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Wikipedia

FC Dynamo Kyiv

Football Club Dynamo Kyiv (Ukrainian: Футбольний клуб «Динамо» Київ, pronounced [dɪˈnɑmo ˈkɪjiu̯]) is a Ukrainian professional football club based in Kyiv. Founded in 1927 as a Kyivan football team of republican branch of the bigger Soviet Dynamo Sports Society, the club as a separate business entity was officially formed only in 1989 and currently plays in the Ukrainian Premier League, and has never been relegated to a lower division. The club has secured brand rights from the Ukrainian Dynamo society and has no direct relations to the sports society since 1989. Their home is the 70,050 capacity Olimpiyskiy National Sports Complex.

Dynamo Kyiv
Full nameФутбольний клуб «Динамо» Київ
Football Club Dynamo Kyiv
Nickname(s)Bilo-syni (The Blue & Whites)
Founded13 May 1927; 96 years ago (1927-05-13)
GroundNSC Olimpiyskiy
Capacity70,050
OwnerIhor Surkis
PresidentIhor Surkis
Head coachMircea Lucescu
LeagueUkrainian Premier League
2022–23Ukrainian Premier League, 4th of 16
WebsiteClub website
Current season

Since 1936, Dynamo Kyiv has spent its entire history in the top league of Soviet and later Ukrainian football. Its most successful periods are associated with Valeriy Lobanovskyi, who coached the team during three stints, leading them to numerous domestic and European titles. In 1961, the club became first-ever in the history of Soviet football that managed to overcome the total hegemony of Moscow-based clubs in the Soviet Top League. The Spartak Moscow–Dynamo Kyiv rivalry that began in the mid-1970s, is widely considered to have been one of the most exciting football rivalries in the Soviet Union.[1] Since becoming the first Soviet football club to participate in UEFA competition in 1965, Dynamo Kyiv has played in European competitions almost every season.

Over its history, Dynamo Kyiv have won 16 Ukrainian top-flight league titles, 13 Soviet top-flight league titles, 11 Ukrainian national cup competitions, 9 Soviet national cup competitions, and three continental titles (including two UEFA Cup Winners' Cups). Its two European Cup Winners' Cups make it one of the only two Soviet clubs to have won a UEFA trophy, the other being Dinamo Tbilisi. The Dynamo Kyiv first team became a base team for the Soviet Union national football team in the 1970–1980s and the Ukraine national football team in the 1990–2000s. The two stars on the club's crest each signify 10 top-flight seasons Dynamo Kyiv won. The club was recognised as the Eastern European Club of the 20th Century by France-Presse.

History

Early history

 
Dynamo Kyiv in 1928

Today's club was established based on the first squad of Kyiv's branch of the all-Union Dynamo sports society and its republican branch in the Ukrainian SSR, originally based out of Kharkiv. The Soviet government relocated capital to Kyiv in 1934. The all-Union Dynamo sports society was a sports department of the Soviet state security KGB, originally Cheka-OGPU. During the Soviet period Dynamo's players same as players of all Dynamos in the Soviet Union were officially Soviet uniform servicemembers earning rank, salary, and pension when playing on the team of masters.

On 13 May 1927, the statute of the Kyivan Proletarian Sport Society (PST) Dynamo was officially registered by the special commission in affairs of public organizations and unions of the Kyiv district.[2] The All-Union sport society of Dynamo in Moscow was formed earlier in 1923 on the initiative of the Felix Dzerzhinsky. Under the banner of Kyivan Dynamo gathered the representatives of the GPU the State Political Directorate, the Soviet secret police, the best footballers of which defended the honors of the Trade Union club "Sovtorgsluzhashchie", a portmanteau for Soviet retail servicemen.[3]

The leadership of Dynamo did not dare to reorganize the well-established club and the main title contender in the middle of a playing season. Therefore the first mention of the football club Dynamo could only be found on 5 April 1928 in the Russian-language newspaper (at that time) Vecherniy Kiev ("Evening Kyiv").

The Kyivan Sport Society Dynamo currently is organizing its own football team. "Dynamo" petitioned to Okrsofik for inclusion of its team in the playing season.

It was then when by the initiative of Semyon Zapadny, chief of the Kyiv GPU, the football team was created. His deputy, Serhiy Barminsky, started to form the team not only out of regular chekists (members of the Soviet secret police), but also footballers of other clubs in the city among which is mentioned a team "Sovtorgsluzhaschie".[4] All the footballers were either part of the consolidated city team or the city champions. The newly created team played its first official match on 1 July 1928 against a local consolidated city team while visiting Bila Tserkva.[2] Already on the fifth minute the Dynamo-men opened the score in the game, however, at the end the club lost it 1–2.[5] On 15 July, the Bila Tserkva newspaper Radyanska Nyva ("Soviet Fields") put it in such words:

In the second halftime Bila Tserkva easily strikes the ball in the net, thus, equalizing the score. Kyiv tried several counter attacks and even earned a free kick which was not able to convert. Near the end Bila Tserkva under the applause of thousands of spectators strikes in the second ball. The final whistle of the referee has fixated the victory of Bila Tserkva with the score 2:1.

The next match played by Dynamo was on 17 July 1928 hosting another Dynamo from the port city of Odesa.[2] As the club gained more experience and played on a regular basis, it started to fill the stadium with spectators with both the club and football in general gaining popularity in Soviet Ukraine.

Its club stadium Dynamo opened on 12 June 1933,[2] a year before the Soviet government turned the city into capital of the Soviet Ukraine.

During the Soviet era, the club was one of the main rivals, and often the only rival, to 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, making Dynamo a professional team of international importance.

In 1936, the first Soviet Championship was played, and Dynamo Kyiv was one of the pioneers of the newly formed league. The club's early successes were however limited to a second-place finish in 1936 and third place in 1937. In the 1941 season, the club only played nine matches as World War II interrupted league play.

The Death Match

 
Poster of the return match

The propaganda story is often told of how the Dynamo team, playing as "Start, City of Kyiv All-Stars", was executed by a firing squad in the summer of 1942 for defeating an All-Star team from the German armed forces by 5–1. The actual story, as recounted by Y. Kuznetsov, is considerably more complex. Still, this match has subsequently become known in the Soviet media as "The Death Match".

After the Nazi occupation of Ukraine began, former professional football players (Dynamo and Lokomotyv) found employment in the city's Bakery No. 3, and continued to play amateur football. The team participated in exhibition games that took place in the city among various other teams including teams composed of the Wehrmacht soldiers. The Kyiv's team played under the name of "Start", comprising eight players from Dynamo Kyiv (Nikolai Trusevych, Mikhail Svyridovskiy, Nikolai Korotkykh, Oleksiy Klymenko, Fedir Tyutchev, Mikhail Putistin, Ivan Kuzmenko, Makar Honcharenko) and three players from Lokomotyv Kyiv (Vladimir Balakin, Vasyl Sukharev and Mikhail Melnyk).

In July and August 1942, "Start" played a series of matches against the Germans and their allies. On 12 July, a German army team was defeated. A stronger army team was selected for the next match on 17 July, which "Start" defeated 6–0. On 19 July, "Start" defeated the Hungarian team MSG Wal 5–1. The Hungarians proposed a return match, held on 26 July, but were defeated again, 3–2.

"Start"'s streak was noticed and a match was announced for 6 August against a "most powerful" "undefeated" German Luftwaffe Flakelf (anti-aircraft artillery) team, but despite the game being talked up by the newspapers, they failed to report the 5–1 result. On 9 August, "Start" played a "friendly" against Flakelf and again defeated them. The team defeated Rukh 8–0 on 16 August, and afterwards, some of "Start"'s players were arrested by the Gestapo, tortured – Nikolai Korotkykh died during the torture – and sent to the nearby labour camp at Syrets. There is speculation 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".

In February 1943, following an attack by partisans or a conflict of the prisoners and administration, one-third of the prisoners at Syrets were killed in reprisal, including Ivan Kuzmenko, Oleksey Klymenko and goalkeeper Nikolai 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 or, according to other sources, escaped and hid in the city until it was liberated.

The story inspired three films: the 1961 Hungarian film drama Two Half Times in Hell, the 1981 American film Escape to Victory and the 2012 Russian film Match.

Last Soviet years

In 1989, the club transitioned into an independent company being disassociated from the Ukrainian republican society of Dynamo.[6] The club transitioned from the Soviet "team of masters" to a regular professional football club of "western" style as it was interpreted then. It also was part of the Mikhail Gorbachev's Perestroika reforms known as Khozrasschyot when state enterprises had difficult time to keep their associate organizations afloat and encouraged them to reorganize into self-sustained businesses.[7][8]

During the last seasons of the Soviet Top League, it competed in the national colors of Ukraine as part of the national movement that grew very popular.

Ukrainian Independence

 
Valeriy Lobanovskyi, the most successful coach in club history

After the dissolution of the Soviet Union, the club became a member of the newly formed Ukrainian Premier League. By the summer of 1993, however, the club was in crisis as the economic policy of Dynamo president Viktor Bezverkhy set Dynamo on the path to bankruptcy. On 19 July 1993, an extraordinary assembly of coaches and players fired Bezverkhy and established a stock society called "Football Club "Dynamo (Kyiv)". Hryhoriy Surkis was elected president of the new company. The republican and city councils of the Dynamo society agreed to hand over two training centers and Dynamo Stadium to Dynamo Kyiv. The founders besides the football team and the Dynamo councils became also the commercial consulting centre Slavutych and the British firm Newport Management. A review board was created, consisting of directors of the Ministry of Interior of Ukraine, and the Security Service, Border Troops, and General Prosecutor of Ukraine.

Dynamo's status as the country's principal club did not change, however, as they went on to dominate domestic competitions, winning or being runner-up in every year of the Premier League's existence and becoming a fixture in the UEFA Champions League. Its main rival in Ukraine is Shakhtar Donetsk, a club from the Donbas region, that came second to Dynamo several times before winning its first Premier League in 2002. The matches between these two sides are called the Ukrainian derby.

In 2007, as a part of club's 80-year anniversary, two gold stars were added to the top of the crest, representing ten Ukrainian championship titles and ten USSR champion titles. Due to club's poor performance in the UEFA Champions League during the last two seasons, Dynamo's management took a somewhat unexpected decision by appointing the first foreign manager in the club's history. Previously, only former players or Dynamo football academy graduates became managers, but in December 2007 Russian coach Yuri Semin was invited to become the new manager of Dynamo Kyiv. However, the club yielded to Shakhtar Donetsk in both the Ukrainian Cup and Premier League in 2008. In 2009. in the club's most successful European campaign since 1999, it reached the semi-finals of the UEFA Cup (eliminating such teams as Valencia and Paris Saint-Germain) but was defeated at that stage by Shakhtar Donetsk. However, 2009 also brought success, as the club celebrated its 13th Premier League title.

In a season which contained their record win, a 9–0 victory over Illichivets Mariupol, the club only managed to finish runners-up in the league in 2010–11, after Shakhtar Donetsk. In what would be icon Andriy Shevchenko's final season at the club, Dynamo also finished as runners-up in 2011–12. In the 2011–12 season Dynamo also managed to reach the group stage of the Europa League after being eliminated in the Champions League third qualifying round by Rubin Kazan by 0–2 in Kyiv and 2–1 in Kazan. In the Europa League playoffs, the club managed to defeat Litex Lovech with a 3–1 aggregate score. In the group stage, Dynamo finished third after a disappointing campaign in a group containing Beşiktaş, Maccabi Tel Aviv and Stoke City.

