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FC Dynamo Kyiv

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Dynamo Kyiv
Club crest
Full name FC Dynamo Kyiv
Nickname(s) "Bilo-Syni" (White-Blues)
Founded 1927
Ground Lobanovsky Dynamo Stadium
(Capacity 16,900)
Chairman Flag of Ukraine Ihor Surkis
Manager Flag of Russia Yuri Semin
League Ukrainian Premier League
2006–07 Champions
Team colours Team colours Team colours
Team colours
Team colours
 
Home colours
Team colours Team colours Team colours
Team colours
Team colours
 
Away colours

FC Dynamo Kyiv (Ukrainian: ФК Динамо Київ, FK Dynamo Kyiv; Russian: Динамо Киев) is a professional football club from the Ukrainian capital city, Kiev. Founded in 1927, they play in the Vyscha Liha of Ukraine and have spent their entire history in the top league of Ukrainian football. Dynamo Kyiv has won twelve league titles, nine Ukrainian Cups, one UEFA Super Cup and two UEFA Cup Winners' Cups. They have also won 13 USSR Championships, 9 USSR Cups, and 3 USSR Super Cups. Dynamo's home is the 16,900 capacity[1] Lobanovsky Dynamo Stadium in Kiev. The club has also plays in the capacity 83,450 Olimpiysky National Sports Complex in Kiev for big games such UEFA competitions. The chairman of the club is Ihor Surkis.

Contents

History overview

Early History

The club was founded in 1927 as an amateur team, part of Dinamo, a nation-wide Soviet sport society. This society later became officially funded and patronized by the NKVD (a KGB predecessor), and later by the interior ministry (MVD). In the 1950s–1980s, team players were even officially ranked as police or interior armed forces officers. However, thousands of ordinary Soviet citizens paid symbolic membership fees for the "sport society".

Soviet Era

During the Soviet era, the club was one of the main rivals, and often the only rival, to the 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. Thus, Dinamo became a de-facto professional team of international importance.

The Death Match

Main article: The Death Match

Poster of the return 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 firing squad in the summer of 1942 for defeating an All-Star team from the German armed forces by 5 goals to 1. The actual story, as recounted by Y. Kuznetsov, is considerably more complex. [2] This match has subsequently become known as "The Death Match".

Club crest (English)
Club crest (English)

After the Nazi occupation of Ukraine began, the Dynamo team found employment in the city's Bakery No. 3, and played football on wasteland, where they were spotted by Germans and invited to play against an army team as "Start". "Start" comprised eight players from Dynamo (Mykola Trusevych, Mikhail Svyridovskiy, Mykola 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 German and allied sides. 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 3-2. At this stage it appeared that "Start" were ready to be beaten, and a match was announced for August 6 against a "most powerful" "undefeated" German Luftwaffe Flakelf 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 after this some of the players were arrested by the Gestapo, tortured – Mykola Korotkykh dying under torture – and sent to the nearby labour camp at Siretz. It is also conjectured 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".[3] In February 1943, following an attack by anti-German partisans or a conflict of the prisoners and administration, one-third of the prisoners at Siretz were killed in reprisal, including Ivan Kuzmenko, Oleksey Klymenko, and the goalkeeper Mykola 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[3] or, according to other sources, escaped and hid in the city until it was liberated. The story inspired two films: 1961 Hungarian film drama "Két félidő a pokolban" and 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 and offered 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 Vasyliy Babiychuk (general secretary) were banned from football for life. These decisions were later reversed, with Dynamo resuming play in European competitions the following season and Ihor Surkis continuing his work at the club.

FC Dynamo Kyiv and FC Metalurh Zaporizhia in the Ukrainian Cup final in Kyiv, 2 May 2006.
FC Dynamo Kyiv and FC Metalurh Zaporizhia in the Ukrainian Cup final in Kyiv, 2 May 2006.

Currently

After the Soviet Union's collapse, the club, now using the Ukrainian name FC Dynamo Kyiv, became a member of the new football league of Ukraine. Dynamo's status as the country's principal club did not alter as they went on to dominate domestic cups. This dominance has recently been challenged by FC Shakhtar Donetsk from the eastern region of Donbass, which won the national championship in 2002, 2005, and 2006, leaving Dynamo in the second place. Dynamo regained the championship the following year, making it their 12th title out in 16 years. In 1996, the club changed their logo to the one that continues to be used today. Two gold stars were added to the top of the crest, representing ten Ukrainian championship titles and 10 USSR champion titles.

