FK TSC (Serbian Cyrillic: ФК ТСЦ), commonly known as TSC, is a Serbian professional football club based in Bačka Topola. Its initial founding date in 1913 as Topolyai Sport Club makes it currently the second-oldest football club in the Serbian SuperLiga, although the club dissolved in 2003 and was reformed under its current incarnation in 2005.

History

Derby day in Subotica against Spartak in Yugoslav third league in 1978

The first football club in Bačka Topola formed in 1912, but TSC officially exists since 1913, and was founded by István Benis, who was the first president. Back then, the club was named Topolyai Sport Club. The town was part of Kingdom of Hungary, and the Austro-Hungarian Empire, and the first club sponsor was Károly Beer, who also brought the first football to the town. Soon the First World War started and after the war the region of Bačka would become part of the Kingdom of Serbs, Croats and Slovenes, renamed into Yugoslavia in 1929. In 1930, the club changed its name into Jugoslovenski Atletski Klub. In the early 1930s, the stadium where the club still plays nowadays was built. In the Second World War the club competed in the Hungarian Second League, finishing in second place in 1942.

AIK Bačka Topola in 1986

After the war the region returned to Yugoslavia, and the club was renamed Egység, and counted with Hungarian international Jenő Kalmár among its strongest reinforcements. In 1951, the club changes its name again into Topola. The club played in the Subotica regional league and later achieved promotion to the Serbian League (3rd Yugoslav tier).

In 1974, the club changed its name to FK AIK Bačka Topola. In 1980, AIK was promoted to the Yugoslav Second League, and over the next 6 years competed 5 seasons in the second highest division. In the Yugoslavian Cup competition of the season 1992–93 they entered the 1/8 finals after a win against the First League club Napredak Kruševac 2–1.

In 2003, the club under financial difficulties ceased to compete, and maintained only the youth levels. In 2005, the club merged with FK Bajša and started competing again under a new name, FK Bačka Topola. The club was the champion of the Vojvodina League North in the 2006–07 season. The club has dedicated much effort in the youth squads archiving titles in several levels. The club finished the 2010–11 season in second place, and won the relegation game for the Third League. In 2013, the official name was changed to FK TSC Bačka Topola. On 15 October 2013, the club's anniversary, TSC played against FK Partizan (1–4). The club finished the season 2013–14 in second place, and lost the promotion play-off game for the Third League after a penalty shootout (2–2, 2–2) against FK Cement Beočin. In 2014–2015, TSC won the Bačka League, and returned to the Serbian League Vojvodina, national third tier.

The club finished the 2016–17 Serbian League Vojvodina in third place, but got promoted to the Serbian First League. From the Serbian second tier, they were for the first time ever promoted to the Serbian SuperLiga for the 2019–20 season. There in their first ever top flight match away to FK Voždovac in Belgrade, playing at the modern shopping centre stadium, TSC won 1–2, marking a fine debut and the brightest moment in the club's history. Under manager Zoltan Sabo, the club finished 4th in their first season in the SuperLiga and qualified for the Europa League first qualifying round. Throughout the club's debut season strikers Nenad Lukić and Vladimir Silađi were impressive, finishing the season as triple joint top scorers. Other impressive players in the season for TSC were Janko Tumbasević, Goran Antonić, Saša Tomanović, Srđan Grabež and Đuro Zec.

In the 2022–23 season, the club finished second in the league to qualify to the Champions League third qualifying round for the first time in their history. TSC lost 7–1 on aggregate to S.C. Braga, but were nonetheless assured a spot in the Europa League group stage.

Name changes

  • 1913–1930: Topolyai Sport Club
  • 1930–1942: JAK Bačka Topola
  • 1942–1945: Topolyai SE
  • 1945–1951: FK Egység
  • 1951–1974: FK Topola
  • 1974–2003: FK AIK Bačka Topola
  • 2005–2013: FK Bačka Topola
  • 2013–present: FK TSC

Club colours and crest

The club's original colours were green and white, but later replaced by blue. The lion on the crest is the coat of arms of Bačka Topola, which comes from the coat of arms of Pál Kray who was a nobleman in the town in 18th century.

Stadium

The home ground of TSC was the City Stadium, which held 4,000 people. Construction of the stadium was finished in the 1930s. In 2017, TSC announced its intentions to build a new 4,500-seat stadium. From the 2018–19 to the 2021–22 season, because of the construction of the new stadium, the club's home games were played in City Stadium in Senta. On 3 September 2021 the TSC Arena was opened by the match against Ferencváros.

Supporters

The official supporters group of the club are the Blue Betyárs.

The club is supported by the local ethnic Hungarians and receives considerable support from both Hungary and its diaspora elsewhere.

Funding

The club's owner and main sponsor is the Hungarian multinational oil and gas public company MOL.

Janos Zsemberi became the club's main investor in 2013 which changed the club's fortunes. Viktor Orbán has also taken an interest in supporting the club financially.

Honours

Players

Current squad

As of 5 February 2026

Note: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules; some limited exceptions apply. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.

