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PFC Lokomotiv Plovdiv

Lokomotiv Plovdiv (Bulgarian: Локомотив Пловдив), commonly known as Loko Plovdiv, is a Bulgarian professional association football club based in Plovdiv. Lokomotiv's home ground is the Lokomotiv Stadium which is situated in Lauta Park and has a capacity of 14,500 spectators.

Lokomotiv Plovdiv
Full nameПрофесионален Футболен Клуб „Локомотив“ Пловдив
Professional Football Club Lokomotiv Plovdiv
Nickname(s)Черно-белите (The Black-Whites)
Смърфовете (The Smurfs)
Железничарите (The Railwaymen)
Short nameLOKPD, LPD
Founded25 July 1926; 97 years ago (1926-07-25) as Sportclub Plovdiv
GroundLokomotiv Stadium
Capacity14,500[1]
ShareholdersAdam Sotkov (50%)
Hristo Krusharski (50%)
ChairmanPavel Kolev
Head coachAleksandar Tomash
LeagueFirst League
2022–23First League, 5th of 16
WebsiteClub website
Current season

Founded on 25 July 1926, Lokomotiv is one of the most popular teams in Bulgaria and currently competes in the top-flight First Professional Football League, which they have won once (in 2004). Lokomotiv Plovdiv has won also 2 Bulgarian Cups, 2 Bulgarian Supercups and 1 Cup of the Soviet Army. The biggest success of the club in Europe is reaching the third round of the Inter-Cities Fairs Cup in 1965, after narrowly losing to the Italian Juventus in a play-off match.

Lokomotiv have a fierce local rivalry with fellow Plovdiv-based team Botev Plovdiv. Matches between the two sides are known as the Plovdiv derby.

History

Throughout the club's history, it has undergone a number of complex reorganisations. These were in part due to the political environment in Bulgaria during the communist period (1944-1989) which led to enforced changes in the nature of sporting clubs throughout the country in order to follow the "Soviet model". For PFC Lokomotiv Plovdiv, these changes led to the merger of two separate existing teams, different in nature, which in turn has led to misinterpretations of the history of the teams. In order to understand the origin of the contemporary team, Lokomotiv's history can be divided into two major branches – one defined largely by its followers (Sportclub Plovdiv), and the other by its functional characteristics, association with the railway, and funding as a labour union team (ZSK Plovdiv).

Roots of the Club (until 1944)

Sportclub Plovdiv

In the spring of 1922, the sport club Karadzha was founded when several casual amateur football teams in one of the districts of Plovdiv consolidated so the players could compete in the Championship of Plovdiv. Two years later, in 1924, another sport club called Atletik was formed in the same district.

On 25 July 1926 Karadzha and Atletik merged to form Sportclub.[2] The team chose white, black and red as the colours for their kits and crest. Several years later, the year of establishment (1926) was added to the crest. Lokomotiv Plovdiv still uses the same colours, while their full name (Professional Football Club Lokomotiv 1926 Plovdiv) shows the club's beginnings as the same year in which Sportclub was founded.

Sportclub had its home ground in the city centre. However, after the 1928 earthquakes, the team donated its land to those who had lost their homes so they could rebuild there. From 1928 on, Sportclub did not have their own football field for more than two decades.

 
Home and away kits of Sportclub Plovdiv (1939–40)

In the years after Sportclub was created, the team competed in the local Championship of Plovdiv. In the early years of Bulgarian football, there was no national league. The local championships, held at a regional level, were the most prestigious football tournaments in the country. Sportclub participated in the second division until 1933, when the team finished first and was promoted to Plovdiv's top tier as of 1939. In 1940, Sportclub became the Champion of Plovdiv for the first time.

In 1939 the team joined the National Football Division – the countrywide football league which had been formed only a year earlier and which included Bulgaria's top ten teams. However, in 1940 the league was disbanded because of World War II. By that time the club had officially changed its name to Plovdivski Sportclub (Sportclub of Plovdiv), primarily because several other teams in the league also had Sportclub in their names.

During World War II, the team participated in several other tournaments including the Tsar's Cup, which was considered Bulgaria's most prestigious knock-out cup tournament at the time and a predecessor of the current domestic cup tournament.[3][4] In the Tsar's Cup the team reached the finals twice – in 1940 and 1942.

By the time of communist rule in Bulgaria in 1944, Sportclub had become one of the best performing teams in the country, reaching the finals in many tournaments. The club had become the biggest in the Plovdiv region in terms of members and continually set attendance records for the period.

The Club of the Railway Workers in Plovdiv

In the mid-1930s, the railway workers' and sailors' labour union established numerous cultural and sporting organisations across the country. The railway workers established a sports club in Plovdiv as well, since the city is one of the major railway centres in the country. On 13 June 1935 the club ZSK Plovdiv was founded, abbreviated from Zheleznicharski Sporten Klub Plovdiv (The sporting club of the railway workers in Plovdiv).

For the first few years, ZSK Plovdiv lagged behind other teams in the city such as Sportclub and Botev Plovdiv. The team was not recognized as a full member of the national sport federation until three years after its creation. However, by the early 1940s they had improved and in 1944 they won the Championship of Plovdiv.

From an economic perspective, the railway club contributed heavily to the development of sports in the region, making large investments in the improvement of sporting facilities and conditions in the city. Most notably, the powerful national railway company, through ZSK Plovdiv, was the main benefactor for the creation of a state-of-the-art multi-purpose stadium that opened in 1943. The stadium was constructed on the football pitch of the existing team Levski Plovdiv and as such was the home ground for both ZSK Plovdiv and Levski Plovdiv. As a result, the stadium was named ZSK-Levski.

Creation of Lokomotiv Plovdiv (1944–1954)

Changes in Sportclub

In the years after 1944, the newly established communist rule embarked on several campaigns for the "reorganisation of the sporting clubs in Bulgaria" to make them align with the Soviet political agenda and follow the "Soviet model" of sport clubs. This meant that every local region should have its own sports club, but in order to make central investments more efficient for a larger member-base, only a few clubs were permitted per area. That led to the forced merger of clubs within the same locality.

Starting in 1944 Sportclub was merged with numerous other teams in the same district of Plovdiv. Being from an area with a diverse ethnic and religious population, the club was first merged with several lower-division so-called Armenian teams, such as Shant and Erevan. Another merger followed in 1945 with the Catholic club Parchevich. After this wave of mergers, like many other clubs in the country, the club was renamed to an abbreviation of the biggest clubs – S.P.-45, meaning Sportclub Parchevich – 1945. However, due to the non-Slavic background of the words "sport" and "club", the team was officially renamed again before the start of the season to Slavia Plovdiv.

 
The crest of Slavia Plovdiv

In 1947 a new wave of consolidations saw Slavia Plovdiv merged with the cooperative workers' union team, Petar Chengelov. This merger created a club known as Slavia-Chengelov.

During 1944–1955, the club reached the domestic knock-out cup finals (at the time the Cup of the Soviet Army) for the third time in its history – in 1948 as Slavia-Chengelov.

In the 1948 season the club became one of the ten founding teams of the new national top league – "A" Republican Football Group (A RFG), the predecessor of the current Bulgarian top division league.

Through the mergers, the club originally named Sportclub kept its original colours and core team, with only a small number of players considered good enough to find a place in the first team of the "new" club. The supporters remained loyal to the colours and the players, and the followers of the assimilated clubs joined them, increasing the number of fans and members of the largest club in Plovdiv at that time. Though technically the numerous clubs merged, because of the sheer size of Sportclub in terms of members, the smaller clubs were effectively assimilated into the larger club.

Changes in ZSK

For ZSK Plovdiv, reorganisation began in the autumn of 1944. The club was initially merged with the team with which it shared a stadium, Levski Plovdiv, to form ZSK-Levski. However, unlike most other forced mergers at that time, the ZSK-Levski merger was dissolved in less than a year.

After the separation in 1945, ZSK was renamed to Lokomotiv Plovdiv similar to other teams in various Eastern bloc countries which were connected with the railways. Lokomotiv Plovdiv and Levski continued to co-exist as separate entities, still sharing the same stadium.

Although railway workers' club was financially backed by the national railway, in the early years of communist rule the football team competed only at the third level of the recently formed national league. Furthermore, the club was the smallest in Plovdiv in terms of members and attracted only a modest number of spectators for its games, despite its large, state-of-the-art stadium.

Merger of Slavia-Chengelov and Lokomotiv Plovdiv

In the summer of 1949, the Bulgarian Communist Party adopted a new principle governing the construction of sports clubs. Clubs had to serve primarily as physical fitness departments of politically important national enterprises, such as oil refineries, police, army, national railway, and others. Thus, the geographical location of a club was no longer important and clubs were assigned to the major institutions in the country.

The reorganisation of 1949 assigned Lokomotiv to assimilate Slavia-Chengelov, since Lokomotiv was already a team strongly associated with a significant national enterprise. By that time, Slavia-Chengelov was the largest club in Bulgaria in terms of members, and with an even larger fan base.

DSO Energiya was formed from this merger prior to the start of the 1950 season. They used Slavia-Chengelov's colours (white, red, and black) for both their kits and crest and the team itself retained only four players from Lokomotiv, with the core of the squad being players from Slavia-Chengelov. More than two decades after the 1928 earthquake, the fans of what was once Sportclub again had a home ground – the stadium of Lokomotiv. Changes in the formal names of clubs in the Soviet Union took place and a popular name for Eastern bloc sports clubs at the time, Torpedo, was adopted and the team was thus renamed Torpedo Plovdiv.

 
The crest of Torpedo Plovdiv

For the 1950 season, Torpedo Plovdiv took the place of Slavia-Chengelov at the top level of the Bulgarian football league system (A RFG). National policy then required that, as part of the railway union, all club members and players had to be members of the union. This included former members of Slavia-Chengelov, who had no connection to the railways.

Before the 1951 season began, the railway union established a new club, DSO Lokomotiv (Plovdiv), which shared Torpedo's colours and stadium. Torpedo's players were transferred to DSO Lokomotiv, and in order to make them official union members each player was nominally employed by the national railways. Meanwhile, Torpedo Plovdiv was removed from the labour union and no longer funded by it or the railway company. DSO Lokomotiv also acquired Torpedo's license to play in the top tier of the Bulgarian football league, while Torpedo was relegated to the third division. The labour union thus effectively legitimised the new club without needing to limit the access of the members of Torpedo to the sports facilities. Existing members of Torpedo could still use the shared facilities and were no longer required to be members of the railway union.

As of 1951 the fans of Torpedo Plovdiv from 1950 now found themselves supporting the same players, with the same colours, in the same stadium, under a new name. As official membership in the club now required a job with the railways, the official number of members was drastically smaller than in previous years. Nevertheless, the supporters of the team remained the same. Hence, in 1951 DSO Lokomotiv effectively became the successor to Torpedo while Torpedo still competed at a lower level.

From 1951 to 1954 DSO Lokomotiv was one of the best performers in the Bulgarian football elite, annually reaching at least the quarter-final phase of the domestic cup competition (at that time the Cup of the Soviet Army) and regularly finishing high in the top division league.

First Relegation from the Elite (1955–1960)

In 1955 DSO Lokomotiv's playing squad changed entirely – many aging key players were transferred to other teams, but their replacements seemed to be unable to collaborate and were not of the same quality. At the end of the 1955 season DSO Lokomotiv were relegated to the second division.

DSO Lokomotiv played in the second division for five seasons until it returned to the elite level for season 1961–62. In the same year, the team reached the domestic cup finals for the fourth time (after 1940 and 1942 as Sportclub, and 1948 as Slavia-Chengelov), but again lost.

In 1957 another sport reorganisation occurred and clubs were no longer required to be affiliated with national enterprises; instead, teams returned to geographical regions. Thus, sport clubs no longer needed to be "DSO" (English: "voluntary sports organisation"). Consequently, DSO Lokomotiv assimilated Torpedo Plovdiv and Septemvri (Plovdiv), changing its name to Lokomotiv Plovdiv, which it has retained to this day.

