this post was submitted on 13 Nov 2023
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This Thursday, Bulgaria is supposed to host the Euro 2024 qualification game against Hungary. A vital one for Hungary, as they have still not solidified their spot in the euros, and a first test for new Bulgarian coach Ilian Iliev. It was originally supposed to take place in Sofia, however it is as of now entirely uncertain where the match will take place, or whether it will take place at all. Entirely at fault here is the Bulgarian football union (BFS) in their reaction to a situation, developed mosty over the past month (though a result of horrible mismanagement over the past 18 years). In this post, I will do my best to summarize what happened leading up to this scandal.

14th Oct 2023:

Bulgaria - Lithuania is plyed in Sofia. After a 1-1 draw in the away fixture, Bulgaria are heavy favorites at home. After Levski captain Adrian Kraev is sent off at the end of the first half, Lithuania defeats Bulgaria 0-2. This sparks outrage in the stadium and online, as this is seen by pretty much everyone, myself included, as possibly the lowest low Bulgarian football has reached (yet!). After some quite frankly embarassing interviews by the (now ex) head coach, and (current) technical director Georgi Ivanov (Levski legend), stating that things are more or less fine, discussions of the BFS's incompetence and corruption gained a lot of traction.

18th Oct 2023:

As he sees a golden opportunity, current frontrunner for new head of the BFS, (firmly against the current administration) Dimitar Berbatov (Manchester United legend) arranges an interview discussionwith Darik - a very popular Bulgarian national radio and media site. As a direct response, BFS vice president Yordan Lechkov also organizes the same, immediately after Berbatov's one. He insists on a live debate with Berbatov, but Berbatov declines. Berbatov's interview is the generic (and in this case very reasonable) "the BFS is an awful and corrupt organization and we need to uproot it". More interestingly, in Lechkov's interview, he deflects all blame on behalf of the BFS, instead opting to blame everyone else, from the state, to Bulgarian football clubs for playing foreigners over Bulgarians, to the NT players, even specifically pointing to Andrian Kraev as the reason for the loss to Lithuania. He also uttered a now very infamous phrase, roughly translating to

"Who wants us to resign?".

The question speead like wildfire throughout wildfire throughout media sites and social media.

19th Oct 2023:

Retired footballer Boyko Velichkov came out with a post on social media, suggesting that fans in every club stadium chant "resignation" at minute 18. Minute 18 is decided on, as that is how many years the BFS has been in power for.

Later in October:

Velichkov's idea is implementing, as nearly every first dicision game in Bulgaria has the chants in the 18th minute. From more populated stadiums like those of Botev Plovdiv, CAKA-Sofia and especially Levski, to the less visited ones like those in Vratsa and Pazarzhik.

An organization starts to take shape, where fans of every big club are to come together for Bulgaria - Hungary (said to take place in Sofia), sit in a specific, organized fashion to prevent violence between supporters of different teams, and explicitly tell the BFS and UEFA exactly what they think about the horrendous massacre of Bulgarian football at the hands of the BFS. The protest is specifically intended to be a peaceful one.

6th Nov 2023

The BFS announces that, due to a recommendation by UEFA, the game will be moved from the national stadium in Sofia to Hristo Botev stadium in Plovdiv and that THERE WILL BE NO HOME FANS ALLOWED. The UEFA recommendation was later confirmed to be based on an undisclosed report of the BFS with safety concerns raised. Clearly, BFS president Boby Mihailov used his very much existing power within UEFA to cause the move. Fans are very obviously outraged, but I will stop mentioning that as it is assumed from this point on.

10th Nov 2023:

The mayor of Plovdiv says that the match cannot be played in Plovdiv. Main reason for which being that the stadium is not fully built, with heavy construction being planned for the international break, as Botev Plovdiv do not play there for 3 weeks.

11th Nov 2023:

The owner of the construction firm that builds the stadium, Iliyan Filipov is interviewed by Darik, where he states that multiple people from BFS have demanded that he send a letter, claiming thag the stadium is safe to use, threatening him that failure to comply, could make it so that the BFS revokes the licences of both Plovdiv clubs. The BFS denies the allegations and "leaks" a taped phone call between their representative and Filipov, where a letter is requested, and where a revocation of the stadium's license is heavily implied.

