FC Belshina Bobruisk

FC Belshina Bobruisk
Full name Football Club Belshina
Founded 1976
Ground Spartak Stadium, Bobruisk
Ground Capacity 3,700
Chairman Mikhail Bondarenko
Manager Eduard Gradoboyev
League Belarusian First League
2016 Premier League: 15th (relegated)

FC Belshina Bobruisk Belarusian: ЀК Β«Π‘Π΅Π»ΡˆΡ‹Π½Π° Бабруйск», FK Belshyna Babruisk) is a Belarusian football club based in Bobruisk.

History

The club was founded in 1976 as Sninnik Bobruisk. Since the inception the team was attached to and later sponsored by local tire manufacturing company Belshina. The club spent most of Soviet-era seasons in Belarusian SSR league (with a couple of seasons in Mogilev Oblast league). Shinnik won the league title twice (in 1978 and 1987) and also won Belarusian SSR Cup in 1979.[1]

In 1992 Shinnik joined Belarusian First League and in 1994 they were promoted to Premier League. In 1996, they were renamed to Belshina Bobruisk. Club's most successful seasons came in late 90s and early 2000s. Belshina won the champions title in 2001, finished as runners-up in 1997 and won Belarusian Cup three times (1997, 1999, 2001).

Name changes

Honours

Current squad

As of July 2017 [2]

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

No. Position Player
1 Belarus GK Andrey Sakovich
2 Belarus MF Sergey Vodyanovich
4 Belarus MF Stanislav Izhakovsky
5 Belarus DF Georgiy Monastyrskiy
7 Belarus FW Mikita Shuhunkow
8 Belarus MF Ivan Veras
9 Belarus MF Dmitry Khalimonchikov
10 Belarus MF Dzmitry Turlin
12 Belarus MF Dmitry Gradoboyev
13 Belarus DF Syarhey Kandratsyew
14 Belarus MF Dmitry Bubnov
17 Belarus FW Kirill Shokurov
20 Belarus FW Ilya Zatenko
No. Position Player
22 Belarus DF Sergey Volkorezov
25 Belarus GK Ilya Matalyha
82 Belarus FW Andrey Sherakow
Belarus DF Dmitry Berezkin
Belarus MF Yevgeniy Kudanov
Belarus MF Yegor Murashko
Belarus MF Ilya Rutskiy
Belarus FW Dmitry Gomza
Belarus FW Alyaksandr Krotaw
Belarus MF Yaroslav Shkurko
Belarus GK Yevgeniy Dergay
Russia DF Vitaly Marakhovsky
Belarus DF Oleg Chmyrikov

League and Cup history

Season Level Pos Pld W D L Goals Points Domestic Cup Notes
1992 2nd 2 161 11 2 3 24–9 24 Round of 32
1992–93 2nd 1 30 21 8 1 69–19 50 Round of 32 Promoted
1993–94 1st 7 30 15 1 14 41–41 31 Quarterfinals
1994–95 1st 13 30 7 9 14 31–50 23 Semifinals
1995 1st 15 15 4 3 8 17–29 15 Round of 32
2 1 0 1 3–2 3 Relegation Play-off2
1996 1st 3 30 20 3 7 67–32 63
1997 1st 2 30 21 3 6 67–30 66 Winners
1998 1st 3 28 17 6 5 47–17 57 Round of 16
1999 1st 8 30 13 6 11 52–42 45 Winners
2000 1st 9 30 11 5 14 42–38 38 Semifinals
2001 1st 1 26 17 4 5 43–20 55 Winners
2002 1st 8 26 12 4 10 44–38 373 Round of 16
2003 1st 10 30 8 8 14 44–50 32 Semifinals
2004 1st 16 30 2 6 22 21–62 12 Round of 16 Relegated
2005 2nd 1 30 23 4 3 61–19 73 Quarterfinals Promoted
2006 1st 14 26 1 6 19 16–46 9 Round of 64 Relegated
2007 2nd 4 26 15 7 4 46–26 494 Round of 32
2008 2nd 3 26 15 4 7 34–21 49 Round of 32
2009 2nd 1 26 20 4 2 55–15 64 Round of 16 Promoted
2010 1st 6 33 12 9 12 31–42 45 Round of 16
2011 1st 5 33 12 12 9 41–35 48 Semifinals
2012 1st 7 30 7 9 14 26–40 30 Round of 16
2013 1st 7 32 15 8 9 42–38 47 Quarterfinals
2014 1st 10 32 8 8 16 42–56 32 Quarterfinals
2015 1st 4 26 12 7 7 39-19 43 Quarterfinals
2016 1st 15 30 5 10 15 34-45 25 Quarterfinals

Belshina in European Cups

Season Competition Round Club 1st Leg 2nd Leg
1997–98 UEFA Cup Winners' Cup QR Estonia Sadam Tallinn 1–1 (A) 4–1 (H)
1R Russia Lokomotiv Moscow 1–2 (H) 0–3 (A)
1998–99 UEFA Cup 1Q Bulgaria CSKA Sofia 0–0 (A) 1–3 (H)
1999–2000 UEFA Cup QR Cyprus Omonia 1–5 (H) 0–3 (A)
2001–02 UEFA Cup QR Slovakia RuΕΎomberok 1–3 (A) 0–0 (H)
2002–03 UEFA Champions League 1Q Northern Ireland Portadown 0–0 (A) 3–2 (H)
2Q Israel Maccabi Haifa 0–4 (A) 0–1 (H)

Managers

References


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