Success Home and Abroad (1961–1984)

After rejoining the elite (A RFG) in 1961, it took Lokomotiv seven years to reach the top three and get a medal in the 1968-69 season.

Internationally, the team achieved success more quickly. In the 1964–65 season, Lokomotiv Plovdiv reached the third round of the Inter-Cities Fairs Cup, where after two draws with the Italian team Juventus, a third play-off match was chosen by UEFA to be played in Torino. The game ended with a narrow loss by Lokomotiv with a score of 2:1.

 
The No.8 shirt is retired in honour of Hristo Bonev

Before reaching the third round, Lokomotiv had previously eliminated the Serbian FK Vojvodina and the Romanian FC Petrolul Ploieşti. Key players during this period include forward Gocho Vasilev, star midfielder Hristo Bonev, defender Ivan Boyadzhiev and goalkeeper Stancho Bonchev.

In 1971, the team reached the domestic cup finals but again lost, this time to Levski Sofia with a score of 3:0.

In 1973, Lokomotiv won the A RFG silver medals, finishing the season with 43 points. In 1974, Lokomotiv finished the season in third place receiving the league bronze. The team was quite stable over the next few years and rarely under 6th place in the league table. Among the team's players was Hristo Bonev – considered by most Lokomotiv fans as the greatest player and one of the greatest Bulgarian-born players.[5][6]

In the 1979-80 season Lokomotiv Plovdiv was again relegated to Bulgaria's second football division, but took three seasons to earn back its place.

While being in second division between 1981 and 1983, the team reached the finals in the Cup of the Soviet Army twice. On 12 June 1982 the team lost the domestic cup final for the sixth time.

In 1982 the team acquired Lokomotiv Stadium, situated in Lauta Park near the city's newest district. It is part of a multi-sports complex also used by the club's other sports teams (such as volleyball, tennis and boxing). The inauguration event was scheduled for Monday 6 September 1982 with a match against Neftochimic Burgas (Lokomotiv prevailed 4–1).[7]

1982–83 Cup of the Soviet Army Winners

On 1 June 1983, led by Hristo Bonev, Lokomotiv won their first national cup by beating FC Chirpan 3:1 at Vasil Levski National Stadium in Sofia. The Cup of the Soviet Army, held annually between 1946 and 1990, is recognised by the Bulgarian Football Union (BFU) as the primary domestic knock-out cup tournament until 1982. In 1981, the Bulgarian Cup began to be held every year and overtook the significance of the Cup of the Soviet Army. BFU's current official policy considers the Bulgarian Cup to be the primary domestic knock-out cup from 1983 onwards. Thus Lokomotiv Plovdiv is not officially recognised as the bearer of the domestic cup for 1983.

In the 1983-84 season, the team was again relegated to second level and played the 1984–85 season at that level. In 1985 it rejoined A RFG.

1985–2000

After its return to the top division in 1985 the team had a consistent performance for over a decade, placing itself in the middle of the league table until the late 1990s. During that time the team finished in the top three once, in the 1991-92 season. In the 1998–99 and 1999–00 seasons Lokomotiv Plovdiv played in B PFG.

Georgi Iliev era (2001-2004)

In 2001 the club was purchased by Georgi Iliev, who at the time owned another football club, Velbazhd Kyustendil. It finished in third place in the top division for three consecutive seasons until 2000-01 and was national cup runner-up in 2001.

During the 2001–02 season, Iliev merged the two teams creating the contemporary Lokomotiv Plovdiv (Professional Football Club Lokomotiv 1926 Plovdiv). The new club is the official successor of the Lokomotiv club that merged with Velbazhd and uses the same colours. The team was formed almost entirely from the high-ranking players from Velbazhd Kyustendil's later years. The team finished third at the end of the season.

2003–04 Champions and Supercup Winners

The most successful season in the club's history was the 2003-04 campaign. Lokomotiv won the title, the only one in the club's history so far. Coach and former legendary player Eduard Eranosyan started well, with Lokomotiv leading the league by six points halfway through the season and remaining unbeaten. In the penultimate 29th round, the team defeated Slavia Sofia in Plovdiv by 3:2 in front of more than 17,000 spectators and won the Bulgarian championship. Lokomotiv finished the season with 75 points, 3 more than the second team, Levski Sofia. In the team lines was recent acquisition Martin Kamburov who became the top goalscorer of the league with 25 goals. Key players during the season included Vasil Kamburov, Georgi Iliev, Aleksandar Tunchev, Kiril Kotev, Vladimir Ivanov, Metodi Stoynev and Macedonians Boban Jančevski, Vančo Trajanov and Robert Petrov.

On 31 July 2004, Lokomotiv won the Bulgarian Supercup, after beating Litex Lovech at Lazur Stadium. The captain Ivan Paskov scored a brilliant header in the last seconds of the game for the 1:0 win.[8]

A few months later, the team played for the first time in the UEFA Champions League qualifying rounds where they faced Club Brugge from Belgium in the second qualifying round.

2005–2015

In 2004-05 the team finished third in the A PFG and qualified for the UEFA Cup. In the European club competition, Lokomotiv defeated Serbian OFK Beograd in the second qualifying round (1:0 home win and 1:2 away loss) and were drawn to play against the English Bolton Wanderers in the first round. However, the team from Plovdiv was eliminated after a 1–2 loss at the Reebok Stadium in Bolton and another 1–2 loss in a match played at the Lazur Stadium in Burgas.[9]

In the next few months the club had significant financial problems causing many of the champions' team players such as Aleksandar Tunchev, Martin Kamburov, Ivan Paskov, Georgi Iliev, Darko Spalević, Kiril Kotev and Boban Jančevski to leave.

In the 2005-06 season Lokomotiv finished 5th in A PFG and qualified for the Intertoto Cup. They were eliminated with a 2-3 (1-2 away loss and a 1–1 home draw) on aggregate by Romanian Farul Constanţa.

In the next three seasons, the team finished in the middle of the table. In December 2009, businessman and ex-Vihren Sandanski owner Konstantin Dinev acquired the club from Galina Topalova in a 2 million euro bid, with the intention to bring them back to European club competition.

Hristo Krusharski era (2016–present)

2018–19 Bulgarian Cup Winners

On 15 May 2019, Lokomotiv Plovdiv won the Bulgarian Cup for the first time in the club's history, defeating local rivals Botev Plovdiv 1–0 in Sofia.[10] The winning goal came in the 72rd minute with a back heel kick of Alen Ožbolt. Ante Aralica provided the assist.[11]

Winning the Bulgarian Cup enabled the team to play in the Europa League second qualifying round for the 2019–20 season. In the second round, Lokomotiv faced FC Spartak Trnava of Slovakia. Lokomotiv won the tie on aggregate, with a score of 3–3, progressing to the next round via the away goals rule.[12] The next round's opponent was Strasbourg. Lokomotiv entered as outsiders against the French side, and lost the first game 0–1 in Bulgaria.[13] In the second match, Lokomotiv Plovdiv again lost with a minimum score of 1–0, being eliminated on aggregate 0–2.[14]

2019–20 Bulgarian Cup and Supercup Winners

On 1 July 2020, Lokomotiv beat CSKA Sofia on the final match played in Sofia and clinched the Bulgarian Cup for a second consecutive time, becoming the first team winning two consecutive cups after Litex Lovech in 2008 and 2009. The Smurfs defeated CSKA Sofia after a penalty shootout (5–3).[15][16]

On 2 August 2020, Lokomotiv won the Bulgarian Supercup for the second time, defeating Ludogorets 0–1 at Ludogorets Arena (Ludogorets home ground). The winning goal was scored in the last minute of the regular time with a volley kick of the captain Dimitar Iliev.[17]

Lokomotiv beat Iskra Danilovgrad of Montenegro 1–0 in the first Europa League qualifying round on 27 August 2020.[18] Due to the COVID-19 pandemic, all Europa League qualifying ties this season before the play-off round featured only one leg. In the second qualifying round Lokomotiv faced Jose Mourinho's Tottenham Hotspur and it was close to eliminate the English team after the goal of Georgi Minchev, but Spurs complete late turnaround after two red cards for Lokomotiv players.[19]

Lokomotiv finished on 2nd place in the regular season and qualified for the Championship Round maintaining their status in the top three until the last round of the season.

The Smurfs started the 2020/21 season with a match against Slovácko in a second qualifying round of the Europa Conference League. Lokomotiv won the first match at Lokomotiv Stadium 1–0 with a 90th-minute winner of Petar Vitanov and loss with the same scoreline in Uherské Hradiště. In the penalty shoot-out Ilko Pirgov parried 3 consecutive penalties and Lokomotiv won 3–2. [20] In the third qualifying round Lokomotiv were eliminated by Copenhagen of Danmark, following a 1–1 draw in Plovdiv and a 4–2 loss in the return leg at Parken Stadium.[21]

In the league, Lokomotiv won the silver medals for the second time in club's history, finishing the season with 61 points.[22]

Crest and colors

The configuration of the crest consists of a shield colored in red and black and a golden letter 'L' (Bulgarian: Л) placed in the center. A white stripe with the inscription 'Plovdiv' is positioned on the upper part of the shield. The wings at the bottom of the shield represent the historical bond between the football club and the national railway company.[23]

Lokomotiv Plovdiv's traditional home colors are white, black and red. In the past the club has also adopted sky blue as a kit color.

Names

Lokomotiv was founded as Sportclub Plovdiv in 1926 and has carried a plethora of names throughout its history. In chronological order, they are as follows:[24]

  • Sportclub Plovdiv (Bulgarian: Пловдивски Спортклуб) in 1926.
  • S.P. 45 (Sportclub Parchevich 1945) (Bulgarian: С.П. 45) in 1945.
  • Slavia Plovdiv (Bulgarian: Славия Пловдив) in 1946 and 1949.
  • Slavia-Chengelov Plovdiv (Bulgarian: Славия-Ченгелов Пловдив) in 1947.
  • Energia Plovdiv (Bulgarian: Енергия Пловдив) in 1949 (from 5 to 11 October).
  • Torpedo Plovdiv (Bulgarian: Торпедо Пловдив) in 1949.
  • Lokomotiv Plovdiv (Bulgarian: Локомотив Пловдив) since 1951.

Stadium

 
Lokomotiv Stadium viewed from the air
 
The Main stand

Lokomotiv Stadium, nicknamed Lauta after the name of the park in which the stadium is situated, is a multi-purpose stadium located in southeastern Plovdiv, Bulgaria. Designed by architect Zdravko Vasilkov, the stadium was officially opened on Bulgarian Unification Day on 6 September 1982 and is a part of a sports complex, which includes an indoor athletic hall, a volleyball hall, five tennis courts and three training pitches.[25] The main pitch length is 105 metres and the width is 71 metres.

The stadium initially held a capacity of 24,000 people. The record attendance was back in 1983 when Lokomotiv played against Chernomorets Burgas in a playoff game for entering the Country's top-tier league. There were 33,000 people attending this game and at least 6,000 of those were actually outside of the stadium.