Achievements

Dynamo Kyiv have participated in all the USSR and Ukrainian championships, and won both tournaments more times than any other team. The club's best performances were in the 1970s and 1980s, it was at this time that the USSR national football team was mostly comprised 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 semifinals of UEFA Champions League. These victories are associated with the name of Valeriy Lobanovs'kyi, who played for the club in the 1960s and later became the club's long-term head coach; he was also the coach of the USSR national football team in various championships. He died in 2002 after a stroke that occurred during a game. Dynamo's striker Oleh 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 appearances. Blokhin also leads the all-time Soviet scorers with more than 300 total official goals (including Soviet Championships, Soviet Cup, National team matches, UEFA club competitions, etc.)

Colours

Team colours Team colours Team colours
Team colours
Team colours
Goalkeeper's kit

Dynamo's traditional colours are white and dark blue, with white being the predominant one. Throughout their history the club always played in white shirt and blue shorts, until 1975 when a blue sash was added to the kit. That season became the most successful in Dynamo's history when the club won the Domestic Championship, the UEFA Cup Winners Cup and the UEFA Super Cup. Although soon afterwards it was removed, in 2004 the club's management decided to return the famous sash as a talisman. It has remained on the kit since and was even added to the club's away kit. Recently, in the early years of Ukrainian independence, the club changed their blue shorts for white. However blue remained one of Dynamo's colours and is still a main colour of the club's away kit.

Honours

Winners

1975, 1986
1975
1993, 1994, 1995, 1996, 1997, 1998, 1999, 2000, 2001, 2003, 2004, 2007
1993, 1996, 1998, 1999, 2000, 2003, 2005, 2006, 2007
2004, 2006, 2007
1961, 1966, 1967, 1968, 1971, 1974, 1975, 1977, 1980, 1981, 1985, 1986, 1990
1954, 1964, 1966, 1974, 1978, 1982, 1985, 1987, 1990
1980, 1985, 1986

Runners-Up

1987
1992, 2002, 2005, 2006
2002
2005
1936 (spring), 1952, 1960, 1965, 1969, 1972, 1973, 1976 (fall), 1978, 1982, 1988
1973
1977

Other Notable Achievements

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, Lobanovsky Dynamo Stadium, is situated in a picturesque park located in the centre of the city, close to the Dnieper River bank. The team also has a modern-equipped training base in the Kyiv suburb of Koncha-Zaspa. Highly-attended games are held on the 83,160-capacity stadium of the city-owned National Olympic Complex traditionally dubbed "The Republican Stadium". The club maintains its own football school for children and youths, also situated in Kyiv. 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.

Squad

Squad is given according to the club's official website.[4]

No. Position Player
1 Flag of Ukraine GK Oleksandr Shovkovsky
2 Flag of Ukraine DF Serhiy Fedorov
3 Flag of Senegal DF Pape Diakhaté
4 Flag of Romania MF Tiberiu Ghioane
5 Flag of Ukraine FW Serhiy Rebrov (captain)
7 Flag of Brazil MF Corrêa
8 Flag of Belarus MF Valentin Belkevich
9 Flag of Brazil FW Kléber
10 Flag of Guinea FW Ismaël Bangoura
11 Flag of Brazil MF Michael
14 Flag of Ukraine MF Ruslan Rotan
15 Flag of Brazil MF Diogo Rincón
16 Flag of Uzbekistan FW Maksim Shatskikh
17 Flag of Ukraine MF Taras Mikhalik
18 Flag of Hungary FW Balázs Farkas
No. Position Player
20 Flag of Ukraine MF Oleh Husyev
21 Flag of Ukraine GK Taras Lutsenko
23 Flag of Croatia FW Tomislav Bušić
25 Flag of Ukraine FW Artem Milevsky
26 Flag of Ukraine DF Andriy Nesmachniy
27 Flag of Ukraine DF Vladyslav Vashchuk
29 Flag of Ukraine DF Vitaly Mandzyuk
30 Flag of Morocco DF Badr El Kaddouri
32 Flag of Serbia DF Goran Gavrančić
36 Flag of Serbia MF Miloš Ninković
37 Flag of Nigeria MF Ayila Yussuf
55 Flag of Ukraine GK Oleksandr Rybka
81 Flag of Serbia DF Marjan Marković
88 Flag of Ukraine FW Oleksandr Aliev

Incoming Transfers 2007/2008

No. Position Player
Flag of Croatia FW Tomislav Bušić (on loan from Hajduk Split)
Flag of Guinea FW Ismaël Bangoura (from Le Mans UC 72)
Flag of Brazil MF Michael (from Palmeiras)
Flag of Senegal DF Pape Diakhaté (from AS Nancy)

Outgoing Transfers 2007/2008

No. Position Player
Flag of Romania MF Florin Cernat (on loan to Hajduk Split)
Flag of Russia DF Andrey Eschenko (on loan to Dnipro Dnipropetrovsk)
Flag of Latvia FW Māris Verpakovskis (on loan to Hajduk Split)
Flag of Croatia DF Goran Sablić (on loan to Hajduk Split)
Flag of Brazil DF Rodrigo (to Flamengo)
No. Position Player

