FC Dynamo Kyiv

FC Dynamo Kyiv
Dynamo Kyiv
FC Dynamo Kyiv logo
Full name Football Club Dynamo Kyiv
Nickname(s) Bilo-Syni (White-Blues)
Founded May 13, 1927; 84 years ago (1927-05-13)
Ground Lobanovskyi Dynamo Stadium
(Capacity: 16,873)
Chairman Ihor Surkis
Manager Yuri Semin
League Ukrainian Premier League
2010–11 2nd
Home colours
Away colours
Current season

FC Dynamo Kyiv is a professional football club based in the Ukrainian capital city of Kyiv. Founded in 1927, the club currently participates in the Ukrainian Premier League and has spent its entire history in the top league of Soviet and later Ukrainian football. Dynamo Kyiv has won thirteen league titles, nine Ukrainian Cups, one UEFA Super Cup and two UEFA Cup Winners' Cups, and played three times in the semi-final of the UEFA Champions League.

As part of the Soviet Union until its collapse in December 1991, the club has also won 13 USSR Championships, 9 USSR Cups, and 3 USSR Super Cups, making Dynamo the most successful club in the history of the Soviet Top League.[1]

Dynamo's home is the 16,873 capacity[2] Lobanovskyi Dynamo Stadium in Kyiv, with a few bigger games played at Olimpiysky National Sports Complex.

Contents

History overview

Early history

Dynamo Kyiv in 1928.

On May 13, 1927 the statute of the Kievan Proletarian Sport Society (PST) Dynamo was officially registered by the special commission in affairs of public organizations and unions of the Kiev okrug (district). The All-Union sport society of Dinamo itself was just recently formed in 1923 on the initiative of the "Iron Felix". Under the banner of Dynamo gathered the representatives of the GPU (the State Political Directorate, that is, the Soviet secret police), the best footballers of which defended the honors of the "Sovtorgsluzhashchie" club (Soviet salesmen). However the leadership of Dynamo did not dare to reorganize the well-established club and the main title contender in the middle of a playing season and therefore the first mentioning about the football club Dynamo could only be found on April 5, 1928 in the Russian-language newspaper Vecherni Kiev ("Evening Kiev").

The Kievan Sport Society Dynamo currently is organizing its own football team. "Dynamo" petitioned to Okrsofik for inclusion of its team in the playing season.

It was then when by the initiative of Semen Zapadny, chief of the Kiev GPU, the football team was created. His deputy, Serhiy Barminsky, started to form the team not only out of regular chekists (members of the Soviet secret police), but also footballers of other clubs in the city. All the footballers were either part of the consolidated city team or the city champions. The newly created team played its first official game on July 1, 1928 against a local consolidated city team while visiting Bila Tserkva. Already on the fifth minute the Dynamo-men opened the score in the game, however at the end the club lost it 1:2. On July 15 the Bila Tserkva newspaper Radyanska Nyva ("Soviet Fields") put it in such words:

In the second halftime Bila Tserkva easily strikes the ball in the net, thus, equalizing the score. Kiev tried several counter attacks and even earned a foul kick which was not able to convert. Near the end Bila Tserkva under the applause of a thousands of spectators strikes in the second ball. The final whistle of the referee has fixated the victory of Bila Tserkva with the score 2:1.

The next match played by Dynamo was on July 17, 1928 against another Dynamo from the port city of Odessa. As the club gained more experience and played on a regular basis, it started to fill the stadium with spectators with both the club and football in general gaining popularity in Soviet Ukraine.

Soviet era

During the Soviet era, the club was one of the main rivals, and often the only rival, to football clubs from Moscow. Its ability to challenge the dominance of the Moscow clubs in Soviet football, and frequently defeat them to win the Soviet championship, was a matter of national pride for Ukraine. Leaders of the Ukrainian SSR unofficially regarded the club as their national team and provided it with generous support, making Dynamo a professional team of international importance.

In 1936 the first Soviet Championship was played, and Dynamo Kyiv was one of the pioneers of the newly formed league. The club's early successes were however limited to a 2nd place finish in 1936 and 3rd place in 1937. In the 1941 season, the club only played 9 matches, as World War II interrupted league play.

