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Baltic Cup (football)

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Football tournament held between the national teams of Baltic states
This article is about the men's association football tournament. For the women's tournament, seeWomen's Baltic Cup.
Football tournament
Baltic Cup
Founded1928
RegionBaltic (UEFA)
Teams3
(+ possible guests)
Current champions Estonia
(5th title)
Most championships Latvia
(13 titles)
2024 Baltic Cup

TheBaltic Cup (Estonian:Balti turniir,Latvian:Baltijas kauss,Lithuanian:Baltijos taurė) is an internationalfootball competition contested by the national teams of theBaltic statesEstonia,Latvia andLithuania. Sometimes guests from theNorthern Europe subregion are also invited:Finland has participated in the event twice,Iceland once, andFaroe Islands made a debut appearance in 2024. Though originally held annually, the competition has beenbiennial since 2008.

It is one of the oldest national teams football tournaments in Europe after theBritish Home Championship, and the oldest of the ones still organized.[1][2]

History

[edit]

As Estonia had unofficially declared itself the Baltic football champion in 1925, 1926 and 1927 based on matches played with Finland, Latvia, Lithuania andPoland it was decided in 1928 to organize an official tournament. Though Poland and Finland were invited to join, the tournament took place between the three Baltic nations.[3]

The tournament was intended to improve relations between the nations, but intrigues around the organization and budget questions worked against this goal. The hosts always did everything to wear out their competitors. In1933 Lithuanian hosts surprised the officials with a tour to a local brewery inKaunas in the morning before the Lithuania–Latvia match. The Estonian newspaperPäevaleht reported that the Finnish referee for the match was really jolly, but did a horrible job, mostly favouring the Lithuanian hosts. The rules demanded that at least two wins were necessary to win the championship. Both the Lithuania–Estonia and Lithuania–Latvia matches had been drawn, but stopped due to darkness and a lack of artificial lighting.

In the team meeting Latvia demanded that the Lithuania–Estonia match should be re-played first. Latvia was hoping for an advantage against a tired Lithuanian team in their match. Lithuania and Estonia disagreed, noting that Latvia had won their match against Estonia, so a Latvian win against Lithuania would grant the Latvians the championship and end the tournament. Consensus was not reached and the Latvian team left the same day. The championship was not awarded.[3][4]

The feud led to the cancellation of the 1934 tournament, but the championship returned for the1935. The rules were changed so that extra matches were now only held between leading teams if they were necessary for deciding on the championship.[5] In 2021, for the 2020 Baltic Cup, Estonia won the Cup after a wait of 83 years.[6]

During theSoviet occupation of the Baltic states, the Baltic Cup took place in 1940 and from 1948 to 1976 (with cancelled editions in 1951, 1953 to 1956 and 1963 to 1968) as a minor regional tournament between theEstonian,Latvian andLithuanian SSRs, with occasional appearances by theBelarusian SSR. In 1991, the tournament was fully restored to the format as it was in the 1930s.

The 2020 tournament was postponed due toCOVID-19 pandemic, and took place in 2021, similarly toUEFA Euro 2020.

The trophy

[edit]

The original silver trophy of the Baltic Cup was seized by the Soviets in 1940 and subsequently lost after reportedly being taken toMoscow.[7] A replica trophy was created in 1991 by Latvian sculptor Indulis Urbāns.[8] It depicts three footballers, representing the three Baltic nations, holding a football on their shoulders akin toAtlas.[9][10][6] However, in recent editions, e.g. 2022 and in the 2000s, the trophies awarded were of various different shapes.[2]

Results

[edit]
YearHost citiesChampionsRunners-upThird placeFourth place
1928EstoniaTallinn Latvia Estonia Lithuania
1929LatviaRiga Estonia Latvia Lithuania
1930LithuaniaKaunas Lithuania Latvia Estonia
1931EstoniaTallinn Estonia (2) Latvia Lithuania
1932LatviaRiga Latvia (2) Lithuania Estonia
1933LithuaniaKaunasChampion undecided due to disagreements over match times.
1934Not held due to disagreements over the 1933 competition.
1935EstoniaTallinn Lithuania (2) Latvia Estonia
1936LatviaRiga Latvia (3) Estonia Lithuania
1937LithuaniaKaunas Latvia (4) Estonia Lithuania
1938EstoniaTallinn Estonia (3) Latvia Lithuania
1939Not held due to strained sporting relations between Latvia and Lithuania afterEuroBasket 1939.
1940–1990Not held, similar tournament occasionally held duringSoviet occupation/annexation of the Baltic states
1991LithuaniaKlaipėda
LithuaniaKretinga
 Lithuania (3) Latvia Estonia
1992LatviaLiepāja Lithuania (4) Latvia Estonia
1993EstoniaPärnu Latvia (5) Estonia Lithuania
1994LithuaniaVilnius Lithuania (5) Latvia Estonia
1995LatviaRiga Latvia (6) Lithuania Estonia
1996EstoniaNarva Lithuania (6) Estonia Latvia
1997LithuaniaVilnius Lithuania (7) Latvia Estonia
1998LatviaLiepāja
EstoniaValga
EstoniaViljandi
 Lithuania (8) Latvia Estonia
2001LatviaRiga Latvia (7) Lithuania Estonia
2003EstoniaTallinn
EstoniaValga
 Latvia (8) Lithuania Estonia
2005LithuaniaKaunas Lithuania (9) LatviaEstonia did not participate due to scheduling conflicts.[11]
2008LatviaJūrmala
LatviaRiga
 Latvia (9) Lithuania Estonia
2010LithuaniaKaunas Lithuania (10) Latvia Estonia
2012EstoniaTartu
EstoniaVõru
 Latvia (10) Finland Estonia Lithuania
2014LatviaVentspils
LatviaLiepāja
 Latvia (11) Lithuania Finland Estonia
2016LithuaniaKlaipėda
LatviaLiepāja
EstoniaTallinn
 Latvia (12) Lithuania Estonia
2018EstoniaRakvere
LatviaRiga
LithuaniaVilnius
 Latvia (13) Estonia Lithuania
2020LithuaniaVilnius
LatviaRiga
EstoniaTallinn
 Estonia (4) Latvia Lithuania
2022LatviaRiga
LithuaniaKaunas
EstoniaTallinn
 Iceland (1) Latvia Estonia Lithuania
2024LatviaLiepāja
EstoniaTallinn
LithuaniaKaunas
 Estonia (5) Lithuania Latvia Faroe Islands