No.Pos.NationPlayer
No. Pos. Nation Player 1 GK SRB Nikola Simić (captain) 2 DF SRB Matija Popović 3 DF BIH Miloš Šatara 4 DF SRB Vukašin Krstić 5 DF FRA Baptiste Roux 7 MF SRB Milan Radin 8 FW SRB Saša Jovanović 9 FW SRB Bogdan Petrović 10 FW AUT Andrej Todoroski 12 FW SRB Radivoj Bosić 15 MF SRB Stefan Mladenović 16 MF SRB Aleksandar Stančić 17 MF SRB Mihajlo Milosavić 18 MF SRB Branko Jovičić 19 GK SRB Ilja PantelinNo. Pos. Nation Player 20 DF MKD Bojan Dimoski 21 FW SRB Dragoljub Savić 22 DF SRB Stefan Jovanović 23 GK SRB Nemanja Jorgić 26 MF HUN Szabolcs Mezei 29 FW CGO Prestige Mboungou 30 DF SRB Nemanja Petrović 31 DF CRO Luka Capan 33 DF SRB Dragan Tegeltija 42 MF SRB Stefan Tomović 44 DF SRB Nemanja Pivnički 55 MF SRB Miloš Soprenić 72 DF SRB Slobodan Urošević 80 MF SRB Andrej Petrović
1GKSRBNikola Simić (captain)
2DFSRBMatija Popović
3DFBIHMiloš Šatara
4DFSRBVukašin Krstić
5DFFRABaptiste Roux
7MFSRBMilan Radin
8FWSRBSaša Jovanović
9FWSRBBogdan Petrović
10FWAUTAndrej Todoroski
12FWSRBRadivoj Bosić
15MFSRBStefan Mladenović
16MFSRBAleksandar Stančić
17MFSRBMihajlo Milosavić
18MFSRBBranko Jovičić
19GKSRBIlja Pantelin
No.Pos.NationPlayer
20DFMKDBojan Dimoski
21FWSRBDragoljub Savić
22DFSRBStefan Jovanović
23GKSRBNemanja Jorgić
26MFHUNSzabolcs Mezei
29FWCGOPrestige Mboungou
30DFSRBNemanja Petrović
31DFCROLuka Capan
33DFSRBDragan Tegeltija
42MFSRBStefan Tomović
44DFSRBNemanja Pivnički
55MFSRBMiloš Soprenić
72DFSRBSlobodan Urošević
80MFSRBAndrej Petrović

Out on loan

Note: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules; some limited exceptions apply. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.

No.Pos.NationPlayer
No. Pos. Nation Player — MF NZL Sarpreet Singh (at Wellington Phoenix until 30 June 2026)
MFNZLSarpreet Singh (at Wellington Phoenix until 30 June 2026)

European record

The players of West Ham United and TSC line up before their Europa League match at the London Stadium
SeasonCompetitionRoundOpponentHomeAwayAggregate
2020–21UEFA Europa LeagueFirst qualifying roundMoldova Petrocub Hîncești—N/a2–02–0
Second qualifying roundRomania FCSB6–6 (a.e.t.)—N/a6–6 (4–5 p)
2023–24UEFA Champions LeagueThird qualifying roundPortugal Braga1–40–31–7
UEFA Europa LeagueGroup AEngland West Ham United0–11–34th of 4
Greece Olympiacos2–22–5
Germany SC Freiburg1–30–5
2024–25UEFA Europa LeaguePlay-off roundIsrael Maccabi Tel Aviv1–50–31–8
UEFA Conference LeagueLeague PhaseKazakhstan Astana—N/a0–124th of 36
Poland Legia Warsaw0–3—N/a
Switzerland Lugano4–1—N/a
Switzerland St. Gallen—N/a2–2
Royal Belgian Football Association Gent—N/a0–3
Football Federation of Armenia Noah4–3—N/a
Knockout phase play-offsPoland Jagiellonia Białystok1–31–32–6

Club officials

PositionName
Current technical staff
PresidentSerbia János Zsemberi
General managerSerbia Szabolcs Palágyi
Head coachSerbia Tomislav Sivić
Assistant coachSerbia Aleksandar Sekulić
Assistant coachSerbia Goran Žmukić
Secretary of the A teamSerbia Vojislav Stantić
Goalkeeper coachSerbia Szilárd Faragó
Assistant coach / AnalystCroatia Krsto Jokić
Fitness trainerHungary Kornél Bubori Serbia Dávid Szabó
PhysiotherapistSerbia Dragan Golubović Serbia Dominik Paróci
General secretarySerbia Borislav Banjac
DoctorSerbia Dr. Deák Tibor
A team economistHungary Attila Dévity
SecretarySerbia Radomir Šaban
Security commissionerSerbia Zlatko Zsemberi
Source: FK TSC

Notable players

The following players played for national teams: Socialist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia Slobodan Batričević Bosnia and Herzegovina Ifet Đakovac Socialist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia Nikica Klinčarski Socialist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia Zlatko Krmpotić Serbia Andrija Kaluđerović Serbia Nenad Lukić Serbia Dušan Tadić Serbia Nikola Žigić Serbia Petar Ratkov Montenegro Savo Pavićević Montenegro Janko Tumbasević North Macedonia Martin Mirčevski Hungary Jenő Kalmár Hungary Norbert KönyvesOther professional footballers: Serbia Dragoljub Bekvalac Serbia Ištvan Dudaš Serbia Viktor Orsag Serbia Čedomir Pavičević Serbia Mitar Peković Serbia Vladimir Silađi Serbia Zvezdan Terzić Serbia Nenad Todorović Hungary Tamás Takács

For the list of current and former players with Wikipedia article, please see: Category:FK TSC players.

External links

  • at National-football-teams
  • at Srbijasport