The Death Match

Poster of the return match

The story is often told of how the Dynamo team, playing as "Start, City of Kiev All-Stars", was executed by a firing squad in the summer of 1942 for defeating an All-Star team from the German armed forces by 5–1. The actual story, as recounted by Y. Kuznetsov, is considerably more complex. This match has subsequently become known as "The Death Match".

After the Nazi occupation of Ukraine began, several members of the Dynamo team found employment in the city's Bakery No. 3, and continued to play amateur football. During Kiev's occupation, the team was spotted by the Germans and were invited to play against an army team. The team played under the name of "Start", comprising eight players from Dynamo Kyiv (Nikolai Trusevych, Mikhail Svyridovskiy, Nikolai Korotkykh, Oleksiy Klimenko, Fedir Tyutchev, Mikhail Putistin, Ivan Kuzmenko, Makar Honcharenko) and three players from Lokomotiv Kiev (Vladimir Balakin, Vasil Sukharev and Mikhail Melnyk).

In July and August 1942 "Start" played a series of matches against the Germans and their allies. On July 12 a German army team was defeated. A stronger army team was selected for the next match on July 17, which "Start" defeated 6–0. On July 19 "Start" defeated the Hungarian team MSG Wal by 5–1. The Hungarians proposed a return match, held on July 26, but were defeated again 3–2.

"Start"'s streak was noticed and a match was announced for August 6 against a "most powerful" "undefeated" German Luftwaffe Flakelf (anti-aircraft artillery) team, but despite the game being talked up by the newspapers, they failed to report the 5–1 result. On August 9 "Start" played a "friendly" against Flakelf and again defeated them. The team defeated Rukh 8–0 on August 16, and afterwards, some of "Start"'s players were arrested by the Gestapo, tortured – Nikolai Korotkykh dying under torture – and sent to the nearby labour camp at Syrets. There is speculation that the players were arrested due to the intrigues of Georgy Shvetsov, founder and trainer of the "Rukh" team, as the arrests were made in a couple of days after "Start" defeated "Rukh".

In February 1943, following an attack by partisans or a conflict of the prisoners and administration, one-third of the prisoners at Syrets were killed in reprisal, including Ivan Kuzmenko, Oleksey Klymenko, and the goalkeeper Nikolai Trusevich. Three of the other players, Makar Honcharenko, Fedir Tyutchev and Mikhail Sviridovskiy, who were in a work squad in the city that day, were arrested a few days later or, according to other sources, escaped and hid in the city until it was liberated.

The story inspired two films: the 1961 Hungarian film drama Két félidő a pokolban and the 1981 American film Escape to Victory.

Bribery scandal

In 1995, Dynamo qualified for the UEFA Champions League by defeating Danish-side AaB Aalborg in the qualification round.

A few weeks later, following Dynamo's first group stage match against Panathinaikos, which they won 1–0, Spanish referee Antonio López Nieto filed a complaint to UEFA that he and his linesmen had been approached by two officials from Dynamo who offered them two fur coats and an unspecified amount of money. As a result, the club was immediately expelled from the competition, with Aalborg taking its place.

Despite an appeal to the UEFA following the incident, Dynamo Kyiv was banned from UEFA competitions for the subsequent two years and club's officials Ihor Surkis (general manager) and Vasyl Babiychuk (secretary general) were banned from football for life. These decisions would later be reversed, with Dynamo resuming play in European competitions the following season and Ihor Surkis continuing his work at the club.

Recent years

After the collapse of the Soviet Union, the club, now using the Ukrainian name FC Dynamo Kyiv, became a member of the newly-formed Ukrainian Premier League. Dynamo's status as the country's principal club did not change with the break-up as they went on to dominate domestic competitions, winning or being runner-up in every year of the Premier League's existence and becoming a fixture in the UEFA Champions League. Its main rival in Ukraine is Shakhtar Donetsk, a team from the Donbas region, that came second to Dynamo several times before winning its first Premier League in 2002. The matches between these two sides are called the Ukrainian derby.

