. They made successively two promotions and returned to top level in 2013. Since 2013, DAC has been affiliated with à  K Senec. In 1987, DAC were the Slovak Cup (Slovenský Pohár) and Czechoslovak Cup (ÃÂeskoslovenský Pohár) winners.
In 2025, UEFA did not let the club to compete in the 2025âÂÂ26 UEFA Conference League since one owner can have only one club in the competition. Világi, the club owner in 2025, had two clubs in the competition due to Gyà Âr's qualification in the 2024âÂÂ25 Nemzeti Bajnokság I. On 1 July 2025, Világi said that the UEFA's decision is not righteous, therefore, the club will turn to Court of Arbitration for Sport CAS.
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In the 1980âÂÂ81 season, the team came eleventh. In the 1981âÂÂ82 season, 26,089 attended games. The team won 15 games, lost 11 games and drew in 4 games. In the 1982âÂÂ83 season, the team's star player Juraj Szikora could not participate in the competition. The team came second, four points behind the premier team, Banská Bystrica. In the 1983âÂÂ84 season, the team came second, four points behind Petrà ¾alka. 8,136 patrons attended a home game where the team beat Petrà ¾alka three points to zero. scored twenty-two points becoming the highest goal scorer of the League for that season. In the 1984âÂÂ85 season, Karol Pecze coached the team. 10,000 patrons attended the last home gain against Nitra. Ladislav Tóth again scored twenty-two points and won the golden shoe. In the 1985âÂÂ86 season, the team made its debut in the Czechoslovak First League. The team reaches the quarter-finals and comes eleventh. In the 1986âÂÂ87 season, the team came fourth in the Slovak League. They won both the Slovak and the Czechoslovak cups. In the 1987 to 1988 season, the team entered the European Cup. In the preliminary round, DAC had two wins against AEL Limassol (Cyprus),1âÂÂ0 and 5âÂÂ1. The team's campaign ended in the first round with a defeat to Young Boys Bern (2âÂÂ1 and 1âÂÂ3). In the Slovak national league, the team came third. In the 1988âÂÂ89 season, the team had a 6âÂÂ0 victory over ÃÂster of Sweden in the first round of the UEFA Cup. In the second round, the team played Bayern Munich. 15,572 patrons attended that game. The team came sixth in the Slovak league. In the 1989âÂÂ90 season, Anton DragÃºà  led the team to fourteenth place.
In the 1990âÂÂ91 season, Juraj Szikora coached the team and they came fourth. In the 1991âÂÂ92 season, the team won the Intertoto Cup in group eight. After twelve days, Szikora was replaced by VladimÃÂr Hrivnák. The team came ninth. In the 1992âÂÂ93 season, the last year of the Slovak national league, the team was coached by Duà ¡an Radolský. In the 1993âÂÂ94 season, the first year of the Slovak League, the team, coached by Ladislav à  korpil scores 62 times and comes third. Pavol Dià Âa is the top scorer with 19 goals. In the UEFA Cup, DAC played Casino Salzburg who defeat them twice with a score zero to two in the first round. In the 1994âÂÂ95 season, with coach Jozef ValoviÃÂ, the team comes fourth. In the 1995âÂÂ96 season, four coaches: Jozef ValoviÃÂ, Anton Grajcár, Juraj Szikora, and Jozef Adamec, led the team to tenth place from a field of twelve. In the 1996âÂÂ97 season, the team, coached by Jozef Adamec came fourteenth out of sixteen. In the 1997âÂÂ98 season, after thirteen years, DAC fell from the Slovak League. Ladislav à  korpil and Duà ¡an Liba coached the team which won five games of thirty and came last out of sixteen teams. In the 1998âÂÂ99 season, VladimÃÂr Rusnák coached the team and they won the second league. In the 1990âÂÂ00 season, the first league was reorganized. DAC cam fourteenth in the first league and was relegated to the second league again. The coaches in this season were Viliam Ilko, Anton Grajcár, and Ladislav Kuna.
In the 2000âÂÂ01 season, DAC was coached by Ladislav Kuna and came fifth in the second league. In 2001âÂÂ02, the coach, Ladislav Hudec, was replaced after nine rounds by Juraj Szikora. The team came ninth in the second league. In the 2002âÂÂ03 season, Tibor Szaban coached the team. After half the rounds, the team was three points from dropping to a lower league. Szaban was then replaced by Milan Albrecht. DAC won the next ten games and came eighth. In 2003âÂÂ04, Juraj Szikora and Duà ¡an Liba were the coaches. The team won nine of fifteen games. At this point, the team was engaged by Iranian sponsors. Robert Pflug became the coach and the team won thirty points. The 2004âÂÂ05 season begins with à  tefan Horný. After fifteen rounds he is replaced by Peter Fieber who was once a player in the team. DAC came eighth. The best game was against Slovan in front of 2,890 fans where DAC won two points to zero. In 2005âÂÂ06, the Slovak League was again reorganized and DAC dropped from the second league. A series of five coaches (Ladislav Kuna, Peter Fieber, Anton Grajcár, à  tefan Zaà ¥ko, and Tibor MiÃÂinec) allowed the team twelfth place in their competition. In the 2006âÂÂ07 season, the first Slovak League was renamed the Corgoà  Liga and the second league became the first league in which DAC played the season. Milan Albrecht coaches for rounds one to six and then is replaced by Robert Pflug. In 2007âÂÂ08, DAC won the second league competition (2. liga) but this was not a nationwide competition. The coaches were Tibor Meszlényi, Peter Fieber and assistant Július à  imon.
