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Wikipedia

Ukrainian Premier League

The Ukrainian Premier League (Ukrainian: "Українська Прем'єр-ліга", Ukrayinska Premier Liha) or UPL is the highest division of Ukrainian annual football championship. As the Vyshcha Liha (Ukrainian: Вища ліга, Top League) it was formed in 1991 as part of the 1992[1] Ukrainian football championship upon discontinuation of the 1991 Soviet football championship and included the Ukraine-based clubs that competed previously in the Soviet top three tiers competitions as well as better clubs of the Ukrainian republican competitions. The initial season of the league featured six former Soviet Top League clubs among which were Dynamo, Shakhtar, Chornomorets, Dnipro, Metalist, Metalurh as well as four more clubs that previously also competed at the top league.

Ukrainian Premier League
Founded1991; 32 years ago (1991)
as Vyshcha Liha
2008; 15 years ago (2008)
as Ukrayinska Premier Liha
CountryUkraine
ConfederationUEFA
Number of teams16 (2021–22)
Level on pyramid1
Relegation toUkrainian First League
Domestic cup(s)
International cup(s)
Current championsDynamo Kyiv (16th title)
(2020–21)
Most championshipsDynamo Kyiv (16 titles)
Most appearancesOleksandr Shovkovskyi (426)
Top goalscorerSerhii Rebrov, Maksim Shatskikh (123)
TV partners
WebsiteUPL.ua
Current: 2022–23 Ukrainian Premier League

In 1996 along with the other professional football leagues of Ukraine, the Top League became a member of the Professional Football League of Ukraine.[1][2] In 2008[3][4] it was withdrawn from Professional Football League of Ukraine and reformed into a separate self governed entity of the Football Federation of Ukraine, officially changing its name to the current one. Its rank was 12th highest in Europe as rated by UEFA as of 2021.

As a leading club of the Soviet Top League, Dynamo Kyiv continues to be the league's "flagship club", while in the last 10 seasons the league is dominated by Shakhtar Donetsk 8 to 2. Three of Ukrainian clubs reached European club competitions finals including Dynamo (as Soviet club), Shakhtar and Dnipro. Among Ukrainian fans the most popular Ukrainian clubs are Dynamo Kyiv and Shakhtar Donetsk.[5] Other popular clubs include Karpaty Lviv, Metalist Kharkiv, Chornomorets Odesa and Dnipro.[5]

General overview and format

The 2020–21 season is the league's thirteenth after the restructuring of professional club football in 2008 and the 30th season since establishing of professional club's competition independent from the Soviet Union. As of 2021, Dynamo Kyiv is the reigning Ukrainian Premier League champion. To summarise, Tavriya Simferopol won the first championship, while all the subsequent titles have gone to either Dynamo Kyiv or Shakhtar Donetsk. Only 2 teams, Dynamo Kyiv and Shakhtar Donetsk have participated in all previous 29 Ukrainian Top League competitions. The central feature of the league is a game between the same Dynamo and Shakhtar, which developed into the Klasychne (Classic).

On 15 April 2008 the new Premier-Liha (Premier League) was formed. It consists of 12 football clubs that take control of the league's operations under the statues of Football Federation of Ukraine, UEFA, and FIFA. With the new reorganization the format of the League was preserved, while the changes that were made were exclusively administrative. Competitions continued to be conducted in a double round robin format among 16 clubs. There were a couple of seasons when the league experimented with a 14 club composition.

Since the 2014 Russian aggression, the league was reduced to 12 members, while its format has changed. The season is still being played in a double round robin in the first half of a season, after which the league splits in half into two groups of six teams. Both the top six and the bottom six play another a double round robin tournament with the clubs of their grouping. For 2019-20 a post season play-off for qualification for the European club competitions was introduced.

The teams that reach the top ranks of the competition table at the end of each season, gain the chance to represent Ukraine internationally in several prestigious tournaments (continental club tournaments). At the end of the season, the bottom clubs (usually two) are relegated to the First League, part of the lower Professional Football League, and are replaced by the top clubs from that league. All the participants of the Premier League enter the National Cup competition and enter it at the round of 32 (1/16th of the final) or Round of 16 stage.

The winner of the League at the beginning of every next season plays against the winner of the National Cup for the Ukrainian Super Cup, under administration of the Premier Liha. Beside Super Cup game and championship among senior teams of the league's clubs, the league conducts competitions among junior teams, including under 21s and under 19s. The champion of the under 19 championship qualifies for the UEFA Youth League.

Emblem

 
Old emblem
 
New emblem
 
Season's emblem in 2016
with Pari-Match as sponsor
 
Season's emblem of FavBet as sponsor
 
Season's emblem of VBet as sponsor

The old emblem depicts a football wrapped by a blue-yellow stripe, the national colors of Ukraine, on a blue background. Across the top and around the ball there are 16 stars that represent the league's participants. In 2014 when the league was reduced to 14 teams, the emblem wasn't changed. On the bottom, the script says "Premier-League – Union of Professional Football Clubs of Ukraine".

As with the old emblem, the new emblem contains 16 stars. For the 2016–17 season, the sponsor's name was added.

Title sponsors

 
A banner with Soyuz(S•V)Viktan in 2007 at Valeriy Lobanovskyi Dynamo Stadium

Since at least 2006, the league has placed its sponsors' names in its seasons' titles. The first sponsor was Russian-Ukrainian alcoholic beverage company "Soyuz-Viktan", in the 2006–07 Ukrainian championship.[6][7][8] While the contract was signed for five years and officially presented by the presidents of the Football Federation of Ukraine and the Professional Football League of Ukraine as a title sponsor, Soyuz-Viktan was expected to stay for couple of seasons. But in 2007 a new title sponsor, "Biola" from Dnipro was announced.[9][6][10]

Previously "Soyuz-Viktan" was sponsoring the Russian ice hockey team and its Hockey Super League. In 2006 it also became the sponsor of the newly established Channel One Cup.[11] Back in 2002, Mirror Weekly published an article that leaders of "Soyuz-Viktan" were convicted in the Autonomous Republic of Crimea to 15 years imprisonment.[12] The reputation of "Soyuz-Viktan" was questioned on several occasions.[13]

Soon after establishment of the Premier-Liha, in 2008 a contract was signed with a new sponsor, Epitsentr K, a network of home improvement stores.[6][14] The sum of the contract was announced as $3.6 million,[15] while just three months before there were speculations that new sponsor would pay no less than $5 million.[16] In 2013 the contract expired.

A new contract was established in 2015 with a bookmaking company Pari-Match, which lasted for couple of seasons.[14][17][18][19]

Season's format and regulations

Season regulations are one of the two most important documents (other being the competition calendar) that are adopted by the Premier League prior to each season.

The Premier League directly organizes and conducts competitions among member clubs. Competitions are conducted on the principle of "Fair play" and according to the competition calendar which is approved by the Premier League General Assembly and the FFU Executive Committee 30 days before start of competitions. Until 2019[citation needed] all advertisement, commercial rights and rights on TV and radio broadcasting of games of championship and cup belong to the club that hosts them (the Super Cup of Ukraine and the "Gold game"). All advertisement, commercial rights and rights on TV and radio broadcasting of the game of Super Cup and the "Gold game". Before 2014 Premier League was also administering some rounds of the Ukrainian Cup (round of 8, quarterfinals, and semifinals). The earlier rounds were administered by the Professional League and the final by the Federation. Since 2014 the organization of Ukrainian Cup competitions in full belongs exclusively to the Federation.

There are currently 12 club members of the league. All participants get approved by the Premier League General Assembly. Each club fields each team for senior competitions, and competitions for under 21 and under 19 teams (three teams). A club is required to have a stadium (registered with FFU) and an education and training facility (or center). A club is also obligated to finance its own youth sports institution and a complex scientific-methodical group as well as to own and finance a number of youth teams. A Premier League club needs to ensure participation of at least four youth teams (ages groups between 14 and 17) in the Youth Football League of Ukraine. A club cannot field more than one team for a certain competition.

All club's staff members (coaches, physicians, massage specialists) have to be contracted and be UEFA licensed. All coaches should have A-diploma, while head coaches – PRO-diploma. Football players are listed in "A" and "B" rosters. "A" roster contains no more than 25 players, while "B" roster has unlimited number of players no older than 21 who have professional contracts or agreements for sports training. The 25-players "A" roster includes the number of slots allotted for players developed by the club.

During breaks in competitions in summer and winter there are two periods for registering players.

Beside the main championship among senior teams, the Premier League also organizes youth championship which was adopted from the previous Vyshcha Liha championship of doubles (reserves). Since 2012 there was added another competition for junior teams, so the original youth championship was renamed into the Championship of U-21 teams and the new competition was named as the Championship of U-19 teams. Unlike the Championship of U-21 teams, in the Championship of U-19 teams beside all of the Premier League clubs' junior teams, there also compete teams of some lower leagues' clubs.

The league's championship among senior teams is conducted by manner of the round robin system in two cycles "fall-spring" with one game at home and another at opponent's field with each participant. A competition calendar is formed after a draw that is conducted based on the Premier League club rankings. The calendar of the second cycle repeats the first, while hosting teams are switched. There should be no less than two calendar days between official games of a club. All games take place between 12:00 and 22:00 local time. Any game postponement is allowed only in emergencies and on decision of the Premier League Administration (Dyrektsiya). Game forfeitures are controlled by technical win/loss nominations and fines, followed by additional sanctions of the FFU Control-Disciplinary Committee, and possible elimination from the league.

Competition calendar

Clubs play each other twice (once at home and once away) in the 26-match season. The league begins in mid-July and ends in mid-June. After 13 rounds of fixtures, there is a winter break that lasts for three months (from early December to early March). Thus, the winter break is significantly longer than the interval between seasons. This schedule accounts for climatic conditions and matches that of most European leagues in terms of the beginning and the end of the season.

The first season of the League in 1992 was an exception, as it lasted only half a year. This was because the last Soviet league season ended in the autumn of 1991, and the Football Federation of Ukraine decided to shift the calendar from "spring-fall" to "fall-spring" football seasons. In the inaugural season, 20 clubs were divided into two 10-team groups. In both groups, each club played each other twice, and the championship was decided by a play-off match between the group winners, in which Tavriya Simferopol surprised the pre-season favorite Dynamo Kyiv.

After the first season, in each of the following seasons each team played each other team in the League twice. The number of participating teams fluctuated between 14 and 18, stabilizing since 2002–03 season at 16.

As of the 2005–06 season, the golden match rule was introduced. According to the rule, if the first two teams obtain the same number of points, the championship is to be decided by an additional "golden" match between the two teams. In fact, in that season Dynamo Kyiv and Shakhtar Donetsk had earned the same number of points and Shakhtar won the championship by winning the golden match (2–1 after extra time).

History

Creation

Before 1992, Ukrainian domestic football league competitions were conducted among Ukrainian teams that competed in one of groups within the Soviet third tier consisting of around 20 teams. Beside that championship another over 20 teams competed in two upper tiers where they played along with other teams across the Soviet Union. Also, at the same time there were conducted competitions among KFK (amateur teams) at lower level. With the Soviet Union tumbling down (as one classic once called it, "the biggest geopolitical disaster of the 20th century"),[26] in late 1991 there arose discussion about creation of separate competition which would include all better Ukrainian clubs. Following the failed 1991 August putsch, the Ukrainian parliament declared a state independence and appointed a date of referendum to confirm the decision.

