FC Dnipro Dnipropetrovsk

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FC Dnipro Dnipropetrovsk
Full name FC Dnipro Dnipropetrovsk
(Ukrainian: ФК Днiпро Днiпропетровськ)
Founded 1925
Ground Meteor
Capacity 24,381
Chairman Ukraine Igor Kolomoyskiy
Head Coach Ukraine Oleg Protasov
League Ukrainian Premier League
2005-06 6th
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 Dnipro Dnipropetrovsk (Ukrainian: ФК Днiпро Днiпропетровськ) is a Ukrainian professional football club from the city of Dnipropetrovsk.

Contents

[edit] History

The club was established in 1925 as a team of the Petrovsky factory. It was renamed "Petrovets" the next year. The team entered the first Soviet competition under the name of Stal (Russian for steel) in 1936 in one of the lower divisions. In 1947, Stal merged with another club from Dnipropetrovsk, Dynamo Dnipropetrovsk. From 1949 until 1961, the team was called Metalurg (from English metal worker). In 1954, Metalurg Dnipropetrovsk reached the semi-finals of the USSR Cup, where it lost to Spartak Yerevan.

In 1961, the team was handed over to its new sponsor, the Yugmash (the Southern machine-producing factory), which at that time was one of the most powerful factories in the entire Soviet Union. The new sponsor changed the team's name to Dnepr, but the team's performance did not change much until after 1968, when Dnepr obtained Andriy Biba and the new coach - Valery Lobanovsky. After that it took the team three years to get promoted to the Soviet Top League and eventually took sixth place out of 16 teams in 1972.

In 1973 and 1976 Dnepr reached the semi-finals of the USSR Cup competition once again. In 1978 the team was relegated to the lower league for two years. Their next entrance was not as inviting as their first one and the team enjoyed the company of other weak teams in the league. Therefore the governing body of the team hired new promising coaches - Vladimir Yemets and Gennadiy Zhizdik. After those changes, Dnepr became a strong contender for the Soviet championship winning it twice: once with Yemets and Zhizdik in 1983, and another one with Evgeny Kucherevsky in 1988. During those years, the team featured many notable players such as Oleg Protasov, Gennadiy Litovchenko, Cherednik, and Tarans.

Following the collapse of the Soviet Union, Dnepr took on the Ukrainian translation, Dnipro, and stayed as one of the contenders for the gold in the newly formed Ukrainian Premier League. The team received silver medals in 1993 as well as bronze in 1992, 1995, 1996, 2001, 2004. The team also reached the Ukrainian Cup finals in 1995, 1997 and 2004, but lost all three to Shakhtar Donetsk.

FC Dnipro is currently controlled by the Privat Group.

[edit] Stadium

Main articles: Stadium Meteor

Currently Dnipro plays home fixtures at Stadium Meteor in Dnipropetrovsk. It was opened in 1966 and has undergone several renovations since, the last one being in 2001.

Capacity: 24381 all-seater
Pitch size: 105x68 m
Lighting: 1400 lux

Main articles: Dnipro Stadium

Due to a recent successful performance in domestic league and regular appearances in major European competitions the club became in need of larger, more modern venue. In April 2005 the FC Dnipro began a construction of their new arena, Dnipro Stadium. It is being built by Germany's largest construction company Hochtief and is planned to be finished in August 2007. It's planned capacity is 31,003 people. The estimated cost of construction is €40,000,000.

[edit] Honors

1983, 1988
1989
1988
1986, 1989


Runner-Up

1987, 1989
1983
1990
1993
1995, 1997, 2004
2006

Other

[edit] Squad

Squad is given according to the club's official website www.fcdnipro.dp.ua, as of March 25, 2007.

No. Position Player
1 Flag of Ukraine GK Maksim Startsev
2 Flag of Ukraine FW Serhiy Motuz
3 Flag of Ukraine DF Olexandr Hrytsay
5 Flag of Ukraine DF Volodymyr Yezerskiy
6 Flag of Ukraine MF Oleh Shelayev
7 Flag of Ukraine FW Olexandr Melaschenko
8 Flag of Belarus FW Sergei Kornilenko
9 Flag of Ukraine FW Kostantyn Balabanov
10 Flag of Russia FW Sergei Samodin
12 Flag of Ukraine DF Vyacheslav Serdyuk
13 Flag of Croatia MF Mladen Bartulovic
14 Flag of Ukraine DF Oleksandr Romanchuk (on loan from Dynamo Kyiv)
15 Flag of Ukraine DF Serhiy Matiukhin
16 Flag of Ukraine DF Andriy Rusol
No. Position Player
17 Flag of Ukraine MF Ruslan Bidnenko
18 Flag of Ukraine DF Oleksandr Yatsenko (on loan from Dynamo Kyiv)
19 Flag of Uzbekistan DF Vitaliy Denisov
20 Flag of Georgia (country) MF Jaba Kankava
22 Flag of Ukraine MF Denis Andriyenko
23 Flag of Ukraine GK Vyacheslav Kernozenko
24 Flag of Ukraine MF Konstantyn Kravchenko
25 Flag of Ukraine DF Bohdan Shershun
27 Flag of Brazil MF Morais Davidson
28 Flag of Ukraine MF Serhiy Nazarenko
32 Flag of Ukraine GK Anton Kanibolotsky
33 Flag of Ukraine FW Olexiy Chichikov
45 Flag of Georgia (country) FW Revazi Barabadze
77 Flag of Ukraine GK Artem Kusliy

[edit] Famous players

   

[edit] Coaches

[edit] UEFA Ranking

Club Ranking for 2006/2007 Euro Season (Previous year rank in italics, UEFA Club Coefficients in parentheses)

National League Ranking for 2006/2007 Euro Season (Previous year rank in italics)

[edit] External links


Flag of Ukraine
Ukrainian Premier League 2006-07 clubs
v  d  e
Flag of Ukraine
2005-06 Champion: Shakhtar Donetsk

Arsenal Kyiv | Chornomorets Odessa | Dnipro Dnipropetrovsk | Dynamo Kyiv | Illychivets Mariupol | Karpaty Lviv | Kharkiv | Kryvbas Kryvyi Rih | Metalist Kharkiv | Metalurh Donetsk | Metalurh Zaporizhzhya | Shakhtar Donetsk | Stal Alchevsk | Tavriya Simferopol | Vorskla Poltava | Zorya Luhansk