13th Nov 2023 (today):

The municipality of Plovdiv officially comes out with a statement that the match can and will not be played in Plovdiv, due to the ingoing construction work. There is growing speculatiom, as to whether or not the game can be played at all. Boby Mihailov states that if Bulgaria ends up unable to host the game, we could get banned from all European competitions. Meanwhile, no word on moving it back to Sofia.

Darik reports on rumors of the game being moved to Karzhali (3+ hour drive from Sofia, where the Hungarian NT will land). Darik interviews the Mayor of Pazardzhik, who says that "it is 99% certain", among a bunch of obvious lies peddled to him by the BFS (the man is clearly not very knowledgable on the matter). Hungarians, who follow the situation are very unhappy about what their team would need to be put through.

As of yet, nothing is official, and the situation is developing very quickly. Even if Pazardhik is decided on to host the match, UEFA still needs to approve the decision. I will make sure to update this post with the latest unformation for those interested.

Sources: Dsport.bg and my own personal speculation, which I have attempted to make obvious when present.

If you've managed to get to the end of this post, thank you very much for the interest in the situation and our general crisis. Sadly, I do not anticipate this post getting much traction.

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[–] _mnd@alien.top 1 points 10 months ago

What's the consensus on Berbatov? If he somehow does get into power do people think he'll be able to (or at least genuinely try to) turn things around or is the expectation for more of the same just with a new face?

[–] Jane_the_analyst@alien.top 1 points 10 months ago

The whole Plovdiv stadium situation made it truly bizzare, as well as the excuses at the end "and now the evil FIFA and evil Plovdiv was it that forced us to play behind closed doors, not us..."

[–] 7screws@alien.top 1 points 10 months ago

Global football is fucking wild shit.

Also Berbatov being involved really peaked my interest

[–] SuperFaiz21@alien.top 1 points 10 months ago

Thanks OP for journaling what must have been an extremely frustrating episode of incompetence. Hoping for the best outcome for the fans.

[–] Such_Technician_501@alien.top 1 points 10 months ago

Just an observation/story. I attended Bulgaria v Ireland in Sofia in maybe 2006. I'm Irish. We loved Sofia and found people very welcoming. In fact I stayed there for a week and had a great time.

On the night of the game we were told to take a specific route to the stadium and escorted by police as the fans of the two Sofia clubs were basically beating the shit out of each other at the other side of the stadium. Then they stopped fighting and there was no trouble at the game.

[–] GeneralMatrim@alien.top 1 points 10 months ago (2 children)

I’m so invested in this now, I need updates!

[–] Siki7@alien.top 1 points 10 months ago (1 children)

It'll be held in the original stadium in Sofia, according to hungarian press. So basically back to the first plan, Sofia but closed doors.

[–] hejluxom@alien.top 1 points 10 months ago

Just wait a bit, I'm quite sure they will apply tomorrow again to change venue. 😂

[–] hejluxom@alien.top 1 points 10 months ago

Apperently Bulgarian FA applied to uefa to change the venue again, but it's 3h drive from Sofia and only has 3 star hotel, so it's not according the rules.

[–] hejluxom@alien.top 1 points 10 months ago (1 children)

Apparently the game will take place in Sofia, closed doors. 😅😂😂😂🙈 I thought there is some threat there... 😱

[–] insomnia1914@alien.top 1 points 10 months ago

Police will say now it's okay. :D

[–] insomnia1914@alien.top 1 points 10 months ago

Last update: the game will be played in Sofia at the National stadium where it was originally intended to be played. It will be behind closed doors though... The fans protest will still go ahead outside of the stadium so it will be funny on Thursday. All this re-locating for nothing.

[–] okramv@alien.top 1 points 10 months ago

Y'all getting cooked in Leskovac.

[–] Siki7@alien.top 1 points 10 months ago (1 children)

According to MLSZ (Hungarian FA), the game is moved back to Sofia, behind closed doors. Hungarian source: https://szovetseg.mlsz.hu/hir/lesz-merkozes-megis-szofiaban-lesz-a-magyar-valogatott-merkozese

[–] NumberHunter1@alien.top 1 points 10 months ago

This seems credible, nothing other than rumors in Bulgaria. I will make sure to update the post once this is official and when we have a bit more information.

[–] everynameisalreadyta@alien.top 1 points 10 months ago

As of Tuesday 13:00 they will play in Sofia with closed gates, no fans.

I´m in Germany, can anyone provide a link where I could watch the game? Would be fantastic!

