FC Chornomorets Odesa

Chornomorets Odesa
Full name Football Club Chornomorets Odesa
Nickname(s) The Sailors
Founded 26 March 1936 (1936-03-26)
Ground Chornomorets Stadium
Ground Capacity 34,164
President Leonid Klimov
Head coach Oleksandr Babych
League Ukrainian Premier League
2014–15 11th
Website Club home page

Chornomorets Odessa (Ukrainian: Футбо́льний Клуб Чорномо́рець Оде́сcа [t͡ʃornoˈmɔrɛt͡sʲ oˈdɛsɐ]) is a Ukrainian professional football club based in Odesa. The club's home ground is the 34,164 capacity Chornomorets Stadium opened in 1935 and rebuilt in 2011. The club was officially formed in 1936 as Dynamo,[1] but after a number of name and management changes, it emerged under its current name in 1958 sponsored by the Black Sea Shipping Company.[2]

The club was among top 20 Soviet clubs, yet it has very limited number of Soviet trophies.

History

Black Sea

At the beginning of the 20th century, in Odessa, within limits of Shevchenko Park, a construction started of what was supposed to become a lake. However, after the trench for the lake was dug out, the funding stopped and so did the construction. Soon the hole began to serve as a field for one of city's non-league teams. As the hole resembled a shape of the Black Sea, that was the nickname given to the field, and the team was named Chornomorets, which means "Black Sea man". And although that team is unrelated to the today's club, it was the first team in Odessa to play under that name.

History of name

Dynamo and previous names

The official date of foundation of Chornomorets Odessa is considered to be March 26, 1936 as Dynamo Odessa. Dynamo Odessa, however, participated before that in the city championship since 1923 (the year of establishment of the Ukrainian football competitions) winning it in 1933. Initially the club was named as Sparta Odessa. In 1940 after relegating from the Top level the club was merged with Pishchevyk (Kharchovyk) Odessa that participated in the republican competitions (Championship of Ukrainian SSR). In 1941 the club was included into the War Championship (Top division) under the name of Spartak Odessa.

Post WWII club

After the WWII the club was reestablished as Pishchevik (Kharchovyk) Odessa in the lower Soviet division. In 1950 the club lost its place in the play-offs to Spartak Uzhhorod (Zakarpattia Uzhhorod) and relegating to the republican-level competitions. In 1953 upon the enlargement of the "Class B" competitions (Second division), Metalurh Odessa appeared in the league. Later Metalurh was renamed into the better-known Pishchevik (Kharchovyk) Odessa for a short period of time. Since 1958 the club participate under its current name.

Recent History

The club was a founding member of the Ukrainian Premier League, winning the Ukrainian Cup and finishing 5th in the inaugural 1992 season. Chornomorets finished 3rd the next two seasons and 2nd during the following two seasons. They also won another domestic Cup in 1994. The club’s most successful spell was achieved under the guidance of Viktor Prokopenko, and later under Leonid Buryak. At the end of the 1997–98 season, following big financial troubles and the sale of a number of leading players, the club was relegated to the First League. They won promotion the following 1998–99 season, but finished in the second last place next year and were relegated again. Chornomorets came back up again for the 2002–03 season and enjoyed several decent seasons in the Premier League. They finished third in the 2005–06 season and took part in the 2006–07 UEFA Cup tournament.

Chornomorets were deducted 6 points by FIFA on November 6, 2008. It was confirmed by Ukrainian Premier League on March 2, 2009.[3] The club managed to finish the 2008–09 season in 10th place despite the deduction. The 2009–10 season started badly with a 5–0 loss to Dynamo Kyiv and a poor run of form that saw the team finish the first half of the season in 13th place, just two spots away from the relegation zone. The club was relegated to the First League at the end of the season. It took, however, just a year for Chornomorets to return to the Ukrainian top flight for the 2011–12 season.

FC Chernomorets emblem on the front of stadium «Chernomorets» in Odessa.