In April 2013, it was announced the club would play two European ties behind closed doors due to racism from fans during previous European ties. In the 2012–13 season, the club managed to qualify for the Champions League group stage after eliminating Feyenoord 3–1 and Borussia Mönchengladbach 4–3 on aggregate and qualified for the Champions League group stage. Dynamo was placed in a group with Paris Saint-Germain, Porto and Dinamo Zagreb and finished in third place with only five points and was eliminated in the Europa League round of 32 by Bordeaux 2–1 on aggregate. In the Premier League, Dynamo finished third, whereas in the Cup, it was eliminated in the round of 32. Overall, the 2012–13 season was a disappointment for Dynamo. The 2013–14 season was an equally disappointing season as Dynamo finished in fourth place in the league, the worst since the establishment of the Premier League and only managed to reach the round of 32 in the Europa League where it was eliminated by Valencia 2–0 on aggregate. Oleh Blokhin was sacked and was replaced by former player Serhii Rebrov. As a result, Dynamo managed to win the 2013–14 Ukrainian Cup for the first time in five years.[9]

Dynamo's revival

 
Serhii Rebrov, former player and manager of the team from 2014 to 2017

In the beginning of the 2014–15 season, Dynamo signed many promising players such as Aleksandar Dragović, Jeremain Lens (departed after end of the season), Łukasz Teodorczyk and Vitorino Antunes. Under Rebrov, Dynamo won the 2014–15 Ukrainian Premier League – undefeated – and the 2014–15 Ukrainian Cup to earn a domestic double for the first time in eight years. In the 2014–15 Europa League, Dynamo comfortably qualified from a group containing Aalborg BK, Steaua București and Rio Ave, finishing in first place with 15 points. In the round of 32, the club eliminated Guingamp 4–3 on aggregate, and in the round of 16, eliminated Everton 6–4 on aggregate after a spectacular 5–2 performance in Kyiv. Rebrov prioritized the passing game but focused on solid defensive foundations. However, in the quarter-finals of the Europa League, Dynamo was eliminated by Fiorentina 3–1 on aggregate.

In the beginning of the 2015–16 season, Dynamo signed the highly talented Derlis González and was drawn in Group G of the 2015–16 Champions League alongside Chelsea F.C., FC Porto and Maccabi Tel Aviv F.C. Dynamo finished in second place with 11 points after a spectacular performance and a memorable 0–2 in Porto. However, Dynamo was punished by UEFA for a racist incident in the home game against Chelsea where four black men were attacked in the stands by Dynamo fans.

Despite this, Dynamo reached the round of 16 in the Champions League for the first time since 2000, where it was drawn with Manchester City. Dynamo was eliminated 1–3 on aggregate but managed to hold an impressive 0–0 draw in Manchester. Dynamo's domestic performance was equally memorable as the club celebrated the 2015–16 Ukrainian Premier League only losing to archrival Shakhtar Donetsk 0–3 twice and was eliminated in the quarter-finals of the 2015–16 Ukrainian Cup. At the end of the season, several star performers (such as Miguel Veloso, Aleksandar Dragović, Younès Belhanda and Łukasz Teodorczyk) departed the club and were not replaced.

Stagnation period

 
Mircea Lucescu, current manager of the team

The 2016–17 season was a relative disappointment for Dynamo, as the club finished in second place in the 2016–17 Ukrainian Premier League, behind Shakhtar Donetsk, with a difference of 13 points after a string of disappointing results. In the 2016–17 Champions League, the club was drawn in Group B alongside Napoli, Benfica and Beşiktaş J.K. Dynamo finished in fourth place after a dismal campaign, but managed to record a memorable 6–0 win over Beşiktaş in Kyiv. In the winter transfer window, Dynamo signed promising defenders Aleksandar Pantić and Tamás Kádár and focused on youth academy talents such as Viktor Tsyhankov, Artem Besyedin and Volodymyr Shepelyev, managing to improve its performances. Dynamo lost the 2016–17 Ukrainian Cup to Shakhtar Donetsk 0–1 in the final.

For the 2017–18 season, after Serhii Rebrov departed, the club appointed former player Alyaksandr Khatskevich as Rebrov's replacement. In Khatskevich's first two seasons at the helm, Dynamo failed to qualify for the UEFA Champions League group stage, having to settle for the UEFA Europa League group stage instead. Both times they were eventually eliminated in the Round of 16, first by S.S. Lazio (2–4 on aggregate) in 2017–18, and then by Chelsea F.C. (0–8 on aggregate) in 2018–19. Domestically, Dynamo remained firmly in second place behind Shakhtar Donetsk in the Ukrainian Premier League. Despite the apparent lack of progress in the results, Khatskevich was rewarded with a two-year contract extension.[10]

However, only six matches into his new extension, Khatskevich was fired on 14 August 2019,[11] after once again failing to advance to the UEFA Champions League group stage. Dynamo's Sports Director, Oleksiy Mykhaylychenko, was appointed as manager. Despite the change, the results on the field hardly improved, as Dynamo was eliminated from continental competitions by placing 3rd in Group B of the 2019–20 UEFA Europa League group stage.

On 23 July 2020, Mircea Lucescu became the head coach of Dynamo. Lucescu signed a two-year contract.[12]

Crests and colours

Crest

Being a member of the All-Union Sports Society Dynamo, the Dynamo football team of Kyiv adopted the same emblem of the Dynamo's sports society as its first logo, which featured on their shirts since 1927 and was a cursive blue Cyrillic letter "Д" (D)[13] in a vertical rhombus. Similar emblem existed in other Soviet football teams throughout the Soviet Union such as FC Dynamo Moscow, FC Dinamo Tbilisi, FC Dinamo Minsk, and others. The idea of symbol is attributed to a native of Ukraine Leonid Nedolya-Honcharenko who at that time served as a chief of political department of the OGPU troops in Moscow District.[14]

The symbol the club obtained on franchise rights from the Ukrainian Fitness and Sports Society "Dynamo" (see Dynamo–Ukraine). Over the years, the club's logo has undergone many changes and replacements, but the cursive "D" has remained ever since.

In 2003 after Dynamo won their 10th domestic trophy, a golden star was added at the top of the logo to celebrate the club's success. The second star was added to the logo in 2007 during celebrations of Dynamo's 80-year anniversary. Although Dynamo has won only 15 Ukrainian league titles, their 13 titles as USSR Champions were taken into account.

 
Dynamo's emblems displayed at the stadium

Dynamo's traditional colours are white and dark blue, with white being the predominant colour. Throughout their history the club has usually played in a white shirt and blue shorts. This was changed in 1961 when a blue sash was added to the kit; it was removed soon afterwards. In 2004, the club's management decided to restore the famous sash as a talisman. It was added to the away kit and remained there until the beginning of the 2008–09 season, when it was replaced by a white kit with a shirt having thin blue vertical stripes, the first time in over 50 years that a club had worn such a pattern.

During the last two seasons before the breakup of the Soviet Union, Dynamo's kit was similar to Metalist, yellow shirts and blue shorts. This color scheme carried a symbolic meaning, representing the national colours of the yet-not-adopted Ukraine national flag. In the 1990 Soviet Cup Final, the yellow-blue Dynamo team thrashed the all-Red Lokomotiv 6–1 at Luzhniki Stadium. In the early years of Ukrainian independence, the club swapped their yellow colour for white. However blue remained one of Dynamo's colours and is still a main colour of the club's away kit.

The club's current sponsors, New Balance and ABank24, feature on the team shirt. New Balance is also the manufacturer of the kit. Among former sponsors there were Ostchem Holding, Nadra Bank, PrivatBank, Prominvestbank, Ukrtelecom, and others.

Colours

Kit suppliers and shirt sponsors

 
The original logo of the professional club (1989–1996)
 
Logo (1972—1989) as part of republican Dynamo (Ukraine) society
Period[15] Kit manufacturer Shirt sponsor
1975–1987 Adidas
1987 Commodore
1987–1988 OCRIM
1988–1989
1989 Duarig FISAC Como
1989–1990 Admiral FISAC
1990–1991 Lufthansa
1992–1994 Umbro Lufthansa
1994–1995
1996 Prominvestbank
1996–2004 Adidas Prominvestbank
2004–2006 EnergoHolding
(Gazprom)
2006–2007 Ukrtelekom
2007–2013 PrivatBank
2013–2015 Nadra Bank
2015–2018
2018–2021 New Balance[16]
2021– A-Bank[17]

Achievements and honours

 
Each gold star on the Dynamo's emblem represents 10 championships.

Dynamo Kyiv has participated in all of the USSR and Ukrainian championships to date, and has won both competitions more times than any other team. The club's best performances were in the 1970s and 1980s, a time in which the Soviet Union national football team was composed mostly of players from the club. Dynamo Kyiv tied the national record for winning three consecutive Soviet Premier League titles in 1966, 1967, and 1968.

Dynamo Kyiv won the UEFA 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 semi-finals of the UEFA Champions League. These victories are associated with the name of Valeriy Lobanovskyi, who played for the club in the 1960s and later became the club's long-term head coach. In 2009 the club reached the semi-final of the UEFA Cup.

Dynamo 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.

Dynamo Kyiv is also was one of the base clubs of the Soviet Union national football team and many players of the club represented the Soviet Union at international level. After fall of the Soviet Union, Dynamo became the base club of the Ukraine national football team.

Dynamo striker Oleh Blokhin is the Soviet Union national football team all-time top scorer with 42 goals, and has also made more appearances than any other player for the team with 112. Two other Dynamo strikers – Oleh Protasov and Viktor Kolotov – are among the Soviet Union national football team top five best scorers with 29 and 22 goals respectfully. Two other Dynamo players – Anatoliy Demyanenko and Volodymyr Bezsonov – are among the Soviet Union national football team top five players with most appearances 80 and 79 respectfully.

Four former Dynamo's players were appointed as a head coach of the Soviet Union national team, among which Valeriy Lobanovsky, Oleh Bazylevych, Vladimir Salkov and Anatoliy Byshovets. All head coaches of the Ukraine national team but two were at some time former players of Dynamo Kyiv.

Individual player awards

 
Ballon d'Or winners, former players for FC Dynamo Kyiv Andriy Shevchenko, Oleg Blokhin, and Ihor Belanov

Several players have won individual awards during or for their time with Dynamo Kyiv

European Footballer of the Year (Ballon d'Or)

UEFA Golden Player Award

FIFA 100

European Championship winners

Two players have won the European Championship whilst at Dynamo Kyiv.

Hall of Fame

While there is no such institution in the club, it does honor its notables players as "Golden Names", while coaches are honored as "Legendary Mentors".

Grounds

Stadiums

 
Valeriy Lobanovskyi Dynamo Stadium
 
Olimpiyskiy National Sports Complex

The club's home ground, Valeriy Lobanovskyi Dynamo Stadium, is situated in a park located in the centre of the city, close to the Dnieper River bank. The stadium holds 16,873 spectators, and has been the club's home since 1934. When it was built the stadium's capacity was 23,000.[20] After being destroyed in 1941 during World War II, it was rebuilt in 1954. By the end of the 20th century, the stadium was reconstructed as a football-only venue with individual seats. These changes reduced the facility's capacity to its present one. In 2002 after the sudden death of Dynamo's longtime player and coach Valeriy Lobanovskyi, the stadium was renamed in his honour. After NSK Olympiyskiy was closed for reconstruction in 2008, Dynamo also began to play its European games at the Lobanovsky Stadium.

Due to a high demand for European fixtures of the club throughout its European history Dynamo played a majority of their home fixtures at Kyiv's and Ukraine's largest stadium, the Olimpiyskiy National Sports Complex, historically dubbed The Republican Stadium, which held 83,450 spectators. The stadium has been the home of the Ukrainian Cup final since its inaugural game in 1992 and up until 2007. The stadium was closed for a major reconstruction in 2008, after Ukraine and Poland were chosen to host the UEFA Euro 2012. The Olympiysky became Kyiv's main venue[clarification needed][citation needed] as well as the stadium that hosted the final; it also become a UEFA Elite rated stadium.

The team also has a modern-equipped training base in the Kyiv suburb of Koncha-Zaspa. 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.