On 25 July 2019, the stadium hosted its first ever European competition game, as Lokomotiv defeated Spartak Trnava 2–0 in a Europa League fixture in front of nearly 10,000 spectators. This date also matched with Lokomotiv's 93rd birthday and the win was a great gift for the thousands of people attending the game.[26]

In 2020 after a government funding for the Plovdiv city football infrastructure the works on the new Bessica stand started with the completion date set for the summer of 2022. Also by the end of the same year the opposite south stand were demolished and preparation started for the foundations of the stand. Both the north and south stands are planned to host 2,846 spectators each and being completed by the end of 2022. [27] After the Bessica and south stand are completed, the west stand called Sportclub is expected to be the next one to be demolished and build back up from the scratch. The total capacity for the stadium is planned to be 14,500 after the construction works are completed by the summer of 2024.[28]

Support

 
Lokomotiv Plovdiv fans provide their support with extreme passion
 
Lokomotiv Plovdiv supporters during the Plovdiv derby

Since its foundation, Lokomotiv has been one of the best supported football clubs in Bulgaria. Its fans broke attendance records on numerous occasions in the early years[29] despite hardships (the team did not have a home ground for more than 20 years after the 1928 earthquake).[30] By the 1940s the club was one of the largest in the country in terms of officially registered members.[31] In 1968 its supporters established the amateur football club Friends of Lokomotiv Plovdiv as a means of organised support, and in 1988 the official fan club – Club of the Supporters of Lokomotiv Plovdiv – was established as the first of its kind in Bulgaria. The political environment of the time was unfavourable towards independently formed organisations.[32]

In the 1980s the club was extremely popular and had the biggest away invasions,[33] including more than 30,000 people at the final of the 1983 Soviet Cup. The club also holds record attendance for a championship home game - more than 40,000 people versus Beroe.[34] When Lokomotiv won the title in 2003–04 there were 50,000 people in the city's main square to celebrate the victory.[35]

At the start of the reconstruction of Lokomotiv Stadium, the section for the most devoted fans was to be called Bessica Tribune after the ancient Thracian tribe whose artefacts were discovered nearby.[36] Since the project's postponement, the name has been used collectively for the most dedicated followers.

Lokomotiv Plovdiv also has a football hooligan fan base, with some of the most prominent factions being Lauta Hools, Got Mitt Uns, Napoletani 1995, and Lauta Youths. Lauta Hools, also called Usual suspects, founded in 1992,[37] adhere to the British form of support and are casuals, and it is not uncommon to see the Union Jack in the stands as a result.

Friendships

Lokomotiv fans have a long-standing friendship with fans of the Italian team SSC Napoli due to their creation of the name Napoletani Ultras Plovdiv.[38] On many occasions, fans from both clubs traveled to watch each other's games.[39]

Rivalries

Lokomotiv's main rival is the neighbouring city club of Botev Plovdiv, and both form the Plovdiv derby. The Plovdiv derby is considered to be the second fiercest rivalry in Bulgarian football, after the Eternal derby of Bulgarian football.[40] The rivalry poses a symbolic importance to supporters due to an assumed superiority that comes with winning the derby.

Another rivalry is with CSKA Sofia and is the fiercest intercity football rivalry in Bulgaria, because of the historical competition between the cities of Plovdiv and Sofia as cultural, political and economical centres.[41]

Players

First-team squad

As of 10 August 2023[42]

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

No. Pos. Nation Player
3 DF   BUL Kaloyan Kostov
4 DF   BUL Martin Paskalev
5 DF   BUL Todor Pavlov
6 MF   BUL Hristo Ivanov
7 FW   BEL Babacar Dione
9 FW   BUL Georgi Minchev
10 FW   BRA Giovanny
11 MF   BUL Petar Andreev
13 DF   BRA Matheus Silva
14 FW   BUL Dimitar Iliev (captain)
16 MF   BUL Kristiyan Peshov
No. Pos. Nation Player
17 FW   SLE Alpha Conteh
19 MF   VEN Christian Mendoza
21 FW   BRA Ewandro
22 DF   BUL Aleksandar Georgiev
23 GK   CRO Dinko Horkaš
33 MF   BUL Georgi Karakashev
44 DF   BUL Angel Lyaskov
91 DF   COL Jorge Segura
99 MF   BRA Léo Sena
DF   CUW Giovanni Troupée

For recent transfers, see Transfers summer 2023.

Foreign players

Up to twenty foreign nationals can be registered and given a squad number for the first team in the Bulgarian First League, however only five non-EU nationals can be used during a match day. Those non-EU nationals with European ancestry can claim citizenship from the nation their ancestors came from. If a player does not have European ancestry he can claim Bulgarian citizenship after playing in Bulgaria for 5 years.

EU Nationals

EU Nationals (Dual citizenship)

Non-EU Nationals

Retired numbers

No. Player Nationality Position Lokomotiv debut Last match Ref
8 Hristo Bonev   Bulgaria Attacking midfielder 5 June 1965 15 October 1983 [43]

Player of the Season

Source: [1]

Honours

Domestic

First League:

Bulgarian Cup:

Bulgarian Supercup:

Cup of the Soviet Army:

  •   Winners (1): 1983

Regional

Plovdiv Championship

  •   Winners (6): 1936, 1938, 1942, 1945, 1946, 1948

Trimontium Cup

  •   Winners (2): 1938, 1946

Source: lokomotivpd.com

European record

As of 13 July 2022
Competition Played Won Drew Lost GF GA GD Win%
UEFA Champions League 2 0 0 2 0 6 −6 000.00
UEFA Cup / UEFA Europa League 46 13 8 25 57 89 −32 028.26
UEFA Europa Conference League 4 1 1 2 4 6 −2 025.00
UEFA Intertoto Cup 2 0 1 1 2 3 −1 000.00
Total 54 14 10 30 63 104 −41 025.93

Matches

As of 13 July 2022
Season Competition Round Club Home Away Aggregate
1963–64 Fairs Cup 1Q   Steagul Roșu Brașov 3–1 2–1 5–2
2Q   Újpest 1–3 0–0 1–3
1964–65 Fairs Cup 1Q   Vojvodina 1–1 1–1 2–0 (Playoff)
2Q   Petrolul Ploiești 2–0 0–1 2–1
3Q   Juventus 1–1 1–1 1–2 (Playoff)
1965–66 Fairs Cup 1Q   Spartak Brno 1–0 0–2 1–2
1967–68 Fairs Cup 1Q   Partizan 1–1 1–5 2–6
1969–70 Fairs Cup 1Q   Juventus 1–2 1–3 2–5
1971–72 UEFA Cup 1Q   Carl Zeiss 3–1 0–3 3–4
1973–74 UEFA Cup 1Q   Sliema Wanderers 1–0 2–0 3–0
2Q   Honved Budapest 3–4 2–3 5–7
1974–75 UEFA Cup 1Q   Győri ETO 3–1 1–3 4–4 (p)
1976–77 UEFA Cup 1Q   Crvena Zvezda 2–1 1–4 3–5
1983–84 UEFA Cup 1Q   PAOK 1–2 1–3 2–5
1992–93 UEFA Cup 1Q   Auxerre 2–2 1–7 3–9
1993–94 UEFA Cup 1Q   Lazio 0–2 0–2 0–4
2004–05 UEFA Champions League 2Q   Club Brugge 0–4 0–2 0–6
2005–06 UEFA Cup 2Q   OFK Beograd 1–0 1–2 2–2 (a)
PO   Bolton 1–2 1–2 2–4
2006 UEFA Intertoto Cup 2Q   Farul Constanța 1–1 1–2 2–3
2012–13 UEFA Europa League 2Q   Vitesse 4–4 1–3 5–7
2019–20 UEFA Europa League 2Q   Spartak Trnava 2–0 1–3 3–3 (a)
3Q   Strasbourg 0–1 0–1 0–2
2020–21 UEFA Europa League 1Q   Iskra 1–0 1–0
2Q   Tottenham Hotspur 1–2 1–2
2021–22 UEFA Europa Conference League 2Q   Slovácko 1–0 0–1 1–1 (3–2 p)
3Q   Copenhagen 1–1 2–4 3–5
Notes
  • 1Q: First qualifying round
  • 2Q: Second qualifying round
  • 3Q: Third qualifying round
  • PO: Play-off round

UEFA club rankings

As of 20 July 2022[44]

Current ranking

Rank Team Coeff.
225   Mura 5.500
226   Trabzonspor 5.500
227   Lokomotiv Plovdiv 5.500
228   Hibernians 5.500
229   FH Hafnarfjördur 5.500

Recent seasons

League positions

First Professional Football LeagueBulgarian A Football GroupBulgarian B Football GroupBulgarian A Football GroupBulgarian B Football GroupBulgarian A Football GroupBulgarian B Football GroupBulgarian A Football GroupBulgarian B Football GroupBulgarian A Football Group
Season Tier Position M W D L G D P Bulgarian Cup Bulgarian Supercup Top goalscorer[45]
2013–14 A Group 7 38 15 5 18 49 -6 50 Semi-finals Martin Kamburov /20 goals/
2014–15 A Group 10 32 9 5 18 28 -24 32 Semi-finals Martin Kamburov /13 goals/
2015–16 A Group 5 32 15 4 14 40 -5 49 Round of 16 Martin Kamburov /18 goals/
2016–17 First League 5 36 14 10 12 50 -2 52 Quarter-finals Martin Kamburov /17 goals/
2017–18 First League 8 36 11 11 14 35 -13 44 Round of 16 Dimo Bakalov /9 goals/
2018–19 First League 10 34 10 8 16 37 -3 38 Winners Runners-Up Dimitar Iliev /9 goals/
2019–20 First League 5 31 15 8 8 53 +18 53 Winners Winners Dimitar Iliev /12 goals/
2020–21 First League 2 31 17 10 4 48 +25 61 Quarter-finals Dimitar Iliev /13 goals/
2021–22 First League 9 32 9 11 12 36 -7 38 Quarter-finals Dimitar Iliev /13 goals/
2022–23 First League 5 35 15 9 11 35 +1 54 Round of 16 Giovanny /8 goals/

Records

 
Legendary Hristo Bonev, a powerful attacking midfielder, is the appearances recordman and all-time goalscorer of the club.
 
Martin Kamburov is 4-time top scorer of the First league with Lokomotiv Plovdiv.
 
Dimitar Iliev won the award for Bulgarian Footballer of the Year in 2019 and 2020. He is the captain and the leader of the club in the recent seasons.

Player records

Hristo Bonev holds the records for most Lokomotiv Plovdiv league appearances (404) and goals (180).[46]

Most league appearances:
Rank Name Apps
1   Hristo Bonev 404
2   Georgi Vasilev 386
3   Stancho Bonchev 331
4   Gancho Peev 327
5   Iliya Bekyarov 314

Most league goals:

Rank Name Goals
1   Hristo Bonev 180
2   Martin Kamburov 145
3   Georgi Vasilev 115
4   Ivan Kanchev 73
5   Ayan Sadakov 66

Bulgarian league top scorers

Bulgarian Footballer of the Year

Club records

  • Biggest league win: 9–1 vs Dobrudzha Dobrich (21 September 2002) — 2002–03[47]
  • Biggest league defeat: 0–9 vs Slavia Sofia (2 March 1986) — 1985–86[48]
  • Biggest cup win: 8–1 vs Pirin Blagoevgrad1946
    0000000000000007–0 vs Torpedo Dimitrovgrad1954
  • Biggest cup defeat: 0–6 vs Minyor Pernik1998–99
  • Most league points in a season: 75 — 2003–04[49]
  • Most league goals in a season: 74 — 2003–04
  • Most consecutive wins in the league (single season): 6 — from 25 April 1971 to 13 June 1971[50]
    0000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000 from 23 February 2002 to 16 March 2002
    0000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000 from 9 August 2003 to 20 September 2003
    0000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000 from 10 April 2004 to 8 May 2004
    0000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000 from 24 April 2016 to 28 May 2016[51]
    0000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000 from 13 September 2019 to 29 October 2019[52]
  • Most consecutive league games unbeaten (single season): 11 — from 17 February 2002 to 13 April 2002[53]
    0000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000 from 9 August 2003 to 9 November 2003[54]
    0000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000 from 6 December 2020 to 21 April 2021[55]
  • Record European competition home attendance: 40,000 vs   Juventus (10 March 1965) — Fairs Cup, Third round 2nd leg, 1964–65[56]

As of 25 July 2022

Managers

Notable managers

Period Name Honours
1982–1983   Аtanas Dramov 99991 Cup of the Soviet Army
2003–2005   Eduard Eranosyan 99991 First League title
1 Bulgarian Supercup title
2017–2020   Bruno Akrapović 99992 Bulgarian Cup titles
1 Bulgarian Supercup title