In 1996, the club modified their logo to the one that continues to be used today. In 2007, as a part of club's 80 year anniversary two gold stars were added to the top of the crest, representing ten Ukrainian championship titles and ten USSR champion titles. Due to club's poor performance in the UEFA Champions League during the last two seasons, Dynamo's management took a somewhat unexpected decision by appointing the first foreign manager in the club's history. Previously, only former players or Dynamo football academy graduates became managers, but in December 2007 Russian coach Yuri Semin was invited to become the new manager of Dynamo Kyiv. Semin's first success came shortly after in a friendly competition Channel One Cup organised in Israel over winter-break. The club went on to confidently defeat both Dynamo's former main rival Spartak Moscow 3–0, and Dynamo's current main rival Shakhtar Donetsk in the final, winning the competition for the first time in its history. However, the club yielded to Shakhtar in both the Ukrainian Cup and Ukrainian Premier League in 2008. In 2009. in the club's most successful European campaign since 1999, it reached the semi-finals of the UEFA Cup (eliminating such teams as Valencia CF and Paris Saint Germain) but was defeated at that stage by Shakhtar Donetsk, losing in Donetsk 1–2 after a 1–1 home draw. However, 2009 also brought success as the club celebrated its 13th Ukrainian Premier League title.

Achievements

Dynamo Kyiv has participated in all of the USSR and Ukrainian championships to date, and has won both competitions more times than any other team. The club's best performances were in the 1970s and 1980s, a time at which the USSR national football team was composed mostly of players from the club. Dynamo Kyiv also tied the national record for winning three consecutive Soviet Premier League titles in 1966, 1967, and 1968. Dynamo Kyiv won the Cup Winners' Cup in 1975 and 1986 as well as the European Super Cup in 1975, after two games against Bayern Munich. In 1977, 1987, and 1999, the club reached the semi-finals of the UEFA Champions League. These victories are associated with the name of Valeri Lobanovsky, who played for the club in the 1960s and later became the club's long-term head coach. In 2009, the club again reached the semi-finals of UEFA Cup.

Dynamo striker Oleg Blokhin is the Soviet Premier League's all-time top scorer with 211 goals, and has also made more appearances than any other player in the championship's history with 432.

Colours

Dynamo's traditional colours are white and dark blue, with white being the predominant colour. Throughout their history the club has usually played in a white shirt and blue shorts, until 1961 when a blue sash was briefly added to the kit. Although it was removed soon afterwards, in 2004 the club's management decided to restore the famous sash as a talisman. It was added to the away kit and remained there until the beginning of the 2008–2009 season, when it was replaced by a white kit with a shirt having thin blue vertical stripes, the first time in over 50 years that a club has worn such a pattern.

Before the breakup of the Soviet Union, Dynamo's kit was similar to Metalist, yellow shirts and blue shorts. That kit at the time carried a symbolical meaning, representing the national colours of the yet-not-adopted Ukraine national flag.Recently, in the early years of Ukrainian independence, the club swapped their yellow colour for white. However blue remained one of Dynamo's colours and is still a main colour of the club's away kit.

The club's current sponsors, Adidas and Ukrainian bank PrivatBank, feature on the team shirt, the former also being the manufacturer of the kit.

Crest

Dynamo's first logo which featured on their shirts in 1927 was a signature blue "Д" (D) in a vertical rhombus. Over the years, the club's logo has undergone many changes and replacements, but the signature D has remained ever since.

In 2003 after Dynamo won their 10th domestic trophy, a golden star was added at the top of the logo to celebrate club's success. The second star was added to the logo in 2007 during celebrations of Dynamo's 80 year anniversary. Although Dynamo won only 13 Ukrainian league titles, their 13 titles as USSR Champions were taken into account, which some consider a reply to actions of Dynamo's former top rival Spartak Moscow, who had done the same thing several years previously.

Honours

Soviet Union Soviet Union

Ukraine Ukraine

Europe Europe

  • UEFA Cup Winners Cup
    • Winners(2): 1975 1986
  • UEFA Super Cup
    • Winners(1): 1975
    • Runners-Up: 1986
  • UEFA Champions League
    • Semifinalists: 1976-77 1986-87 1998-99;
    • Quarterfinalists: 1972-73 1975-76 1981-82 1982-83 1991-92 1997-98
  • UEFA Cup
    • Semifinalists: 2008-09
  • UEFA Europa League
    • Quarter-finalists: 2010-11

Commonwealth of Independent States Commonwealth of Independent States

Non-official

Individual Player Awards

Several players have won individual awards during or for their time with Dynamo Kyiv

European Footballer of the Year (Ballon d'Or)

UEFA Golden Player Award

FIFA 100

European Championship winners

Two players have won the European Championship whilst at Dynamo Kyiv.