Reserve, youth and junior teams

 
Entrance sign of the football academy at Nyvky

Dynamo Kyiv has several reserve teams. Dynamo reserve teams competed in national competitions since 1946. The club was fielding its reserve team in the Soviet Top League competitions for reserve teams (so called doubles) that existed in 1946–1991. Dynamo doubles team holds a record for number of champion titles of the Soviet Top League for doubles winning it 15 times with a closest pursuing Spartak doubles team trailing with 9 titles. In 2004 the club revived its reserve team which later became youth (U-21) team competing at Ukrainian Premier League competitions for U-21 and U-19 teams. Dynamo football school (academy) fields few teams in Ukrainian Youth Football League as well as Kyiv city football league. Among possibly most exotic football academy graduates is a former Moroccan international Tarik El Jarmouni.

Besides its normal junior squads, FC Dynamo Kyiv also has fielded its second team Dynamo-2 which competed among regular "teams of masters" (Soviet analog of professional teams) as well as republican competitions (amateur level) during the Soviet period. The first time the team participated in football competitions at professional level was in 1964 when it took part in the Soviet Second League (in so called the Ukrainian Soviet football competitions). With dissolution of the Soviet Union in 1991, Dynamo-2 was revived based on the Dynamo's reserve team that participated in the Soviet Top League for doubles. The team continued to play in Ukrainian First League for over 20 years. Along with the second team, Dynamo created also its third team Dynamo-3 which at first played at amateur level and later advanced to Ukrainian Second League. Since 2016, Dynamo has discontinued its numbered team.

Reserve team (under-21) honours

  • Soviet Top League (reserves): 15 (record)
    • 1949, 1963, 1965, 1966, 1968, 1972, 1974, 1976, 1977, 1980, 1981, 1982, 1983, 1985, 1990
  • Ukrainian Premier League (reserves / under-21): 6 (record)
    • 2004–05, 2005–06, 2006–07, 2007–08, 2015–16, 2016–17

Other departments

Since parting from its parent Dynamo society in 1989, Dynamo Kyiv becoming exclusively a football club (other departments were left with the Kyiv city branch of Dynamo–Ukraine) had also its own women team which while not being as successful as the main team, had some degree of success when they were playing first at Soviet and later at Ukrainian competitions. In 1994 the whole women department was liquidated as the owners of the club lost interest in it.

In 2017 the Ukrainian Association of Football pursued existing men football clubs to help with development of women's football in Ukraine and either create own teams or adopt already existing teams of separate women football clubs or sports schools.

In 2021 Dynamo in cooperation with the Kyivan Olympic College reestablished its women football team replacing the college team at the second tier of the two-tier national football pyramid for women and gained promotion the same season.

Supporters and rivalries

 
A dynamo flag with Sviatoslav the Brave

The Dynamo fan movement is one of the oldest in Ukraine. Active support began in 1980s during the Soviet period (Ukrainian SSR). Then began to appear first graffiti with the team's logo and was registered one of the biggest fights in the USSR: Dynamo fans against fans of Spartak Moscow in the center of Kyiv.[21] In the 1990s on the stands became popular English style.[citation needed]

 
Dynamo Kyiv fans show the team's logo at a match versus Borussia Mönchengladbach.

Dynamo ultras are usually associated with right-wing politics and many[clarification needed] adhere to nationalist ideas.[22] Historically they would frequently hold patriotic (Ukrainian nationalism) and strongly anti-communist actions. During the reign of Viktor Yanukovych the ultras had bad relations with the government, caused by persecutions of fans and other political factors.[23] The most publicized action was "Freedom Pavlichenko" (Ukrainian: Волю Павліченкам) in support of political prisoners father and son Pavlichenko.[24] The ultras Dynamo took part in the Independence Day of Ukraine and Heroes Day celebrations.

Dynamo ultras often use the image of Sviatoslav the Brave in the design of their banners.[25] Svyatoslav, a printed magazine of Dynamo ultras, also bears the Kyiv prince's name.[26]

The most famous derby in Ukraine is Ukrainian derby, always held in a tense atmosphere. Dynamo maintains friendly relations with: Karpaty Lviv, Dnipro Dnipropetrovsk (Braty po zbroyi; Band of Brothers), Hutnik Kraków[27] and with Zalgiris Vilnius, GNK Dinamo Zagreb, Dinamo Tbilisi, Stade Rennais F.C. fans. Strained relations with: Shakhtar Donetsk,[28] Chornomorets Odesa, Metalist Kharkiv, Spartak Moscow and Legia Warsaw.[29] Now all fans have declared a truce because of the war in Eastern Ukraine.[30] They play the Kyiv derby with Arsenal Kyiv, a strong rivalry also due to politics; Arsenal fans are known to be strongly left-wing.[31]

Players

First team squad

As of 4 July 2023[32][33]

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

No. Pos. Nation Player
22 MF   NED Justin Lonwijk
24 DF   UKR Oleksandr Tymchyk
25 DF   UKR Maksym Dyachuk
29 MF   UKR Vitaliy Buyalskyi (vice-captain)
30 MF   SEN Samba Diallo
34 DF   UKR Oleksandr Syrota
35 GK   UKR Ruslan Neshcheret
37 MF   UKR Anton Tsarenko
40 DF   UKR Kristian Bilovar
44 DF   UKR Vladyslav Dubinchak
70 MF   UKR Bohdan Lyednyev
75 GK   UKR Yuriy Avramenko
77 MF   NGA Benito
91 MF   UKR Nazar Voloshyn
92 MF   MKD Reshat Ramadani
MF   LUX Gerson Rodrigues
MF   GEO Heorhiy Tsitaishvili
DF   BRA Sidcley
MF   UKR Akhmed Alibekov

U-19 team

Out on loan

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

No. Pos. Nation Player
DF   POL Tomasz Kędziora (at PAOK until 30 June 2024)
MF   UKR Mykola Mykhaylenko (at Zorya Luhansk until 30 June 2024)
MF   UKR Mykyta Kravchenko (at Polissya Zhytomyr until 30 June 2024)
MF   UKR Viktor Bliznichenko (at Inhulets Petrove until 30 June 2024)
MF   UKR Bohdan Biloshevskyi (at Oleksandriya until 30 June 2023)
MF   DEN Mikkel Duelund (at   AGF until 30 June 2023)
MF   UKR Yevheniy Smyrnyi (at Kolos Kovalivka until 30 June 2023)
No. Pos. Nation Player
MF   UKR Illya Skrypnyk (at Bukovyna Chernivtsi until 30 June 2023)
MF   UKR Yevheniy Smyrnyi (at Kolos Kovalivka until 30 June 2023)
MF   UKR Vikentiy Voloshyn (at Oleksandriya until 30 June 2023)
MF   BRA Vitinho (at   Red Bull Bragantino until 30 June 2023)
FW   UKR Yevhen Isayenko (at Kolos Kovalivka until 31 December 2023)
FW   UKR Kiril Popov (at Kolos Kovalivka until 30 June 2023)

Retired number(s)

12  Club Supporters (the 12th Man)

Presidents and other officials

Presidents

Vice-Presidents

  • 2005–2010: Mykhailo Oshenkov (son of Oleg Oshenkov)
  • 2005–2010: Vadym Kostiuchenko
  • 2018–2020: Yevhen Krasnikov
  • 1993–2011: Vitaliy Sivkov

General directors

  • 2007–present:   Rezo Chohonelidze

Sports directors

Technical directors

Coaches and administration

Administration[34] Coaching[35] (senior team) Coaching[36] (U-19 teams)
  • President – Ihor Surkis
  • First vice-president – Vitaliy Sivkov
  • General director –   Rezo Chokhonelidze
  • Sports director – Heorhiy Vorogovskyi
  • Vice-president – Leonid Ashkenazi
  • Vice-president – Andriy Madzianovsky
  • Vice-president – Oleksiy Palamarchuk
  • Vice-president – Oleksiy Semenenko
  • Vice-president – Mark Ginsburg

Notable coaches

  • In the Ukrainian championship

The following individuals have all won at least one trophy while coaching Dynamo Kyiv:

Name Period Trophies
  Oleg Oshenkov 1954 1 domestic cup
    Vyacheslav Solovyov 1961 1 league title
  Viktor Maslov 1964, 1966–68 3 league titles, 2 domestic cups
    Aleksandr Sevidov 1971 1 league title
    Anatoliy Puzach 1990 1 league title, 1 domestic cup
  Mykhaylo Fomenko 1993 1 league title, 1 domestic cup
  Yozhef Sabo 1994, 1996, 2005, 2007 2 league titles, 2 domestic cups
  Mykola Pavlov 1995 1 league title
    Valeriy Lobanovskyi 1974, 1975, 1977, 1978, 1980–82, 1985–87, 1997–01 12 league titles, 8 domestic cups, 2 UEFA Cup Winners' Cups, 1 UEFA Supercup
  Oleksiy Mykhaylychenko 2003, 2004, 2019–2020 2 league titles, 2 domestic cup, 1 super cup
  Anatoliy Demyanenko 2006, 2007 1 league title, 2 domestic cups, 2 super cups
  Yuri Semin 2009 1 league title, 1 super cup
  Valery Gazzaev 2009–2010 1 super cup
  Serhii Rebrov 2014–2017 2 league titles, 2 domestic cups, 1 super cup
  Alyaksandr Khatskevich 2017–2019 2 super cups
  Mircea Lucescu 2020– 1 league title, 1 domestic cup, 1 super cup

Club records and statistics

Oleksandr Shovkovskyi currently holds Dynamo's official appearance record, having made 637 appearances in all competitions, over the course of 17 seasons from 1993 until 2016. He also holds the record for Ukrainian Premier League (Vyshcha Liha) appearances with 426, while Oleh Blokhin remains unreachable for Soviet Top League appearances with 432.

Including all competitions, Oleh Blokhin is the all-time leading goalscorer for Dynamo with 266 goals since joining the club in 1969, 211 of which were scored in Soviet Top League (another Dynamo record). Serhiy Rebrov, who is the all-time topscorer for Ukrainian Premier League, comes in second in all competitions with 163.

Dynamo Kyiv qualified for continental competitions for the last 32 years since 1990 and missed only twice (two seasons) since 1973.

Divisional movements

Tier Years Last Promotions Relegations
Top League (tier 1) 54 1991 22 times to Europe never
56 years of professional football in Soviet Union since 1936
Tier Years Last Promotions Relegations
Premier League (tier 1) 31 2021–22 30 times to Europe never
31 years of professional national football in Ukraine since 1992

Soviet Union

World War II

Ukraine

Russian aggression against Ukraine

Dynamo Kyiv in European competitions

Dynamo Kyiv made a forceful entrance into European competitions in the 1965–66 European Cup Winners' Cup, advancing into the quarter-finals before losing to Celtic F.C. The club is a regular visitor to UEFA competitions, having participated in over 50 tournaments. Dynamo Kyiv has not missed a single season of European competition since 1990 and, since 1973, has only missed out twice (1984–85 and 1988–89). During the Soviet era, the club won the European Cup Winners' Cup twice, in 1975 and 1986, the 1975 European Super Cup and reached the semi-finals of the European Cup/Champions League three times, once under the Ukrainian banner.