Managerial history

As of 13 July 2022

Source: loko-pd.com

References

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  2. ^ "Пловдивски Спортклуб – Учредителният протокол!". www.loko-pd.com (in Bulgarian). from the original on 6 October 2022. Retrieved 14 September 2022.
  3. ^ Todor Krastev. "Bulgaria Cups Overview". Rec.Sport.Soccer Statistics Foundation. from the original on 12 July 2022. Retrieved 4 June 2019.
  4. ^ "Bulgaria Cups Overview". from the original on 2015-09-25. Retrieved 2015-09-08.
  5. ^ "Български легенди >> Христо Бонев" [Bulgarian legends - Hristo Bonev] (in Bulgarian). Retrieved 15 July 2022.[permanent dead link]
  6. ^ "36 години от едно от най-паметните футболни събития за Пловдив и България" [36 years from one of the most memorable football events for Plovdiv and Bulgaria] (in Bulgarian). 16 September 2020. from the original on 8 April 2022. Retrieved 15 July 2022.
  7. ^ (in Bulgarian). Archived from the original on 7 February 2022. Retrieved 25 August 2022.
  8. ^ "Wide open race in Bulgaria | Inside UEFA". 4 August 2004. from the original on 14 July 2022. Retrieved 14 July 2022.
  9. ^ "Bolton 2–1 Lokomotiv Plovdiv". BBC News. 15 September 2005. from the original on 2006-12-22. Retrieved 2005-09-15.
  10. ^ "Купата е за Локо!" [Lokomotiv won the Bulgarian Cup!] (in Bulgarian). 15 May 2019. Retrieved 14 July 2022.
  11. ^ "Локо разказа играта на Ботев! Купата е на "Лаута"". marica.bg/ (in Bulgarian). 15 May 2019. from the original on 29 June 2022. Retrieved 15 May 2019.
  12. ^ "Ален Ожболт класира Локо срещу Страсбург". marica.bg/ (in Bulgarian). 2 August 2019. from the original on 29 June 2022. Retrieved 2 August 2019.
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  26. ^ "Стадионът на Локомотив (Пловдив) е почти готов за мачовете в Лига Европа" [Lokomotiv Stadium is almost ready for Europa League matches] (in Bulgarian). 17 July 2017. from the original on 28 June 2022. Retrieved 13 July 2022.
  27. ^ "Пускат в експлоатация Трибуна Бесика в началото на ноември" (in Bulgarian). 27 September 2022. from the original on 16 December 2022. Retrieved 16 December 2022.
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  29. ^ "МНОГОБРОЙНИ ПРИВЪРЖЕНИЦИ, ЧАСТ ВТОРА: ДЕСАНТИТЕ В ЧЕРНО-БЯЛО-ЧЕРВЕНО" [Numerous Supporters, Part Two: The Raids in Black-White-and-Red] (in Bulgarian). 13 Aug 2013. from the original on 21 December 2017. Retrieved 9 May 2014.
  30. ^ "ИСТОРИЯТА НА ЛОКОМОТИВ ПЛОВДИВ" [The History of Lokomotiv Plovdiv] (in Bulgarian). 28 Apr 2010. from the original on 6 June 2014. Retrieved 9 May 2014.
  31. ^ "ИСТОРИЯТА НА ЛОКОМОТИВ ПЛОВДИВ" [The History of Lokomotiv Plovdiv] (in Bulgarian). 28 Apr 2010. from the original on 17 January 2018. Retrieved 9 May 2014.
  32. ^ "25 ГОДИНИ КЛУБ НА ПРИВЪРЖЕНИЦИТЕ НА ЛОКОМОТИВ ПЛОВДИВ" [25 Years Club of the Supporters of Lokomotiv Plovdiv] (in Bulgarian). 10 May 2013. from the original on 16 January 2018. Retrieved 9 May 2014.
  33. ^ "През 1982/83 г. се местим на Лаута, печелим първата Купа, играем 2 баража и постаявяме рекорд по посещаемост на чужд терен". from the original on 2022-05-20. Retrieved 2022-07-01.
  34. ^ "В. "Отечествен глас", 17 март 1983 г." [„Otechestven glas“ newspaper, 17 March 1983] (in Bulgarian). 17 Mar 1983. from the original on 1 July 2022. Retrieved 1 July 2022.
  35. ^ "Кадри от 2004 г.: Локо с шампионската купа, шествието и 50-хилядното посрещане в Пловдив" (in Bulgarian). 15 May 2020. from the original on 21 September 2022. Retrieved 21 September 2022.
  36. ^ "Трибуна Бесика" [TRIBUNA BESSICA] (in Bulgarian). 29 July 2010. from the original on 14 September 2022. Retrieved 14 September 2022.
  37. ^ "Lauta Hools чества 20 години" [Lauta Hools celebrated 20 years anniversary] (in Bulgarian). 20 Feb 2012. from the original on 30 June 2022. Retrieved 20 Feb 2012.]
  38. ^ "Napoletani Ultras Plovdiv (Lokomotiv Plovdiv-Bulgaria)". Ultras-tifo.net. 2008-01-05. from the original on 2022-06-30. Retrieved 2022-07-12.
  39. ^ "Фенове на Наполи подкрепяха Локомотив вчера" [Fans from Napoli supported Lokomotiv yesterday] (in Bulgarian). 18 Aug 2013. from the original on 30 June 2022. Retrieved 12 July 2022.
  40. ^ "ДЕРБИТО НА ПЛОВДИВ – КУРИОЗИ ОТ РАННИТЕ ВРЕМЕНА" [The Plovdiv Derby - curiosity in early years] (in Bulgarian). 21 June 2010. from the original on 13 July 2022. Retrieved 12 July 2022.
  41. ^ "RIOTS: CSKA SOFIA - LOKOMOTIV PLOVDIV 31.10.2021". 31 October 2021. from the original on 18 August 2022. Retrieved 12 July 2022.
  42. ^ "Състав". lokomotivpd.com (in Bulgarian). from the original on 8 October 2022. Retrieved 8 October 2022.
  43. ^ "Замразените номера на великите" [Retired numbers of the greatest] (in Bulgarian). 27 June 2015. from the original on 20 July 2022. Retrieved 20 July 2022.
  44. ^ "Club coefficients". from the original on 2021-11-09. Retrieved 2022-07-20.
  45. ^ "Players - First League - Bulgaria - Results, fixtures, tables and news - Soccerway". from the original on 29 April 2022. Retrieved 11 July 2022.
  46. ^ "Български легенди >> Христо Бонев" [Bulgarian legends - Hristo Bonev] (in Bulgarian). Retrieved 11 July 2022.[permanent dead link]
  47. ^ ""Смърфовете" смазаха "Добруджа" с 9:1". dnevnik.bg (in Bulgarian). 21 September 2002. Retrieved 21 September 2002.
  48. ^ "1985-1986-славия-локомотив-пловдив". a-pfg.com (in Bulgarian). from the original on 25 July 2022. Retrieved 22 July 2022.
  49. ^ "КЛАСИРАНЕ ПРЕЗ СЕЗОНИТЕ". a-pfg.com (in Bulgarian). from the original on 29 May 2022. Retrieved 22 July 2022.
  50. ^ "А група - сезон 1970/1971". a-pfg.com (in Bulgarian). from the original on 27 July 2022. Retrieved 26 July 2022.
  51. ^ "Локомотив гони шампионски рекорд". www.tribunaplovdiv.bg (in Bulgarian). Retrieved 26 July 2022.
  52. ^ "А група - сезон 2019/2020". a-pfg.com (in Bulgarian). from the original on 5 July 2022. Retrieved 26 July 2022.
  53. ^ "А група - сезон 2001/2002". a-pfg.com (in Bulgarian). from the original on 27 July 2022. Retrieved 26 July 2022.
  54. ^ "А група - сезон 2003/2004". a-pfg.com (in Bulgarian). from the original on 26 July 2022. Retrieved 26 July 2022.
  55. ^ "А група - сезон 2020/2021". a-pfg.com (in Bulgarian). from the original on 27 July 2022. Retrieved 26 July 2022.
  56. ^ "На тази дата преди 49 години, пловдивското "Юве" надигра "Ювентус"". www.tribunaplovdiv.bg (in Bulgarian). from the original on 23 May 2022. Retrieved 26 July 2022.

External links

Official websites

  • Official website (in Bulgarian)
  • Historical website (part of the official website) (in Bulgarian)
  • Official fan-website (in Bulgarian)
  • Lokomotiv Plovdiv at UEFA