Preceded by
1. FC Magdeburg
UEFA Cup Winners' Cup Winner
1975
Runner up: Ferencváros
Succeeded by
Anderlecht
Preceded by
Everton
UEFA Cup Winners' Cup Winner
1986
Runner up: Atlético Madrid
Succeeded by
Ajax

Structure

The club's home ground, Lobanovskyi Dynamo Stadium, is situated in a picturesque park located in the centre of the city, close to the Dnieper River bank. The stadium holds 16,873 spectators, and has been the club's home ever since 1934. When it was built the stadium's capacity was 23,000.[3] After being destroyed in 1941 during the war, it was rebuilt in 1954. By the end of the century, the stadium was reconstructed once more, now becoming a football-only venue, and having individual seats installed, which reduced the capacity down to its present one. In 2002 after the sudden death of Dynamo's long time player and coach Valeriy Lobanovskyi, the stadium was renamed in his honour. After NSK Olympiyskyi was closed for reconstruction in 2008, Dynamo also began to play its European games at the Lobanovsky Stadium.

NSC Olimpiysky reconstruction

Due to a high demand for European fixtures of the club throughout its European history Dynamo played a majority of their home fixtures at Kiev's and Ukraine's largest stadium, the Olympiysky National Sport Complex, historically dubbed The Republican Stadium, which held 83,450 spectators. The stadium has been the home of the Ukrainian Cup final since its inaugural game in 1992 and up until 2007. The stadium was closed for a major reconstruction in 2008, after Ukraine and Poland were chosen to host the UEFA Euro 2012. The Olympiysky will be Kiev's main venue as well as the stadium to host the final; it will also become an UEFA Elite rated stadiums.

The team also has a modern-equipped training base in the Kiev suburb of Koncha-Zaspa. The club maintains its own football school for children and youths, also situated in Kiev. Junior Dynamo teams are colloquially known as Dynamo-2 and Dynamo-3. Its reserves team -called "double" (дубль) in both Ukrainian and Russian- participates in the national Reserves tournament, where "doubles" of all 16 Vyscha Liga teams compete. Many notable Dynamo Kyiv players progressed through the club's youth system, among them is Andriy Shevchenko, one of the graduates of the school.

Sponsors

Current squad

Squad is given according to the club's official website.[4] Note: Flags indicate national team as has been defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.

No. Position Player
1 Ukraine GK Oleksandr Shovkovskiy (Captain)
2 Brazil DF Danilo Silva
3 Brazil DF Betão
5 Croatia MF Ognjen Vukojević
6 Republic of Macedonia DF Goran Popov
7 Ukraine FW Andriy Shevchenko
8 Ukraine MF Oleksandr Aliyev
9 Ukraine FW Andriy Yarmolenko
10 Ukraine FW Artem Milevskiy
11 Nigeria FW Ideye Brown
14 Ukraine MF Serhiy Rybalka
17 Ukraine DF Taras Mykhalyk
18 Argentina MF Facundo Bertoglio
19 Ukraine MF Denys Harmash
20 Ukraine MF Oleh Husyev
No. Position Player
21 Brazil MF Gérson Magrão
22 Ukraine FW Artem Kravets
24 Nigeria FW Fanendo Adi
25 Nigeria MF Lukman Haruna
27 Colombia FW Andrés Escobar
31 Ukraine GK Stanislav Bohush
34 Ukraine DF Yevhen Khacheridi
35 Ukraine GK Maksym Koval
36 Serbia MF Miloš Ninković
37 Nigeria MF Ayila Yussuf
44 Brazil DF Leandro Almeida
45 Ukraine MF Vladyslav Kalytvyntsev
77 Brazil MF Corrêa
99 Brazil MF Dudu

For recent transfers, see List of Ukrainian football transfers winter 2010–2011 and List of Ukrainian football transfers summer 2010.

Out on loan

Note: Flags indicate national team as has been defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.