European cups finals

UEFA club coefficient ranking

As of 5 May 2021
Source: [37]

Rank Team Points
30  Beşiktaş 49.000
31   Dynamo Kyiv 47.000
32   Sporting CP 45.500

UEFA Rankings since 2007

Source: [37]

Season Ranking Movement Points Change
2020–21 31   -5 47.000   -8.000
2019–20 26   -2 55.000   -10.000
2018–19 23 =0 65.000   +3.000
2017–18 23   +2 62.000 new points system
2016–17 25   +1 67.526   +1.550
2015–16 26   +1 65.976   +0.943
2014–15 27   +7 65.033   +8.840
2013–14 34   -9 56.193   -12.958
2012–13 25   +6 68.951   +6.925
2011–12 31   -1 62.026   +1.250
2010–11 30   +14 60.776   +17.866
2009–10 44   -3 42.910   -3.460
2008–09 41   +33 46.370   +11.438
2007–08 74   -13 34.932   -3.791

Player records

[38][39]

Top goalscorers

As of 30th November 2022[40]
# Name Years League Cup Europe Other Total
1   Oleh Blokhin 1969–1987 211 29 26 0 266
2   Serhiy Rebrov 1992–2000
2005–2007
113 19 31 0 163
3   Maksim Shatskikh 1999–2008 97 22 23 0 142
4   Andriy Yarmolenko 2007–2017 99 19 19 0 137
5   Andriy Shevchenko 1994–1999
2009–2012
83 16 25 0 124
6   Oleh Husiev 2003–2016
2017–2018
57 15 22 2 96
7   Victor Tsyhankov 2016–2023 77 4 13 0 94
8   Artem Milevskyi 2002–2013 57 11 16 3 87
9   Viktor Kanevskyi 1973–1984 56 12 14 0 82
10   Leonid Buryak 1971–1981 62 11 8 0 81
  • Other – National Super Cup

Most appearances

As of 19 May 2018[41]
# Name Years League Cup Europe Other Total
1   Oleksandr Shovkovskyi 1993–2016 426 58 144 9 637
2   Oleh Blokhin 1969–1987 432 67 79 3 581
3   Oleh Husiev 2003–2016
2017–2018
295 43 98 6 442
4   Anatoliy Demyanenko 1979–1990
1992–1993
347 47 43 2 439
5   Leonid Buryak 1973–1984 304 52 51 2 409
6   Volodymyr Veremeyev 1968–1982 310 45 44 2 401
7   Volodymyr Muntyan 1965–1977 302 34 35 0 371
8   Volodymyr Bezsonov 1976–1990 278 48 39 3 368
9   Serhii Rebrov 1992–2000
2005–2007
242 44 72 2 360
10   Vladyslav Vashchuk 1993–2002
2005–2008
253 41 62 0 356
  • Other – National Super Cup

Scandals

FootballLeaks-2

German journalists from Der Spiegel[42] Rafael Buschmann and Michael Wulzinger published a book titled Football Leaks – 2.

A separate part titled "Ukrainische Bruderschaft" (Ukrainian Brotherhood) describes brothers Ihor and Hryhorii Surkis's activities in the football sphere and their relation to the "Newport" offshore. All FC "Dynamo’s" activities are financed by this company. The authors refer to Football Leaks documents.[43]

The book tells that starting from 1993, all the financial activities of Kyiv-based FC "Dynamo" have been performed via the company 'Newport", controlled by the club's boss Ihor Surkis. Having cited the FIFA data, the authors noted that in 2011–2017 the "Newport" has spent US$324 million to buy 82 players for FC "Dynamo". The taxes from this sum haven't been paid in Ukraine.

See also

References

  1. ^ Wilson, Jonathan (12 August 2008). "Honour on the line as Soviet football's biggest rivalry awakens once more". The Guardian. ISSN 0261-3077. Retrieved 24 June 2019.
  2. ^ a b c d Evgeni Kazakov. The Soviet First League in football (Первая лига СССР по футболу). History of the Soviet championships in football. Volume 1 (1936–1969). Litres, 2019
  3. ^ Sovtorgsluzhashchie at ukrsoccerhistory.com
  4. ^ Радторгслужбовці Київ. www.kopanyi-myach.info
  5. ^ Banyas, V. 1 July 1928: the first game of Dynamo (1 липня 1928–го: перший матч «Динамо») 1 July 2018 at the Wayback Machine. Ukrainian Premier League. 1 July 2018
  6. ^ Yuriy Korzachenko. Ретро. Как на киевское «Динамо» велосипед наехал. footclub.com.ua. 23 February 2013
  7. ^ Вспоминая эпоху Горбачева: Время, когда деньги лежали под ногами. www.kp.ru. 31 August 2022
  8. ^ Глава 30. ВЗГЛЯДЫ НА ОТДЕЛЬНЫЕ СТОРОНЫ ИЗМЕНЕНИЯ СОЦИАЛЬНО-ЭКОНОМИЧЕСКОЙ СИСТЕМЫ. Шестой том. "Всемирная история экономической мысли". www.booksite.ru.
  9. ^ Dynamo Kyiv ordered to play next two European ties behind closed doors due to racism incidents from fans, The Daily Telegraph (10 April 2013) On 21 January 2014, in midst of the Ukrainian Revolution, the VK fan site called out to all fans to go into the streets and protect the city from the "titushki", or hired pro-government thugs.
  10. ^ "Хацкевич продлил контракт с Динамо" [Khatskevich extended contract with Dynamo]. football.ua (in Russian). 6 June 2019. Retrieved 16 March 2020.
  11. ^ "Динамо уволило Хацкевича" [Dynamo fired Khatskevich]. football.ua (in Russian). 14 August 2019. Retrieved 16 March 2020.
  12. ^ "Former Shakhtar coach Mircea Lucescu hired by Dynamo Kyiv". The Washington Post. Associated Press. Retrieved 24 July 2020.
  13. ^ . FC Dynamo Kyiv.
  14. ^ Kolomiets, A. "«Динамо» – 90! Загадка прописної «Д»" ["Dynamo" – 90! Mystery of the cursive «Д»]. FC Dynamo Kyiv (in Ukrainian). Retrieved 18 June 2023.
  15. ^ . Xxldynamo.com.ua. Archived from the original on 21 September 2013. Retrieved 25 July 2022.
  16. ^ "New Balance and FC Dynamo Kyiv: start of shared path - FC Dynamo Kyiv official website". fcdynamo.com. Retrieved 18 June 2023.
  17. ^ "А-Банк виступив генеральним партнером футбольного клубу «Динамо» Київ - ФK «Динамо» Київ. Офіційний сайт". fcdynamo.com (in Ukrainian). Retrieved 18 June 2023.
  18. ^ Золоті імена. fcdynamo.com
  19. ^ Легендарні наставники. fcdynamo.com
  20. ^ Stadium's history – Fan Website of Dynamo Kyiv
  21. ^ "DYNAMO ULTRAS / WHITE-BLUE HOOLIGANS – Статті – Біло-Сині – сайт вболівальників "ДИНАМО КИЇВ"". White-blue.kiev.ua.
  22. ^ "Ультрас Філя: За Україну воюють націоналісти, а керують "неосовки"". depo.ua.
  23. ^ "Преступности.НЕТ". news.pn.
  24. ^ "Freedom for Pavlichenko". Ultras-Tifo.
  25. ^ "DYNAMO ULTRAS / WHITE-BLUE HOOLIGANS | Статті | Біло-Сині – сайт вболівальників "ДИНАМО КИЇВ"". White-blue.kiev.ua. Retrieved 29 June 2020.
  26. ^ "Журнал "СВЯТОСЛАВ" – друковане видання ультрас "Динамо Київ" | Новини | Біло-Сині – сайт вболівальників "ДИНАМО КИЇВ"". White-blue.kiev.ua. Retrieved 29 June 2020.
  27. ^ . Archived from the original on 22 November 2015. Retrieved 10 January 2016.
  28. ^ "Dynamo Kyiv – Shaktar Donetsk 16.10.2015". Ultras-Tifo.
  29. ^ "Liga Europy. Bójka chuliganów Legii i Dynama Kijów Piłka nożna". Sport.pl.
  30. ^ "Truce among the Ukrainian ultras". Ultras-Tifo.
  31. ^ "ДинамоАрсенал: ідеологічне протистояння фанатів. Фото. Відео". Спорт. 23 July 2012.
  32. ^ "Player Profiles – FC Dynamo Kyiv. Official club website". fcdynamo.com.
  33. ^ "Dynamo". upl.ua.
  34. ^ "Management - FC Dynamo Kyiv official website". fcdynamo.com. Retrieved 18 June 2023.
  35. ^ "Staff Profiles – FC Dynamo Kyiv. Official club website". fcdynamo.com.
  36. ^ "Dynamo U19 - Coaches - FC Dynamo Kyiv official website". fcdynamo.com. Retrieved 18 June 2023.
  37. ^ a b . Archived from the original on 20 March 2017. Retrieved 9 September 2015.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link)
  38. ^ "FC Dynamo Kyiv". junik.lv.
  39. ^ "Украинский футбол от Дмитрия Трощия". uafootball.net.ua (in Ukrainian).
  40. ^ Pavlushko, Anton. "Динамо Киев – все бомбардиры в Чемпионате Украины по футболу" [Dynamo Kyiv – all scorers in Ukrainian football championship (149 players)]. Статистика чемпионата Украины по футболу – все игроки, матчи и голы, составы команд и переходы.
  41. ^ "Гусев – третий по количеству матчей за Динамо в истории". football.ua (in Ukrainian).
  42. ^ "DER SPIEGEL | Online-Nachrichten". Der Spiegel. Retrieved 20 February 2020.
  43. ^ "Football Leaks-2: Суркисы через оффшоры купили в "Динамо" футболистов на $324 млн". Украинская Правда (in Russian). Retrieved 20 February 2020.