Out on loan

No. Position Player
Flag of Ukraine MF Oleh Herasimyuk (on loan to Arsenal Kyiv)
Flag of Ukraine DF Anatoly Kitsuta (on loan to Arsenal Kyiv)
Flag of Ukraine FW Andriy Kruglyak (on loan to Liepājas Metalurgs)
Flag of Serbia MF Igor Petković (on loan to Liepājas Metalurgs)
Flag of Latvia FW Māris Verpakovskis (on loan to Hajduk Split)
Flag of Croatia DF Goran Sablić (on loan to Hajduk Split)
No. Position Player
Flag of Georgia (country) FW Otar Martsvaladze (on loan to Zakarpattia Uzhhorod)
Flag of Ukraine DF Oleksandr Romanchuk (on loan to Arsenal Kyiv)
Flag of Romania MF Florin Cernat (on loan to Hajduk Split)
Flag of Russia DF Andrey Eschenko (on loan to Dnipro Dnipropetrovsk)
Flag of Georgia (country) DF Kahaber Aladashvili (on loan to Zakarpattia Uzhhorod)
Flag of Morocco MF Hicham Mahdoufi (on loan to FC Metalist Kharkiv)

Famous players

Flag of the Soviet Union USSR
 
Flag of Ukraine Ukraine
 
Flag of Georgia (country) Georgia
Flag of Belarus Belarus
Flag of Russia Russia
 
Flag of Senegal Senegal
Flag of Nigeria Nigeria
Flag of Croatia Croatia
Flag of Guinea Guinea

Notable managers

For more details on this topic, see List of Dynamo Kyiv managers.

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

Name Period Trophies
Flag of Ukraine Anatoly Puzach 1990-1993 2 league titles, 1 domestic cup
Flag of Ukraine Mykhailo Fomenko 1993-1994 1 leauge title
Flag of Ukraine Yozhef Sabo 1994-1996, 2004-2005, 2007 2 league titles, 2 domestic cups
Flag of Ukraine Valery Lobanovsky 1997-2002 5 league titles, 4 domestic cups
Flag of Ukraine Oleksiy Mykhaylichenko 2002-2004 2 league titles, 1 domestic cup
Flag of Ukraine Anatoly Demyanenko 2005-2007 1 league title, 2 domestic cups

League and Cup History

Season Div. Pos. Pl. W D L GS GA P Domestic Cup Europe Notes
1992 1st 2 18 13 4 1 31 13 30 1/4 finals ECC Group stage
1992-93 1st 1 30 18 8 4 59 14 44 Winner UC 2nd round
1993-94 1st 1 34 23 10 1 61 21 56 1/8 finals ECL 1st round
1994-95 1st 1 34 25 8 1 87 24 83 1/4 finals ECL Group stage
1995-96 1st 1 34 24 7 3 65 17 79 Winner ECL Group stage Dq from ECL for bribing
1996-97 1st 1 30 23 4 3 69 20 73 1/8 finals ECL Qual round
1997-98 1st 1 30 23 3 4 70 15 72 Winner ECL 1/4 finals
1998-99 1st 1 30 23 5 2 75 17 74 Winner ECL 1/2 finals
1999-00 1st 1 30 27 3 0 85 18 84 Winner ECL 2nd group stage
2000-01 1st 1 26 20 4 2 58 17 64 1/16 finals ECL 1st group stage
2001-02 1st 2 26 20 5 1 62 9 65 Runner-up ECL 1st group stage
2002-03 1st 1 30 23 4 3 66 20 73 Winner UC 3rd round ECL - 1st group stage
2003-04 1st 1 30 23 4 3 68 20 73 1/2 finals ECL 1st group stage
2004-05 1st 2 30 23 4 3 58 14 73 Winner UC Round of 32 ECL - 1st group stage
2005-06 1st 2 30 23 6 1 68 20 75 Winner ECL 2nd qual round
2006-07 1st 1 30 22 8 0 67 23 74 Winner ECL Group stage

See also

References

  1. ^ Cite error: Invalid <ref> tag; no text was provided for refs named capacity
  2. ^ Dynamo Team: The Legend (by Yuri Kuznetsov - Babij Yar)
  3. ^ a b Миф о "Матче смерти". Летопись Акселя Вартаняна (The "Death Match" legend) (Russian)
  4. ^ http://www.fcdynamo.kiev.ua/ua/dynamo/players/ Info as of 20 July 2007.
  • Dougan, Andy (2001). Dynamo: Triumph and Tragedy in Nazi-Occupied Kiev, Guilford, CN: Lyons Press. ISBN 1-58574-719-X.

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FC Dynamo Kyiv from Wíkipedia. ©2006 by Wíkipedia. Licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License. View a list of authors or edit this article.

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