No. Position Player
Ukraine GK Denys Boyko (on loan to Kryvbas Kryvyi Rih)
Ukraine DF Taras Pinchuk (on loan to Zirka Kirovohrad)
Ukraine DF Serhiy Lohinov (on loan to Lithuania Sūduva)
Morocco DF Badr El Kaddouri (on loan to Scotland Celtic F.C.)
Ukraine MF Kyrylo Petrov (on loan to Kryvbas Kryvyi Rih)
Nigeria MF Frank Temile (on loan to PFC Oleksandria)
No. Position Player
Ukraine FW Mykhaylo Malin (on loan to Zakarpattia Uzhhorod)
Ukraine FW Yaroslav Sokol (on loan to FC Nyva Ternopil)
Belarus FW Andrei Voronkov (on loan to FC Karpaty Lviv)
Brazil FW André (on loan to Brazil Atlético Mineiro)

Retired number(s)

12Ukraine Club Supporters (the 12th Man)

Notable players

Had international caps for their respective countries. Players whose name is listed in bold represented their countries while playing for Dynamo.

For full list, see Category:FC Dynamo Kyiv players

USSR/Ukraine
Armenia
Argentina
Azerbaijan
Belarus
Brazil
Bulgaria
Colombia
Croatia
Finland
Georgia
Guinea
Hungary
Latvia
Lithuania
Makedonia
Morocco
Nigeria
Poland
Romania
Russia
Senegal
Serbia
Uzbekistan

Notable managers

  • in the Ukrainian championship

The following managers have all won at least one trophy when in charge of Dynamo Kyiv:

Name Period Trophies
Ukraine Anatoliy Puzach 1990–92
Ukraine Mykhailo Fomenko 1992–94 1 league title, 1 domestic cup
Ukraine Yozhef Sabo 1992, 1994–95, 1995–96, 2004–05, 2007 2 league titles, 2 domestic cups
Ukraine Volodymyr Onyschenko 1995
Ukraine Mykola Pavlov 1995 1 league title
Ukraine Valery Lobanovsky 1973–82, 1984–90, 1997–02 8 league titles, 7 domestic cups, 3 European cups
Ukraine Oleksiy Mykhaylichenko 2002–04 2 league titles, 1 domestic cup, 1 super cup
Ukraine Anatoly Demyanenko 2005–07 1 league title, 2 domestic cups, 2 super cups
Russia Yuri Semin 2007–09, 2010– 1 league title, 1 super cup
Russia Valery Gazzayev 2009–2010 1 super cup