[–] Bradalee@alien.top 1 points 10 months ago

Excellent post, echoing the thoughts of many that i'd love more of this type of post here.

[–] elchurroofficial@alien.top 1 points 10 months ago

The game will be played behind closed doors - source: Hungarian FA

Until now the Hungarian FA was very polite and didn't mock the Bulgarians, but they finally lost their patience:

But now, with the venue in complete chaos just a few days before the match, it has to be said in no uncertain terms: what the Bulgarian FA has been doing in recent weeks is unprecedented, totally unjustified and grossly unsportsmanlike. It is not even possible to organise a family holiday in this way, let alone an international football match with a huge stake, involving and attracting millions of people. The Bulgarian FA has put both UEFA and the Hungarian FA in an impossible situation: taking advantage of the fact that both organisations are concerned with fair play and always try to decide the question of qualification on the pitch.

This is not just ridiculous but a disgrace for the whole Bulgarian football community, fans involved.

[–] crbndr@alien.top 1 points 10 months ago

Remember the good days when both Romania and Bulgaria were 2 teams to be feared.

[–] qwazzy92@alien.top 1 points 10 months ago

Enough is enough. These clowns in the Bulgarian Football Union need to resign.

[–] pooorky@alien.top 1 points 10 months ago

Mauritius, my country has been in a similar situation for years. The people who are currently in charge are backed by the government and they are clearly using the federations funds for their own purposes and sadly nothing can be done about it. Our league was completely stopped since Covid and only restarted at the end of 2022 and ended early 2023. The new season has not even started and we dont have any official news when it will start again.. We might be the only country that plays international football (we are playing against Cameroon this Friday and we will get fucked as usual) which its leagues is currently not active..

[–] colincreevey0@alien.top 1 points 10 months ago

Good post. Thanks OP for this interesting bit.

[–] throw-away-after1@alien.top 1 points 10 months ago

Some 16 years ago I remember dreading the thought of playing Bulgaria. They had a decent NT with the likes of Berbatov and Petrov, Bojinov was still a prospect.

Now Bulgaria seems like a certain target in any group stage fixture. Not gonna lie, I hove we play Bulgaria in that stupid Nations League, as they are clearly weaker than Kosovo for example.

Eastern Europe and the Balkans seem doomed, and UEFA can't really do anything about it(nor do they wish to, as easily to corrupt federation heads can be swayed).

[–] Lost13Highway@alien.top 1 points 10 months ago

This is the quality content we rarely see here, thank you.

[–] CoolstorySteve@alien.top 1 points 10 months ago

Ayyy they finally made a decision. Will be played in Sofia.

[–] New_Archer_7539@alien.top 1 points 10 months ago

Where's this farm?! 👀

[–] PimpTheGandalf@alien.top 1 points 10 months ago

I loved those Bulgarian players from the 90’s , sad to see the state of the bulgarian football now (and that some of them are directly involved in this)

[–] gmoney160@alien.top 1 points 10 months ago

Very interesting

[–] Crazy_cat_guy_07@alien.top 1 points 10 months ago

I'm so sad to see the current state of Bulgarian football. I still remember fondly the fantastic run on the 94 WC.

I hope Berbatov can manage to turn the situation around.

[–] shotputprince@alien.top 1 points 10 months ago

Get Dimi in he'll sort it out effortlessly

[–] sandbag-1@alien.top 1 points 10 months ago (1 children)

This is mad - surely UEFA should be pressuring them more here and shouldn't have let them get this far? Insane crisis from the BFS though

[–] AdminEating_Dragon@alien.top 1 points 10 months ago

UEFA doesn't care about corruption in national federations as long as the politicians stay away from them.

They don't care enough to intervene and clean the mess of each individual country (assuming they aren't part of the corruption themselves in the first place). In multiple countries you will see people asking for UEFA to intervene against corrupt FAs, it almost never happens, because they don't think it's their problem.

The silent message they send is "you re on your own, and no visible government involvement because we re not setting this precedent".

[–] user3170@alien.top 1 points 10 months ago (2 children)

They're scum, kicked out my village's team out of the amateur divisions because they supported Berbatov... they did it to many amateur teams

[–] brainacpl@alien.top 1 points 10 months ago

This is the problem in Poland as well. It looks like fairly democratic process. Clubs designate their local representatives and they elect FA president/board/we. But at the same time, local representatives gain too much power and do whatever they can to hold power, so any reasonable change is thwarted.