External links

  • Official website (in Ukrainian)
  • Youtube channel

dynamo, kyiv, football, club, dynamo, kyiv, ukrainian, Футбольний, клуб, Динамо, Київ, pronounced, dɪˈnɑmo, ˈkɪjiu, ukrainian, professional, football, club, based, kyiv, founded, 1927, kyivan, football, team, republican, branch, bigger, soviet, dynamo, sports,. Football Club Dynamo Kyiv Ukrainian Futbolnij klub Dinamo Kiyiv pronounced dɪˈnɑmo ˈkɪjiu is a Ukrainian professional football club based in Kyiv Founded in 1927 as a Kyivan football team of republican branch of the bigger Soviet Dynamo Sports Society the club as a separate business entity was officially formed only in 1989 and currently plays in the Ukrainian Premier League and has never been relegated to a lower division The club has secured brand rights from the Ukrainian Dynamo society and has no direct relations to the sports society since 1989 Their home is the 70 050 capacity Olimpiyskiy National Sports Complex Dynamo KyivFull nameFutbolnij klub Dinamo KiyivFootball Club Dynamo KyivNickname s Bilo syni The Blue amp Whites Founded13 May 1927 96 years ago 1927 05 13 GroundNSC OlimpiyskiyCapacity70 050OwnerIhor SurkisPresidentIhor SurkisHead coachMircea LucescuLeagueUkrainian Premier League2022 23Ukrainian Premier League 4th of 16WebsiteClub websiteHome coloursAway coloursThird coloursCurrent seasonSince 1936 Dynamo Kyiv has spent its entire history in the top league of Soviet and later Ukrainian football Its most successful periods are associated with Valeriy Lobanovskyi who coached the team during three stints leading them to numerous domestic and European titles In 1961 the club became first ever in the history of Soviet football that managed to overcome the total hegemony of Moscow based clubs in the Soviet Top League The Spartak Moscow Dynamo Kyiv rivalry that began in the mid 1970s is widely considered to have been one of the most exciting football rivalries in the Soviet Union 1 Since becoming the first Soviet football club to participate in UEFA competition in 1965 Dynamo Kyiv has played in European competitions almost every season Over its history Dynamo Kyiv have won 16 Ukrainian top flight league titles 13 Soviet top flight league titles 11 Ukrainian national cup competitions 9 Soviet national cup competitions and three continental titles including two UEFA Cup Winners Cups Its two European Cup Winners Cups make it one of the only two Soviet clubs to have won a UEFA trophy the other being Dinamo Tbilisi The Dynamo Kyiv first team became a base team for the Soviet Union national football team in the 1970 1980s and the Ukraine national football team in the 1990 2000s The two stars on the club s crest each signify 10 top flight seasons Dynamo Kyiv won The club was recognised as the Eastern European Club of the 20th Century by France Presse Contents 1 History 1 1 Early history 1 2 The Death Match 1 3 Last Soviet years 1 4 Ukrainian Independence 1 5 Dynamo s revival 1 6 Stagnation period 2 Crests and colours 2 1 Crest 2 2 Colours 2 3 Kit suppliers and shirt sponsors 3 Achievements and honours 3 1 Ukrainian competitions 3 2 Soviet competitions 3 3 European competitions 3 4 International competitions 3 5 Friendly competitions 3 6 Individual player awards 3 7 Hall of Fame 4 Grounds 4 1 Stadiums 4 2 Reserve youth and junior teams 4 2 1 Reserve team under 21 honours 4 3 Other departments 5 Supporters and rivalries 6 Players 6 1 First team squad 6 2 U 19 team 6 3 Out on loan 6 4 Retired number s 7 Presidents and other officials 7 1 Presidents 7 2 Vice Presidents 7 3 General directors 7 4 Sports directors 7 5 Technical directors 8 Coaches and administration 9 Notable coaches 10 Club records and statistics 10 1 Divisional movements 10 2 Soviet Union 10 3 Ukraine 11 Dynamo Kyiv in European competitions 11 1 European cups finals 11 2 UEFA club coefficient ranking 11 3 UEFA Rankings since 2007 12 Player records 12 1 Top goalscorers 12 2 Most appearances 13 Scandals 13 1 FootballLeaks 2 14 See also 15 References 16 External linksHistory EditEarly history Edit Dynamo Kyiv in 1928See also Dynamo Ukraine and Dynamo Sports Club Today s club was established based on the first squad of Kyiv s branch of the all Union Dynamo sports society and its republican branch in the Ukrainian SSR originally based out of Kharkiv The Soviet government relocated capital to Kyiv in 1934 The all Union Dynamo sports society was a sports department of the Soviet state security KGB originally Cheka OGPU During the Soviet period Dynamo s players same as players of all Dynamos in the Soviet Union were officially Soviet uniform servicemembers earning rank salary and pension when playing on the team of masters On 13 May 1927 the statute of the Kyivan Proletarian Sport Society PST Dynamo was officially registered by the special commission in affairs of public organizations and unions of the Kyiv district 2 The All Union sport society of Dynamo in Moscow was formed earlier in 1923 on the initiative of the Felix Dzerzhinsky Under the banner of Kyivan Dynamo gathered the representatives of the GPU the State Political Directorate the Soviet secret police the best footballers of which defended the honors of the Trade Union club Sovtorgsluzhashchie a portmanteau for Soviet retail servicemen 3 The leadership of Dynamo did not dare to reorganize the well established club and the main title contender in the middle of a playing season Therefore the first mention of the football club Dynamo could only be found on 5 April 1928 in the Russian language newspaper at that time Vecherniy Kiev Evening Kyiv The Kyivan Sport Society Dynamo currently is organizing its own football team Dynamo petitioned to Okrsofik for inclusion of its team in the playing season It was then when by the initiative of Semyon Zapadny chief of the Kyiv GPU the football team was created His deputy Serhiy Barminsky started to form the team not only out of regular chekists members of the Soviet secret police but also footballers of other clubs in the city among which is mentioned a team Sovtorgsluzhaschie 4 All the footballers were either part of the consolidated city team or the city champions The newly created team played its first official match on 1 July 1928 against a local consolidated city team while visiting Bila Tserkva 2 Already on the fifth minute the Dynamo men opened the score in the game however at the end the club lost it 1 2 5 On 15 July the Bila Tserkva newspaper Radyanska Nyva Soviet Fields put it in such words In the second halftime Bila Tserkva easily strikes the ball in the net thus equalizing the score Kyiv tried several counter attacks and even earned a free kick which was not able to convert Near the end Bila Tserkva under the applause of thousands of spectators strikes in the second ball The final whistle of the referee has fixated the victory of Bila Tserkva with the score 2 1 The next match played by Dynamo was on 17 July 1928 hosting another Dynamo from the port city of Odesa 2 As the club gained more experience and played on a regular basis it started to fill the stadium with spectators with both the club and football in general gaining popularity in Soviet Ukraine Its club stadium Dynamo opened on 12 June 1933 2 a year before the Soviet government turned the city into capital of the Soviet Ukraine During the Soviet era the club was one of the main rivals and often the only rival to 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 making Dynamo a professional team of international importance In 1936 the first Soviet Championship was played and Dynamo Kyiv was one of the pioneers of the newly formed league The club s early successes were however limited to a second place finish in 1936 and third place in 1937 In the 1941 season the club only played nine matches as World War II interrupted league play The Death Match Edit Main article The Death Match Poster of the return matchThe propaganda story is often told of how the Dynamo team playing as Start City of Kyiv All Stars was executed by a firing squad in the summer of 1942 for defeating an All Star team from the German armed forces by 5 1 The actual story as recounted by Y Kuznetsov is considerably more complex Still this match has subsequently become known in the Soviet media as The Death Match After the Nazi occupation of Ukraine began former professional football players Dynamo and Lokomotyv found employment in the city s Bakery No 3 and continued to play amateur football The team participated in exhibition games that took place in the city among various other teams including teams composed of the Wehrmacht soldiers The Kyiv s team played under the name of Start comprising eight players from Dynamo Kyiv Nikolai Trusevych Mikhail Svyridovskiy Nikolai Korotkykh Oleksiy Klymenko Fedir Tyutchev Mikhail Putistin Ivan Kuzmenko Makar Honcharenko and three players from Lokomotyv Kyiv Vladimir Balakin Vasyl Sukharev and Mikhail Melnyk In July and August 1942 Start played a series of matches against the Germans and their allies On 12 July a German army team was defeated A stronger army team was selected for the next match on 17 July which Start defeated 6 0 On 19 July Start defeated the Hungarian team MSG Wal 5 1 The Hungarians proposed a return match held on 26 July but were defeated again 3 2 Start s streak was noticed and a match was announced for 6 August against a most powerful undefeated German Luftwaffe Flakelf anti aircraft artillery team but despite the game being talked up by the newspapers they failed to report the 5 1 result On 9 August Start played a friendly against Flakelf and again defeated them The team defeated Rukh 8 0 on 16 August and afterwards some of Start s players were arrested by the Gestapo tortured Nikolai Korotkykh died during the torture and sent to the nearby labour camp at Syrets There is speculation 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 In February 1943 following an attack by partisans or a conflict of the prisoners and administration one third of the prisoners at Syrets were killed in reprisal including Ivan Kuzmenko Oleksey Klymenko and goalkeeper Nikolai 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 or according to other sources escaped and hid in the city until it was liberated The story inspired three films the 1961 Hungarian film drama Two Half Times in Hell the 1981 American film Escape to Victory and the 2012 Russian film Match Last Soviet years Edit See also Dynamo Ukraine In 1989 the club transitioned into an independent company being disassociated from the Ukrainian republican society of Dynamo 6 The club transitioned from the Soviet team of masters to a regular professional football club of western style as it was interpreted then It also was part of the Mikhail Gorbachev s Perestroika reforms known as Khozrasschyot when state enterprises had difficult time to keep their associate organizations afloat and encouraged them to reorganize into self sustained businesses 7 8 During the last seasons of the Soviet Top League it competed in the national colors of Ukraine as part of the national movement that grew very popular Ukrainian Independence Edit Valeriy Lobanovskyi the most successful coach in club historyAfter the dissolution of the Soviet Union the club became a member of the newly formed Ukrainian Premier League By the summer of 1993 however the club was in crisis as the economic policy of Dynamo president Viktor Bezverkhy set Dynamo on the path to bankruptcy On 19 July 1993 an extraordinary assembly of coaches and players fired Bezverkhy and established a stock society called Football Club Dynamo Kyiv Hryhoriy Surkis was elected president of the new company The republican and city councils of the Dynamo society agreed to hand over two training centers and Dynamo Stadium to Dynamo Kyiv The founders besides the football team and the Dynamo councils became also the commercial consulting centre Slavutych and the British firm Newport Management A review board was created consisting of directors of the Ministry of Interior of Ukraine and the Security Service Border Troops and General Prosecutor of Ukraine Dynamo s status as the country s principal club did not change however as they went on to dominate domestic competitions winning or being runner up in every year of the Premier League s existence and becoming a fixture in the UEFA Champions League Its main rival in Ukraine is Shakhtar Donetsk a club from the Donbas region that came second to Dynamo several