Despite the failed putsch and declaration of independence by number of Soviet union republics, the Football Federation of the Soviet Union continued with planning of the 1992 football season.[26] In September 1991 in Soviet magazine "Futbol" appeared some comments from head coaches of Ukrainian clubs playing in the Soviet First League (Tavriya and Bukovyna).[26] The Tavriya head coach Anatoliy Zayaev said that the club is strongly against participation in Ukrainian championship and intend to continue to play in Soviet championship.[26] The Bukovyna head coach Yukhym Shkolnykov said that the club does not have any wishes to return to the Ukrainian group as planned by the republican federation and no one should let politics transverse football.[26]

In October 1991 some Moscow press took a big interview from FC Dnipro head coach Yevhen Kucherevsky titled "How to live on?" His direct speech had started with a phrase "Dnipro is definitely for the Soviet championship".[26] Next Yevhen Mefodiyich told about possible isolation of Ukrainian football, because if Ukraine would not be recognized by the World, there is nothing to think about membership in FIFA or UEFA.[26] After that recalling some kind of World Basket League, Kucherevsky discussed the topic that "people are uniting , but we..."[26] When questioned "what is the mood among coaches of other Ukrainian teams", he firmly answered "Almost all are for the united championship and against separate Ukrainian".[26]

In particular, Kucherevsky mentioned his talks with head coach of Shakhtar Valeriy Yaremchenko.[26] According to Kucherevsky, the majority of Dnipro's fans, judging by their letters and telephone calls also consider that conducting of Ukrainian championship not in time.[26] Ended his interview Kucherevsky with a phrase that "he wants to hope that the situation when they have to play in a separate championship will never come".[26] The coach even allowed the thought that Ukraine could be recognized as an independent state, but proposes an idea of the "Soviet open championship", referring to... the case with NHL.[26]

In general Kucherevsky was speaking of true situation.[26] Among all Ukrainian teams of the Soviet Top League, only Dynamo was clearly and firmly for its own independent championship. Other clubs took position from "strongly against" to "possibly for, but".[26] For example, Metalurh Zaporizhya that was playing its first season at such level was for the Soviet championship.[26] Yet, Metalist that was struggling to stay in, took a tricky position: "If we are would relegate to the First Union League, we will be for Ukrainian championship, if we would stay at the top, we will be for Soviet championship".[26]

In September 1991 there took place a session of the Football Federation of the Ukrainian SSR Executive Committee (ispolkom), which started with raising of blue-and-yellow flag that was given by a member of parliament Vyacheslav Chornovil.[27] On proposition of Viktor Bannikov who at time was heading the football federation, the struggle for independent championship had to take place under national colors.[27] The executive committee decided that blue-and-yellow flags had to flown over all stadiums where were playing Ukrainian teams.[27] Some members of the executive committee have spoken about the independent Ukrainian championship, but did not rush with a decision.[27] For that it was decided to wait until the Federation's plenum on 13–14 December 1991.[27]

Vyshcha Liha and Professional Football League (1992–1999)

Since the fall of the Soviet Union, the inaugural independent championship took place hastily at the start of spring 1992 after the creation of the Ukrainian Higher League (Ukrainian: Вища Ліга, Vyshcha Liha). The League was created out of the six teams that took part in the Soviet Top League, two teams from the Soviet First League, and nine out of the eleven Ukrainian teams from the Soviet Second League. The other two of that eleven were placed in the Ukrainian First League as they were to be relegated anyway. The two best teams of the Soviet Second League B of the Ukrainian Zone were also placed in the Higher League along with the winner of the 1991 Ukrainian Cup which finished ninth in the same group (Soviet Second League B).

The 20 participants were split into two groups with the winners playing for the championship title and the runners-up playing for third place. Three teams from each group were to be relegated. As expected, the five favorites, Dynamo Kyiv, Dnipro Dnipropetrovsk, Shakhtar Donetsk, Chornomorets Odesa, and Metalist Kharkiv finished at the top of each group. In the championship play-off game in Lviv, a sensation took place as Tavriya Simferopol beat Dynamo Kyiv 1–0. The Crimeans earned the first Ukrainian title (thus far their only one), losing only once to Temp Shepetivka.

After being stunned in the first championship by the tragedy in Lviv, Dynamo Kyiv were anxious to earn their first title at the second opportunity. In the second Ukrainian championship, which had a regular League format of 16 teams, the main rivals of the Kyivians were Dnipro Dnipropetrovsk, who were top after the first half of the season. By the end of the season both teams were neck and neck and at the end they finished with the same number of points. The championship title was awarded to Dynamo Kyiv as they had a better goal difference. Neither the Golden match, nor the fact that Dnipro Dnipropetrovsk had a better head-to-head record was considered.

The next seven years were known as the total domination of Dynamo Kyiv. During this period 'the main Soviet protagonists' had changed as some of the best teams were facing a crisis. After the 1993–94 season Metalist Kharkiv were surprisingly relegated to the First League. In the 1995–96 season Shakhtar Donetsk had the worst year in the club's history, coming tenth. Chornomorets Odesa were relegated twice during that first decade after which manager Leonid Buryak was sacked. A few newly created teams have since emerged such as Arsenal Kyiv and Metalurh Donetsk, as well as Vorskla Poltava, who surprisingly came third in the club's first season at the Top Level in the 1997.

Dynamo–Shakhtar rivalry and Premier League (2000–2010)

The next decade was marked by fierce competition between Dynamo Kyiv and Shakhtar Donetsk. Since 2000, Shakhtar Donetsk has proved to be the real challengers to Kyiv's dominance. In 2000 Shakhtar earned their first qualification to the Champions League earning a place in the Group stage. Nonetheless, Dynamo Kyiv is still considered to be the benchmark of excellence in the country and the primary feeder to the Ukraine national football team. 2002 became the real cornerstone in the miners history when they earned their first national title under the management of the newly appointed Italian specialist, Nevio Scala, who managed to secure the Ukrainian Cup title as well. Since that time the issue of foreign players has become particularly acute and brought a series of court cases. The FFU and PFL worked together to solve that issue, coming up with a plan to force the transitional limitation of foreign players over time.

The clubs such as Dnipro Dnipropetrovsk and Chornomorets Odesa, who were recent contenders for the title, had to put up a fierce fight against the newly established contenders Metalurh Donetsk and Metalist Kharkiv to qualify for the European competitions. Metalist Kharkiv shone brightly in the late 2000s (decade) by consistently finishing right behind Dynamo Kyiv and Shakhtar Donetsk in third place. Their most remarkable feat was their participation in the 2009 European season when they had to face Dynamo Kyiv to earn a place in the quarter-finals of the 2008–09 UEFA Cup, but lost on the away goals rule. That same 2008–09 UEFA Cup competition was won for the first time by Shakhtar Donetsk, the first club of independent Ukraine to win the title. It was also the last UEFA cup title before it changed its name to the Europa league. In the 2008–09 season the league earned the highest UEFA league coefficient in Europe for that season.

 
Aerial duel between players of Shakhtar and Metalist in September 2009 including Fernandinho and Marko Devic

On 15 November 2007 clubs' presidents of the Vyshcha Liha adopted a decision to create the Premier League (Premier Liha).[28] At the same meeting session there was created a supervisory board that consisted of Ravil Safiullin (Professional Football League), Vitaliy Danilov (FC Kharkiv), Petro Dyminskyi (FC Karpaty), and Vadym Rabinovych (FC Arsenal).[28] During the next three months that body curated a process on creation of the Premier League's regulation and statute as well as a procedure of launching the championship starting from the 2008–09 season.[28] On 15 April 2008 at one of the meetings among the presidents of clubs there was signed a protocol about establishing the Association of Professional Football Clubs of Ukraine "Premier-Liha"[28] as an autonomous entity, parting away from the PFL.

The Premier League has been split since the moment it was created in regards to its president. The dispute went as far as even canceling the 13th round of 2009–10 season and moving it to the spring half, while having the 14th round still playing in the fall. The representatives of five clubs: Arsenal Kyiv, Dynamo Kyiv, Dnipro Dnipropetrovsk, Kryvbas Kryvyi Rih, and Metalist Kharkiv have been boycotting most of the League meetings, not complying with its financial obligations and giving the broadcasting rights to TV-channels other than the League official supplier. They justified their actions due to what they deem to be the illegal election of the Premier League president. The representatives of the above-mentioned clubs did not recognize the election in 2008 of Vitaliy Danilov as the president and believed that the elections should have been won by Vadim Rabinovich.

To resolve this conflict Vitaliy Danilov instigated the re-election of the Premier League president in September 2009, and on 1 December 2009 won the election again with 11 clubs voting for his candidature, 3 were against, 1 abstained, and 1 was absent. This time most club presidents of the Premier League of Ukraine acknowledged Vitaliy Danilov legality. In the subsequent elections on 9 December 2011 Vitaliy Danilov was challenged by Andriy Kurhanskyi (through the proposal of Karpaty Lviv). The other available candidates, Miletiy Balchos (president of the Professional Football League of Ukraine) and Yuriy Kindzerskyi, were not picked by any members of the Premier League. Vitaliy Danilov managed to retain his seat with nine votes for him.

Big Four and two-round league (2011–present)

Results of the 'Big Four' during the late 2000s–early 2010s
Season DNI DYN MET SHA
2005–06 6 2 5 1
2006–07 4 1 3 2
2007–08 4 2 3 1
2008–09 6 1 3 2
2009–10 4 2 3 1
2010–11 4 2 3 1
2011–12 4 2 3 1
2012–13 4 3 2 1
2013–14 2 4 3 1
2014–15 3 1 6 2
Top four 8 10 8 10
Finishes out of 10
  League champions
  Champions League
  UEFA Cup / Europa League group stage
  UEFA Cup / Europa League qualification
  UEFA Intertoto Cup

Starting from 2010 and to 2014 season, FC Shakhtar led by Romanian coach Mircea Lucescu obtained five national league titles in a row, making Lucescu the most successful manager in the history of the league with 9 titles. At the same time, in the beginning of 2010s the so-called "Big Four" of clubs eventually formed, consisting from Shakhtar, Dynamo, Metalist and Dnipro.[29] These four clubs consecutively took all the top 4 places for five seasons from 2009–10 to 2013–14 and displayed the biggest financial abilities in the league.[30]

In 2012–13, Metalist Kharkiv finished second and qualified for the UEFA Champions League for the first time, the achievement which was repeated by Dnipro in the next season. In the same 2013–14 season Dynamo Kyiv for the first time since Ukrainian independence placed as low as fourth in league's season ranking, which led to dismissal of former national team coach and the legend of Soviet football Oleh Blokhin as the club's manager. In European football, new club achievements were set in these years for Shakhtar in 2010–11 UEFA Champions League quarter-finals and for Metalist in 2011–12 UEFA Europa League quarter-finals.

 
The 2017 Liha Pari-Match champions FC Shakhtar Donetsk with a pennant (Hrayemo Chesno, We Play Fair)

Because of the Russian aggression against Ukraine and subsequent cleaning of the league from the clubs that became financially unreliable (Metalist, Hoverla, Metalurh Donetsk, Dnipro), the number of teams participating in the league was cut from 16 in the 2013–14 season to 14 in the following two seasons.[31] Both of the seasons were won by Dynamo Kyiv with Serhii Rebrov as manager. With the continuation of the military conflict in the eastern oblasts of Ukraine since 2014 and its economic impact, the league was forced to change its format again and started to be contested by 12 teams after being cut from 14 after the 2015–16 season, introducing the two stages of the competition: after the standard two rounds of games the league would split into two 6-team groups according to their positions.

Under the new format, Shakhtar Donetsk under the manager Paulo Fonseca managed to win three league titles in a row from 2016–17 to 2018–19, runner-up in all the three seasons being Dynamo Kyiv. In 2019–20 season, Shakhtar set the record of the earliest title win in the history, win 5 rounds remaining.[32] In 2019, the decision was adopted to expand the league to 14 teams from the 2020–21 and to 16 teams from the 2021–22 season.[33] In April 2022, it was announced that the current UPL season has been terminated due to the extension of martial law in Ukraine.[34] The football clubs of the UPL also expressed their support for the termination, since it is not possible to end the championship due to the country’s current state. Thus, it was concluded that the standings as of February 24, 2022 will be the final standings of the 2021/22 season, and there will be no winners to be awarded.[34]

Officials

Presidents

  • Vitaliy Danilov, 27 May 2008 – 29 February 2016 (until 1 July 2009 – temporary acting, as president of FC Kharkiv, reelected on 1 July 2009 and 9 December 2011)[35]
  • Volodymyr Heninson, 29 February 2016 – 6 April 2018[36]
  • Thomas Grimm, 6 April 2018 – 5 April 2020[37]
    • (executive director, acting) Yevhen Dykyi[38]
  • TBA, (elections postponed; previously to dates 27 April 2020, 25 May 2020)

Directors

  • General director: Oleksandr Yefremov[39]
  • Executive director: Yevhen Dykyi
  • Sport director: Petro Ivanov
  • Development director: Vadym Halahan

Competitions

Clubs

A total of 43 clubs have played in the Premier League up to 2019–20 season, 20 of which were the founding members of the inaugural 1992 season and 23 other were promoted in the later seasons.

