The United Tournament or United Supercup is an exhibition football club tournament between two best clubs from Ukraine and two from Russia.[1][2] The context of the tournament are the talks which are held regarding creating the United CIS championship, or joint Russia–Ukraine league.[3] The organisers of the tournament were the same people in charge of drafting a proposal for the united league.[4] The format of the first tournament was taken from the the Channel One Cup (two-legged ties for all pairs of clubs from different countries,),[5][6] but at the second edition it was changed to a round-robin.
History
The idea of a tournament between the top teams of Russia in Ukraine was already tried in the past as the Channel One Cup, and the United Tournament was called by many an incarnation of the original tournament (including the original format).[5][6][9][10][4]
The context of the tournament was talks which were held regarding creating the United CIS championship, or joint Russia–Ukraine league.[11] The organisers of the tournament were the same people in charge of drafting a proposal for the united league.[4]
The first edition Of the tournament took part in 2013 and included Shakhtar Donetsk and Dynamo Kiev from Ukraine; Zenit Saint Petersburg and FC Spartak Moscow from Russia. The format of the tournament was two-legged ties for all pairs of clubs from different countries. The host cities were Donetsk, Kiev and Ukraine. Dynamo Kyiv won the 2013 United Tournament, after beating Spartak Moscow in the last game.[12][13]
The second edition, 2014 United Supercup took place in Israel between 30 January 2013 – 5 February 2014. Four teams participated in it: Shakhtar Donetsk and Metalist Kharkiv from Ukraine; Zenit St. Petersburg and CSKA Moscow from Russia.[1][2] The clubs were picked by the principle of two top placed clubs in the local championships.[14] G-Drive became the edition official sponsor.[15] Before the tournament a press conference was held in Tel Aviv. Among the participants were Valery Gazzaev, the head of the committee in charge of the united championship, Mircea Lucescu, the manager of Shakhtar Donetsk, Leonid Slutskiy, the manager of PFC CSKA Moscow, Myron Markevych, the manager of Metallist Kharkiv, and Luciano Spalletti, the manager of FC Zenit Saint Petersburg.[16] The tournament format became round-robin (instead of two-legged ties for all pairs of clubs from different countries, as played previously). The first two games of the tournament were watched by 3 million Russians, which is 1 million more than the previous edition average.[17] The 2014 tournament was won by Shakhtar Donetsk from Ukraine, winning all 3 games.[18][19][20][21]
Results
Performances by country the clubs came from
Country |
Titles |
Runners-up |
Winning clubs |
Ukraine |
2 |
1 |
Shakhtar Donetsk (1), Dynamo Kiev (1) |
Russia |
0 |
1 |
|
See also
References