[–] loreamatz00@alien.top 1 points 10 months ago

This is the lowest of lows, so sorry for all of you

[–] EvanVanNess@alien.top 1 points 10 months ago

upvoted, interesting post. wish there was more of this here.

[–] WW_Jones@alien.top 1 points 10 months ago (2 children)

Just a bit of a background why people hate the BFS:

We used to be quite decent in football between the 1950s and 1990s - we featured in the - 62, 66, 70, 74, 86, 94 and 98 WCs and had some pretty good players along the way, although during socialism most of them were not allowed to play abroad. Last big tournament we featured was Euro 2004. One year later Bobby The Wig became BFS president. And has been ever since. We haven’t produced even an average player in a decade. We have no players in any top 4 leagues. The upper half of our clubs play with 80-90% foreigners. Bobby doesn’t give a shit. In fact, he claims that BFS are doing their job perfectly and it’s the clubs fault that they don’t produce any good players. Which is false since it’s explicitly said in the BFS manifesto that youth development is their job. The league is a total joke - we have a boutique little club formed in 2010 owned by a billionaire which has won the league 12-13 times in a row because they just buy the best foreigners. Stadiums are shit.

[–] L-Freeze@alien.top 1 points 10 months ago (2 children)

We have no players in any top 4 leagues. The upper half of our clubs play with 80-90% foreigners.

That’s madness, how does that even happen? Completely neglecting youth football can only do so much harm, that sounds like straight up sabotage

[–] WW_Jones@alien.top 1 points 10 months ago

Well, youth football is hard and costs money to do it properly. You need good coaches, infrastructure investment, etc, just for a product to maybe happen in 7-8 years. If you're a club owner, it's much easier and faster to just get ready foreign products, usually on free, and hope to sell them abroad for small profit. That's the business model for most clubs. They don't want that changed, therefore they elect The Wig every 4 years, knowing that he won't pressure them to do anything (methodology, investment).

Like, don't get me wrong, FANS hate Bobby, but club owners (mostly) LOVE him. He just lets them do whatever they want.

[–] Gordzulax@alien.top 1 points 10 months ago

The owners of most big bulgarian clubs (apart from Ludogorets - aka the billionaire club) tend to scout free agent foreigners and bring them in by the dozen.

The script they all follow is standard by now: bring in foreigner for no money, hope he does well, sell him in a season or two for profit, rinse and repeat. Because of this, clubs never really improve, because even if one of them has a good season, chances are by the next season they will sell half of their team and replace them with new free agents.

This basically means very few youth players make it into the starting 11's. Also because of the way the BFS has managed our football for the past 20 years, the youth systems are completely fucked as well. You can walk into any age group of a big clubs youth system and it's almost guaranteed you'll see at least 3-4 kids in the starting 11 who are absolutely shit, but they're playing because their parents are paying.

[–] jetteauloin_2080@alien.top 1 points 10 months ago (1 children)

To this day, french people (maybe not the younger generation :X )still remember the trauma of the elimination in the 94 qualifiers against Bulgaria and the 2 goals Kostadinov scored.

[–] WW_Jones@alien.top 1 points 10 months ago (2 children)

Kostadinov, who the whole nation used to adore because of these 2 goals, is BFS vice president. Now everyone hates him.

[–] jetteauloin_2080@alien.top 1 points 10 months ago

Ah I see, the Platini of Bulgaria

[–] Crazy_cat_guy_07@alien.top 1 points 10 months ago (1 children)

Oh, damn. He was one of my favourites from that team. :(

[–] chachakhan@alien.top 1 points 10 months ago

Unrelated to the post, I just found myself frustratingly trying to get the goddamn hair of my screen.

Nice one.

[–] FerraristDX@alien.top 1 points 10 months ago

All I wonder is, why? What is the endgame of the guys currently running BFS? Power? But what value does it have when the thing they have power over keeps losing value and gets smaller and smaller?

[–] AlmostNL@alien.top 1 points 10 months ago

Do y'all only have one suitable venue to host a NT game?

Now I don't know what you need for that, and also how the city would handle such a thing but is Sofia the only place? The fact they wanted to host it at a stadium under construction is fucking wild.

[–] ibrahimtuna0012@alien.top 1 points 10 months ago

This is an actual crisis caused by the Bulgarian FA and they definitely have to pay for it.

[–] holyjesusitsahorse@alien.top 1 points 10 months ago

You had me at Berba running the FA

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