times before winning its first Premier League in 2002 The matches between these two sides are called the Ukrainian derby In 2007 as a part of club s 80 year anniversary two gold stars were added to the top of the crest representing ten Ukrainian championship titles and ten USSR champion titles Due to club s poor performance in the UEFA Champions League during the last two seasons Dynamo s management took a somewhat unexpected decision by appointing the first foreign manager in the club s history Previously only former players or Dynamo football academy graduates became managers but in December 2007 Russian coach Yuri Semin was invited to become the new manager of Dynamo Kyiv However the club yielded to Shakhtar Donetsk in both the Ukrainian Cup and Premier League in 2008 In 2009 in the club s most successful European campaign since 1999 it reached the semi finals of the UEFA Cup eliminating such teams as Valencia and Paris Saint Germain but was defeated at that stage by Shakhtar Donetsk However 2009 also brought success as the club celebrated its 13th Premier League title In a season which contained their record win a 9 0 victory over Illichivets Mariupol the club only managed to finish runners up in the league in 2010 11 after Shakhtar Donetsk In what would be icon Andriy Shevchenko s final season at the club Dynamo also finished as runners up in 2011 12 In the 2011 12 season Dynamo also managed to reach the group stage of the Europa League after being eliminated in the Champions League third qualifying round by Rubin Kazan by 0 2 in Kyiv and 2 1 in Kazan In the Europa League playoffs the club managed to defeat Litex Lovech with a 3 1 aggregate score In the group stage Dynamo finished third after a disappointing campaign in a group containing Besiktas Maccabi Tel Aviv and Stoke City In April 2013 it was announced the club would play two European ties behind closed doors due to racism from fans during previous European ties In the 2012 13 season the club managed to qualify for the Champions League group stage after eliminating Feyenoord 3 1 and Borussia Monchengladbach 4 3 on aggregate and qualified for the Champions League group stage Dynamo was placed in a group with Paris Saint Germain Porto and Dinamo Zagreb and finished in third place with only five points and was eliminated in the Europa League round of 32 by Bordeaux 2 1 on aggregate In the Premier League Dynamo finished third whereas in the Cup it was eliminated in the round of 32 Overall the 2012 13 season was a disappointment for Dynamo The 2013 14 season was an equally disappointing season as Dynamo finished in fourth place in the league the worst since the establishment of the Premier League and only managed to reach the round of 32 in the Europa League where it was eliminated by Valencia 2 0 on aggregate Oleh Blokhin was sacked and was replaced by former player Serhii Rebrov As a result Dynamo managed to win the 2013 14 Ukrainian Cup for the first time in five years 9 Dynamo s revival Edit Serhii Rebrov former player and manager of the team from 2014 to 2017In the beginning of the 2014 15 season Dynamo signed many promising players such as Aleksandar Dragovic Jeremain Lens departed after end of the season Lukasz Teodorczyk and Vitorino Antunes Under Rebrov Dynamo won the 2014 15 Ukrainian Premier League undefeated and the 2014 15 Ukrainian Cup to earn a domestic double for the first time in eight years In the 2014 15 Europa League Dynamo comfortably qualified from a group containing Aalborg BK Steaua București and Rio Ave finishing in first place with 15 points In the round of 32 the club eliminated Guingamp 4 3 on aggregate and in the round of 16 eliminated Everton 6 4 on aggregate after a spectacular 5 2 performance in Kyiv Rebrov prioritized the passing game but focused on solid defensive foundations However in the quarter finals of the Europa League Dynamo was eliminated by Fiorentina 3 1 on aggregate In the beginning of the 2015 16 season Dynamo signed the highly talented Derlis Gonzalez and was drawn in Group G of the 2015 16 Champions League alongside Chelsea F C FC Porto and Maccabi Tel Aviv F C Dynamo finished in second place with 11 points after a spectacular performance and a memorable 0 2 in Porto However Dynamo was punished by UEFA for a racist incident in the home game against Chelsea where four black men were attacked in the stands by Dynamo fans Despite this Dynamo reached the round of 16 in the Champions League for the first time since 2000 where it was drawn with Manchester City Dynamo was eliminated 1 3 on aggregate but managed to hold an impressive 0 0 draw in Manchester Dynamo s domestic performance was equally memorable as the club celebrated the 2015 16 Ukrainian Premier League only losing to archrival Shakhtar Donetsk 0 3 twice and was eliminated in the quarter finals of the 2015 16 Ukrainian Cup At the end of the season several star performers such as Miguel Veloso Aleksandar Dragovic Younes Belhanda and Lukasz Teodorczyk departed the club and were not replaced Stagnation period Edit Mircea Lucescu current manager of the teamThe 2016 17 season was a relative disappointment for Dynamo as the club finished in second place in the 2016 17 Ukrainian Premier League behind Shakhtar Donetsk with a difference of 13 points after a string of disappointing results In the 2016 17 Champions League the club was drawn in Group B alongside Napoli Benfica and Besiktas J K Dynamo finished in fourth place after a dismal campaign but managed to record a memorable 6 0 win over Besiktas in Kyiv In the winter transfer window Dynamo signed promising defenders Aleksandar Pantic and Tamas Kadar and focused on youth academy talents such as Viktor Tsyhankov Artem Besyedin and Volodymyr Shepelyev managing to improve its performances Dynamo lost the 2016 17 Ukrainian Cup to Shakhtar Donetsk 0 1 in the final For the 2017 18 season after Serhii Rebrov departed the club appointed former player Alyaksandr Khatskevich as Rebrov s replacement In Khatskevich s first two seasons at the helm Dynamo failed to qualify for the UEFA Champions League group stage having to settle for the UEFA Europa League group stage instead Both times they were eventually eliminated in the Round of 16 first by S S Lazio 2 4 on aggregate in 2017 18 and then by Chelsea F C 0 8 on aggregate in 2018 19 Domestically Dynamo remained firmly in second place behind Shakhtar Donetsk in the Ukrainian Premier League Despite the apparent lack of progress in the results Khatskevich was rewarded with a two year contract extension 10 However only six matches into his new extension Khatskevich was fired on 14 August 2019 11 after once again failing to advance to the UEFA Champions League group stage Dynamo s Sports Director Oleksiy Mykhaylychenko was appointed as manager Despite the change the results on the field hardly improved as Dynamo was eliminated from continental competitions by placing 3rd in Group B of the 2019 20 UEFA Europa League group stage On 23 July 2020 Mircea Lucescu became the head coach of Dynamo Lucescu signed a two year contract 12 Crests and colours EditSee also Dynamo Sports Club and Dynamo Ukraine Crest Edit Being a member of the All Union Sports Society Dynamo the Dynamo football team of Kyiv adopted the same emblem of the Dynamo s sports society as its first logo which featured on their shirts since 1927 and was a cursive blue Cyrillic letter D D 13 in a vertical rhombus Similar emblem existed in other Soviet football teams throughout the Soviet Union such as FC Dynamo Moscow FC Dinamo Tbilisi FC Dinamo Minsk and others The idea of symbol is attributed to a native of Ukraine Leonid Nedolya Honcharenko who at that time served as a chief of political department of the OGPU troops in Moscow District 14 The symbol the club obtained on franchise rights from the Ukrainian Fitness and Sports Society Dynamo see Dynamo Ukraine Over the years the club s logo has undergone many changes and replacements but the cursive D has remained ever since In 2003 after Dynamo won their 10th domestic trophy a golden star was added at the top of the logo to celebrate the club s success The second star was added to the logo in 2007 during celebrations of Dynamo s 80 year anniversary Although Dynamo has won only 15 Ukrainian league titles their 13 titles as USSR Champions were taken into account Dynamo s emblems displayed at the stadiumDynamo s traditional colours are white and dark blue with white being the predominant colour Throughout their history the club has usually played in a white shirt and blue shorts This was changed in 1961 when a blue sash was added to the kit it was removed soon afterwards In 2004 the club s management decided to restore the famous sash as a talisman It was added to the away kit and remained there until the beginning of the 2008 09 season when it was replaced by a white kit with a shirt having thin blue vertical stripes the first time in over 50 years that a club had worn such a pattern During the last two seasons before the breakup of the Soviet Union Dynamo s kit was similar to Metalist yellow shirts and blue shorts This color scheme carried a symbolic meaning representing the national colours of the yet not adopted Ukraine national flag In the 1990 Soviet Cup Final the yellow blue Dynamo team thrashed the all Red Lokomotiv 6 1 at Luzhniki Stadium In the early years of Ukrainian independence the club swapped their yellow colour for white However blue remained one of Dynamo s colours and is still a main colour of the club s away kit The club s current sponsors New Balance and ABank24 feature on the team shirt New Balance is also the manufacturer of the kit Among former sponsors there were Ostchem Holding Nadra Bank PrivatBank Prominvestbank Ukrtelecom and others Colours Edit Kit suppliers and shirt sponsors Edit The original logo of the professional club 1989 1996 Logo 1972 1989 as part of republican Dynamo Ukraine societyPeriod 15 Kit manufacturer Shirt sponsor1975 1987 Adidas 1987 Commodore1987 1988 OCRIM1988 1989 1989 Duarig FISAC Como1989 1990 Admiral FISAC1990 1991 Lufthansa1992 1994 Umbro Lufthansa1994 1995 1996 Prominvestbank1996 2004 Adidas Prominvestbank2004 2006 EnergoHolding Gazprom 2006 2007 Ukrtelekom2007 2013 PrivatBank2013 2015 Nadra Bank2015 20182018 2021 New Balance 16 2021 A Bank 17 Achievements and honours Edit Each gold star on the Dynamo s emblem represents 10 championships Dynamo Kyiv has participated in all of the USSR and Ukrainian championships to date and has won both competitions more times than any other team The club s best performances were in the 1970s and 1980s a time in which the Soviet Union national football team was composed mostly of players from the club Dynamo Kyiv tied the national record for winning three consecutive Soviet Premier League titles in 1966 1967 and 1968 Dynamo Kyiv won the UEFA 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 semi finals of the UEFA Champions League These victories are associated with the name of Valeriy Lobanovskyi who played for the club in the 1960s and later became the club s long term head coach In 2009 the club reached the semi final of the UEFA Cup Dynamo 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 Dynamo Kyiv is also was one of the base clubs of the Soviet Union national football team and many players of the club represented the Soviet Union at international level After fall of the Soviet Union Dynamo became the base club of the Ukraine national football team Dynamo striker Oleh Blokhin is the Soviet Union national football team all time top scorer with 42 goals and has also made more appearances than any other player for the team with 112 Two other Dynamo strikers Oleh Protasov and Viktor Kolotov are among the Soviet Union national football team top five best scorers with 29 and 22 goals respectfully Two other Dynamo players Anatoliy Demyanenko and Volodymyr Bezsonov are among the Soviet Union national football team top five players with most appearances 80 and 79 respectfully Four former Dynamo s players were appointed as a head coach of the Soviet Union national team among which Valeriy Lobanovsky Oleh Bazylevych Vladimir Salkov and Anatoliy Byshovets All head coaches of the Ukraine national team but two were at some time former players of Dynamo Kyiv Ukrainian competitions Edit Ukrainian Premier League 16 record 1992 93 1993 94 1994 95 1995 96 1996 97 1997 98 1998 99 1999 2000 2000 01 2002 03 2003 04 