League and Cup history

Soviet Union Soviet Union

Season Division (Name) Pos./Teams Pl. W D L GS GA P Domestic Cup Europe Notes
1936
(Spring)
1st (Group A) 2/(7) 6 4 0 2 18 11 14 3 pts for win, 2 – draw, 1 – lose
1936
(Autumn)
1st (Group A) 6/(8) 7 1 3 3 16 19 12 1/32 finals 3 pts for win, 2 – draw, 1 – lose
1937 1st (Group A) 3/(9) 16 7 6 3 33 24 36 3 pts for win, 2 – draw, 1 – lose
1938 1st (Group A) 4/(26) 25 15 6 4 76 35 36 2 pts for win, 1 – draw, 0 – lose
1939 1st (Group A) 8/(14) 26 9 8 9 39 44 26 2 pts for win, 1 – draw, 0 – lose
1940 1st (Group A) 8/(13) 24 6 9 9 32 49 21 Not played 2 pts for win, 1 – draw, 0 – lose
1941 1st (Group A) 8/(15) 9 4 2 3 16 14 10 Not played No Official (did not finish due to World War II)
1942 Did not play due to World War II
1943 Did not play due to World War II
1944 Not played Did not play due to World War II
1945 1st (1st Group) 11/(12) 22 1 6 15 13 50 8
1946 1st (1st Group) 12/(12) 22 4 5 13 18 39 13 Semi-finals
1947 1st (1st Group) 4/(13) 24 9 9 6 27 31 27
1948 1st (1st Group) 10/(14) 26 7 6 13 32 50 20
1949 1st (1st Group) 7/(18) 34 17 6 11 48 47 40
1950 1st (Class A) 13/(19) 36 10 11 15 39 53 31
1951 1st (Class A) 8/(15) 28 9 9 10 43 39 27
1952 1st (Class A) 2/(14) 13 7 3 3 26 14 17
1953 1st (Class A) 8/(11) 20 6 5 9 21 26 17
1954 1st (Class A) 5/(13) 24 8 10 6 31 29 26 Winner
1955 1st (Class A) 6/(12) 22 8 6 8 31 37 22
1956 1st (Class A) 4/(12) 22 7 10 5 32 31 24 Not played
1957 1st (Class A) 6/(12) 22 8 7 7 30 30 23
1958 1st (Class A) 6/(12) 22 7 9 6 40 33 23
1959 1st (Class A) 7/(12) 22 6 8 8 26 33 20 Not played
1960 (Spring) 1st (Class A, Subgroup II) 1/(11) 20 13 2 5 46 23 28 Qualifying round
1960 1st (Class A, Final) 2/(6) 10 5 1 4 19 14 11
1961 (Spring) 1st (Class A, Subgroup II) 2/(11) 20 12 5 3 41 19 29 Qualifying round
1961 1st (Class A, Final) 1/(10) 30 18 9 3 58 28 45 Spring results included in the final standings. Every team qualified played only with the teams from the other spring's group
1962 (Spring) 1st (Class A, Subgroup I) 1/(11) 20 14 5 1 44 20 33 Qualifying round
1962 1st (Class A, Final) 5/(12) 22 8 9 5 36 28 25
1963 1st (Class A, 1st Group) 9/(20) 38 16 12 10 68 48 44
1964 1st (Class A, 1st Group) 6/(17) 32 10 16 6 42 29 36 Winner
1965 1st (Class A, 1st Group) 2/(17) 32 22 6 4 58 22 50
1966 1st (Class A, 1st Group) 1/(19) 36 23 10 3 66 17 56 Winner CWC 1/4 finals
1967 1st (Class A, 1st Group) 1/(19) 36 21 12 3 51 11 54
1968 1st (Class A, 1st Group) 1/(20) 38 21 15 3 58 25 57 ECC 1/8 finals (second round)
1969 (Spring) 1st (Class A, Subgroup I) 1/(10) 18 10 8 0 25 6 28 Qualifying round
1969 1st (Class A, 1st Group) 2/(14) 26 16 7 3 37 13 39 ECC did not compete (withdrew in protest to a redraw by UEFA of the first round keeping clubs from Eastern and Western Europe apart)
1970 1st (Vysshaya Group A) 7/(17) 32 14 5 13 36 32 33 Semi-finals ECC 1/8 finals (second round)
1971 1st (Vysshaya Liga) 1/(16) 30 17 10 3 41 17 44
1972 1st (Vysshaya Liga) 2/(16) 30 12 11 7 52 38 35 1/8 finals
1973 1st (Vysshaya Liga) 2/(16) 30 16 8 6 44 23 36 Runner-up ECC 1/4 finals 4 draw – 1 pts, 4 draw – 0 pts
1974 1st (Vysshaya Liga) 1/(16) 30 14 12 4 49 24 40 Winner UC 1/8 finals (third round)
1975 1st (Vysshaya Liga) 1/(16) 30 17 9 4 53 30 43 CWC Winner Winner of UEFA Super Cup
1976 (Spring) 1st (Vysshaya Liga) 8/(16) 15 5 5 5 14 12 15
1976 (Autumn) 1st (Vysshaya Liga) 2/(16) 15 6 6 3 22 16 18 ECC 1/4 finals
1977 1st (Vysshaya Liga) 1/(16) 30 14 15 1 51 12 43 ECC Semi-finals
1978 1st (Vysshaya Liga) 2/(16) 30 15 9 6 42 20 38 Winner UC 1/32 finals (first round) a point deducted due to limit on games drawn
1979 1st (Vysshaya Liga) 3/(18) 34 21 5 8 51 26 47 1/4 finals ECC 1/8 finals (second round)
1980 1st (Vysshaya Liga) 1/(18) 34 21 9 4 63 23 51 Semi-finals UC 1/8 finals (third round)
1981 1st (Vysshaya Liga) 1/(18) 34 22 9 3 58 26 53 1/4 finals UC 1/32 finals (first round)
1982 1st (Vysshaya Liga) 2/(18) 34 18 10 6 58 25 46 Winner ECC 1/4 finals
1983 1st (Vysshaya Liga) 7/(18) 34 14 10 10 50 34 38 1/4 finals ECC 1/4 finals
1984 1st (Vysshaya Liga) 10/(18) 34 12 13 9 46 30 34 1/8 finals UC 1/32 finals (first round) 3 pts deducted due to excess drawn games
1985 1st (Vysshaya Liga) 1/(18) 34 20 8 6 64 26 48 Winner
1986 1st (Vysshaya Liga) 1/(16) 30 14 11 5 53 33 39 1/8 finals CWC Winner Runner-Up of UEFA Super Cup
1987 1st (Vysshaya Liga) 6/(16) 30 11 10 9 37 27 32 Winner ECC Semi-finals
1988 1st (Vysshaya Liga) 2/(16) 30 17 9 4 43 19 43 1/8 finals ECC 1/16 finals (first round)
1989 1st (Vysshaya Liga) 3/(16) 30 13 12 5 44 27 38 Semi-finals
1990 1st (Vysshaya Liga) 1/(13) 24 14 6 4 44 20 34 Winner UC 1/8 finals (third round)
1991 1st (Vysshaya Liga) 5/(16) 30 13 9 8 43 34 35 1/16 finals CWC 1/4 finals yielded to FC Tekstilschik Kamishin in Domestic Cup