Kits and Kit Sponsors

Period Shirt sponsor
1958–89 Soviet Union BLASCO
1989–90 Japan Nisso Boeki
1990–91 Soviet Union BLASCO
1992–94 United States Pony
1994–97 Germany Reusch
1997–99 Germany Puma
2001–2014 Ukraine Imexbank
2014–2015 Ukraine ET
2015– Ukraine 2+2 Channel

Period Football kit sponsor
1936–70 Italy Kappa
1970–80 Germany Adidas
1992–94 United States Pony
1994–97 Germany Reusch
1997–99 Germany Puma
1999–02 Germany Adidas
2002–10 United Kingdom Umbro
2010– United States Nike

European Competitions

Season Competition Round Country Opponent Home & Away Score UEFA Co-efficient
1975/76 UEFA Cup 1R Italy Lazio Roma 1–0, 0–3 2.0
1985/86 UEFA Cup 1R Germany Werder Bremen 2–1, 2–3 3.0
2R Spain Real Madrid 1–2, 0–0
1990/91 UEFA Cup 1R Norway Rosenborg Trondheim 3–1, 1–2 3.0
2R France AS Monaco 0–0, 0–1
1992/93 European Cup Winners' Cup Q Liechtenstein FC Vaduz 5–0, 7–1 6.0
1R Greece Olympiakos Piraeus 1–0, 0–3
1994/95 UEFA Cup Winners' Cup 1R Switzerland Grasshopper Zürich 0–3, 1–0 2.0
1995/96 UEFA Cup Q Malta Hibernians FC 5–2, 2–0 7.0
1R Poland Widzew Łódź 1–0, 0–1 ns (6–5)
2R France RC Lens 0–0, 0–4
1996/97 UEFA Cup 2Q Finland HJK Helsinki 2–2, 2–0 4.0
1R Romania Național Bucharest 0–0, 0–2
2006/07 UEFA Cup 2Q Poland Wisła Płock 0–0, 1–1 1.0
1R Israel Hapoel Tel Aviv 0–1, 1–3
2007 Intertoto Cup 2R Belarus Shakhtyor Soligorsk 4–2, 2–0 0.0
3R France Racing Club Lens 0–0, 1–3
2013/14 Europa League 2Q Moldova Dacia Chisinau 2–0, 1–2
3Q Serbia Red Star Belgrade 3–1, 0–0
PO Albania Skënderbeu Korçë 1–0, 0–1 pen (7–6)
Group Bulgaria PFK Ludogorets 0–1, 1–1
Group Netherlands PSV Eindhoven 0–2, 1–0
Group Croatia Dinamo Zagreb 2–1, 2–1
2R France Olympique Lyon 0–0, 0–1
2014/15 Europa League 3Q Croatia RNK Split 0–2, 0–0

Honours

Domestic achievements

International achievements

Special prizes

Naming History

Players

Current squad

As of 14 February 2016 [4][5]

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

No. Position Player
3 Ukraine DF Artur Kuznetsov
5 Georgia (country) DF Davit Khocholava
6 Ukraine MF Kyrylo Kovalets
7 Ukraine FW Dmytro Korkishko
9 Ukraine FW Oleksiy Khoblenko (on loan from Dynamo)
11 Ukraine MF Yevhen Smirnov
12 Ukraine GK Yevhen Borovyk (Vice-captain)
13 Ukraine DF Oleksandr Azatskyi
14 Ukraine FW Yevhen Murashov
15 Georgia (country) DF Giorgi Gadrani
16 Ukraine MF Artem Filimonov (Captain)
17 Ukraine MF Mykyta Tatarkov
18 Brazil FW Sílvio
19 Ukraine DF Oleksandr Kalitov
No. Position Player
20 Ukraine MF Valeriy Kutsenko
21 Ukraine FW Petro Pereverza
22 Ukraine FW Vladyslav Kabayev (Vice-captain)
25 Ukraine DF Yevhen Martynenko
32 Ukraine MF Serhiy Petko
51 Ukraine DF Vladyslav Schetinin
61 Brazil MF Mateus Mendes
71 Ukraine GK Dmytro Bezruk
86 Ukraine FW Volodymyr Barilko (on loan from Metalist)
87 United States FW Eugene Starikov
94 Ukraine MF Oleh Danchenko
96 Ukraine MF Roman Stefurak
98 Ukraine MF Arkadiy Tumanyan

Out on loan

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

No. Position Player
Ukraine DF Andriy Slinkin (at Zaria Bălți)
Ukraine FW Navid Nasimi (at Hirnyk-Sport)
No. Position Player
Ukraine FW Vadym Yavorskyi (at Hirnyk-Sport)

Current coaching staff

Coaching staff based on the official website[6]

Position Name
Head Coach Oleksandr Babych
Assistant Coach Oleksandr Hranovsky
Fitness Coach Dmytro Holovko
Goalkeeping Coach Oleksandr Lavrentsov
Coach Andriy Telesnenko
Coach Valeriy Porkuyan
U21/U19 Team Head Coach Russia Gennadiy Nizhegorodov
U21/U19 Team Goalkeeping Coach Andriy Hlushchenko
U21 Coach Serhiy Matyukhin
U19 Coach Oleksandr Spitsyn
U19 Coach Serhiy Tsymbalar

League and Cup history

Soviet Union

Note: In Soviet competitions league calendar mostly stretched from spring through fall, while main rounds of the cup tournament sometimes would follow the fall-spring format.