Medal summary

[edit]
As of 2024, excluding 1933.[12]
RankNationGoldSilverBronzeTotal
1 Latvia1314229
2 Lithuania108927
3 Estonia561627
4 Iceland1001
5 Finland0112
Totals (5 entries)29292886

Statistics

[edit]
As of 2024. Including the 1933 tournament, but excluding the replay match played on 5 September 1933.
RankTeamAppsPldWDLGFGAGDPts
1 Latvia3059302099252+40110
2 Lithuania30592014257995−1674
3 Estonia29581415296587−2257
4 Finland2421153+27
5 Iceland120201102
6 Faroe Islands1200215−40

Top scorers per tournament

[edit]
TournamentNameTeamGoals
1928Arnold Pihlak Estonia3
1929Voldemārs Plade Latvia3
Eugen Einman Estonia
Eduard Ellman-Eelma Estonia
1930Ēriks Pētersons Latvia4
1931Friedrich Karm Estonia2
Eduard Ellman-Eelma Estonia
1932Alberts Šeibelis Latvia2
1933Ēriks Pētersons Latvia2
1935Iļja Vestermans Latvia2
Antanas Lingis Lithuania
1936Alberts Šeibelis Latvia2
1937Iļja Vestermans Latvia3
1938Ralf Veidemann Estonia2
19919 different players1
1992Virginijus Baltušnikas Lithuania3
19935 different players1
1994Valdas Ivanauskas Lithuania2
199511 different players1
19967 different players1
19977 different players1
19984 different players1
2001Marians Pahars Latvia2
Vladimirs Koļesņičenko Latvia
20039 different players1
2005Igoris Morinas Lithuania2
20084 different players1
2010Mantas Savėnas Lithuania1
Artūras Rimkevičius Lithuania
2012Edgars Gauračs Latvia3
20144 different players1
2016Fiodor Černych Lithuania2
20185 different players1
2020Mattias Käit Estonia2
2022Sergei Zenjov Estonia2
202410 different players1

All-time top goalscorers

[edit]
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RankNameTeamGoalsTournament(s)
1Ēriks Pētersons Latvia91930(4), 1931(1), 1932(1), 1933(2) and 1935(1)
2Antanas Lingis Lithuania61930(2), 1932(1), 1933(1) and 1935(2)
Eduard Ellman-Eelma Estonia1929(3), 1931(2) and 1935(1)
Iļja Vestermans Latvia1935(2), 1936(1) and 1937(3)
5Alberts Šeibelis Latvia51932(2), 1933(1) and 1936(2)
6Arnold Pihlak Estonia41928(3) and 1929(1)
Eugen Einman Estonia1929(3) and 1930(1)
Friedrich Karm Estonia1930(2) and 1931(2)
Jaroslavas Citavičius Lithuania1930(2), 1932 (1) and 1933(1)
Virginijus Baltušnikas Lithuania1992(3) and 1995(1)
Marians Pahars Latvia1997(1), 1998(1) and 2001(2)
Igoris Morinas Lithuania1997(1), 2003(1) and 2005(2)
13Voldemārs Plade Latvia31929(3)
Stepas Chmelevskis Lithuania1928(2) and 1930(1)
Georg Siimenson Estonia1936(1) and 1937(2)
Richard Kuremaa Estonia1933(1), 1936(1) and 1937(1)
Voldemaras Jaškevičius Lithuania1935(1), 1936(1) and 1938(1)
Vitālijs Astafjevs Latvia1993(1), 1994(1) and 1995(1)
Edgars Gauračs Latvia2012(3)
Mattias Käit Estonia2018(1) and 2020(2)

Hat-tricks

[edit]

Since the first official tournament in1928, 4 hat-tricks have been scored in over 50 matches of the 28 editions of the tournament. The first hat-trick was scored byArnold Pihlak of theEstonia, playing againstLithuania on 26 July1928; and the last was byVirginijus Baltušnikas ofLithuania, playing againstLatvia on 12 July1992. No player has ever scored two hat-tricks in the Baltic Cup and no player has ever scored more than 3 goals in a single Baltic Cup match.