2006 07 2008 09 2014 15 2015 16 2020 21 dd Ukrainian Cup 13 1992 93 1995 96 1997 98 1998 99 1999 2000 2002 03 2004 05 2005 06 2006 07 2013 14 2014 15 2019 20 2020 21 dd Ukrainian Super Cup 9 2004 2006 2007 2009 2011 2016 2018 2019 2020 dd Soviet competitions Edit Soviet Top League 13 record 1961 1966 1967 1968 1971 1974 1975 1977 1980 1981 1985 1986 1990 dd Soviet Cup 9 1954 1964 1966 1974 1978 1982 1985 1987 1990 dd Soviet Super Cup 3 record 1981 1986 1987 dd Cup of the Ukrainian SSR 7 record 1936 1937 1938 1944 1946 1947 1948 dd Championship of the Proletarian Sports Society Dynamo 3 1931 1933 1935 dd European competitions Edit UEFA Cup Winners Cup 2 1974 75 1985 86 dd UEFA Super Cup 1 1975 dd International competitions Edit Commonwealth of Independent States Cup 4 1996 1997 1998 2002Friendly competitions Edit Dynamo Kyiv won the Teresa Herrera Trophy in 1981 and 1982 Channel One Cup United Tournament 2 2008 2013 Amsterdam Tournament 1 1986 Mohammed V Trophy 1 1975 Individual player awards Edit Ballon d Or winners former players for FC Dynamo Kyiv Andriy Shevchenko Oleg Blokhin and Ihor BelanovSeveral players have won individual awards during or for their time with Dynamo KyivEuropean Footballer of the Year Ballon d Or Oleg Blokhin 1975 Ihor Belanov 1986 UEFA Golden Player Award Oleg BlokhinFIFA 100 Andriy ShevchenkoEuropean Championship winnersTwo players have won the European Championship whilst at Dynamo Kyiv Yuriy Voynov France 1960 Yury Kovalyov France 1960 Ukrainian Footballer of the Year Viktor Serebryanikov 1969 Volodymyr Muntyan 1970 Yevhen Rudakov 1971 Oleg Blokhin 1972 1973 1974 1975 1976 1977 1978 1980 1981 Anatoliy Demyanenko 1982 1985 Oleksandr Zavarov 1986 Oleksiy Mykhaylychenko 1987 1988 Volodymyr Bezsonov 1989 Sergei Yuran 1990 Akhrik Tsveiba 1991 Viktor Leonenko 1992 1993 1994 Yuriy Kalitvintsev 1995 Serhii Rebrov 1996 1998 Andriy Shevchenko 1997 1999 Artem Milevskyi 2008 2009 Andriy Yarmolenko 2013 2014 2015 2017 Viktor Tsyhankov 2018 Soviet Footballer of the Year Andriy Biba 1966 Volodymyr Muntyan 1969 Yevhen Rudakov 1971 Oleg Blokhin 1973 1974 1975 Anatoliy Demyanenko 1985 Oleksandr Zavarov 1986 Oleksiy Mykhaylychenko 1988 Hall of Fame Edit While there is no such institution in the club it does honor its notables players as Golden Names while coaches are honored as Legendary Mentors Golden Names 18 Oleh Blokhin Andriy Shevchenko Ihor Belanov Oleh Husyev Valyantsin Byalkevich Andriy Husin Valeriy Lobanovskyi Hennadiy Lytovchenko Vadym Yevtushenko Maksim Shatskikh Vladimir Veremeyev Mykhailo Fomenko Serhii Rebrov Volodymyr Troshkin Volodymyr Muntyan Viktor Kolotov Pavlo Vinkovatov Valeriy Porkuyan Dezyderiy Tovt Dezso Toth Anatoliy Konkov Viktor Chanov Vitaliy Holubyev Viktor Matviyenko Mykola Makhynia Mykhaylo Mykhalyna Oleh Luzhnyi Volodymyr Bezsonov Vasyl Rats Laszlo Racz Oleksandr Zavarov Vasyl Turyanchyk Mykhaylo Mykhaylov Andriy Biba Volodymyr Onyshchenko Anatoliy Puzach Oleksiy Mykhailychenko Anatoliy Demyanenko Vadym Sosnykhin Vitaliy Kosovskyi Viktor Zhylin Mykola Koltsov Leonid Buryak Konstantin Schegotsky Mykhailo Koman Anatoliy Byshovets Andrei Zazroyev Viktor Khlus Serhiy Fedorov Vitaliy Khmelnytskyi Oleh Bazylevych Viktor Kanevskyi Fedir Medvid Ferenc Medvigy Aleksandr Khapsalis Serhiy Krulykovskyi Abram Lerman Valentyn Troyanovskyi Serhiy Zhuravlyov Yevhen Rudakov Yuriy Voynov Viktor Bannikov Makar Honcharenko Yozhef Sabo Jozsef Szabo Oleh Makarov Oleksandr Holovko Leonid Ostrovski Viktor Fomin Serhiy Baltacha Ivan Yaremchuk Oleh Kuznetsov Viktor Serebrianikov Petro Slobodyan Pavlo Yakovenko Andriy Bal Stefan Reshko Yuriy Romenskyi Anatoliy Suchkov Volodymyr Anufriyenko Volodymyr Levchenko Volodymyr Shcheholkov Yuriy Kalitvintsev Legendary Mentors 19 Valeriy Lobanovskyi Aleksandr Sevidov Oleg Oshenkov Viktor Maslov Vyacheslav Solovyov Viktor Terentiev Oleh BazylevychGrounds EditStadiums Edit See also Valeriy Lobanovskyi Dynamo Stadium Olimpiyskiy National Sports Complex and Dynamo Training Center Valeriy Lobanovskyi Dynamo Stadium Olimpiyskiy National Sports ComplexThe club s home ground Valeriy Lobanovskyi Dynamo Stadium is situated in a park located in the centre of the city close to the Dnieper River bank The stadium holds 16 873 spectators and has been the club s home since 1934 When it was built the stadium s capacity was 23 000 20 After being destroyed in 1941 during World War II it was rebuilt in 1954 By the end of the 20th century the stadium was reconstructed as a football only venue with individual seats These changes reduced the facility s capacity to its present one In 2002 after the sudden death of Dynamo s longtime player and coach Valeriy Lobanovskyi the stadium was renamed in his honour After NSK Olympiyskiy was closed for reconstruction in 2008 Dynamo also began to play its European games at the Lobanovsky Stadium Due to a high demand for European fixtures of the club throughout its European history Dynamo played a majority of their home fixtures at Kyiv s and Ukraine s largest stadium the Olimpiyskiy National Sports Complex historically dubbed The Republican Stadium which held 83 450 spectators The stadium has been the home of the Ukrainian Cup final since its inaugural game in 1992 and up until 2007 The stadium was closed for a major reconstruction in 2008 after Ukraine and Poland were chosen to host the UEFA Euro 2012 The Olympiysky became Kyiv s main venue clarification needed citation needed as well as the stadium that hosted the final it also become a UEFA Elite rated stadium The team also has a modern equipped training base in the Kyiv suburb of Koncha Zaspa 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 dubl 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 Reserve youth and junior teams Edit Entrance sign of the football academy at NyvkySee also FC Dynamo 2 Kyiv FC Dynamo 3 Kyiv and YFS Dynamo Kyiv of Valeriy Lobanovsky Dynamo Kyiv has several reserve teams Dynamo reserve teams competed in national competitions since 1946 The club was fielding its reserve team in the Soviet Top League competitions for reserve teams so called doubles that existed in 1946 1991 Dynamo doubles team holds a record for number of champion titles of the Soviet Top League for doubles winning it 15 times with a closest pursuing Spartak doubles team trailing with 9 titles In 2004 the club revived its reserve team which later became youth U 21 team competing at Ukrainian Premier League competitions for U 21 and U 19 teams Dynamo football school academy fields few teams in Ukrainian Youth Football League as well as Kyiv city football league Among possibly most exotic football academy graduates is a former Moroccan international Tarik El Jarmouni Besides its normal junior squads FC Dynamo Kyiv also has fielded its second team Dynamo 2 which competed among regular teams of masters Soviet analog of professional teams as well as republican competitions amateur level during the Soviet period The first time the team participated in football competitions at professional level was in 1964 when it took part in the Soviet Second League in so called the Ukrainian Soviet football competitions With dissolution of the Soviet Union in 1991 Dynamo 2 was revived based on the Dynamo s reserve team that participated in the Soviet Top League for doubles The team continued to play in Ukrainian First League for over 20 years Along with the second team Dynamo created also its third team Dynamo 3 which at first played at amateur level and later advanced to Ukrainian Second League Since 2016 Dynamo has discontinued its numbered team Reserve team under 21 honours Edit Soviet Top League reserves 15 record 1949 1963 1965 1966 1968 1972 1974 1976 1977 1980 1981 1982 1983 1985 1990 Ukrainian Premier League reserves under 21 6 record 2004 05 2005 06 2006 07 2007 08 2015 16 2016 17Other departments Edit See also FC Dynamo Kyiv women Since parting from its parent Dynamo society in 1989 Dynamo Kyiv becoming exclusively a football club other departments were left with the Kyiv city branch of Dynamo Ukraine had also its own women team which while not being as successful as the main team had some degree of success when they were playing first at Soviet and later at Ukrainian competitions In 1994 the whole women department was liquidated as the owners of the club lost interest in it In 2017 the Ukrainian Association of Football pursued existing men football clubs to help with development of women s football in Ukraine and either create own teams or adopt already existing teams of separate women football clubs or sports schools In 2021 Dynamo in cooperation with the Kyivan Olympic College reestablished its women football team replacing the college team at the second tier of the two tier national football pyramid for women and gained promotion the same season Supporters and rivalries Edit A dynamo flag with Sviatoslav the BraveThe Dynamo fan movement is one of the oldest in Ukraine Active support began in 1980s during the Soviet period Ukrainian SSR Then began to appear first graffiti with the team s logo and was registered one of the biggest fights in the USSR Dynamo fans against fans of Spartak Moscow in the center of Kyiv 21 In the 1990s on the stands became popular English style citation needed Dynamo Kyiv fans show the team s logo at a match versus Borussia Monchengladbach Dynamo ultras are usually associated with right wing politics and many clarification needed adhere to nationalist ideas 22 Historically they would frequently hold patriotic Ukrainian nationalism and strongly anti communist actions During the reign of Viktor Yanukovych the ultras had bad relations with the government caused by persecutions of fans and other political factors 23 The most publicized action was Freedom Pavlichenko Ukrainian Volyu Pavlichenkam in support of political prisoners father and son Pavlichenko 24 The ultras Dynamo took part in the Independence Day of Ukraine and Heroes Day celebrations Dynamo ultras often use the image of Sviatoslav the Brave in the design of their banners 25 Svyatoslav a printed magazine of Dynamo ultras also bears the Kyiv prince s name 26 The most famous derby in Ukraine is Ukrainian derby always held in a tense atmosphere Dynamo maintains friendly relations with Karpaty Lviv Dnipro Dnipropetrovsk Braty po zbroyi Band of Brothers Hutnik Krakow 27 and with Zalgiris Vilnius GNK Dinamo Zagreb Dinamo Tbilisi Stade Rennais F C fans Strained relations with Shakhtar Donetsk 28 Chornomorets Odesa Metalist Kharkiv Spartak Moscow and Legia Warsaw 29 Now all fans have declared a truce because of the war in Eastern Ukraine 30 They play the Kyiv derby with Arsenal Kyiv a strong rivalry also due to politics Arsenal fans are known to be strongly left wing 31 Players EditFirst team squad Edit As of 4 July 2023 32 33 Note Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules Players may hold more than one non FIFA nationality No Pos Nation Player1 GK UKR Heorhiy Bushchan2 DF UKR Kostyantyn Vivcharenko3 DF UKR Anton Bol4 DF UKR Denys Popov5 MF UKR Serhiy Sydorchuk captain 6 MF UKR Volodymyr Brazhko7 MF UKR Vladyslav Kabayev8 MF UKR Volodymyr Shepelyev9 MF JAM Kaheem Parris10 MF UKR Mykola Shaparenko11 FW UKR Vladyslav Vanat14 MF UKR Oleksandr Yatsyk15 FW VEN Eric Ramirez16 MF UKR Serhiy Buletsa17 FW UKR Vladyslav Supryaha18 MF UKR Oleksandr Andriyevskyi19 MF UKR Denys Harmash20 DF UKR Oleksandr Karavayev21 FW UKR Andriy Yarmolenko No Pos Nation Player22 MF NED Justin Lonwijk24 DF UKR Oleksandr Tymchyk25 DF UKR Maksym Dyachuk29 MF UKR Vitaliy Buyalskyi vice captain 30 MF SEN Samba Diallo34 DF UKR Oleksandr Syrota35 GK UKR Ruslan Neshcheret37 MF UKR Anton Tsarenko40 DF UKR Kristian Bilovar44 DF UKR Vladyslav Dubinchak70 MF UKR Bohdan Lyednyev75 GK UKR Yuriy Avramenko77 MF NGA Benito91 MF UKR Nazar Voloshyn92 MF MKD Reshat Ramadani MF LUX Gerson Rodrigues MF GEO Heorhiy Tsitaishvili DF BRA Sidcley MF UKR Akhmed AlibekovU 19 team Edit Main article YFS Dynamo Kyiv of Valeriy Lobanovsky Out on loan Edit Note Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules Players may hold more than one non FIFA nationality No Pos Nation Player DF POL Tomasz Kedziora at PAOK until 30 June 2024 MF UKR Mykola Mykhaylenko at Zorya Luhansk until 30 June 2024 MF UKR Mykyta Kravchenko at Polissya Zhytomyr until 30 June 2024 MF UKR Viktor Bliznichenko at Inhulets Petrove until 30 June 2024 MF UKR Bohdan Biloshevskyi at Oleksandriya until 30 June 2023 MF DEN Mikkel