Ukraine Ukraine

Season Division (Name) Pos./Teams Pl. W D L GS GA P Domestic Cup Europe Notes
1992 1st (Vyshcha Liha) 2/(10) 18 13 4 1 31 13 30 1/4 finals ECC Group stage Final: Tavriya Simferopol–Dynamo Kyiv-1:0
1992–93 1st (Vyshcha Liha) 1/(16) 30 18 8 4 59 14 44 Winner UC 1/16 finals (second round)
1993–94 1st (Vyshcha Liha) 1/(18) 34 23 10 1 61 21 56 1/8 finals ECL first round
1994–95 1st (Vyshcha Liha) 1/(18) 34 25 8 1 87 24 83 1/4 finals ECL Final poule
1995–96 1st (Vyshcha Liha) 1/(18) 34 24 7 3 65 17 79 Winner ECL Group stage Dq from ECL for bribing
1996–97 1st (Vyshcha Liha) 1/(16) 30 23 4 3 69 20 73 1/8 finals UC 1/32 finals (first round) ECL – Qual round
1997–98 1st (Vyshcha Liha) 1/(16) 30 23 3 4 70 15 72 Winner ECL 1/4 finals
1998–99 1st (Vyshcha Liha) 1/(16) 30 23 5 2 75 17 74 Winner ECL 1/2 finals
1999-00 1st (Vyshcha Liha) 1/(16) 30 27 3 0 85 18 84 Winner ECL 2nd group stage
2000–01 1st (Vyshcha Liha) 1/(14) 26 20 4 2 58 17 64 1/16 finals ECL 1st group stage yielded to FC Spartak Sumy in Domestic Cup
2001–02 1st (Vyshcha Liha) 2/(14) 26 20 5 1 62 9 65 Runner-up ECL 1st group stage
2002–03 1st (Vyshcha Liha) 1/(16) 30 23 4 3 66 20 73 Winner UC 3rd round ECL – 1st group stage
2003–04 1st (Vyshcha Liha) 1/(16) 30 23 4 3 68 20 73 1/2 finals ECL 1st group stage
2004–05 1st (Vyshcha Liha) 2/(16) 30 23 4 3 58 14 73 Winner UC 1/32 finals ECL – group stage
2005–06 1st (Vyshcha Liha) 2/(16) 30 23 6 1 68 20 75 Winner ECL 2nd qual round
2006–07 1st (Vyshcha Liha) 1/(16) 30 22 8 0 67 23 74 Winner ECL Group stage
2007–08 1st (Vyshcha Liha) 2/(16) 30 22 5 3 65 26 71 Runner-up ECL Group stage
2008–09 1st (Premier League) 1/(16) 30 26 1 3 71 19 79 1/2 finals UC 1/2 finals ECL – group stage
2009–10 1st 2/(16) 30 22 5 3 61 16 71 1/4 finals ECL Group Stage
2010–11 1st 2/(16) 30 20 5 5 60 24 65 Runner-up EL 1/4 finals ECL – 4th qual. round
2011–12 1/8 finals EL Group E ECL – 3rd qual. round