Media

  • Official YouTube channel
  • Official Facebook page

lokomotiv, plovdiv, lokomotiv, plovdiv, bulgarian, Локомотив, Пловдив, commonly, known, loko, plovdiv, bulgarian, professional, association, football, club, based, plovdiv, lokomotiv, home, ground, lokomotiv, stadium, which, situated, lauta, park, capacity, sp. Lokomotiv Plovdiv Bulgarian Lokomotiv Plovdiv commonly known as Loko Plovdiv is a Bulgarian professional association football club based in Plovdiv Lokomotiv s home ground is the Lokomotiv Stadium which is situated in Lauta Park and has a capacity of 14 500 spectators Lokomotiv PlovdivFull nameProfesionalen Futbolen Klub Lokomotiv PlovdivProfessional Football Club Lokomotiv PlovdivNickname s Cherno belite The Black Whites Smrfovete The Smurfs Zheleznicharite The Railwaymen Short nameLOKPD LPDFounded25 July 1926 97 years ago 1926 07 25 as Sportclub PlovdivGroundLokomotiv StadiumCapacity14 500 1 ShareholdersAdam Sotkov 50 Hristo Krusharski 50 ChairmanPavel KolevHead coachAleksandar TomashLeagueFirst League2022 23First League 5th of 16WebsiteClub websiteHome coloursAway coloursThird coloursCurrent seasonFounded on 25 July 1926 Lokomotiv is one of the most popular teams in Bulgaria and currently competes in the top flight First Professional Football League which they have won once in 2004 Lokomotiv Plovdiv has won also 2 Bulgarian Cups 2 Bulgarian Supercups and 1 Cup of the Soviet Army The biggest success of the club in Europe is reaching the third round of the Inter Cities Fairs Cup in 1965 after narrowly losing to the Italian Juventus in a play off match Lokomotiv have a fierce local rivalry with fellow Plovdiv based team Botev Plovdiv Matches between the two sides are known as the Plovdiv derby Contents 1 History 1 1 Roots of the Club until 1944 1 1 1 Sportclub Plovdiv 1 1 2 The Club of the Railway Workers in Plovdiv 1 2 Creation of Lokomotiv Plovdiv 1944 1954 1 2 1 Changes in Sportclub 1 2 2 Changes in ZSK 1 2 3 Merger of Slavia Chengelov and Lokomotiv Plovdiv 1 3 First Relegation from the Elite 1955 1960 1 4 Success Home and Abroad 1961 1984 1 4 1 1982 83 Cup of the Soviet Army Winners 1 5 1985 2000 1 6 Georgi Iliev era 2001 2004 1 6 1 2003 04 Champions and Supercup Winners 1 7 2005 2015 1 8 Hristo Krusharski era 2016 present 1 8 1 2018 19 Bulgarian Cup Winners 1 8 2 2019 20 Bulgarian Cup and Supercup Winners 2 Crest and colors 3 Names 4 Stadium 5 Support 5 1 Friendships 5 2 Rivalries 6 Players 6 1 First team squad 6 2 Foreign players 6 3 Retired numbers 6 4 Player of the Season 7 Honours 7 1 Domestic 7 2 Regional 8 European record 8 1 Matches 8 2 UEFA club rankings 9 Recent seasons 9 1 League positions 10 Records 10 1 Player records 10 2 Club records 11 Managers 11 1 Notable managers 11 2 Managerial history 12 References 13 External linksHistory EditThroughout the club s history it has undergone a number of complex reorganisations These were in part due to the political environment in Bulgaria during the communist period 1944 1989 which led to enforced changes in the nature of sporting clubs throughout the country in order to follow the Soviet model For PFC Lokomotiv Plovdiv these changes led to the merger of two separate existing teams different in nature which in turn has led to misinterpretations of the history of the teams In order to understand the origin of the contemporary team Lokomotiv s history can be divided into two major branches one defined largely by its followers Sportclub Plovdiv and the other by its functional characteristics association with the railway and funding as a labour union team ZSK Plovdiv Roots of the Club until 1944 Edit Sportclub Plovdiv Edit In the spring of 1922 the sport club Karadzha was founded when several casual amateur football teams in one of the districts of Plovdiv consolidated so the players could compete in the Championship of Plovdiv Two years later in 1924 another sport club called Atletik was formed in the same district On 25 July 1926 Karadzha and Atletik merged to form Sportclub 2 The team chose white black and red as the colours for their kits and crest Several years later the year of establishment 1926 was added to the crest Lokomotiv Plovdiv still uses the same colours while their full name Professional Football Club Lokomotiv 1926 Plovdiv shows the club s beginnings as the same year in which Sportclub was founded Sportclub had its home ground in the city centre However after the 1928 earthquakes the team donated its land to those who had lost their homes so they could rebuild there From 1928 on Sportclub did not have their own football field for more than two decades Home and away kits of Sportclub Plovdiv 1939 40 In the years after Sportclub was created the team competed in the local Championship of Plovdiv In the early years of Bulgarian football there was no national league The local championships held at a regional level were the most prestigious football tournaments in the country Sportclub participated in the second division until 1933 when the team finished first and was promoted to Plovdiv s top tier as of 1939 In 1940 Sportclub became the Champion of Plovdiv for the first time In 1939 the team joined the National Football Division the countrywide football league which had been formed only a year earlier and which included Bulgaria s top ten teams However in 1940 the league was disbanded because of World War II By that time the club had officially changed its name to Plovdivski Sportclub Sportclub of Plovdiv primarily because several other teams in the league also had Sportclub in their names During World War II the team participated in several other tournaments including the Tsar s Cup which was considered Bulgaria s most prestigious knock out cup tournament at the time and a predecessor of the current domestic cup tournament 3 4 In the Tsar s Cup the team reached the finals twice in 1940 and 1942 By the time of communist rule in Bulgaria in 1944 Sportclub had become one of the best performing teams in the country reaching the finals in many tournaments The club had become the biggest in the Plovdiv region in terms of members and continually set attendance records for the period The Club of the Railway Workers in Plovdiv Edit In the mid 1930s the railway workers and sailors labour union established numerous cultural and sporting organisations across the country The railway workers established a sports club in Plovdiv as well since the city is one of the major railway centres in the country On 13 June 1935 the club ZSK Plovdiv was founded abbreviated from Zheleznicharski Sporten Klub Plovdiv The sporting club of the railway workers in Plovdiv For the first few years ZSK Plovdiv lagged behind other teams in the city such as Sportclub and Botev Plovdiv The team was not recognized as a full member of the national sport federation until three years after its creation However by the early 1940s they had improved and in 1944 they won the Championship of Plovdiv From an economic perspective the railway club contributed heavily to the development of sports in the region making large investments in the improvement of sporting facilities and conditions in the city Most notably the powerful national railway company through ZSK Plovdiv was the main benefactor for the creation of a state of the art multi purpose stadium that opened in 1943 The stadium was constructed on the football pitch of the existing team Levski Plovdiv and as such was the home ground for both ZSK Plovdiv and Levski Plovdiv As a result the stadium was named ZSK Levski Creation of Lokomotiv Plovdiv 1944 1954 Edit Changes in Sportclub Edit In the years after 1944 the newly established communist rule embarked on several campaigns for the reorganisation of the sporting clubs in Bulgaria to make them align with the Soviet political agenda and follow the Soviet model of sport clubs This meant that every local region should have its own sports club but in order to make central investments more efficient for a larger member base only a few clubs were permitted per area That led to the forced merger of clubs within the same locality Starting in 1944 Sportclub was merged with numerous other teams in the same district of Plovdiv Being from an area with a diverse ethnic and religious population the club was first merged with several lower division so called Armenian teams such as Shant and Erevan Another merger followed in 1945 with the Catholic club Parchevich After this wave of mergers like many other clubs in the country the club was renamed to an abbreviation of the biggest clubs S P 45 meaning Sportclub Parchevich 1945 However due to the non Slavic background of the words sport and club the team was officially renamed again before the start of the season to Slavia Plovdiv The crest of Slavia PlovdivIn 1947 a new wave of consolidations saw Slavia Plovdiv merged with the cooperative workers union team Petar Chengelov This merger created a club known as Slavia Chengelov During 1944 1955 the club reached the domestic knock out cup finals at the time the Cup of the Soviet Army for the third time in its history in 1948 as Slavia Chengelov In the 1948 season the club became one of the ten founding teams of the new national top league A Republican Football Group A RFG the predecessor of the current Bulgarian top division league Through the mergers the club originally named Sportclub kept its original colours and core team with only a small number of players considered good enough to find a place in the first team of the new club The supporters remained loyal to the colours and the players and the followers of the assimilated clubs joined them increasing the number of fans and members of the largest club in Plovdiv at that time Though technically the numerous clubs merged because of the sheer size of Sportclub in terms of members the smaller clubs were effectively assimilated into the larger club Changes in ZSK Edit For ZSK Plovdiv reorganisation began in the autumn of 1944 The club was initially merged with the team with which it shared a stadium Levski Plovdiv to form ZSK Levski However unlike most other forced mergers at that time the ZSK Levski merger was dissolved in less than a year After the separation in 1945 ZSK was renamed to Lokomotiv Plovdiv similar to other teams in various Eastern bloc countries which were connected with the railways Lokomotiv Plovdiv and Levski continued to co exist as separate entities still sharing the same stadium Although railway workers club was financially backed by the national railway in the early years of communist rule the football team competed only at the third level of the recently formed national league Furthermore the club was the smallest in Plovdiv in terms of members and attracted only a modest number of spectators for its games despite its large state of the art stadium Merger of Slavia Chengelov and Lokomotiv Plovdiv Edit In the summer of 1949 the Bulgarian Communist Party adopted a new principle governing the construction of sports clubs Clubs had to serve primarily as physical fitness departments of politically important national enterprises such as oil refineries police army national railway and others Thus the geographical location of a club was no longer important and clubs were assigned to the major institutions in the country The reorganisation of 1949 assigned Lokomotiv to assimilate Slavia Chengelov since Lokomotiv was already a team strongly associated with a significant national enterprise By that time Slavia Chengelov was the largest club in Bulgaria in terms of members and with an even larger fan base DSO Energiya was formed from this merger prior to the start of the 1950 season They used Slavia Chengelov s colours white red and black for both their kits and crest and the team itself retained only four players from Lokomotiv with the core of the squad being players from Slavia Chengelov More than two decades after the 1928 earthquake the fans of what was once Sportclub again had a home ground the stadium of Lokomotiv Changes in the formal names of clubs in the Soviet Union took place and a popular name for Eastern bloc sports clubs at the time Torpedo was adopted and the team was thus renamed Torpedo Plovdiv The crest of Torpedo PlovdivFor the 1950 season Torpedo Plovdiv took the