Duelund at AGF until 30 June 2023 MF UKR Yevheniy Smyrnyi at Kolos Kovalivka until 30 June 2023 No Pos Nation Player MF UKR Illya Skrypnyk at Bukovyna Chernivtsi until 30 June 2023 MF UKR Yevheniy Smyrnyi at Kolos Kovalivka until 30 June 2023 MF UKR Vikentiy Voloshyn at Oleksandriya until 30 June 2023 MF BRA Vitinho at Red Bull Bragantino until 30 June 2023 FW UKR Yevhen Isayenko at Kolos Kovalivka until 31 December 2023 FW UKR Kiril Popov at Kolos Kovalivka until 30 June 2023 Retired number s Edit Main article List of retired numbers in association football 12 Club Supporters the 12th Man Presidents and other officials EditPresidents Edit 1927 1989 part of Dynamo the republican section of Soviet sports society Dynamo 1989 1993 Viktor Bezverkhy 1993 2002 Hryhoriy Surkis 2002 present Ihor SurkisVice Presidents Edit 2005 2010 Mykhailo Oshenkov son of Oleg Oshenkov 2005 2010 Vadym Kostiuchenko 2018 2020 Yevhen Krasnikov 1993 2011 Vitaliy SivkovGeneral directors Edit 2007 present Rezo ChohonelidzeSports directors Edit 2011 2019 Oleksiy Mykhailychenko 2018 2019 Eduardo Docampo 2020 2021 Oleksiy MykhailychenkoTechnical directors Edit 1992 Mykhailo Oshenkov son of Oleg Oshenkov Coaches and administration EditAdministration 34 Coaching 35 senior team Coaching 36 U 19 teams President Ihor Surkis First vice president Vitaliy Sivkov General director Rezo Chokhonelidze Sports director Heorhiy Vorogovskyi Vice president Leonid Ashkenazi Vice president Andriy Madzianovsky Vice president Oleksiy Palamarchuk Vice president Oleksiy Semenenko Vice president Mark Ginsburg Head coach Mircea Lucescu Assistant coach Emil Caras Assistant coach Oleh Husiev Assistant coach Ognjen Vukojevic Goalkeeper coach Mykhaylo Mykhaylov U 19 senior coach Ihor Kostyuk U 19 assistant coach Serhiy Fedorov U 19 assistant coach Oleh Venhlinskyi U 19 goalies coach Oleksandr MorozNotable coaches EditMain article List of FC Dynamo Kyiv managers In the Ukrainian championshipThe following individuals have all won at least one trophy while coaching Dynamo Kyiv Name Period Trophies Oleg Oshenkov 1954 1 domestic cup Vyacheslav Solovyov 1961 1 league title Viktor Maslov 1964 1966 68 3 league titles 2 domestic cups Aleksandr Sevidov 1971 1 league title Anatoliy Puzach 1990 1 league title 1 domestic cup Mykhaylo Fomenko 1993 1 league title 1 domestic cup Yozhef Sabo 1994 1996 2005 2007 2 league titles 2 domestic cups Mykola Pavlov 1995 1 league title Valeriy Lobanovskyi 1974 1975 1977 1978 1980 82 1985 87 1997 01 12 league titles 8 domestic cups 2 UEFA Cup Winners Cups 1 UEFA Supercup Oleksiy Mykhaylychenko 2003 2004 2019 2020 2 league titles 2 domestic cup 1 super cup Anatoliy Demyanenko 2006 2007 1 league title 2 domestic cups 2 super cups Yuri Semin 2009 1 league title 1 super cup Valery Gazzaev 2009 2010 1 super cup Serhii Rebrov 2014 2017 2 league titles 2 domestic cups 1 super cup Alyaksandr Khatskevich 2017 2019 2 super cups Mircea Lucescu 2020 1 league title 1 domestic cup 1 super cupClub records and statistics EditOleksandr Shovkovskyi currently holds Dynamo s official appearance record having made 637 appearances in all competitions over the course of 17 seasons from 1993 until 2016 He also holds the record for Ukrainian Premier League Vyshcha Liha appearances with 426 while Oleh Blokhin remains unreachable for Soviet Top League appearances with 432 Including all competitions Oleh Blokhin is the all time leading goalscorer for Dynamo with 266 goals since joining the club in 1969 211 of which were scored in Soviet Top League another Dynamo record Serhiy Rebrov who is the all time topscorer for Ukrainian Premier League comes in second in all competitions with 163 Dynamo Kyiv qualified for continental competitions for the last 32 years since 1990 and missed only twice two seasons since 1973 Divisional movements Edit See also List of FC Dynamo Kyiv seasons Tier Years Last Promotions RelegationsTop League tier 1 54 1991 22 times to Europe never56 years of professional football in Soviet Union since 1936Tier Years Last Promotions RelegationsPremier League tier 1 31 2021 22 30 times to Europe never31 years of professional national football in Ukraine since 1992Soviet Union Edit Ukraine EditDynamo Kyiv in European competitions EditMain article FC Dynamo Kyiv in European football Dynamo Kyiv made a forceful entrance into European competitions in the 1965 66 European Cup Winners Cup advancing into the quarter finals before losing to Celtic F C The club is a regular visitor to UEFA competitions having participated in over 50 tournaments Dynamo Kyiv has not missed a single season of European competition since 1990 and since 1973 has only missed out twice 1984 85 and 1988 89 During the Soviet era the club won the European Cup Winners Cup twice in 1975 and 1986 the 1975 European Super Cup and reached the semi finals of the European Cup Champions League three times once under the Ukrainian banner European cups finals Edit Year Competition Opposing team Score Venue1975 European Cup Winners Cup Ferencvaros 3 0 St Jakob Stadium Basel1975 European Super Cup Bayern Munich 1 0 2 0 Two legged1986 European Cup Winners Cup Atletico Madrid 3 0 Stade de Gerland Lyon1986 European Super Cup Steaua Bucharest 0 1 Stade Louis II MonacoUEFA club coefficient ranking Edit As of 5 May 2021Source 37 Rank Team Points30 Besiktas 49 00031 Dynamo Kyiv 47 00032 Sporting CP 45 500UEFA Rankings since 2007 Edit Source 37 Season Ranking Movement Points Change2020 21 31 5 47 000 8 0002019 20 26 2 55 000 10 0002018 19 23 0 65 000 3 0002017 18 23 2 62 000 new points system2016 17 25 1 67 526 1 5502015 16 26 1 65 976 0 9432014 15 27 7 65 033 8 8402013 14 34 9 56 193 12 9582012 13 25 6 68 951 6 9252011 12 31 1 62 026 1 2502010 11 30 14 60 776 17 8662009 10 44 3 42 910 3 4602008 09 41 33 46 370 11 4382007 08 74 13 34 932 3 791Player records Edit 38 39 Top goalscorers Edit As of 30th November 2022 40 Name Years League Cup Europe Other Total1 Oleh Blokhin 1969 1987 211 29 26 0 2662 Serhiy Rebrov 1992 2000 2005 2007 113 19 31 0 1633 Maksim Shatskikh 1999 2008 97 22 23 0 1424 Andriy Yarmolenko 2007 2017 99 19 19 0 1375 Andriy Shevchenko 1994 1999 2009 2012 83 16 25 0 1246 Oleh Husiev 2003 2016 2017 2018 57 15 22 2 967 Victor Tsyhankov 2016 2023 77 4 13 0 948 Artem Milevskyi 2002 2013 57 11 16 3 879 Viktor Kanevskyi 1973 1984 56 12 14 0 8210 Leonid Buryak 1971 1981 62 11 8 0 81Other National Super CupMost appearances Edit As of 19 May 2018 41 Name Years League Cup Europe Other Total1 Oleksandr Shovkovskyi 1993 2016 426 58 144 9 6372 Oleh Blokhin 1969 1987 432 67 79 3 5813 Oleh Husiev 2003 2016 2017 2018 295 43 98 6 4424 Anatoliy Demyanenko 1979 1990 1992 1993 347 47 43 2 4395 Leonid Buryak 1973 1984 304 52 51 2 4096 Volodymyr Veremeyev 1968 1982 310 45 44 2 4017 Volodymyr Muntyan 1965 1977 302 34 35 0 3718 Volodymyr Bezsonov 1976 1990 278 48 39 3 3689 Serhii Rebrov 1992 2000 2005 2007 242 44 72 2 36010 Vladyslav Vashchuk 1993 2002 2005 2008 253 41 62 0 356Other National Super CupScandals EditFootballLeaks 2 Edit German journalists from Der Spiegel 42 Rafael Buschmann and Michael Wulzinger published a book titled Football Leaks 2 A separate part titled Ukrainische Bruderschaft Ukrainian Brotherhood describes brothers Ihor and Hryhorii Surkis s activities in the football sphere and their relation to the Newport offshore All FC Dynamo s activities are financed by this company The authors refer to Football Leaks documents 43 The book tells that starting from 1993 all the financial activities of Kyiv based FC Dynamo have been performed via the company Newport controlled by the club s boss Ihor Surkis Having cited the FIFA data the authors noted that in 2011 2017 the Newport has spent US 324 million to buy 82 players for FC Dynamo The taxes from this sum haven t been paid in Ukraine See also EditFC Dynamo 2 Kyiv FC Dynamo 3 KyivReferences Edit Wilson Jonathan 12 August 2008 Honour on the line as Soviet football s biggest rivalry awakens once more The Guardian ISSN 0261 3077 Retrieved 24 June 2019 a b c d Evgeni Kazakov The Soviet First League in football Pervaya liga SSSR po futbolu History of the Soviet championships in football Volume 1 1936 1969 Litres 2019 Sovtorgsluzhashchie at ukrsoccerhistory com Radtorgsluzhbovci Kiyiv www kopanyi myach info Banyas V 1 July 1928 the first game of Dynamo 1 lipnya 1928 go pershij match Dinamo Archived 1 July 2018 at the Wayback Machine Ukrainian Premier League 1 July 2018 Yuriy Korzachenko Retro Kak na kievskoe Dinamo velosiped naehal footclub com ua 23 February 2013 Vspominaya epohu Gorbacheva Vremya kogda dengi lezhali pod nogami www kp ru 31 August 2022 Glava 30 VZGLYaDY NA OTDELNYE STORONY IZMENENIYa SOCIALNO EKONOMIChESKOJ SISTEMY Shestoj tom Vsemirnaya istoriya ekonomicheskoj mysli www booksite ru Dynamo Kyiv ordered to play next two European ties behind closed doors due to racism incidents from fans The Daily Telegraph 10 April 2013 On 21 January 2014 in midst of the Ukrainian Revolution the VK fan site called out to all fans to go into the streets and protect the city from the titushki or hired pro government thugs Hackevich prodlil kontrakt s Dinamo Khatskevich extended contract with Dynamo football ua in Russian 6 June 2019 Retrieved 16 March 2020 Dinamo uvolilo Hackevicha Dynamo fired Khatskevich football ua in Russian 14 August 2019 Retrieved 16 March 2020 Former Shakhtar coach Mircea Lucescu hired by Dynamo Kyiv The Washington Post Associated Press Retrieved 24 July 2020 History of the letter D Istoriya bukvy D FC Dynamo Kyiv Kolomiets A Dinamo 90 Zagadka propisnoyi D Dynamo 90 Mystery of the cursive D FC Dynamo Kyiv in Ukrainian Retrieved 18 June 2023 Zupinimo vijnu Xxldynamo com ua Archived from the original on 21 September 2013 Retrieved 25 July 2022 New Balance and FC Dynamo Kyiv start of shared path FC Dynamo Kyiv official website fcdynamo com Retrieved 18 June 2023 A Bank vistupiv generalnim partnerom futbolnogo klubu Dinamo Kiyiv FK Dinamo Kiyiv Oficijnij sajt fcdynamo com in Ukrainian Retrieved 18 June 2023 Zoloti imena fcdynamo com Legendarni nastavniki fcdynamo com Stadium s history Fan Website of Dynamo Kyiv DYNAMO ULTRAS WHITE BLUE HOOLIGANS Statti Bilo Sini sajt vbolivalnikiv DINAMO KIYiV White blue kiev ua Ultras Filya Za Ukrayinu voyuyut nacionalisti a keruyut neosovki depo ua Prestupnosti NET news pn Freedom for Pavlichenko Ultras Tifo DYNAMO ULTRAS WHITE BLUE HOOLIGANS Statti Bilo Sini sajt vbolivalnikiv DINAMO KIYiV White blue kiev ua Retrieved 29 June 2020 Zhurnal SVYaTOSLAV drukovane vidannya ultras Dinamo Kiyiv Novini Bilo Sini sajt vbolivalnikiv DINAMO KIYiV White blue kiev ua Retrieved 29 June 2020 Hutnik Nowa Huta Dynamo Kijow 19 07 2014 Stadionowi Oprawcy Archived from the original on 22 November 2015 Retrieved 10 January 2016 Dynamo Kyiv Shaktar Donetsk 16 10 2015 Ultras Tifo Liga Europy Bojka chuliganow Legii i Dynama Kijow Pilka nozna Sport pl Truce among the Ukrainian ultras Ultras Tifo Dinamo Arsenal ideologichne protistoyannya fanativ Foto Video Sport 23 July 2012 Player Profiles FC Dynamo Kyiv Official club website fcdynamo com Dynamo upl ua Management FC Dynamo Kyiv official website fcdynamo com Retrieved 18 June 2023 Staff Profiles FC Dynamo Kyiv Official club website fcdynamo com Dynamo U19 Coaches FC Dynamo Kyiv official website fcdynamo com Retrieved 18 June 2023 a b Archived copy Archived from the original on 20 March 2017 Retrieved 9 September 2015 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint archived copy as title link FC Dynamo Kyiv junik lv Ukrainskij futbol ot Dmitriya Troshiya uafootball net ua in Ukrainian Pavlushko Anton Dinamo Kiev vse bombardiry v Chempionate Ukrainy po futbolu Dynamo Kyiv all scorers in Ukrainian football championship 149 players Statistika chempionata Ukrainy po futbolu vse igroki matchi i goly sostavy komand i perehody Gusev tretij po kolichestvu matchej za Dinamo v istorii football ua in Ukrainian DER SPIEGEL Online Nachrichten Der Spiegel Retrieved 20 February 2020 Football Leaks 2 Surkisy cherez offshory kupili v Dinamo futbolistov na 324 mln Ukrainskaya Pravda in Russian Retrieved 20 February 2020 External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to FC Dynamo Kyiv Official website in Ukrainian Youtube channel Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title FC Dynamo Kyiv amp oldid 1164795769, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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