European campaigns

Season Achievement Notes
European Cup / UEFA Champions League
1972–73 Quarter Final eliminated by Spain Real Madrid 0–0 in Kiev, 0–3 in Madrid
1975–76 Quarter Final eliminated by France Saint-Étienne 2–0 in Kiev, 0–3 in Saint-Étienne
1976–77 Semi Final eliminated by Germany Mönchengladbach 1–0 in Kiev, 0–2 in Mönchengladbach
1981–82 Quarter Final eliminated by England Aston Villa 0–0 in Kiev, 0–2 in Birmingham
1986–87 Semi Final eliminated by Portugal Porto 1–2 in Porto, 1–2 in Kiev
1991–92 Quarter Final finished fourth in a group with Spain Barcelona, Czech Republic Sparta Prague and Portugal Benfica
1997–98 Quarter Final eliminated by Italy Juventus 1–1 in Turin, 1–4 in Kiev
1998–99 Semi Final eliminated by Germany Bayern Munich 3–3 in Kiev, 0–1 in Munich
UEFA Cup
2008–09 Semi Final eliminated by Ukraine Shakhtar Donetsk 1–1 in Kiev, 1–2 in Donetsk
2010–11 Quarter Final eliminated by Portugal Braga 1–1 in Kiev, 0–0 in Braga
UEFA Cup Winners' Cup
1965–66 Quarter Final eliminated by Scotland Celtic 0–3 in Glasgow, 1–1 in Kiev
1974–75 Winner won Hungary Ferencváros 3–0
1985–86 Winner won Spain Atlético Madrid 3–0
1990–91 Quarter Final eliminated by Spain Barcelona 2–3 in Kiev, 1–1 in Barcelona
UEFA Super Cup
1975 Winner won Germany Bayern Munich 1–0 in Munich, 2–0 in Kiev
1986 Final defeated by Romania Steaua Bucureşti 0–1


Player records

[5] [6]

Top goalscorers

As of 25 August 2011
# Name Years League Cup Europe Other Total
1 Soviet Union Oleg Blokhin 1969–1987 211 29 26 4 270
2 Ukraine Serhiy Rebrov 1992–2000
2005–2007
113 19 31 0 163
3 Uzbekistan Maksim Shatskikh 1999–2008 97 22 23 0 142
4 Ukraine Andriy Shevchenko 1994–1999
2009–
81 16 25 0 122
5 Soviet Union Viktor Kanevskyi 1953–1964 80 5 0 0 85
6 Soviet Union Leonid Buryak 1973–1984 56 12 14 0 82
7 Soviet Union Viktor Kolotov 1971–1981 62 11 8 0 81
8 Ukraine Artem Milevskiy 2002– 51 10 16 3 80
9 Soviet Union Viktor Serebryanikov 1959–1971 70 5 4 0 79
10 Ukraine Viktor Leonenko 1992–1998 61 10 8 0 79
  • Other – National Super Cup & USSR Federation Cup

Most appearances

As of 16 July 2011
# Name Years League Cup Europe Other Total
1 Soviet Union Oleg Blokhin 1969–1987 432 67 79 8 586
2 Ukraine Oleksandr Shovkovskiy 1993– 346 53 111 5 515
3 Soviet Union Anatoliy Demyanenko 1979–1990
1992–1993
347 46 43 5 441
4 Soviet Union Leonid Buryak 1973–1984 304 51 51 2 408
5 Soviet Union Volodymyr Veremeyev 1968–1982 310 45 44 2 401
6 Soviet Union Volodymyr Bezsonov 1976–1990 277 47 39 11 374
7 Soviet Union Volodymyr Muntyan 1965–1977 302 34 35 0 371
8 Ukraine Serhiy Rebrov 1992–2000
2005–2007
242 44 72 2 360
9 Ukraine Vladyslav Vashchuk 1993–2002
2005–2008
254 41 62 0 357
10 Ukraine Oleh Luzhny 1989–1999 253 42 58 2 355
  • Other – National Super Cup & USSR Federation Cup

See also

References

External links


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