place of Slavia Chengelov at the top level of the Bulgarian football league system A RFG National policy then required that as part of the railway union all club members and players had to be members of the union This included former members of Slavia Chengelov who had no connection to the railways Before the 1951 season began the railway union established a new club DSO Lokomotiv Plovdiv which shared Torpedo s colours and stadium Torpedo s players were transferred to DSO Lokomotiv and in order to make them official union members each player was nominally employed by the national railways Meanwhile Torpedo Plovdiv was removed from the labour union and no longer funded by it or the railway company DSO Lokomotiv also acquired Torpedo s license to play in the top tier of the Bulgarian football league while Torpedo was relegated to the third division The labour union thus effectively legitimised the new club without needing to limit the access of the members of Torpedo to the sports facilities Existing members of Torpedo could still use the shared facilities and were no longer required to be members of the railway union As of 1951 the fans of Torpedo Plovdiv from 1950 now found themselves supporting the same players with the same colours in the same stadium under a new name As official membership in the club now required a job with the railways the official number of members was drastically smaller than in previous years Nevertheless the supporters of the team remained the same Hence in 1951 DSO Lokomotiv effectively became the successor to Torpedo while Torpedo still competed at a lower level From 1951 to 1954 DSO Lokomotiv was one of the best performers in the Bulgarian football elite annually reaching at least the quarter final phase of the domestic cup competition at that time the Cup of the Soviet Army and regularly finishing high in the top division league First Relegation from the Elite 1955 1960 Edit In 1955 DSO Lokomotiv s playing squad changed entirely many aging key players were transferred to other teams but their replacements seemed to be unable to collaborate and were not of the same quality At the end of the 1955 season DSO Lokomotiv were relegated to the second division DSO Lokomotiv played in the second division for five seasons until it returned to the elite level for season 1961 62 In the same year the team reached the domestic cup finals for the fourth time after 1940 and 1942 as Sportclub and 1948 as Slavia Chengelov but again lost In 1957 another sport reorganisation occurred and clubs were no longer required to be affiliated with national enterprises instead teams returned to geographical regions Thus sport clubs no longer needed to be DSO English voluntary sports organisation Consequently DSO Lokomotiv assimilated Torpedo Plovdiv and Septemvri Plovdiv changing its name to Lokomotiv Plovdiv which it has retained to this day Success Home and Abroad 1961 1984 Edit After rejoining the elite A RFG in 1961 it took Lokomotiv seven years to reach the top three and get a medal in the 1968 69 season Internationally the team achieved success more quickly In the 1964 65 season Lokomotiv Plovdiv reached the third round of the Inter Cities Fairs Cup where after two draws with the Italian team Juventus a third play off match was chosen by UEFA to be played in Torino The game ended with a narrow loss by Lokomotiv with a score of 2 1 The No 8 shirt is retired in honour of Hristo BonevBefore reaching the third round Lokomotiv had previously eliminated the Serbian FK Vojvodina and the Romanian FC Petrolul Ploiesti Key players during this period include forward Gocho Vasilev star midfielder Hristo Bonev defender Ivan Boyadzhiev and goalkeeper Stancho Bonchev In 1971 the team reached the domestic cup finals but again lost this time to Levski Sofia with a score of 3 0 In 1973 Lokomotiv won the A RFG silver medals finishing the season with 43 points In 1974 Lokomotiv finished the season in third place receiving the league bronze The team was quite stable over the next few years and rarely under 6th place in the league table Among the team s players was Hristo Bonev considered by most Lokomotiv fans as the greatest player and one of the greatest Bulgarian born players 5 6 In the 1979 80 season Lokomotiv Plovdiv was again relegated to Bulgaria s second football division but took three seasons to earn back its place While being in second division between 1981 and 1983 the team reached the finals in the Cup of the Soviet Army twice On 12 June 1982 the team lost the domestic cup final for the sixth time In 1982 the team acquired Lokomotiv Stadium situated in Lauta Park near the city s newest district It is part of a multi sports complex also used by the club s other sports teams such as volleyball tennis and boxing The inauguration event was scheduled for Monday 6 September 1982 with a match against Neftochimic Burgas Lokomotiv prevailed 4 1 7 1982 83 Cup of the Soviet Army Winners Edit On 1 June 1983 led by Hristo Bonev Lokomotiv won their first national cup by beating FC Chirpan 3 1 at Vasil Levski National Stadium in Sofia The Cup of the Soviet Army held annually between 1946 and 1990 is recognised by the Bulgarian Football Union BFU as the primary domestic knock out cup tournament until 1982 In 1981 the Bulgarian Cup began to be held every year and overtook the significance of the Cup of the Soviet Army BFU s current official policy considers the Bulgarian Cup to be the primary domestic knock out cup from 1983 onwards Thus Lokomotiv Plovdiv is not officially recognised as the bearer of the domestic cup for 1983 In the 1983 84 season the team was again relegated to second level and played the 1984 85 season at that level In 1985 it rejoined A RFG 1985 2000 Edit After its return to the top division in 1985 the team had a consistent performance for over a decade placing itself in the middle of the league table until the late 1990s During that time the team finished in the top three once in the 1991 92 season In the 1998 99 and 1999 00 seasons Lokomotiv Plovdiv played in B PFG Georgi Iliev era 2001 2004 Edit In 2001 the club was purchased by Georgi Iliev who at the time owned another football club Velbazhd Kyustendil It finished in third place in the top division for three consecutive seasons until 2000 01 and was national cup runner up in 2001 During the 2001 02 season Iliev merged the two teams creating the contemporary Lokomotiv Plovdiv Professional Football Club Lokomotiv 1926 Plovdiv The new club is the official successor of the Lokomotiv club that merged with Velbazhd and uses the same colours The team was formed almost entirely from the high ranking players from Velbazhd Kyustendil s later years The team finished third at the end of the season 2003 04 Champions and Supercup Winners Edit Vasil KamburovPaskovKotevIvanovPetrovIlievDimitrovMihaylovJayeobaMartin KamburovJancevskiPlayers with most apps in 2003 04 season The most successful season in the club s history was the 2003 04 campaign Lokomotiv won the title the only one in the club s history so far Coach and former legendary player Eduard Eranosyan started well with Lokomotiv leading the league by six points halfway through the season and remaining unbeaten In the penultimate 29th round the team defeated Slavia Sofia in Plovdiv by 3 2 in front of more than 17 000 spectators and won the Bulgarian championship Lokomotiv finished the season with 75 points 3 more than the second team Levski Sofia In the team lines was recent acquisition Martin Kamburov who became the top goalscorer of the league with 25 goals Key players during the season included Vasil Kamburov Georgi Iliev Aleksandar Tunchev Kiril Kotev Vladimir Ivanov Metodi Stoynev and Macedonians Boban Jancevski Vanco Trajanov and Robert Petrov On 31 July 2004 Lokomotiv won the Bulgarian Supercup after beating Litex Lovech at Lazur Stadium The captain Ivan Paskov scored a brilliant header in the last seconds of the game for the 1 0 win 8 A few months later the team played for the first time in the UEFA Champions League qualifying rounds where they faced Club Brugge from Belgium in the second qualifying round 2005 2015 Edit In 2004 05 the team finished third in the A PFG and qualified for the UEFA Cup In the European club competition Lokomotiv defeated Serbian OFK Beograd in the second qualifying round 1 0 home win and 1 2 away loss and were drawn to play against the English Bolton Wanderers in the first round However the team from Plovdiv was eliminated after a 1 2 loss at the Reebok Stadium in Bolton and another 1 2 loss in a match played at the Lazur Stadium in Burgas 9 In the next few months the club had significant financial problems causing many of the champions team players such as Aleksandar Tunchev Martin Kamburov Ivan Paskov Georgi Iliev Darko Spalevic Kiril Kotev and Boban Jancevski to leave In the 2005 06 season Lokomotiv finished 5th in A PFG and qualified for the Intertoto Cup They were eliminated with a 2 3 1 2 away loss and a 1 1 home draw on aggregate by Romanian Farul Constanţa In the next three seasons the team finished in the middle of the table In December 2009 businessman and ex Vihren Sandanski owner Konstantin Dinev acquired the club from Galina Topalova in a 2 million euro bid with the intention to bring them back to European club competition Hristo Krusharski era 2016 present Edit 2018 19 Bulgarian Cup Winners Edit LukovEzeVezalovTomasevicPetrovicBanovicIlievBouhnaTsvetanovOzboltAralicaLokomotiv lineup in the Bulgarian Cup Final 2018 19 On 15 May 2019 Lokomotiv Plovdiv won the Bulgarian Cup for the first time in the club s history defeating local rivals Botev Plovdiv 1 0 in Sofia 10 The winning goal came in the 72rd minute with a back heel kick of Alen Ozbolt Ante Aralica provided the assist 11 Winning the Bulgarian Cup enabled the team to play in the Europa League second qualifying round for the 2019 20 season In the second round Lokomotiv faced FC Spartak Trnava of Slovakia Lokomotiv won the tie on aggregate with a score of 3 3 progressing to the next round via the away goals rule 12 The next round s opponent was Strasbourg Lokomotiv entered as outsiders against the French side and lost the first game 0 1 in Bulgaria 13 In the second match Lokomotiv Plovdiv again lost with a minimum score of 1 0 being eliminated on aggregate 0 2 14 2019 20 Bulgarian Cup and Supercup Winners Edit LukovMasoeroAlmeidaPetrovicUmarbayevVitanovSalinasKaragarenTomasevicAralicaIlievLokomotiv lineup in the Bulgarian Cup Final 2019 20 On 1 July 2020 Lokomotiv beat CSKA Sofia on the final match played in Sofia and clinched the Bulgarian Cup for a second consecutive time becoming the first team winning two consecutive cups after Litex Lovech in 2008 and 2009 The Smurfs defeated CSKA Sofia after a penalty shootout 5 3 15 16 On 2 August 2020 Lokomotiv won the Bulgarian Supercup for the second time defeating Ludogorets 0 1 at Ludogorets Arena Ludogorets home ground The winning goal was scored in the last minute of the regular time with a volley kick of the captain Dimitar Iliev 17 Lokomotiv beat Iskra Danilovgrad of Montenegro 1 0 in the first Europa League qualifying round on 27 August 2020 18 Due to the COVID 19 pandemic all Europa League qualifying ties this season before the play off round featured only one leg In the second qualifying round Lokomotiv faced Jose Mourinho s Tottenham Hotspur and it was close to eliminate the English team after the goal of Georgi Minchev but Spurs complete late turnaround after two red cards for Lokomotiv players 19 Lokomotiv finished on 2nd place in the regular season and qualified for the Championship Round maintaining their status in the top three until the last round of the season The Smurfs started the 2020 21 season with a match against Slovacko in a second qualifying round of the Europa Conference League Lokomotiv won the first match at Lokomotiv Stadium 1 0 with a 90th minute winner of Petar Vitanov and loss with the same scoreline in Uherske Hradiste In the penalty shoot out Ilko Pirgov parried 3 consecutive penalties and Lokomotiv won 3 2 20 In the third qualifying round Lokomotiv were eliminated by Copenhagen of Danmark following a 1 1 draw in Plovdiv and a 4 2 loss in the return leg at Parken Stadium 21 In the league Lokomotiv