Season Div. Pos. Pl. W D L GS GA P Domestic Cup Europe Notes
1970 1st 15 32 8 10 14 25 38 26 1/4 finals
1971 2nd 3 42 21 11 10 56 33 53 1/16 finals
1972 3 38 20 8 10 67 36 48 1/8 finals
1973 1 38 24 6 8 83 38 52 1/4 finals
1974 1st 3 30 12 11 7 35 31 35 1/8 finals
1975 12 30 8 10 12 27 35 26 1/16 finals UC 1st round
1976 10 15 4 7 4 14 18 15 1/8 finals spring half
9 15 7 1 7 14 20 15 fall half
1977 7 30 11 8 11 33 41 30 1/16 finals
1978 7 30 12 10 8 41 26 32 (−2) 1/8 finals Drawn games over limit
1979 11 34 10 11 13 32 37 28 (−3) Group stage Drawn games over limit
1980 7 34 13 9 12 37 37 35 Group stage
1981 11 34 11 9 14 36 44 31 1/4 finals
1982 10 34 11 11 12 30 36 32 (−1) Group stage Drawn games over limit
1983 8 34 16 5 13 44 46 37 1/8 finals
1984 4 34 16 9 9 49 38 41 1/4 finals Cup tournament switched format
1985 15 34 11 7 16 44 65 29 1/8 finals UC 2nd round Relegation tournament
1986 15 30 8 7 15 29 37 23 1/4 finals Relegated
1987 2nd 1 42 25 12 5 68 31 62 1/16 finals Promoted
1988 1st 13 30 9 6 15 24 37 24 1/64 finals
1989 6 30 11 9 10 40 41 31 1/16 finals
1990 9 24 8 3 13 23 29 19 1/8 finals UC 2nd round
1991 4 30 10 16 4 39 24 36 1/4 finals
1992 No competition 1/4 finalsCup

Notes:

Scheduled to play against PFC CSKA Moscow, Chornomorets withdrew from the Soviet Cup in 1992.

Ukraine

Season Div. Pos. Pl. W D L GS GA P Domestic Cup Europe Notes
1992 1st 5 18 9 7 2 30 12 35 Winner
1992–93 3 30 17 4 9 31 12 38 1/16 finals CWC 1st round
1993–94 3 34 20 8 6 52 23 48 Winner
1994–95 2 34 22 7 5 62 29 73 1/2 finals CWC 1st round
1995–96 2 34 22 7 5 56 25 73 1/16 finals UC 2nd round
1996–97 7 30 12 6 12 36 31 42 1/4 finals UC 1st round
1997–98 15 30 8 8 14 31 39 32 1/4 finals Relegated
1998–99 2nd 2 38 25 4 9 77 38 79 1/64 finals Promoted
1999–00 1st 15 30 6 8 16 20 50 26 1/16 finals Relegated
2000–01 2nd 6 34 17 6 11 44 28 57 1/8 finals
2001–02 2 34 21 4 9 48 21 67 1/16 finals Promoted
2002–03 1st 8 30 10 4 16 31 45 34 1/16 finals
2003–04 5 30 11 12 7 38 33 45 1/2 finals
2004–05 6 30 12 6 12 29 29 42 1/16 finals
2005–06 3 30 13 6 11 36 31 45 1/16 finals
2006–07 6 30 11 8 11 36 33 41 1/16 finals UC 1st round
2007–08 7 30 11 5 14 27 33 38 1/2 finals IC 3rd round
2008–09 10 30 12 2 16 34 42 32 1/16 finals (−6) disciplinaryCAS
2009–10 15 30 5 9 16 21 44 24 1/16 finals Relegated
2010–11 2nd 2 34 18 11 5 53 26 65 1/16 finals Promoted
2011–12 1st 9 30 10 7 13 32 42 37 1/4 finals
2012–13 6 30 12 7 11 32 36 43 Runners up
2013–14 5 28 12 10 6 30 22 46 1/2 finals EL 1/16 finals
2014–15 11 25 3 11 11 15 31 20 1/8 finals EL 3rd qual round [7]
2015–16 1st 1/8 finals

Notes:

on decision of Court of Arbitration for Sport about Đorđe Inđić[3]

Managers

See also

References

External links

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the Sunday, February 14, 2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.