Current clubs

The following teams are competing in the 2021–22 season. Note, in parenthesis shown the actual home cities and stadiums.

Team Home city Stadium Capacity Position in
2020–21
First season
in PL
Seasons
in PL
Chornomorets Odesa Odesa Stadion Chornomorets 34,164 FL:2nd 1992 25
Desna Chernihiv Chernihiv Stadion imeni Gagarina 12,060 6th 2018–19 4
Dnipro-1 Dnipro Dnipro-Arena 31,003 7th 2019–20 3
Dynamo Kyiva Kyiv Olimpiyskiy National Sports Complex 70,050 1st 1992 31
Inhulets Petrove Petrove (Kropyvnytskyi) Stadion Zirka (temporarily) 14,628 12th 2020–21 2
Kolos Kovalivka Kovalivka Stadion Kolos 5,000 4th 2019–20 3
Lviv Lviv Arena Lviv 34,915 8th 2008–09 5
Mariupol Mariupol Stadion imeni Boika 12,680 11th 1997–98 22
Metalist 1925 Kharkiv Kharkiv Oblast Sports Complex Metalist 40,003 FL:3rd debut 1
Mynai Mynai (Uzhhorod) Stadion Avanhard 12,000 14th 2020–21 2
Oleksandriya Oleksandria Nika Concert and Sports Complex 7,000 9th 2001–02 10
Rukh Lviv Lviv Arena Lviv 34,915 10th 2020–21 2
Shakhtar Donetska Donetsk (Kyiv) Olimpiyskiy National Sports Complex 70,050 2nd 1992 31
Veres Rivne Rivne (Lutsk) Stadion Avanhard (temporarily) 12,080 FL:1st 1992–93 5
Vorskla Poltava Poltava Stadion Vorskla imeni Butovskoho 24,795 5th 1996–97 26
Zorya Luhansk Luhansk (Zaporizhzhia) Slavutych-Arena 12,000 3rd 1992 21

a: Team played in every Ukrainian top flight season

Maps

Broadcasting

The UPL broadcaster in the 2022/23, 2023/24 and 2024/25 seasons is Setanta Sports. All matches are broadcast on the OTT platform. Also, at least 4 matches of the tour are broadcast on the company's linear TV channels, and 1-2 matches of the tour are broadcast free of charge on the Setanta YouTube channel.

International broadcasters

The main international broadcaster of the league in west Europe and some countries of Africa is the French Ma Chaîne Sport providing coverage for such countries like France, and satellite communities in Andorra, Switzerland, Belgium, Luxembourg, Monaco, Algeria, Morocco, Tunisia. Another broadcaster Sport Klub provides coverage in all countries of former Yugoslavia including Bosnia/Herzegovina, Croatia, Macedonia, Serbia, and Slovenia. National broadcasters of some other counties include 12 TV (Armenia), CBC Sport (Azerbaijan), Polsat Futbol (Poland), Futbol (Russia), and Dolce Sport (Romania).

UEFA ranking and European competitions

 
Shakhtar Donetsk against Arsenal in the 2010–11 UEFA Champions League

Ukrainian clubs being part of the Soviet Union competed in European competitions since 1960s when the Soviet clubs started to participate in continental competitions. In fact the very first Soviet club that took part in European competitions was Ukrainian club, FC Dynamo Kyiv, that took in the 1965–66 European Cup Winners' Cup. Before the fall of the Soviet Union, the following Ukrainian clubs participated in European competitions: FC Dynamo Kyiv (1965), FC Karpaty Lviv (1970), FC Zorya Luhansk (1973), FC Chornomorets Odessa (1975), FC Shakhtar Donetsk (1977), FC Dnipro (1984), and FC Metalist Kharkiv (1988).

At least five clubs participated in top continental competitions the European Cup and the UEFA Champions League among which are FC Dynamo Kyiv, FC Dnipro, FC Metalist Kharkiv, FC Shakhtar Donetsk, and SC Tavriya Simferopol.

Two teams (Dynamo and Shakhtar) were able to obtain trophies of European competitions including two European Cup Winners' Cups, one European Super Cup, and one UEFA Cup. One more team (Dnipro) came just short to join their company losing in the 2015 UEFA Europa League Final.

International relations

In 2009 The Ukrainian Premier League joined the European Professional Football Leagues.[40] Also in 2009 the league signed a partnership with IMG of which during the first month of cooperation sold broadcasting rights for the Ukrainian Cup to Poland and Armenia. On its own initiative the Ukrainian Premier League sold broadcasting rights to Romania and Russia as well.

Results by season

Higher League (Vyshcha Liha)

Season Champion Runner-up Third place Top goalscorer Rank
1992 Tavriya Simferopol Dynamo Kyiv Dnipro Dnipropetrovsk   Yuriy Hudymenko (Tavriya Simferopol, 12 goals) N/A[a]
1992–93 Dynamo Kyiv Dnipro Dnipropetrovsk Chornomorets Odesa   Serhiy Husyev (Chornomorets Odesa, 17 goals) 28/39
1993–94 Dynamo Kyiv Shakhtar Donetsk Chornomorets Odesa   Tymerlan Huseinov (Chornomorets Odesa, 18 goals) 24/44
1994–95 Dynamo Kyiv Chornomorets Odesa Dnipro Dnipropetrovsk   Arsen Avakov (Torpedo Zaporizhzhia, 21 goals) 24/47
1995–96 Dynamo Kyiv Chornomorets Odesa Dnipro Dnipropetrovsk   Tymerlan Huseinov (Chornomorets Odesa, 20 goals) 19/48
1996–97 Dynamo Kyiv Shakhtar Donetsk Vorskla Poltava   Oleh Matveyev (Shakhtar Donetsk, 21 goals) 22/48
1997–98 Dynamo Kyiv Shakhtar Donetsk Karpaty Lviv   Serhii Rebrov (Dynamo Kyiv, 22 goals) 17/49
1998–99 Dynamo Kyiv Shakhtar Donetsk Kryvbas Kryvyi Rih   Andriy Shevchenko (Dynamo Kyiv, 18 goals) 15/50
1999–00 Dynamo Kyiv Shakhtar Donetsk Kryvbas Kryvyi Rih   Maksim Shatskikh (Dynamo Kyiv, 20 goals) 12/50
2000–01 Dynamo Kyiv Shakhtar Donetsk Dnipro Dnipropetrovsk   Andriy Vorobey (Shakhtar Donetsk, 21 goals) 13/51
2001–02 Shakhtar Donetsk Dynamo Kyiv Metalurh Donetsk   Serhiy Shyshchenko (Metalurh Donetsk, 12 goals) 13/51
2002–03 Dynamo Kyiv Shakhtar Donetsk Metalurh Donetsk   Maksim Shatskikh (Dynamo Kyiv, 22 goals) 14/52
2003–04 Dynamo Kyiv Shakhtar Donetsk Dnipro Dnipropetrovsk   Giorgi Demetradze (Metalurh Donetsk, 18 goals) 14/52
2004–05 Shakhtar Donetsk Dynamo Kyiv Metalurh Donetsk   Oleksandr Kosyrin (Chornomorets Odesa, 14 goals) 15/52
2005–06 Shakhtar Donetsk Dynamo Kyiv Chornomorets Odesa   Brandão (Shakhtar Donetsk, 15 goals)
  Emmanuel Okoduwa (Arsenal Kyiv, 15 goals)
13/52
2006–07 Dynamo Kyiv Shakhtar Donetsk Metalist Kharkiv   Oleksandr Hladkyi (FC Kharkiv, 13 goals) 11/52
2007–08 Shakhtar Donetsk Dynamo Kyiv Bronze stripped *    Marko Dević* (Metalist Kharkiv, 19 goals) 12/53

Premier League

Season Champion Runner-up Third place Top goalscorer Rank
2008–09 Dynamo Kyiv Shakhtar Donetsk Metalist Kharkiv   Oleksandr Kovpak (Tavriya Simferopol, 17 goals) 7/53
2009–10 Shakhtar Donetsk Dynamo Kyiv Metalist Kharkiv   Artem Milevskyi (Dynamo Kyiv, 17 goals) 7/53
2010–11 Shakhtar Donetsk Dynamo Kyiv Metalist Kharkiv   Yevhen Seleznyov (Dnipro Dnipropetrovsk, 17 goals) 8/53
2011–12 Shakhtar Donetsk Dynamo Kyiv Metalist Kharkiv   Yevhen Seleznyov (Shakhtar Donetsk, 14 goals)
  Maicon (Volyn Lutsk, 14 goals)
9/53
2012–13 Shakhtar Donetsk Metalist Kharkiv Dynamo Kyiv   Henrikh Mkhitaryan (Shakhtar Donetsk, 25 goals) 7/53
2013–14 Shakhtar Donetsk Dnipro Dnipropetrovsk Metalist Kharkiv   Luiz Adriano (Shakhtar Donetsk, 20 goals) 9/53
2014–15 Dynamo Kyiv Shakhtar Donetsk Dnipro Dnipropetrovsk   Alex Teixeira (Shakhtar Donetsk, 17 goals)
  Eric Bicfalvi (Volyn Lutsk, 17 goals)
8/54
2015–16 Dynamo Kyiv Shakhtar Donetsk Dnipro Dnipropetrovsk   Alex Teixeira (Shakhtar Donetsk, 22 goals)
8/54
2016–17 Shakhtar Donetsk Dynamo Kyiv Zorya Luhansk   Andriy Yarmolenko (Dynamo Kyiv, 15 goals) 8/55
2017–18 Shakhtar Donetsk Dynamo Kyiv Vorskla Poltava   Facundo Ferreyra (Shakhtar Donetsk, 21 goal) 8/55
2018–19 Shakhtar Donetsk Dynamo Kyiv Oleksandriya    Júnior Moraes (Shakhtar Donetsk, 19 goals) 9/55
2019–20 Shakhtar Donetsk Dynamo Kyiv Zorya Luhansk   Júnior Moraes (Shakhtar Donetsk, 20 goals) 10/55
2020–21 Dynamo Kyiv Shakhtar Donetsk Zorya Luhansk   Vladyslav Kulach (Vorskla Poltava, 15 goals) 12/55
2021–22 Shakhtar Donetsk Dynamo Kyiv Zorya Luhansk   Artem Dovbyk (SC Dnipro-1, 14 goals) 13/55
2022–23

Notes:

Performance by club

  • Note: Defunct teams marked in Italics.

Honored teams

A representative star is placed above the team's badge to indicate 10 league titles.[43] Dynamo Kyiv became the first Ukrainian team to achieve the prestigious honor of winning the Soviet Top League for the 10th time in 1981. Dynamo Kyiv after having entered the Ukrainian championship has become the same dominant leader as during the Soviet times by earning its 20th national title at the top level in 1999. The two stars were added to the club's logo in 2007.[44] Earning its 10th national title in 2017, Shakhtar Donetsk has not yet adopted a star on its crest.

Currently (as of 2020) the following clubs earned the star element to be added to their crest.

Prestige trophy

From 2016–17 to 2019–20 seasons, the league conducted season competition in two rounds, where after the first double round robin tournament the league is split in half into two groups of six teams. Then, top six play second double round robin for the title, while the bottom six play to determine teams to be relegated (and Europa League playoff participants in the 2019–20 season). The team that won the relegation group receives a consolation-type honorary award, the Prestige trophy.[45]

Premier League players

Ex-Dynamo Kyiv strikers Maksim Shatskikh and Serhii Rebrov hold the record for most Ukrainian Premier League goals with 123, with Shatskikh winning the top single season scorer title twice in 1999–2000 and 2002–03, Rebrov once in 1997–98. Since the first Ukrainian Premier League season in 1992, 22 different players have won or shared the top scorer's title. Only five players have won the title more than once, Tymerlan Huseynov, Maksim Shatskikh, Yevhen Seleznyov, Alex Teixeira and Júnior Moraes.