FC DAC 1904 Dunajská Streda is a football club based in southern Slovakia near the Hungarian border, in a town with a historically large ethnic Hungarian population. The clubâÂÂs supporters, known as YBS (Yellow Blue Supporters), are closely associated with this Hungarian identity. They typically display banners stating "Dunaszerdahely," the Hungarian name of the town, and sing in Hungarian, including the Hungarian national anthem, Himnusz, or the song Nélküled, often performed before kick-off. The Hungarian tricolour is regularly displayed in the stands of the MOL Aréna. YBS exclude Slovak members and have maintained friendly relations with fans of Ferencváros TC, while their main domestic rivals are Slovan Bratislava and Spartak Trnava.
These cultural expressions have occasionally led to clashes with other Slovak clubs and attracted the attention of nationalist politicians. In 2019, Slovak National Party MP Duà ¡an Tittel promoted legislation making it an offence to sing foreign national anthems, explicitly referencing DAC fans' singing of the Hungarian anthem. Club president Oszkár Világi and spokesman Krisztián Nagy affirmed that the club would continue to support these customs, even if fines were imposed. During a 12 April 2025 match against DAC, Slovan Bratislava fans displayed overtly nationalist and anti-Hungarian behaviour. They unfurled a banner depicting a balaclava-clad Slovan ultra "teaching a lesson" to children wearing DAC and Ferencvárosi TC kits, accompanied by a blackboard and inscriptions mocking Hungary and asserting Slovak dominance. Anti-Hungarian chants were a constant feature, and the timing of the match coincided with a historic date commemorating the deportation of ethnic Hungarians from Slovakia in 1947. After the match, DAC released a trilingual statement condemning the Slovan fans' tifo as inappropriate, offensive, and divisive, noting that it targeted ethnic, cultural, and national identities. The club affirmed that while rivalry is part of football, mocking identity or ethnicity is unacceptable. DAC announced it would file an official complaint with the Slovak Football Association and urged all stakeholders to consider the values promoted in Slovak football, emphasising that exclusion has no place in the modern game. The statement included the hashtag #HungarianNotForeign, a hashtag supporting the position of ethnic Hungarians as a part of Slovak society.
The club has benefited from financial backing linked to Hungary, including infrastructural support and strategic partnerships with Hungarian companies, most prominently MOL. Owner Oszkár Világi, a local businessman with close ties to the Hungarian government and Viktor Orbán, has overseen the development of the clubâÂÂs facilities, including the MOL Arena and a modern youth academy, while maintaining a trilingual and internationally diverse playing and technical staff.
The following club is affiliated with DAC:
Slovakia
Czechoslovakia
DAC have produced numerous players who have gone on to represent the Slovak national football team. Over the last periods there has been a steady increase of young players leaving Dunajská Streda after a few years of first team football and moving on to play football in leagues of a higher standard, with the German Bundesliga (András Schäfer to Union Berlin in 2022), Czech First League (Tibor JanÃÂula to à ½ià ¾kov in 1993, Léonard Kweuke to Sparta in 2010, Dzon Delarge to Liberec in 2012, Erik PaÃÂinda to Plzeà  in 2019), Danish Superliga (Pavol à  afranko to Aalborg in 2017, Marko Divkoviàto Brøndby IF in 2022), Austrian Bundesliga (Ján Novota to Rapid Wien in 2011), Polish Ekstraklasa (TomÃ¡à ¡ Huk (2019) and Kristopher Vida (2020) to Piast Gliwice, ýubomÃÂr à  atka to Lech Poznaà  in 2019), American Major League Soccer (Matej Oravec to Philadelphia Union in 2020), Scottish Premiership (Vakoun Issouf Bayo to Celtic F.C. in 2019). The top transfer was agreed in 2023 when forward Nikola Krstoviàjoined Italian US Lecce for a fee of â¬4.5 million. + additional â¬3.6million from his next transfer to Atalanta BC in 2025.
<small>*-unofficial fee</small>
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Slovak League only (1993âÂÂpresent)
<sup>1</sup> Deducted six points at the end of the season due to match-fixing.
For recent transfers, see List of Slovak football transfers summer 2025
<big>12</big> â The 12th man (reserved for the club supporters)
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Players whose name is listed in bold are still active.
Slovak League Top scorer since 1993âÂÂ94
Had international caps for their respective countries. Players whose name is listed in bold represented their countries while playing for DAC.