List

[edit]
Baltic Cup hat-tricks
#PlayerGTime of goalsForResultAgainstTournamentDateFIFA
report
1.Arnold Pihlak31', 21', 57' Estonia6–0 Lithuania1928 Baltic Cup26 July 1928Report
2.Voldemārs Plade351', 68', 86' Latvia3–1 Lithuania1929 Baltic Cup14 August 1929Report
3.Ēriks Pētersons337', 61', 64' Latvia3–3 Lithuania1930 Baltic Cup17 August 1930Report
4.Virginijus Baltušnikas328', 31', 79' Lithuania3–2 Latvia1992 Baltic Cup12 July 1992Report

Other competitions

[edit]
CompetitionEditionChampionsRunners-upNext edition
National teams (Men's)
Baltic Cup2024 Estonia Lithuania2027
Under-21 Baltic CupEstonia 2024[13] Latvia Estonia2026
Under-19 Baltic CupEstonia 2025[14] Latvia LithuaniaTBD
Under-17 Baltic CupEstonia 2025[15] Latvia FinlandTBD
Baltic Futsal CupLatvia 2021[16] Lithuania LatviaTBD
Baltic–Nordic Futsal CupDenmark 2023[17] Denmark LatviaTBD
National teams (Women's)
Women's Baltic CupLithuania 2025[18] Latvia LithuaniaTBD
Women's Under-19 Baltic CupLithuania 2025[19] Lithuania LatviaTBD
Women's Under-17 Baltic CupLithuania 2025[20] Lithuania Latvia2026 June
Women's Under-15 Baltic CupLatvia 2025[21] Estonia LatviaTBD

See also

[edit]

References

[edit]
  1. ^"Eiropas vecākā starptautiskā futbola turnīra vēstures līkloči un ceļš pretim jaunai atzinībai".Latvijas futbols. Maijs 2014. Latvijas Futbola federācija. 2014-05-20. Archived fromthe original on 2016-06-10. Retrieved2014-05-26.
  2. ^abDaly, Rhys (2022-11-19)."Europe's oldest international football trophy finished just day before Qatar World Cup - Daily Star".dailystar.co.uk. Retrieved2024-06-29.
  3. ^ab"Eesti välispoliitika Balti suund 1926–1934"(PDF). University of Tartu.Archived(PDF) from the original on 21 December 2019. Retrieved30 May 2018.
  4. ^"Balti turniir lõppes fiaskoga".dea.digar.ee. Maa Hääl. 6 September 1933.Archived from the original on 21 December 2019. Retrieved30 May 2018.
  5. ^Allika, Andrus."Vilniuses algas Balti turniir". Õhtuleht.Archived from the original on 21 December 2019. Retrieved3 June 2018.
  6. ^ab"Estonia lifts Baltic Cup trophy after 83-year wait".ERR.ee. 2021-06-11. Retrieved2024-06-29.
  7. ^Vaiders, Arturs (2014-06-02)."Arturs Vaiders: Pirmie čaļi ciemā jeb nevainosim Paharu".lsm.lv (in Latvian). Retrieved2024-06-29.Baltijas kausa trofeja ir atjaunota tās agrākajā izskatā. Oriģināls visdrīzāk ir kāda čekista pēcteča privātajā kolekcijā Maskavā vai kaut kur citur Krievijā. [The trophy of the Baltic Cup has been restored in its original appearance. The original, most likely, is in the private Moscow collection of some Cheka worker's offspring or somewhere else in Russia.]
  8. ^"Mūžībā devies metālmākslinieks Indulis Urbāns" [Metal sculptor Indulis Urbāns has died].lsm.lv (in Latvian). 2024-03-28. Retrieved2024-06-29.
  9. ^Critchlow, Dan (2021-06-11)."Arsenal 19-year-old Karl Hein wins Baltic Cup". Retrieved2024-06-29.
  10. ^"Knattspyrnusambandið on X: "Baltic Cup final on Saturday. Daugava Stadium, Riga. 🇱🇻⚽️🇮🇸 The trophy.👇 "".X. 2022-11-18.
  11. ^"EJL tegi ettepaneku uuendusteks Balti turniiril". Eesti Päevaleht.Archived from the original on 12 April 2019. Retrieved3 June 2018.
  12. ^"Baltic Cup Overview in rsssf.com".almis.sritis.lt.Archived from the original on 1 June 2019. Retrieved4 June 2018.
  13. ^"Turniir".
  14. ^"Turniir".
  15. ^"Turniir".
  16. ^"Turniir".
  17. ^"FutsalPlanet News".
  18. ^"Turniir".
  19. ^"Turniir".
  20. ^"Turniir".
  21. ^"Turniir".

External links

[edit]
Links to related articles
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