won the silver medals for the second time in club s history finishing the season with 61 points 22 Crest and colors EditThe configuration of the crest consists of a shield colored in red and black and a golden letter L Bulgarian L placed in the center A white stripe with the inscription Plovdiv is positioned on the upper part of the shield The wings at the bottom of the shield represent the historical bond between the football club and the national railway company 23 Lokomotiv Plovdiv s traditional home colors are white black and red In the past the club has also adopted sky blue as a kit color Names EditLokomotiv was founded as Sportclub Plovdiv in 1926 and has carried a plethora of names throughout its history In chronological order they are as follows 24 Sportclub Plovdiv Bulgarian Plovdivski Sportklub in 1926 S P 45 Sportclub Parchevich 1945 Bulgarian S P 45 in 1945 Slavia Plovdiv Bulgarian Slaviya Plovdiv in 1946 and 1949 Slavia Chengelov Plovdiv Bulgarian Slaviya Chengelov Plovdiv in 1947 Energia Plovdiv Bulgarian Energiya Plovdiv in 1949 from 5 to 11 October Torpedo Plovdiv Bulgarian Torpedo Plovdiv in 1949 Lokomotiv Plovdiv Bulgarian Lokomotiv Plovdiv since 1951 Stadium Edit Lokomotiv Stadium viewed from the air The Main standLokomotiv Stadium nicknamed Lauta after the name of the park in which the stadium is situated is a multi purpose stadium located in southeastern Plovdiv Bulgaria Designed by architect Zdravko Vasilkov the stadium was officially opened on Bulgarian Unification Day on 6 September 1982 and is a part of a sports complex which includes an indoor athletic hall a volleyball hall five tennis courts and three training pitches 25 The main pitch length is 105 metres and the width is 71 metres The stadium initially held a capacity of 24 000 people The record attendance was back in 1983 when Lokomotiv played against Chernomorets Burgas in a playoff game for entering the Country s top tier league There were 33 000 people attending this game and at least 6 000 of those were actually outside of the stadium On 25 July 2019 the stadium hosted its first ever European competition game as Lokomotiv defeated Spartak Trnava 2 0 in a Europa League fixture in front of nearly 10 000 spectators This date also matched with Lokomotiv s 93rd birthday and the win was a great gift for the thousands of people attending the game 26 In 2020 after a government funding for the Plovdiv city football infrastructure the works on the new Bessica stand started with the completion date set for the summer of 2022 Also by the end of the same year the opposite south stand were demolished and preparation started for the foundations of the stand Both the north and south stands are planned to host 2 846 spectators each and being completed by the end of 2022 27 After the Bessica and south stand are completed the west stand called Sportclub is expected to be the next one to be demolished and build back up from the scratch The total capacity for the stadium is planned to be 14 500 after the construction works are completed by the summer of 2024 28 Support Edit Lokomotiv Plovdiv fans provide their support with extreme passion Lokomotiv Plovdiv supporters during the Plovdiv derbySince its foundation Lokomotiv has been one of the best supported football clubs in Bulgaria Its fans broke attendance records on numerous occasions in the early years 29 despite hardships the team did not have a home ground for more than 20 years after the 1928 earthquake 30 By the 1940s the club was one of the largest in the country in terms of officially registered members 31 In 1968 its supporters established the amateur football club Friends of Lokomotiv Plovdiv as a means of organised support and in 1988 the official fan club Club of the Supporters of Lokomotiv Plovdiv was established as the first of its kind in Bulgaria The political environment of the time was unfavourable towards independently formed organisations 32 In the 1980s the club was extremely popular and had the biggest away invasions 33 including more than 30 000 people at the final of the 1983 Soviet Cup The club also holds record attendance for a championship home game more than 40 000 people versus Beroe 34 When Lokomotiv won the title in 2003 04 there were 50 000 people in the city s main square to celebrate the victory 35 At the start of the reconstruction of Lokomotiv Stadium the section for the most devoted fans was to be called Bessica Tribune after the ancient Thracian tribe whose artefacts were discovered nearby 36 Since the project s postponement the name has been used collectively for the most dedicated followers Lokomotiv Plovdiv also has a football hooligan fan base with some of the most prominent factions being Lauta Hools Got Mitt Uns Napoletani 1995 and Lauta Youths Lauta Hools also called Usual suspects founded in 1992 37 adhere to the British form of support and are casuals and it is not uncommon to see the Union Jack in the stands as a result Friendships Edit Lokomotiv fans have a long standing friendship with fans of the Italian team SSC Napoli due to their creation of the name Napoletani Ultras Plovdiv 38 On many occasions fans from both clubs traveled to watch each other s games 39 Rivalries Edit Lokomotiv s main rival is the neighbouring city club of Botev Plovdiv and both form the Plovdiv derby The Plovdiv derby is considered to be the second fiercest rivalry in Bulgarian football after the Eternal derby of Bulgarian football 40 The rivalry poses a symbolic importance to supporters due to an assumed superiority that comes with winning the derby Another rivalry is with CSKA Sofia and is the fiercest intercity football rivalry in Bulgaria because of the historical competition between the cities of Plovdiv and Sofia as cultural political and economical centres 41 Players EditFirst team squad Edit As of 10 August 2023 update 42 Note Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules Players may hold more than one non FIFA nationality No Pos Nation Player3 DF BUL Kaloyan Kostov4 DF BUL Martin Paskalev5 DF BUL Todor Pavlov6 MF BUL Hristo Ivanov7 FW BEL Babacar Dione9 FW BUL Georgi Minchev10 FW BRA Giovanny11 MF BUL Petar Andreev13 DF BRA Matheus Silva14 FW BUL Dimitar Iliev captain 16 MF BUL Kristiyan Peshov No Pos Nation Player17 FW SLE Alpha Conteh19 MF VEN Christian Mendoza21 FW BRA Ewandro22 DF BUL Aleksandar Georgiev23 GK CRO Dinko Horkas33 MF BUL Georgi Karakashev44 DF BUL Angel Lyaskov91 DF COL Jorge Segura99 MF BRA Leo Sena DF CUW Giovanni TroupeeFor recent transfers see Transfers summer 2023 Foreign players Edit Up to twenty foreign nationals can be registered and given a squad number for the first team in the Bulgarian First League however only five non EU nationals can be used during a match day Those non EU nationals with European ancestry can claim citizenship from the nation their ancestors came from If a player does not have European ancestry he can claim Bulgarian citizenship after playing in Bulgaria for 5 years EU Nationals Dinko Horkas EU Nationals Dual citizenship Giovanni Troupee Pierre Zebli Babacar Dione Non EU Nationals Alpha Conteh Matheus Silva GiovannyRetired numbers Edit See also Retired numbers in association football No Player Nationality Position Lokomotiv debut Last match Ref8 Hristo Bonev Bulgaria Attacking midfielder 5 June 1965 15 October 1983 43 Player of the Season Edit Year Winner2006 Stoyan Kolev2007 Dakson2008 Yordan Miliev2009 Kiril Akalski2010 Zdravko Lazarov2011 Zdravko Lazarov2012 Hristo Zlatinski2013 Martin Kamburov2014 Martin Kamburov2015 Martin Kamburov Year Winner2016 Martin Kamburov2017 Martin Kamburov2018 Dimitar Iliev2019 Dimitar Iliev2020 Dimitar Iliev2021 Dimitar Iliev2022 Birsent KaragarenSource 1 Honours EditDomestic Edit First League Winners 1 2003 04 Runners up 2 1972 73 2020 21 Third place 5 1945 1968 69 1973 74 1991 92 2004 05Bulgarian Cup Winners 2 2018 19 2019 20 Runners up 7 1940 1942 1948 1959 60 1970 71 1981 82 2011 12Bulgarian Supercup Winners 2 2004 2020 Runners up 2 2012 2019Cup of the Soviet Army Winners 1 1983Regional Edit Plovdiv Championship Winners 6 1936 1938 1942 1945 1946 1948Trimontium Cup Winners 2 1938 1946Source lokomotivpd comEuropean record EditAs of 13 July 2022Competition Played Won Drew Lost GF GA GD Win UEFA Champions League 2 0 0 2 0 6 6 00 0 00UEFA Cup UEFA Europa League 46 13 8 25 57 89 32 0 28 26UEFA Europa Conference League 4 1 1 2 4 6 2 0 25 00UEFA Intertoto Cup 2 0 1 1 2 3 1 00 0 00Total 54 14 10 30 63 104 41 0 25 93Matches Edit As of 13 July 2022Season Competition Round Club Home Away Aggregate1963 64 Fairs Cup 1Q Steagul Roșu Brașov 3 1 2 1 5 22Q Ujpest 1 3 0 0 1 31964 65 Fairs Cup 1Q Vojvodina 1 1 1 1 2 0 Playoff 2Q Petrolul Ploiești 2 0 0 1 2 13Q Juventus 1 1 1 1 1 2 Playoff 1965 66 Fairs Cup 1Q Spartak Brno 1 0 0 2 1 21967 68 Fairs Cup 1Q Partizan 1 1 1 5 2 61969 70 Fairs Cup 1Q Juventus 1 2 1 3 2 51971 72 UEFA Cup 1Q Carl Zeiss 3 1 0 3 3 41973 74 UEFA Cup 1Q Sliema Wanderers 1 0 2 0 3 02Q Honved Budapest 3 4 2 3 5 71974 75 UEFA Cup 1Q Gyori ETO 3 1 1 3 4 4 p 1976 77 UEFA Cup 1Q Crvena Zvezda 2 1 1 4 3 51983 84 UEFA Cup 1Q PAOK 1 2 1 3 2 51992 93 UEFA Cup 1Q Auxerre 2 2 1 7 3 91993 94 UEFA Cup 1Q Lazio 0 2 0 2 0 42004 05 UEFA Champions League 2Q Club Brugge 0 4 0 2 0 62005 06 UEFA Cup 2Q OFK Beograd 1 0 1 2 2 2 a PO Bolton 1 2 1 2 2 42006 UEFA Intertoto Cup 2Q Farul Constanța 1 1 1 2 2 32012 13 UEFA Europa League 2Q Vitesse 4 4 1 3 5 72019 20 UEFA Europa League 2Q Spartak Trnava 2 0 1 3 3 3 a 3Q Strasbourg 0 1 0 1 0 22020 21 UEFA Europa League 1Q Iskra 1 0 1 02Q Tottenham Hotspur 1 2 1 22021 22 UEFA Europa Conference League 2Q Slovacko 1 0 0 1 1 1 3 2 p 3Q Copenhagen 1 1 2 4 3 5Notes1Q First qualifying round 2Q Second qualifying round 3Q Third qualifying round PO Play off roundUEFA club rankings Edit As of 20 July 2022 44 Current ranking Rank Team Coeff 225 Mura 5 500226 Trabzonspor 5 500227 Lokomotiv Plovdiv 5 500228 Hibernians 5 500229 FH Hafnarfjordur 5 500Recent seasons EditLeague positions Edit Season Tier Position M W D L G D P Bulgarian Cup Bulgarian Supercup Top goalscorer 45 2013 14 A Group 7 38 15 5 18 49 6 50 Semi finals Martin Kamburov 20 goals 2014 15 A Group 10 32 9 5 18 28 24 32 Semi finals Martin Kamburov 13 goals 2015 16 A Group 5 32 15 4 14 40 5 49 Round of 16 Martin Kamburov 18 goals 2016 17 First League 5 36 14 10 12 50 2 52 Quarter finals Martin Kamburov 17 goals 2017 18 First League 8 36 11 11 14 35 13 44 Round of 16 Dimo Bakalov 9 goals 2018 19 First League 10 34 10 8 16 37 3 38 Winners Runners Up Dimitar Iliev 9 goals 2019 20 First League 5 31 15 8 8 53 18 53 Winners Winners Dimitar Iliev 12 goals 2020 21 First League 2 31 17 10 4 48 25 61 Quarter finals Dimitar Iliev 13 goals 2021 22 First League 9 32 9 11 12 36 7 38 Quarter finals Dimitar Iliev 13 goals 2022 23 First League 5 35 15 9 11 35 1 54 Round of 16 Giovanny 8 goals Records Edit Legendary Hristo Bonev a powerful attacking midfielder is the appearances recordman and all time goalscorer of the club Martin Kamburov is 4 time top scorer of the First league with Lokomotiv Plovdiv Dimitar Iliev won the award for Bulgarian Footballer of the Year in 2019 and 2020 He is the captain and the leader of the club in the recent seasons Player records Edit Hristo Bonev holds the records for most Lokomotiv Plovdiv league appearances 404 and goals 180 46 Most league appearances Rank Name Apps1 Hristo Bonev 4042 Georgi Vasilev 3863 Stancho Bonchev 3314 Gancho Peev 3275 Iliya Bekyarov 314 Most league goals Rank Name Goals1 Hristo Bonev 1802 Martin Kamburov 1453 Georgi Vasilev 1154 Ivan Kanchev 735 Ayan Sadakov 66Bulgarian league top scorers Season Name Goals1983 84 Eduard Eranosyan 192003 04 Martin Kamburov 252004 05 Martin Kamburov 272013 14 Martin Kamburov 202015 16 Martin Kamburov 18Bulgarian Footballer of the Year Year Name1969 Hristo Bonev1972 Hristo Bonev1973 Hristo Bonev2019 Dimitar Iliev2020 Dimitar IlievClub records Edit Biggest league win 9 1 vs Dobrudzha Dobrich 21 September 2002 2002 03 47 Biggest league defeat 0 9 vs Slavia Sofia 2 March 1986 1985 86 48 Biggest cup win 8 1 vs Pirin Blagoevgrad 19460 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 7 0 vs Torpedo Dimitrovgrad 1954 Biggest cup defeat 0 6 vs Minyor Pernik 1998 99 Most league points in