Henrikh Mkhitaryan holds the record for most goals in a season (25), Serhii Rebrov and Maksim Shatskikh are the only two players to score at least 20 goals twice. The most prolific all-time scorers are Ivan Hetsko and Viktor Leonenko, respectively attaining 0.59 and 0.57 goals per game.

All-time Premier League appearance leaders
Player Games Years
  Oleksandr Shovkovskyi 426 1994–2017
  Oleh Shelayev 412 1994–2014
  Vyacheslav Checher 410[46] 1994–2017
  Oleksandr Chizhevskiy 400 1992–2006, 2008, 2010
  Oleksandr Horyainov 391 1994–2015
  Ruslan Rotan 375[46] 2000–2018
  Serhiy Nazarenko 373 2000, 2002–2017
  Serhiy Shyshchenko 363 1993–2010
  Ruslan Kostyshyn 359 1997–2012
  Serhiy Zakarlyuka 356 1994, 1997–2012
Players in bold are still playing in Premier League
Data as of 19 December 2021[46][47]
All-time Premier League scorers
Player Goals Games Years
  Serhii Rebrov 123 261 1992–2000, 2006–2008
  Maksim Shatskikh 123[b] 341 2000–2015
  Yevhen Seleznyov 117 255 2007–2017, 2020–
  Andriy Vorobey 105 315 1998–2013
  Júnior Moraes 103 189 2013–2021
  Andriy Yarmolenko 99 228 2008–2018
  Oleksandr Hladkyy 98 337 2005–2018, 2020–
  Oleksandr Haydash 95[c] 259[d] 1993–2004
  Marko Dević 90 219 2005–2014
  Serhiy Mizin 90 342 1993–2008
Players in bold are still playing in Premier League
Data as of 19 December 2021[46][49]

Premier League managers

 
Former Shakhtar Donetsk and current Dynamo Kyiv manager Mircea Lucescu is the most successful manager in Ukrainian Premier League history with 9 championships and the only who won it with multiple clubs.
 
Myron Markevych has managed the most games in Ukrainian Premier League, participating in every season from the inaugurational 1992 to 2015–16 (with the exception of 2004–05).

The league's record holder for winnings is Mircea Lucescu.

The league's record holder for games in the league is Myron Markevych.

All-time top-20 managers with league games
Rank Coach Games
1   Myron Markevych 620
2   Mykola Pavlov 546
3   Mircea Lucescu 399
4   Vitaliy Kvartsyanyi 340
5   Valeriy Yaremchenko 297
6   Mykhailo Fomenko 294
7   Oleh Taran 273
8   Semen Altman 249
9   Vyacheslav Hrozny 222
10   Volodymyr Sharan 220
11   Yuriy Vernydub 219
12   Oleksandr Ishchenko 204
13   Volodymyr Bezsonov 197
14   Anatoliy Zayaev 191
15   Ihor Nadein 184
16   Leonid Buryak 180
17   Yuriy Maksymov 173
18   Oleksandr Ryabokon 168
19   Oleksandr Babych 160
20   Valeriy Lobanovsky 152
Coaches in bold are still active in the League
Data as of 2022[50]

Among other coaches who stayed in the league the longest, there are Anatoliy Chantsev (150), Roman Sanzhar (145), Ihor Yavorskyi (144), Viktor Prokopenko (140), Nikolay Kostov (139), Vasyl Sachko (137), Oleksandr Zavarov (134), Roman Pokora (129), Oleksandr Sevidov (129), and Ivan Balan (123).

Current managers
Nat. Name Club Appointed Time as manager
  Oleksandr Ryabokon Desna Chernihiv 16 March 2012 10 years, 361 days
  Serhiy Lavrynenko Inhulets Petrove 31 August 2016 6 years, 193 days
  Viktor Skrypnyk Zorya Luhansk 3 June 2019 3 years, 282 days
  Yuriy Virt Veres Rivne 14 June 2019 3 years, 271 days
  Yuriy Maksymov Vorskla Poltava 15 November 2019 3 years, 117 days
  Mircea Lucescu Dynamo Kyiv 23 July 2020 2 years, 232 days
  Ostap Markevych Mariupol 3 August 2020 2 years, 221 days
  Valeriy Kriventsov Metalist 1925 Kharkiv 21 August 2020 2 years, 203 days
  Igor Jovićević Dnipro-1 22 September 2020 2 years, 171 days
  Yuriy Hura Oleksandriya 18 May 2021 1 year, 298 days
  Roberto De Zerbi Shakhtar Donetsk 25 May 2021 1 year, 291 days
  Vasyl Kobin FC Mynai 15 June 2021 1 year, 270 days
  Yuriy Moroz Chornomorets Odesa 23 June 2021 1 year, 262 days
  Leanid Kuchuk Rukh Lviv 4 August 2021 1 year, 220 days
  Syarhey Kuznyatsow Kolos Kovalivka 29 August 2021 1 year, 195 days
  Aleh Dulub FC Lviv 6 September 2021 1 year, 187 days

All-time participants

The table lists the place each team took in each of the seasons.

Vyshcha Liha era (1992–2008)

Season 1992 92/93 93/94 94/95 95/96 96/97 97/98 98/99 99/00 00/01 01/02 02/03 03/04 04/05 05/06 06/07 07/08
Teams 20 16 18 18 18 16 16 16 16 14 14 16 16 16 16 16 16
Arsenal Kyiv[e]         4 11 10 7 10 6 12 5 9 9 12 14 6
Borysfen Boryspil                         7 16      
Bukovyna Chernivtsi 10 12 17                            
Chornomorets Odesa 5 3 3 2 2 7 15   15     8 5 6 3 6 7
Dnipro 3 2 4 3 3 4 4 12 11 3 6 4 3 4 6 4 4
Dynamo Kyiv 2 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 2 1 1 2 2 1 2
Hoverla Uzhhorod                     14     12 16   16
Karpaty Lviv 13 6 5 8 8 5 3 4 9 10 8 7 15     8 10
Kharkiv                             13 12 14
Kremin Kremenchuk 14 9 15 10 9 15                      
Kryvbas Kryvyi Rih   8 6 6 14 12 8 3 3 11 9 12 10 13 14 10 13
Mariupol             14 5 8 4 10 10 8 5 4 15  
Metalist Kharkiv 6 5 18         6 5 9 5 16   11 5 3 (3)*
Metalurh Donetsk             6 14 7 5 3 3 4 3 9 9 12
Metalurh Zaporizhya 11 7 16 9 5 8 9 8 6 8 4 15 11 10 8 7 9
Mykolaiv 18     13 16     16                  
Naftovyk-Ukrnafta Okhtyrka 16                               15
Nyva Ternopil 7 14 7 12 13 9 7 13 12 14              
Nyva Vinnytsia 15   10 14 15 16                      
Obolon Kyiv                       14 6 15      
Odesa 20                                
Oleksandriya                     13 13          
Prykarpattya Ivano-Frankivsk 17     11 11 13 13 15 14                
Shakhtar Donetsk 4 4 2 4 10 2 2 2 2 2 1 2 2 1 1 2 1
Stal Alchevsk                   13         11 16  
Tavriya Simferopol 1 10 8 5 12 6 12 9 13 7 7 9 12 7 7 5 5
Temp Shepetivka 19   9 17                          
Torpedo Zaporizhzhia 8 13 13 7 7 14 16                    
Veres Rivne   16 11 18                          
Volyn Lutsk 9 11 12 15 17             6 13 8 15    
Vorskla Poltava           3 5 10 4 12 11 11 14 14 10 13 8
Zirka Kropyvnytskyi         6 10 11 11 16       16        
Zorya Luhansk 12 15 14 16 18                     11 11

Premier League era (2008–present)

Season 08/09 09/10 10/11 11/12 12/13 13/14 14/15 15/16 16/17 17/18 18/19 19/20 20/21 21/22
Teams 16 16 16 16 16 16 14 14 12 12 12 12 14 16
Arsenal Kyiv 11 7 9 5 8 16         12      
Chornomorets Odesa 10 15   9 6 5 11 11 6 11 11    
Desna Chernihiv                     8 4 6
Dnipro 6 4 4 4 4 2 3 3 11          
Dnipro-1                       7 7
Dynamo Kyiv 1 2 2 2 3 4 1 1 2 2 2 2 1
Hoverla Uzhhorod   16     15 12 12 13            
Inhulets Petrove                         12
Karpaty Lviv 9 5 5 14 14 11 13 7 10 8 10 12    
Kharkiv 16                          
Kolos Kovalivka                       6 4
Kryvbas Kryvyi Rih 12 14 13 10 7                  
Lviv 15                   6 11 8
Mariupol 14 12 14 11 9 10 14     5 4 8 11
Metalist Kharkiv 3 3 3 3 2 3 6 10            
Metalist 1925 Kharkiv                          
Metalurh Donetsk 4 8 8 7 5 6 10              
Metalurh Zaporizhya 7 9 16   16 14 7 14            
Mynai                         14
Obolon Kyiv   11 10 15                    
Oleksandriya       16       6 5 7 3 5 9
Olimpik Donetsk           8 9 5 4 9 9 9 13  
Rukh Lviv                         10
Sevastopol     15     9                
Shakhtar Donetsk 2 1 1 1 1 1 2 2 1 1 1 1 2
Stal Kamianske               8 8 12        
Tavriya Simferopol 8 6 7 6 11 15                
Veres Rivne                   6      
Volyn Lutsk     11 12 13 13 9 12 12        
Vorskla Poltava 5 10 6 8 12 8 5 5 7 3 7 10 5
Zirka Kropyvnytskyi                 9 10        
Zorya Luhansk 13 13 12 13 10 7 4 4 3 4 5 3 3

Teams marking (as of 2020–21):

Competing in UPL (1st tier)
Competing in PFL (2nd tier)
Competing in PFL (3rd tier)
Competing in AAFU (4th tier)
Competing in regional championships (below 4th tier)
Defunct clubs

All-time table

All figures are correct through the 2021–22 season.[51][52][53] Promotion/relegation playoff games are not included. Teams in bold currently compete in Premier League. Numbers in bold indicate the record values for each column.

  clubs that lost professional status or were dissolved
Rank Team Seasons P W D L GF GA GD Pts Achievement Other names used
1 Dynamo Kyiv 31 906 662 153 91 1950 596 +1354 2139 champions (16)
2 Shakhtar Donetsk 31 906 644 165 119 1930 664 +1226 2057 champions (13)
3 FC Dnipro 26 765 379 199 187 1127 718 +409 1336 runners-up (2)
4 Karpaty Lviv 27 800 255 227 318 872 1003 −131 992 3rd (1)
5 Chornomorets Odesa 25 733 269 183 281 815 875 −60 990 runners-up (2)
6 Vorskla Poltava 26 754 260 204 290 821 889 −68 984 3rd (2) Vorskla-Naftohaz
7 Metalist Kharkiv[f] 20 573 254 144 175 755 664 +91 906 runners-up (1)
8 Tavriya Simferopol[g] 23 681 237 170 274 795 873 −78 881 champions (1)
9 Metalurh Zaporizhya[h] 24 702 206 173 323 699 949 −250 791 4th (1)
10 Kryvbas Kryvyi Rih[i] 21 634 201 173 260 633 786 −153 776 3rd (2)
11 Metalurh Donetsk[j] 18 526 203 142 181 655 623 +32 751 3rd (3)
12 FC Mariupol 22 638 197 153 288 715 932 −217 744 4th (3) Illichivets, Metalurh
13 Zorya Luhansk 20 580 204 125 251 666 816 −150 737 3rd (3) Zorya-MALS
14 Arsenal Kyiv[k] 19 568 191 156 221 654 675 −21 729 4th (1)[l] CSKA, CSKA-Borysfen
15 Volyn Lutsk 16 472 140 102 230 473 710 −237 519 6th (1)
16 FC Oleksandriya[m] 10 285 89 82 114 312 375 −63 349 3rd (1) Polihraftekhnika, PFC Oleksandriya
17 Nyva Ternopil 10 296 93 62 141 319 388 −69 341 7th (3)
18 Zirka Kropyvnytskyi[n] 8 248 62 58 128 209 368 −159 244 6th (1) Zirka-NIBAS
19 Torpedo Zaporizhzhia[o] 7 210 64 42 104 214 315 −101 234 7th (2)
20 Olimpik Donetsk 7 206 56 55 95 210 324 −114 223 4th (1)
21 Prykarpattya Ivano-Frankivsk[p] 7 206 55 52 99 215 315 −100 217 10th (1)
22 Kremin Kremenchuk[q] 6 180 54 40 86 182 269 −87 202 9th (2)
23 Hoverla Uzhhorod[r] 9 256 41 64 151 186 421 −235 187 12th (3) Zakarpattia
24 Obolon Kyiv[s] 6 180 44 44 92 153 253 −100 176 6th (1)
25 Veres Rivne[t] 5 148 40 44 64 132 191 −59 164 6th (1)
26 Desna Chernihiv 4 108 46 22 40 154 133 +21 160 4th (1)
27 Nyva Vinnytsia[u] 5 150 42 32 76 140 213 −73 158 10th (1)
28 FC Lviv 5 138 31 37 70 113 217 −104 130 6th (1)
29 SC Dnipro-1[v] 3 77 36 11 30 114 101 +13 119 7th (2)
30 FC Kharkiv[w] 4 120 25 33 62 94 156 −62 108 12th (1)
31 Kolos Kovalivka 3 78 29 16 33 88 109 −21 103 4th (1)
32 SC Mykolaiv 4 116 26 23 67 100 208 −108 101 13th (1) Evis
33 Stal Kamianske[x] 3 90 24 24 42 72 106 −34 96 8th (2)
34 Temp Shepetivka[y] 3 86 24 16 46 79 113 −34 88 9th (1)
35 Bukovyna Chernivtsi 3 82 23 18 41 69 99 −30 87 11th (1)
36 Stal Alchevsk[z] 3 86 17 21 48 67 126 −59 72 11th (1)
37 FC Sevastopol[aa] 2 58 17 11 30 58 91 −33 62 9th (1) PFC Sevastopol
38 Borysfen Boryspil 2 60 14 19 27 40 60 −20 61 7th (1)
40 Rukh Lviv 2 43 10 16 17 43 60 −17 46 10th
39 Naftovyk-Ukrnafta Okhtyrka[ab] 2 48 11 11 26 30 66 −36 44 15th (1) Naftovyk
41 Inhulets Petrove 2 43 8 15 20 37 47 −10 39 12th
42 FC Mynai 2 44 5 13 26 28 77 −49 28 14th
43 Metalist 1925 Kharkiv 1 18 6 1 11 17 29 −12 19
44 SC Odesa[ac] 1 18 3 1 14 15 32 −17 10 20th SKA Odesa

List of bankrupt clubs

  • FC Dnipro (formerly Dnipro Dnipropetrovsk); soon after playing at the 2015 UEFA Europa League Final, the club was forced into relegation due to ignoring the FIFA sanctions and eventually its first team was dissolved
  • FC Metalist Kharkiv; denied license due to heavy debts[54]
  • FC Hoverla Uzhhorod; denied license due to heavy debts[55]
  • FC Kryvbas Kryvyi Rih; denied license for failure to provide evidence of stable financial support[56]
  • FC Kharkiv; denied license for giving false documentation about financial condition in the club[57]
  • FC Arsenal Kyiv; club was not able to finish the 2013–14 season[58]
  • FC Arsenal-Kyiv Kyiv; is considered a direct successor of Arsenal Kyiv (2001–2013) soon after relegation in 2019 it announced about liquidation of its first team[59]
  • FC Karpaty Lviv; was not able to finish the 2019–20 and announced that it is a bankrupt, but allowed to keep professional status and restart at the third tier. In 2020 it was split and original club following 2020–21 was dissolved, while the newly formed was admitted to the third tier from amateurs.
  • SC Tavriya Simferopol, playing since 1958, the club became liquidated in 2014 by the Russian authorities following occupation of the Autonomous Republic of Crimea. In 2016 it was revived based out of neighboring Kherson Oblast and playing in lower tiers until the full-scale Russian invasion in 2022.
  • FC Metalurh Zaporizhia; during the 2015–16 season on 2 March 2016, Metalurh was recognized as bankrupt on decision of the commercial court of Zaporizhzhia Oblast and a liquidation procedure was initiated.[60]
  • FC Metalurh Donetsk; was merged with FC Stal Dniprodzerzhynsk in 2015, due to hardship caused by the 2014 Russian aggression against Ukraine
  • FC Mariupol, in connection with the full-scale invasion of Ukraine by Russia and occupation of the city of Mariupol as well as financial inability of to keep the club, on 27 April 2022 it was announced that the club withdraws from national competitions and dissolves.

List of successions

  • FC Karpaty Lviv, it joined Ukraine national competitions already as a phoenix club of the same club that was merged with SKA Lvov and later revived in 1989. In 2020 Karpaty were expelled from the Premier League due to financial hardship. The same year the club was recreated for the second time being split between two entities one joining the third tier competition, while another the fourth. In 2021 the split was resolved by one of the clubs becoming disbanded.
  • FC Vorskla Poltava, it joined Ukraine national competitions already as a phoenix club of Kolos Poltava that was disbanded and revived in 1984 based on its football academy.
  • FC Metalist Kharkiv, created in 2019 as Metal Kharkiv, in 2021 it was officially recognized as a successor of the Metalist that bankrupted back in 2016.
  • FC Kryvbas Kryvyi Rih, renewed its participation in national competitions in 2018, in 2020 FC Hirnyk Kryvyi Rih changed its name to Kryvbas allowing to continue on the legacy with all its colors and logos of bankrupted FC Kryvbas Kryvyi Rih, while at the same time keeping its academy's name as Hirnyk.
  • FC Arsenal Kyiv, it is considered a successor of the club that appeared in national competitions in 1993 as FC Boryspil that was admitted to the third tier in place of FC Nyva Myronivka (Nyva-Borysfen). In 1995 it was already promoted to the top tier as a joint venture along the Ministry of Defense and named as CSKA-Borysfen Kyiv, while the original CSKA team was kept playing in lower tiers. In 1996 the merger was dissolved and until 2001 in the top tier competed CSKA Kyiv while in the second tier competed its reserves CSKA-2 Kyiv. In mid season 2001–02 the club was sold to the city of Kyiv and renamed to Arsenal Kyiv in honour of another club that existed back in 1960s. Around 2008-2010 it ran a campaign to claim heritage of the Arsenal Kyiv factory club, SC Arsenal. Unable to finish the 2013–14, in 2013 it folded. Yet, already in 2014 it was revived as Arsenal-Kyiv Kyiv and soon it made through several tiers back to the top tier where after a single season folded again in 2019.

Heritage claims

  • FC Chornomorets Odesa, created in 1958, it lays claims also to heritage of Pischevik Odessa, Metalurh Odesa and Dynamo Odesa.
  • FC Metalist 1925 Kharkiv, created in 2016, it lays claims also to heritage of the Metalist that bankrupted in 2016.
  • MFC Metalurh Zaporizhia, following bankruptcy of the original club and its exclusion from competitions, in 2016 there was created new Metalurh Zaporizhia based on a privately owned local amateur team Rosso-Nero and for few seasons competed in lower leagues and at the same time another Metalurh Zaporizhia was created in 2017 based on the older Metalurh academy (sports school) being financed by the city authorities. In 2018 the UAF denied license for the Rosso-Nero's Metalurh when the Zaporizhia city's Metalurh was admitted to the Professional League (third tier).

Post-season play-offs

There were several instances when the games outside of regular double round-robin tournament and split group seasons were scheduled or required. They were held either for determining the league position (golden and third place matches), international competitions qualification (Europa League play-off) or promotion or relegation (relegation play-off).

Golden matches

League finals for Premier League took place on two occasions. In the inaugural 1992 season, the league was conducted in two groups of 10 teams due to transition to the autumn-spring competition calendar. The teams in each group played a double round-robin tournament, after which the winners of both groups faced each other in the one-match league final at neutral field. The final was played on 21 June 1992, crowning Tavriya Simferopol as the first champions of independent Ukraine after their 1–0 win over Dynamo Kyiv.

Starting from the 2005–06 season, if multiple teams finish tied on points on the top of the table, Golden match is required to determine the champion. In the same season, this rule came into effect for the first and only to the moment time: Shakhtar Donetsk and Dynamo Kyiv both finished with 75 points after the regular season. In the following final game, Shakhtar managed to win the title after the 100th-minute goal from Julius Aghahowa which concluded their 2–1 extra-time win.

Season Winner Result Runner-up Venue Date
1992 Tavriya Simferopol 1–0 Dynamo Kyiv Ukraina Stadium, Lviv 21 June 1992
2005–06 Shakhtar Donetsk 2–1 (a.e.t.) Dynamo Kyiv Metalurh Stadium, Kryvyi Rih 14 May 2006

Third place matches

Similarly to the league final, in the inaugural 1992 season the third place match was played between the runners-up of both 10-team groups that formed the league in the season. In the game at neutral field, Dnipro Dnipropetrovsk from Group B defeated Shakhtar Donetsk from Group A 3–2 and won their first bronze medals in the league.

Season Group A team Result Group B team Venue Date
1992 Shakhtar Donetsk 2–3 Dnipro Dnipropetrovsk Metalurh Central Stadium, Zaporizhzhia 20 June 1992

Europa League play-offs

In the 2019–20 season, play-offs for qualification to the UEFA Europa League are played for the first time between the 5th and 6th teams from the Championship round and two top teams from the Relegation round (7th and 8th). The play-off consists of the semi-final and final stages, with ties in both played as single matches on the field of the team ranked higher in the season standings.

Season Home team Result Away team Venue Date
2019–20 Semi-finals
FC Oleksandriya 1–2 FC Mariupol CSC Nika Stadium, Oleksandriya 25 July 2020
Kolos Kovalivka 4–1 Dnipro-1 NSC Olimpiyskiy, Kyiv 25 July 2020
Final
Kolos Kovalivka 1–0 (a.e.t.) FC Mariupol NSC Olimpiyskiy, Kyiv 29 July 2020

Relegation play-offs

For the first tome, play-off to determine the participant of the next Vyshcha Liha season was held unplanned at the end of the 1998–99 season. Third-placed team of 1998–99 First League, Torpedo Zaporizhzhia, who was to be promoted, filed for bankruptcy at the end of the season. The league regulations at the time did not specify what actions are needed to be taken in such situation, so PFL made a decision to held a play-off game between the highest-ranked relegated team, Prykarpattia Ivano-Frankivsk, and highest-ranked not promoted team, FC Cherkasy at neutral field in Kyiv. The game ended with Prykarpattia defending their league place 3–1.[61][62]

In the 2001–02 season, due to league enlargement play-off was held between the second-lowest Vyshcha Liha team, Polihraftekhnika Oleksandriya, and fourth First League team, Polissya Zhytomyr. The game on a neutral field in Kyiv ended 1–0 in favour of Oleksandriya.[62]

Since 2017–18 season, the play-offs are held in home-and-away format between the 10th and 11th teams from Premier League, and 2nd and 3rd from First League. During this time, 3 teams were promoted by play-offs, and another 1 managed to defend its place. However, in the 2019–20 season there will be no playoffs because of the league enlargement and three teams will promote from First League directly.[63]

Season Premier League team Result First League team Venue Date
1998–99 Prykarpattia Ivano-Frankivsk 3–1 FC Cherkasy Dynamo Stadium, Kyiv 4 July 1999
2001–02 Polihraftekhnika Oleksandriya 1–0 Polissya Zhytomyr CSK ZSU Stadium, Kyiv 16 June 2002
2017–18 Zirka Kropyvnytskyi 1–1
0–4
Desna Chernihiv Home and away 23 and 27 May 2018
Chornomorets Odesa 1–0
0–3 (a.e.t.)
FC Poltava
2018–19 Karpaty Lviv 0–0
3–0*
Volyn Lutsk 4 and 8 June 2019
Chornomorets Odesa 0–0
0–2
Kolos Kovalivka
2021–22 TBD x–x
x–x
TBD TBA
TBD x–x
x–x
TBD

Rivalries and city derbies

Klasychne derby

The central feature of the league is a rivalry between Shakhtar Donetsk and Dynamo Kyiv which has adopted its name as Klasychne derby. The rivalry started ever since the end of 1990s when both teams started consistently to place the top two places from season to season. The rivalry became really established when Shakhtar obtained its first national title in 2002.