a season 75 2003 04 49 Most league goals in a season 74 2003 04 Most consecutive wins in the league single season 6 from 25 April 1971 to 13 June 1971 50 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 from 23 February 2002 to 16 March 20020 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 from 9 August 2003 to 20 September 20030 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 from 10 April 2004 to 8 May 20040 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 from 24 April 2016 to 28 May 2016 51 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 from 13 September 2019 to 29 October 2019 52 Most consecutive league games unbeaten single season 11 from 17 February 2002 to 13 April 2002 53 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 from 9 August 2003 to 9 November 2003 54 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 from 6 December 2020 to 21 April 2021 55 Record European competition home attendance 40 000 vs Juventus 10 March 1965 Fairs Cup Third round 2nd leg 1964 65 56 As of 25 July 2022Managers EditNotable managers Edit Period Name Honours1982 1983 Atanas Dramov 9999 1 Cup of the Soviet Army2003 2005 Eduard Eranosyan 9999 1 First League title1 Bulgarian Supercup title2017 2020 Bruno Akrapovic 9999 2 Bulgarian Cup titles1 Bulgarian Supercup titleManagerial history Edit Stefan Paunov 1969 71 Ivan Manolov 1971 75 Borislav Milenov 1975 76 Atanas Dramov 1977 78 Dimitar Grigorov 1978 79 Petar Dimitrov 1979 80 Atanas Dramov 2 1982 83 Atanas Angelov Aug 5 1983 Sept 26 1983 Hristo Bonev Oct 29 1983 Dec 22 1985 Atanas Dramov 3 Feb 15 1986 April 19 1986 Gancho Peev Aug 9 1986 Nov 30 1986 Hristo Bonev 2 Feb 14 1987 May 28 1988 Stancho Bonchev Aug 13 1988 Jun 3 1989 Mihail Georgiev Aug 12 1989 Jun 8 1991 Atanas Dramov 4 Aug 17 1991 Oct 31 1992 Petar Miladinov Nov 21 1992 Jun 5 1993 Ivan Vutsov Aug 14 1993 Mar 26 1994 Voyn Voynov Mar 26 1994 June 31 1994 Ivan Kuchukov Aug 19 1994 June 10 1995 Ivan Gluhchev Sept 2 1995 Oct 28 1995 Gancho Peev 2 Aug 12 1995 Aug 26 1995 Vasil Ankov Nov 5 1995 Feb 24 1996 Ivan Marinov Mar 2 1996 1996 Dinko Dermendzhiev Mar 9 1996 May 11 1996 Krasimir Manolov Aug 9 1996 Dec 7 1996 Ivan Marinov 2 1996 1997 Stancho Bonchev 2 Feb 22 1997 May 31 1997 Radoslav Zdravkov 1997 1997 Atanas Dramov 5 1997 1998 Ivan Gluchev 2 May 1998 Sept 1998 Dinko Dermendzhiev 2 1998 1999 Georgi Vasilev 1999 1999 Vladimir Fatov 1999 1999 Vasil Ankov 2 1999 2000 Ayan Sadakov 2000 2000 Eduard Eranosyan 2000 2001 Stefan Draganov 2001 2001 Dimitar Dimitrov 2001 2003 Eduard Eranosyan 2 2003 2005 Ayan Sadakov 2 2005 2006 Ivan Marinov 3 Sept 1 2006 Sept 23 2007 Yasen Petrov Sept 24 2007 Mar 14 2008 Dragi Kanatlarovski Mar 20 2008 Sept 29 2008 Ayan Sadakov 3 Sept 29 2008 Aug 10 2009 Ivan Marinov 4 Aug 10 2009 Nov 1 2009 Stefan Genov Nov 1 2009 Dec 26 2009 Naci Sensoy Dec 26 2009 June 30 2010 Hristo Bonev 3 July 1 2010 Oct 31 2010 Nedelcho Matushev Sept 28 2010 Apr 23 2011 Sasa Nikolic April 23 2011 June 30 2011 Dragi Kanatlarovski 2 June 17 2011 Nov 8 2011 Emil Velev Nov 8 2011 Oct 9 2012 Stefan Genov 2 Oct 13 2012 June 30 2013 Aleksandar Stankov July 1 2013 May 29 2014 Emil Velev 2 June 9 2014 July 8 2014 Nedelcho Matushev 2 July 9 2014 Sept 29 2014 Hristo Kolev Oct 1 2014 Feb 26 2016 Ilian Iliev Feb 26 2016 Oct 17 2016 Eduard Eranosyan 3 Oct 31 2016 Apr 9 2017 Voyn Voynov 2 Apr 19 2017 Oct 30 2017 Bruno Akrapovic Oct 30 2017 Nov 10 2020 Aleksandar Tunchev Nov 11 2020 Apr 7 2022 Aleksandar Tomash Apr 11 2022 present As of 13 July 2022Source loko pd comReferences Edit Vsichko za proekta na stadion Lokomotiv sled mesec zapochva izgrazhdaneto na Besika in Bulgarian 20 April 2021 Archived from the original on 28 November 2022 Retrieved 19 October 2022 Plovdivski Sportklub Uchreditelniyat protokol www loko pd com in Bulgarian Archived from the original on 6 October 2022 Retrieved 14 September 2022 Todor Krastev Bulgaria Cups Overview Rec Sport Soccer Statistics Foundation Archived from the original on 12 July 2022 Retrieved 4 June 2019 Bulgaria Cups Overview Archived from the original on 2015 09 25 Retrieved 2015 09 08 Blgarski legendi gt gt Hristo Bonev Bulgarian legends Hristo Bonev in Bulgarian Retrieved 15 July 2022 permanent dead link 36 godini ot edno ot naj pametnite futbolni sbitiya za Plovdiv i Blgariya 36 years from one of the most memorable football events for Plovdiv and Bulgaria in Bulgarian 16 September 2020 Archived from the original on 8 April 2022 Retrieved 15 July 2022 Stadionite Stariyat Lokomotiv e krasavect na Plovdiv in Bulgarian Archived from the original on 7 February 2022 Retrieved 25 August 2022 Wide open race in Bulgaria Inside UEFA 4 August 2004 Archived from the original on 14 July 2022 Retrieved 14 July 2022 Bolton 2 1 Lokomotiv Plovdiv BBC News 15 September 2005 Archived from the original on 2006 12 22 Retrieved 2005 09 15 Kupata e za Loko Lokomotiv won the Bulgarian Cup in Bulgarian 15 May 2019 Retrieved 14 July 2022 Loko razkaza igrata na Botev Kupata e na Lauta marica bg in Bulgarian 15 May 2019 Archived from the original on 29 June 2022 Retrieved 15 May 2019 Alen Ozhbolt klasira Loko sreshu Strasburg marica bg in Bulgarian 2 August 2019 Archived from the original on 29 June 2022 Retrieved 2 August 2019 Desetima ot Loko Pd zagubiha ot Strasburg sdiya osheti smrfovete sportal bg in Bulgarian Archived from the original on 25 March 2023 Retrieved 28 July 2022 Strasburg sprya ustrema na Lokomotiv Plovdiv dnevnik bg in Bulgarian 15 August 2019 Archived from the original on 28 July 2022 Retrieved 28 July 2022 Genialen Akrapovich i Kupata pak e za Loko Brilliant Akrapovic and Lokomotiv won the Bulgarian Cup again in Bulgarian 1 July 2020 Archived from the original on 14 April 2022 Retrieved 14 July 2022 CSKA SOFIA LOKOMOTIV PLOVDIV 01 07 2020 1 July 2020 Archived from the original on 25 March 2023 Retrieved 14 July 2022 Superkupata e cherno byala sled triumf nad Ludogorec gong bg in Bulgarian Archived from the original on 8 August 2020 Retrieved 2 August 2020 Iskra Lokomotiv Plovdiv UEFA Europa League 2020 21 uefa com Archived from the original on 28 July 2022 Retrieved 28 July 2022 Lokomotiv Plovdiv 1 2 Tottenham Spurs survive Europa League scare skysports com Archived from the original on 28 July 2022 Retrieved 28 July 2022 Lokomotiv premina pokraj Slovachko sledvashata gara Kopenhagen in Bulgarian 29 July 2021 Archived from the original on 25 March 2023 Retrieved 29 July 2022 Loko zagubi s 2 4 v Kopenhagen i otpadna ot evroturnirite in Bulgarian 13 August 2021 Archived from the original on 29 July 2022 Retrieved 29 July 2022 Loko e viceshampion za vtori pt in Bulgarian 22 May 2021 Archived from the original on 29 July 2022 Retrieved 29 July 2022 EMBLEMATA NA LOKOMOTIV PLOVDIV Badge of Lokomotiv Plovdiv in Bulgarian 31 May 2010 Archived from the original on 20 May 2022 Retrieved 14 July 2022 LOKOMOTIV PLOVDIV NAChALOTO 26 YuLI 1926G Lokomotiv Plovdiv the beginning 26 July 1926 in Bulgarian 21 December 2010 Archived from the original on 5 August 2022 Retrieved 5 August 2022 30 GODINI STADION LOKOMOTIV 30 Years Lokomotiv Stadium in Bulgarian 4 September 2012 Archived from the original on 20 May 2022 Retrieved 13 July 2022 Stadiont na Lokomotiv Plovdiv e pochti gotov za machovete v Liga Evropa Lokomotiv Stadium is almost ready for Europa League matches in Bulgarian 17 July 2017 Archived from the original on 28 June 2022 Retrieved 13 July 2022 Puskat v eksploataciya Tribuna Besika v nachaloto na noemvri in Bulgarian 27 September 2022 Archived from the original on 16 December 2022 Retrieved 16 December 2022 Starozagorska firma specheli porchkata za Lauta Company from Stara Zagora won the government contract for Lokomotiv Stadium in Bulgarian 19 November 2020 Archived from the original on 13 July 2022 Retrieved 13 July 2022 MNOGOBROJNI PRIVRZhENICI ChAST VTORA DESANTITE V ChERNO BYaLO ChERVENO Numerous Supporters Part Two The Raids in Black White and Red in Bulgarian 13 Aug 2013 Archived from the original on 21 December 2017 Retrieved 9 May 2014 ISTORIYaTA NA LOKOMOTIV PLOVDIV The History of Lokomotiv Plovdiv in Bulgarian 28 Apr 2010 Archived from the original on 6 June 2014 Retrieved 9 May 2014 ISTORIYaTA NA LOKOMOTIV PLOVDIV The History of Lokomotiv Plovdiv in Bulgarian 28 Apr 2010 Archived from the original on 17 January 2018 Retrieved 9 May 2014 25 GODINI KLUB NA PRIVRZhENICITE NA LOKOMOTIV PLOVDIV 25 Years Club of the Supporters of Lokomotiv Plovdiv in Bulgarian 10 May 2013 Archived from the original on 16 January 2018 Retrieved 9 May 2014 Prez 1982 83 g se mestim na Lauta pechelim prvata Kupa igraem 2 barazha i postayavyame rekord po poseshaemost na chuzhd teren Archived from the original on 2022 05 20 Retrieved 2022 07 01 V Otechestven glas 17 mart 1983 g Otechestven glas newspaper 17 March 1983 in Bulgarian 17 Mar 1983 Archived from the original on 1 July 2022 Retrieved 1 July 2022 Kadri ot 2004 g Loko s shampionskata kupa shestvieto i 50 hilyadnoto posreshane v Plovdiv in Bulgarian 15 May 2020 Archived from the original on 21 September 2022 Retrieved 21 September 2022 Tribuna Besika TRIBUNA BESSICA in Bulgarian 29 July 2010 Archived from the original on 14 September 2022 Retrieved 14 September 2022 Lauta Hools chestva 20 godini Lauta Hools celebrated 20 years anniversary in Bulgarian 20 Feb 2012 Archived from the original on 30 June 2022 Retrieved 20 Feb 2012 Napoletani Ultras Plovdiv Lokomotiv Plovdiv Bulgaria Ultras tifo net 2008 01 05 Archived from the original on 2022 06 30 Retrieved 2022 07 12 Fenove na Napoli podkrepyaha Lokomotiv vchera Fans from Napoli supported Lokomotiv yesterday in Bulgarian 18 Aug 2013 Archived from the original on 30 June 2022 Retrieved 12 July 2022 DERBITO NA PLOVDIV KURIOZI OT RANNITE VREMENA The Plovdiv Derby curiosity in early years in Bulgarian 21 June 2010 Archived from the original on 13 July 2022 Retrieved 12 July 2022 RIOTS CSKA SOFIA LOKOMOTIV PLOVDIV 31 10 2021 31 October 2021 Archived from the original on 18 August 2022 Retrieved 12 July 2022 Sstav lokomotivpd com in Bulgarian Archived from the original on 8 October 2022 Retrieved 8 October 2022 Zamrazenite nomera na velikite Retired numbers of the greatest in Bulgarian 27 June 2015 Archived from the original on 20 July 2022 Retrieved 20 July 2022 Club coefficients Archived from the original on 2021 11 09 Retrieved 2022 07 20 Players First League Bulgaria Results fixtures tables and news Soccerway Archived from the original on 29 April 2022 Retrieved 11 July 2022 Blgarski legendi gt gt Hristo Bonev Bulgarian legends Hristo Bonev in Bulgarian Retrieved 11 July 2022 permanent dead link Smrfovete smazaha Dobrudzha s 9 1 dnevnik bg in Bulgarian 21 September 2002 Retrieved 21 September 2002 1985 1986 slaviya lokomotiv plovdiv a pfg com in Bulgarian Archived from the original on 25 July 2022 Retrieved 22 July 2022 KLASIRANE PREZ SEZONITE a pfg com in Bulgarian Archived from the original on 29 May 2022 Retrieved 22 July 2022 A grupa sezon 1970 1971 a pfg com in Bulgarian Archived from the original on 27 July 2022 Retrieved 26 July 2022 Lokomotiv goni shampionski rekord www tribunaplovdiv bg in Bulgarian Retrieved 26 July 2022 A grupa sezon 2019 2020 a pfg com in Bulgarian Archived from the original on 5 July 2022 Retrieved 26 July 2022 A grupa sezon 2001 2002 a pfg com in Bulgarian Archived from the original on 27 July 2022 Retrieved 26 July 2022 A grupa sezon 2003 2004 a pfg com in Bulgarian Archived from the original on 26 July 2022 Retrieved 26 July 2022 A grupa sezon 2020 2021 a pfg com in Bulgarian Archived from the original on 27 July 2022 Retrieved 26 July 2022 Na tazi data predi 49 godini plovdivskoto Yuve nadigra Yuventus www tribunaplovdiv bg in Bulgarian Archived from the original on 23 May 2022 Retrieved 26 July 2022 External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to PFC Lokomotiv Plovdiv Official websites Official website in Bulgarian Historical website part of the official website in Bulgarian Official fan website in Bulgarian Lokomotiv Plovdiv at UEFAMedia Official YouTube channel Official Facebook page Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title PFC Lokomotiv Plovdiv amp oldid 1170731366, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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