Other championship contenders

The surprising win of the first season by SC Tavriya Simferopol has never turned the club into a real contender for another title and the club was not always successful to secure a place among the top five. In the beginning of 1990s, FC Chornomorets Odessa and the two-time Soviet champions FC Dnipro were also among the main contenders. The 1972 Soviet champions FC Zorya Luhansk until 2013 really struggled to stay in the top league. Among other contenders there were FC Metalist Kharkiv that were the league's runners-up in 2012–13 and FC Metalurh Donetsk that showed some consistent form in the early 2000s.

Other rivalries

There are few smaller regional rivalries such between Karpaty and Volyn, Metalist and Dnipro, Zorya and Shakhtar.

Among city derbies, there were no running city derbies in the league for the 2017–18 season. Among the most notable previously there were Zaporizhzhia derby between Metalurh and Torpedo, Kyiv derby between Dynamo and Arsenal (CSKA), Donetsk derby between Shakhtar and Metalurh. Other derbies existed in Lviv, Odesa, Kharkiv, West Ukrainian football derby and others.

Stadiums and attendance

Ukraine has several big stadiums with capacity of 30,000+ spectators and at least two stadiums with capacity of over 50,000 which also are considered to be by UEFA the elite stadiums. Since the 2014 Russian aggression against Ukraine, the access to some stadiums was restricted. Many stadiums in Ukraine and their surrounding infrastructure were renovated in preparation to the Euro 2012.

UEFA Elite Stadiums

# Stadium Capacity City Club Opened
1 Olimpiysky National Sports Complex 70,050 Kyiv Ukraine, Dynamo Kyiv 1923, 2011
2 Donbass Arena 52,518 Donetsk Shakhtar Donetsk 2009

Other major stadiums

Among 30,000+ football stadiums or multi-use stadiums adopted for football are Arena Lviv, Chornomorets Stadium, Dnipro-Arena, Metalist Stadium and others.

Other UEFA 4-category stadiums in the league:

# Stadium Capacity City Club Opened UEFA category
1 Metalist Stadium 40,003 Kharkiv Metalist Kharkiv
Metalist 1925 Kharkiv
1926     
2 Arena Lviv 34,915 Lviv Lviv
Rukh Lviv
2011     
3 Chornomorets Stadium 34,164 Odesa Chornomorets Odesa 1935[ad]     
4 Dnipro-Arena 31,003 Dnipro Dnipro
Dnipro-1
1940[ae]     
5 Butovsky Vorskla Stadium 24,795 Poltava Vorskla Poltava 1951     
6 Slavutych-Arena 11,883 Zaporizhzhia Metalurh Zaporizhya
Zorya Luhansk
1938[af]     

Attendance

Source:[citation needed]

See also

Notes

  1. ^ part of Soviet Union
  2. ^ On 22 July 2017 Ukrainian Premier League announced that Maksim Shatskikh might have scored 123 goals instead of 124 due to one of the autogoals (own goals) being counted towards his tally.[48] Other time, the same news outlet claims that Shatskikh indeed scored 124.[46]
  3. ^ Haidash who is recorded with 95 goals in reality did score 96, but the game in which he scored was cancelled along with his record.[48]
  4. ^ Some records indicate that Haidash played 258 games.[48]
  5. ^ Arsenal Kyiv was renamed from CSKA Kyiv in 2001, the original CSKA Kyiv was recreated in the First League in place of CSCA-2 Kyiv.
  6. ^ Club was denied license in 2016 for failing to pay debts and ceased operations afterwards
  7. ^ The original club was forced to be dissolved due to the Russian aggression against Ukraine, it was later re-established and plays home games in Beryslav, Kherson oblast
  8. ^ The original club dissolved due to bankruptcy. Later it was revived in 2016–2018 based on amateur club FC Rosso Nero, and in 2017 replaced with municipal club
  9. ^ The club lost profession status due to bankruptcy and later was revived as an amateur club, competing in regional competitions of Dnipropetrovsk Oblast
  10. ^ Due to financial situation and hardship being forced to play away from home because of the Russian aggression against Ukraine, in 2015 the club merged with FC Stal Kamianske.
  11. ^ Being reorganized based on the first team of CSKA Kyiv in 2001–02, the club dissolved due to bankruptcy and was later revived based on its academy as FC Arsenal–Kyiv
  12. ^ Arsenal Kyiv's record includes the record of its predecessor CSKA Kyiv (when the club was sponsored by the Ministry of Defence). It does not include the 14 games that it played in 2013-14 that were annulled later.
  13. ^ The club was reformed in 2004 as a city team, in 2014 merged with FC UkrAhroKom Holovkivka
  14. ^ The original club dissolved in 2006 due to bankruptcy, was later was revived based on the local football school Olimpik. In 2019 team withdrew from professional competitions again
  15. ^ The club dissolved due to bankruptcy
  16. ^ The original club FC Prykarpattia dissolved due to bankruptcy, later a new team with the same name was formed
  17. ^ The club was dissolved and revived again two times
  18. ^ The club was denied license in 2016 for failing to pay salary to players and later was dissolved
  19. ^ The club was administratively reorganised in 2013 and had to change its name and start from the lower leagues
  20. ^ The original club was liquidated in 2011 and in 2015 was revived as NK Veres Rivne. In 2018 it merged with FC Lviv, at the same time re-entering Second League
  21. ^ The club dissolved two times in 2005 and 2012 and both times was later revived
  22. ^ The off-shot club that was created after the FIFA sanctions were applied to FC Dnipro forcing the latter to be relegated to amateurs
  23. ^ The club folded in 2010
  24. ^ The club dissolved in 2018
  25. ^ The club dissolved in 1995
  26. ^ The club dissolved due to the Russian aggression against Ukraine
  27. ^ The club dissolved due to the Russian aggression against Ukraine and in its place was created Russian club SKChF which later changed its name to FC Sevastopol
  28. ^ The club dissolved in 2018
  29. ^ The club merged with FC Chornomorets in 1999
  30. ^ The Central Stadium of the Black Sea Shipping Company was completely rebuilt in 2011
  31. ^ Original Metalurh Stadium was completely rebuilt in 2008
  32. ^ Original Metalurh Stadium was completely rebuilt in 2006

References

  1. ^ a b Hunchenko, O., Kazakov, V., Kulikovska, O.
  2. ^ . Professional Football League of Ukraine
  3. ^ . Electronic Library of Ukraine.
  4. ^ . Champion (Ukrayinska Pravda). 27 May 2008
  5. ^ a b Poll: Dynamo is ahead of Shakhtar in popularity (Опитування: "Динамо" випереджає "Шахтар" за популярністю) 9 May 2015 at the Wayback Machine. UNIAN. 12 September 2013.
  6. ^ a b c Ukrainian football championship. Kick-off.by.
  7. ^ Igor Nitsak. The "Soyuz-Viktan" group of companies became a partner of the Ukrainian championship as well as the Ukraine national and youth teams (Группа компаний «Союз-Виктан» стала партнером Чемпионата Украины, а также национальной и молодежной команд страны). Sport.ua. 20 July 2006
  8. ^ "Soyuz-Viktan" became a title sponsor of Ukrainian football championship ("Союз-Виктан" стал титульным спонсором ЧУ по футболу). Kommersant.ru. 20 July 2006
  9. ^ Godskiy. Everyone gets own (Каждому свое). Football.ua / Opinion column. 24 July 2007
  10. ^ A lion in its own juice (Лев в собственном соку). Pressing. 3 August 2007
  11. ^ The Ukrainian championship received its title sponsor (Чемпионат Украины получил титульного спонсора). Korrespondent.net. 20 July 2006
  12. ^ The leaders of the "Soyuz-Viktan" firm were convicted to 15 years of imprisonment (РУКОВОДИТЕЛИ ФИРМЫ «СОЮЗ-ВИКТАН» ПРИГОВОРЕНЫ К 15 ГОДАМ ЛИШЕНИЯ СВОБОДЫ). Mirror Weekly. 23 August 2002.
  13. ^ Andrei Dneprov. The Ukrainian vodka "Soyuz-Viktan" will be taught to respected the Russian laws (Украинскую водку «Союз-Виктан» научат уважать российские законы? (ФОТО)). Newdaynews.ru. 1 March 2007
  14. ^ a b Aleksandr Khlepytko. Evolution of the UPL emblem: from "Epitsentr" to bookmakers (Эволюция эмблемы УПЛ: от «Эпицентра» до букмекеров). Tribuna.com. 7 August 2019
  15. ^ "Epitsentr" is a title sponsor of the Ukrainian football championship («ЭпиЦентр» – Титульный спонсор Чемпионата Украины по футболу). Sport.ua. 29 July 2008
  16. ^ A title sponsor of the Ukrainian championship will pay more than $5 million (Титульный спонсор чемпионата Украины заплатит более ? 5 млн). Championat. 8 April 2008
  17. ^ Oleg Barkov. The official name of the 2015–16 Ukrainian championship is "Liha Pari-Match" (Официальное название чемпионата Украины в сезоне 2015/16 – "Лига Пари-Матч"). Footboom. 17 June 2015
  18. ^ The Liha Pari-Match: 43 million hryvnias for two years (Лига Пари-Матч: 43 млн гривен за два года). Football.ua. 25 June 2015
  19. ^ The Pari-Match was deprived of the opportunity to carry out financial obligations for the Premier League (Пари-Матч лишен возможности выполнять финансовые обязательства перед Премьер-лигой). UA-Football. 1 December 2015
  20. ^ a b Сергей Харченко: «Рынок единых коммерческих прав Чемпионата Украины на данный момент разрушен»
  21. ^ «ЭпиЦентр» – Титульный спонсор Чемпионата Украины по футболу
  22. ^ Сеть гипермаркетов «Эпицентр» стала титульным спонсором сборной Украины по футболу
  23. ^ . FPL.ua | Официальный веб-сайт Объединения профессиональных футбольных клубов Украины «Премьер-лига»] (in Russian). Объединение профессиональных футбольных клубов Украины «Премьер-лига». Archived from the original on 29 June 2015. Retrieved 25 June 2015.
  24. ^ "Чемпионат Украины сменил логотип и теперь называется Favbet лига". football.ua. Retrieved 24 January 2020.
  25. ^ "Официально: Титульным спонсором УПЛ стала букмекерская компания VBET". UA-Football. Retrieved 1 July 2021.
  26. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q Volodymyr Mylenko. The Ukrainian quarter. The 1991, where who wants to play? (Украинский квотер. 1991, где кто хочет играть?). UA-Football. 14 April 2016
  27. ^ a b c d e Mykola Motornyi. Ukraine: "A breakthrough into the independence" (Украина: "Прорыв в независимость"). Fanat.ua.
  28. ^ a b c d . Ukrainian Premier League. 16 November 2017
  29. ^ Ukrainian Championship: breakthrough or beginning of the end? (Чемпіонат України з футболу: прорив чи початок кінця?). BBC News Ukrainian. 11 June 2013
  30. ^ Mid-table clubs of Ukrainian Premier League are reducing players' salaries («Середняки» Української Прем'єр Ліги знижують зарплати футболістів). Ukrinform. 12 July 2013
  31. ^ Ukraine trying to revive Crimean champion football club, USA Today (19 June 2015)
  32. ^ Shakhtar equaled Real, Barcelona and PSG: the most dominating European clubs (Шахтар став в один ряд з Реалом, Барселоною і ПСЖ: найбільш домінуючі клуби Європи). Football 1. 20 June 2020
  33. ^ Number of participating clubs in the UPL will increase to 16 for the 2021/22 season (Кількість клубів-учасників УПЛ у сезоні 2021/22 зросте до 16). Ukrainian Association of Football. 10 July 2020
  34. ^ a b "Ukraine league season terminated due to martial law". Reuters. 27 April 2022. Retrieved 27 April 2022.
  35. ^ "Danylov re-elected as president of Ukrainian football premier league – Dec. 02, 2009". KyivPost. 2 December 2009.
  36. ^ "Официально. Владимир Генинсон – новый президент УПЛ". iSport.ua. 29 February 2016.
  37. ^ "Томас ГРИММ: "УПЛ получит нового президента 6 апреля"". СПОРТ.UA.
  38. ^ Ihor Tsyhanyk: "I get awfully angry when I get named as television presenter or commentator (Ігор Циганик: «Я страшенно злюся, коли мене називають телеведучим чи коментатором»). 1927.kiev.ua. 23 May 2020
  39. ^ In the UPL is a new general director (У УПЛ новый генеральный директор). Football.ua. 28 July 2009
  40. ^ "Ukrainian Premier League".
  41. ^ Lausanne announced a verdict on the game Karpaty – Metalist (Лозанна озвучила вердикт по матчу "Карпаты" – "Металлист"). ua-football.com. 2 August 2013.
  42. ^ Football – Match Fixing 15 October 2013 at the Wayback Machine. Court of Arbitration of Sport. Lausanne 2 August 2013.
  43. ^ Will Dynamo have two stars? Television Service of News (TSN). 12 June 2007
  44. ^ FC Dynamo Kyiv has a new emblem. Interfax Ukraine. 4 July 2011
  45. ^ "Dnipro-1" is the owner of the Prestige trophy for the 2019–20 season («Дніпро-1» – володар Трофею престижу сезону 2019/20 років!). Ukrainian Premier League. 19 July 2020
  46. ^ a b c d e . Ukrainian Premier League. 29 December 2020
  47. ^ Ukrainian football championship – List of players with 200 or more appearances since 1992. Allplayers.in.ua
  48. ^ a b c ...And on the horizon – Yarmolenko (…А на горизонті – Ярмоленко). Ukrainian Premier League. 22 July 2017
  49. ^ Ukrainian football championship – all scorers since 1992. Allplayers.in.ua
  50. ^ "Украинский футбол от Дмитрия Трощия". www.uafootball.net.ua.
  51. ^ Grand tournament table of the Ukrainian Championship (1992-2015) 8 March 2016 at the Wayback Machine. ukr-football.org
  52. ^ Summarized table of championships. Ukrainskiy Futbol ot Dmitriya Troshchiya (Ukrainian Football from Dmitriy Troshchiy).
  53. ^ Summarized table of all years. Wildstat.
  54. ^ Metalist with a debt of 112 million hryvnia is heading the ranking of Ukrainian most indebted enterprises (Металлист с долгом 112 млн гривен возглавил рейтинг украинских предприятий-должников). UA-Football 31 October 2018
  55. ^ (Металісту, Говерлі і Волині відмовлено в атестації, Дніпро – допущений до чемпіонату). UA-Football. 25 April 2016
  56. ^ FFU deprived Kryvbas of license (ФФУ лишила Кривбасс лицензии). Sport.ua. 31 May 2013
  57. ^ The license of FC Kharkiv is withdrawn. UA-Football. 23 June 2010
  58. ^ On 29 October 2013, the general director of FC Arsenal Kyiv Viktor Holovko announced that the club was filing for bankruptcy and withdrawing from competitions as it was unable to find any sponsors. "Arsenal Kyiv director general says club out of all competitions, bankruptcy procedures launched". Interfax-Ukraine. 1 November 2013."FC Arsenal (Kyiv) starts bankruptcy procedure, drops out of competition, says director". Interfax-Ukraine. 31 October 2013.
    The General Assembly of the Ukrainian Premier League was unable to reach a quorum and hence no decision was made on the expulsion of the club from the UPL.Гендиректор УПЛ пояснив, чому Данілов не приїхав на Загальні збори [General Director of UPL explained why Danilov did not come to the General Assembly] (in Ukrainian). ua-football.com. 18 December 2013. (18 December 2013)
    On 12 February 2014 Arsenal Kyiv was officially expelled from the league and all club's results were annulled. (PDF) (in Ukrainian). 12 February 2014. Archived from the original (PDF) on 22 February 2014. Retrieved 8 April 2014.
  59. ^ Арсенал-Киев продолжит существование, но без профессиональной команды. UA-Football. 23 July 2019
  60. ^ Ex-sports director of Metalurh Zaporizhzhia Mike Snoei wants to sue the club more than 15 mln hryvnia (Екс-спортдиректор запорізького Металурга Майк Снуі хоче відсудити у клубу понад 15 млн гривень). Football 24. 6 December 2017
  61. ^ In 1999 play-off match was held for the first time in the Vyshcha Liha history. It was introduced because of Torpedo's collapse (В 1999 впервые в истории Высшей лиги состоялся стыковой матч. Его придумали из-за развала Торпедо). UA-Football. 25 May 2020
  62. ^ a b How and why after-seasons were played in Ukrainian football (Як і чому гралися післясезоння в українському футболі). UA-Football. 25 May 2020
  63. ^ UAF Executive Committee approved a system of team exchange between leagues at the conclusion of 2019/2020 season (Виконком УАФ затвердив систему обміну команд між лігами за підсумками сезону-2019/2020). Ukrainian Association of Football. 25 May 2020

External links

  • UPL.ua (official website)
  • at the Wayback Machine (archived 14 December 2016)
  • Premier League 2012/2013 Regular Season, Soccerway
  • Ukraine – List of Champions, RSSSF.com
  • Official Fantasy League Game, Real Manager
  • UPL statistics and mathematics

ukrainian, premier, league, ukrainian, Українська, Прем, єр, ліга, ukrayinska, premier, liha, highest, division, ukrainian, annual, football, championship, vyshcha, liha, ukrainian, Вища, ліга, league, formed, 1991, part, 1992, ukrainian, football, championshi. The Ukrainian Premier League Ukrainian Ukrayinska Prem yer liga Ukrayinska Premier Liha or UPL is the highest division of Ukrainian annual football championship As the Vyshcha Liha Ukrainian Visha liga Top League it was formed in 1991 as part of the 1992 1 Ukrainian football championship upon discontinuation of the 1991 Soviet football championship and included the Ukraine based clubs that competed previously in the Soviet top three tiers competitions as well as better clubs of the Ukrainian republican competitions The initial season of the league featured six former Soviet Top League clubs among which were Dynamo Shakhtar Chornomorets Dnipro Metalist Metalurh as well as four more clubs that previously also competed at the top league Ukrainian Premier LeagueFounded1991 32 years ago 1991 as Vyshcha Liha2008 15 years ago 2008 as Ukrayinska Premier LihaCountryUkraineConfederationUEFANumber of teams16 2021 22 Level on pyramid1Relegation toUkrainian First LeagueDomestic cup s Ukrainian Cup Ukrainian Super CupInternational cup s UEFA Champions League UEFA Europa League UEFA Europa Conference LeagueCurrent championsDynamo Kyiv 16th title 2020 21 Most championshipsDynamo Kyiv 16 titles Most appearancesOleksandr Shovkovskyi 426 Top goalscorerSerhii Rebrov Maksim Shatskikh 123 TV partnersUkraine Setanta SportsInternational See listWebsiteUPL uaCurrent 2022 23 Ukrainian Premier LeagueIn 1996 along with the other professional football leagues of Ukraine the Top League became a member of the Professional Football League of Ukraine 1 2 In 2008 3 4 it was withdrawn from Professional Football League of Ukraine and reformed into a separate self governed entity of the Football Federation of Ukraine officially changing its name to the current one Its rank was 12th highest in Europe as rated by UEFA as of 2021 As a leading club of the Soviet Top League Dynamo Kyiv continues to be the league s flagship club while in the last 10 seasons the league is dominated by Shakhtar Donetsk 8 to 2 Three of Ukrainian clubs reached European club competitions finals including Dynamo as Soviet club Shakhtar and Dnipro Among Ukrainian fans the most popular Ukrainian clubs are Dynamo Kyiv and Shakhtar Donetsk 5 Other popular clubs include Karpaty Lviv Metalist Kharkiv Chornomorets Odesa and Dnipro 5 Contents 1 General overview and format 1 1 Emblem 1 2 Title sponsors 1 3 Season s format and regulations 1 4 Competition calendar 2 History 2 1 Creation 2 2 Vyshcha Liha and Professional Football League 1992 1999 2 3 Dynamo Shakhtar rivalry and Premier League 2000 2010 2 4 Big Four and two round league 2011 present 3 Officials 3 1 Presidents 3 2 Directors 4 Competitions 5 Clubs 5 1 Current clubs 5 1 1 Maps 6 Broadcasting 6 1 International broadcasters 7 UEFA ranking and European competitions 8 International relations 9 Results by season 9 1 Higher League Vyshcha Liha 9 2 Premier League 9 3 Performance by club 9 4 Honored teams 9 5 Prestige trophy 10 Premier League players 11 Premier League managers 12 All time participants 12 1 Vyshcha Liha era 1992 2008 12 2 Premier League era 2008 present 13 All time table 13 1 List of bankrupt clubs 13 2 List of successions 13 3 Heritage claims 14 Post season play offs 14 1 Golden matches 14 2 Third place matches 14 3 Europa League play offs 14 4 Relegation play offs 15 Rivalries and city derbies 15 1 Klasychne derby 15 2 Other championship contenders 15 3 Other rivalries 16 Stadiums and attendance 16 1 UEFA Elite Stadiums 16 2 Other major stadiums 16 3 Attendance 17 See also 18 Notes 19 References 20 External linksGeneral overview and format EditThe 2020 21 season is the league s thirteenth after the restructuring of professional club football in 2008 and the 30th season since establishing of professional club s competition independent from the Soviet Union As of 2021 Dynamo Kyiv is the reigning Ukrainian Premier League champion To summarise Tavriya Simferopol won the first championship while all the subsequent titles have gone to either Dynamo Kyiv or Shakhtar Donetsk Only 2 teams Dynamo Kyiv and Shakhtar Donetsk have participated in all previous 29 Ukrainian Top League competitions The central feature of the league is a game between the same Dynamo and Shakhtar which developed into the Klasychne Classic On 15 April 2008 the new Premier Liha Premier League was formed It consists of 12 football clubs that take control of the league s operations under the statues of Football Federation of Ukraine UEFA and FIFA With the new reorganization the format of the League was preserved while the changes that were made were exclusively administrative Competitions continued to be conducted in a double round robin format among 16 clubs There were a couple of seasons when the league experimented with a 14 club composition Since the 2014 Russian aggression the league was reduced to 12 members while its format has changed The season is still being played in a double round robin in the first half of a season after which the league splits in half into two groups of six teams Both the top six and the bottom six play another a double round robin tournament with the clubs of their grouping For 2019 20 a post season play off for qualification for the European club competitions was introduced The teams that reach the top ranks of the competition table at the end of each season gain the chance to represent Ukraine internationally in several prestigious tournaments continental club tournaments At the end of the season the bottom clubs usually two are relegated to the First League part of the lower Professional Football League and are replaced by the top clubs from that league All the participants of the Premier League enter the National Cup competition and enter it at the round of 32 1 16th of the final or Round of 16 stage The winner of the League at the beginning of every next season plays against the winner of the National Cup for the Ukrainian Super Cup under administration of the Premier Liha Beside Super Cup game and championship among senior teams of the league s clubs the league conducts competitions among junior teams including under 21s and under 19s The champion of the under 19 championship qualifies for the UEFA Youth League Emblem Edit Old emblem New emblem Season s emblem in 2016with Pari Match as sponsor Season s emblem of FavBet as sponsor Season s emblem of VBet as sponsor The old emblem depicts a football wrapped by a blue yellow stripe the national colors of Ukraine on a blue background Across the top and around the ball there are 16 stars that represent the league s participants In 2014 when the league was reduced to 14 teams the emblem wasn t changed On the bottom the script says Premier League Union of Professional Football Clubs of Ukraine As with the old emblem the new emblem contains 16 stars For the 2016 17 season the sponsor s name was added Title sponsors Edit A banner with Soyuz S V Viktan in 2007 at Valeriy Lobanovskyi Dynamo Stadium Since at least 2006 the league has placed its sponsors names in its seasons titles The first sponsor was Russian Ukrainian alcoholic beverage company Soyuz Viktan in the 2006 07 Ukrainian championship 6 7 8 While the contract was signed for five years and officially presented by the presidents of the Football Federation of Ukraine and the Professional Football League of Ukraine as a title sponsor Soyuz Viktan was expected to stay for couple of seasons But in 2007 a new title sponsor Biola from Dnipro was announced 9 6 10 Previously Soyuz Viktan was sponsoring the Russian ice hockey team and its Hockey Super League In 2006 it also became the sponsor of the newly established Channel One Cup 11 Back in 2002 Mirror Weekly published an article that leaders of Soyuz Viktan were convicted in the Autonomous Republic of Crimea to 15 years imprisonment 12 The reputation of Soyuz Viktan was questioned on several occasions 13 Soon after establishment of the Premier Liha in 2008 a contract was signed with a new sponsor Epitsentr K a network of home improvement stores 6 14 The sum of the contract was announced as 3 6 million 15 while just three months before there were speculations that new sponsor would pay no less than 5 million 16 In 2013 the contract expired A new contract was established in 2015 with a bookmaking company Pari Match which lasted for couple of seasons 14 17 18 19 2006 07 Soyuz Viktan 20 2007 08 Biola 20 2008 09 2011 12 Epitsentr 21 22 2015 16 2016 17 Pari Match 23 2019 20 2020 21 FavBet 24 2021 22 VBet 25 Season s format and regulations Edit Season regulations are one of the two most important documents other being the competition calendar that are adopted by the Premier League prior to each season The Premier League directly organizes and conducts competitions among member clubs Competitions are conducted on the principle of Fair play and according to the competition calendar which is approved by the Premier League General Assembly and the FFU Executive Committee 30 days before start of competitions Until 2019 citation needed all advertisement commercial rights and rights on TV and radio broadcasting of games of championship and cup belong to the club that hosts them the Super Cup of Ukraine and the Gold game All advertisement commercial rights and rights on TV and radio broadcasting of the game of Super Cup and the Gold game Before 2014 Premier League was also administering some rounds of the Ukrainian Cup round of 8 quarterfinals and semifinals The earlier rounds were administered by the Professional League and the final by the Federation Since 2014 the organization of Ukrainian Cup competitions in full belongs exclusively to the Federation There are currently 12 club members of the league All participants get approved by the Premier League General Assembly Each club fields each team for senior competitions and competitions for under 21 and under 19 teams three teams A club is required to have a stadium registered with FFU and an education and training facility or center A club is also obligated to finance its own youth sports institution and a complex scientific methodical group as well as to own and finance a number of youth teams A Premier League club needs to ensure participation of at least four youth teams ages groups between 14 and 17 in the Youth Football League of Ukraine A club cannot field more than one team for a certain competition All club s staff members coaches physicians massage specialists have to be contracted and be UEFA licensed All coaches should have A diploma while head coaches PRO diploma Football players are listed in A and B rosters A roster contains no more than 25 players while B roster has unlimited number of players no older than 21 who have professional contracts or agreements for sports training The 25 players A roster includes the number of slots allotted for players developed by the club During breaks in competitions in summer and winter there are two periods for registering players Beside the main championship among senior teams the Premier League also organizes youth championship which was adopted from the previous Vyshcha Liha championship of doubles reserves Since 2012 there was added another competition for junior teams so the original youth championship was renamed into the Championship of U 21 teams and the new competition was named as the Championship of U 19 teams Unlike the Championship of U 21 teams in the Championship of U 19 teams beside all of the Premier League clubs junior teams there also compete teams of some lower leagues clubs The league s championship among senior teams is conducted by manner of the round robin system in two cycles fall spring with one game at home and another at opponent s field with each participant A competition calendar is formed after a draw that is conducted based on the Premier League club rankings The calendar of the second cycle repeats the first while hosting teams are switched There should be no less than two calendar days between official games of a club All games take place between 12 00 and 22 00 local time Any game postponement is allowed only in emergencies and on decision of the Premier League Administration Dyrektsiya Game forfeitures are controlled by technical win loss nominations and fines followed by additional sanctions of the FFU Control Disciplinary Committee and possible elimination from the league Competition calendar Edit Clubs play each other twice once at home and once away in the 26 match season The league begins in mid July and ends in mid June After 13 rounds of fixtures there is a winter break that lasts for three months from early December to early March Thus the winter break is significantly longer than the interval between seasons This schedule accounts for climatic conditions and matches that of most European leagues in terms of the beginning and the end of the season The first season of the League in 1992 was an exception as it lasted only half a year This was because the last Soviet league season ended in the autumn of 1991 and the Football Federation of Ukraine decided to shift the calendar from spring fall to fall spring football seasons In the inaugural season 20 clubs were divided into two 10 team groups In both groups each club played each other twice and the championship was decided by a play off match between the group winners in which Tavriya Simferopol surprised the pre season favorite Dynamo Kyiv After the first season in each of the following seasons each team played each other team in the League twice The number of participating teams fluctuated between 14 and 18 stabilizing since 2002 03 season at 16 As of the 2005 06 season the golden match rule was introduced According to the rule if the first two teams obtain the same number of points the championship is to be decided by an additional golden match between the two teams In fact in that season Dynamo Kyiv and Shakhtar Donetsk had earned the same number of points and Shakhtar won the championship by winning the golden match 2 1 after extra time History EditSee also Football in Ukraine Soviet Top League Championship of the Ukrainian SSR and Football Federation of the Ukrainian SSR Creation Edit Before 1992 Ukrainian domestic football league competitions were conducted among Ukrainian teams that competed in one of groups within the Soviet third tier consisting of around 20 teams Beside that championship another over 20 teams competed in two upper tiers where they played along with other teams across the Soviet Union Also at the same time there were conducted competitions among KFK amateur teams at lower level With the Soviet Union tumbling down as one classic once called it the biggest geopolitical disaster of the 20th century 26 in late 1991 there arose discussion about creation of separate competition which would include all better Ukrainian clubs Following the failed 1991 August putsch the Ukrainian parliament declared a state independence and appointed a date of referendum to confirm the decision Despite the failed putsch and declaration of independence by number of Soviet union republics the Football Federation of the Soviet Union continued with planning of the 1992 football season 26 In September 1991 in Soviet magazine Futbol appeared some comments from head coaches of Ukrainian clubs playing in the Soviet First League Tavriya and Bukovyna 26 The Tavriya head coach Anatoliy Zayaev said that the club is strongly against participation in Ukrainian championship and intend to continue to play in Soviet championship 26 The Bukovyna head coach Yukhym Shkolnykov said that the club does not have any wishes to return to the Ukrainian group as planned by the republican federation and no one should let politics transverse football 26 In October 1991 some Moscow press took a big interview from FC Dnipro head coach Yevhen Kucherevsky titled How to live on His direct speech had started with a phrase Dnipro is definitely for the Soviet championship 26 Next Yevhen Mefodiyich told about possible isolation of Ukrainian football because if Ukraine would not be recognized by the World there is nothing to think about membership in FIFA or UEFA 26 After that recalling some kind of World Basket League Kucherevsky discussed the topic that people are uniting but we 26 When questioned what is the mood among coaches of other Ukrainian teams he firmly answered Almost all are for the united championship and against separate Ukrainian 26 In particular Kucherevsky mentioned his talks with head coach of Shakhtar Valeriy Yaremchenko 26 According to Kucherevsky the majority of Dnipro s fans judging by their letters and telephone calls also consider that conducting of Ukrainian championship not in time 26 Ended his interview Kucherevsky with a phrase that he wants to hope that the situation when they have to play in a separate championship will never come 26 The coach even allowed the thought that Ukraine could be recognized as an independent state but proposes an idea of the Soviet open championship referring to the case with NHL 26 In general Kucherevsky was speaking of true situation 26 Among all Ukrainian teams of the Soviet Top League only Dynamo was clearly and firmly for its own independent championship Other clubs took position from strongly against to possibly for but 26 For example Metalurh Zaporizhya that was playing its first season at such level was for the Soviet championship 26 Yet Metalist that was struggling to stay in took a tricky position If we are would relegate to the First Union League we will be for Ukrainian championship if we would stay at the top we will be for Soviet championship 26 In September 1991 there took place a session of the Football Federation of the Ukrainian SSR Executive Committee ispolkom which started with raising of blue and yellow flag that was given by a member of parliament Vyacheslav Chornovil 27 On proposition of Viktor Bannikov who at time was heading the football federation the struggle for independent championship had to take place under national colors 27 The executive committee decided that blue and yellow flags had to flown over all stadiums where were playing Ukrainian teams 27 Some members of the executive committee have spoken about the independent Ukrainian championship but did not rush with a decision 27 For that it was decided to wait until the Federation s plenum on 13 14 December 1991 27 Vyshcha Liha and Professional Football League 1992 1999 Edit Since the fall of the Soviet Union the inaugural independent championship took place hastily at the start of spring 1992 after the creation of the Ukrainian Higher League Ukrainian Visha Liga Vyshcha Liha The League was created out of the six teams that took part in the Soviet Top League two teams from the Soviet First League and nine out of the eleven Ukrainian teams from the Soviet Second League The other two of that eleven were placed in the Ukrainian First League as they were to be relegated anyway The two best teams of the Soviet Second League B of the Ukrainian Zone were also placed in the Higher League along with the winner of the 1991 Ukrainian Cup which finished ninth in the same group Soviet Second League B The 20 participants were split into two groups with the winners playing for the championship title and the runners up playing for third place Three teams from each group were to be relegated As expected the five favorites Dynamo Kyiv Dnipro Dnipropetrovsk Shakhtar Donetsk Chornomorets Odesa and Metalist Kharkiv finished at the top of each group In the championship play off game in Lviv a sensation took place as Tavriya Simferopol beat Dynamo Kyiv 1 0 The Crimeans earned the first Ukrainian title thus far their only one losing only once to Temp Shepetivka After being stunned in the first championship by the tragedy in Lviv Dynamo Kyiv were anxious to earn their first title at the second opportunity In the second Ukrainian championship which had a regular League format of 16 teams the main rivals of the Kyivians were Dnipro Dnipropetrovsk who were top after the first half of the season By the end of the season both teams were neck and neck and at the end they finished with the same number of points The championship title was awarded to Dynamo Kyiv as they had a better goal difference Neither the Golden match nor the fact that Dnipro Dnipropetrovsk had a better head to head record was considered The next seven years were known as the total domination of Dynamo Kyiv During this period the main Soviet protagonists had changed as some of the best teams were facing a crisis After the 1993 94 season Metalist Kharkiv were surprisingly relegated to the First League In the 1995 96 season Shakhtar Donetsk had the worst year in the club s history coming tenth Chornomorets Odesa were relegated twice during that first decade after which manager Leonid Buryak was sacked A few newly created teams have since emerged such as Arsenal Kyiv and Metalurh Donetsk as well as Vorskla Poltava who surprisingly came third in the club s first season at the Top Level in the 1997 Dynamo Shakhtar rivalry and Premier League 2000 2010 Edit See also Ukrainian derby The next decade was marked by fierce competition between Dynamo Kyiv and Shakhtar Donetsk Since 2000 Shakhtar Donetsk has proved to be the real challengers to Kyiv s dominance In 2000 Shakhtar earned their first qualification to the Champions League earning a place in the Group stage Nonetheless Dynamo Kyiv is still considered to be the benchmark of excellence in the country and the primary feeder to the Ukraine national football team 2002 became the real cornerstone in the miners history when they earned their first national title under the management of the newly appointed Italian specialist Nevio Scala who managed to secure the Ukrainian Cup title as well Since that time the issue of foreign players has become particularly acute and brought a series of court cases The FFU and PFL worked together to solve that issue coming up with a plan to force the transitional limitation of foreign players over time The clubs such as Dnipro Dnipropetrovsk and Chornomorets Odesa who were recent contenders for the title had to put up a fierce fight against the newly established contenders Metalurh Donetsk and Metalist Kharkiv to qualify for the European competitions Metalist Kharkiv shone brightly in the late 2000s decade by consistently finishing right behind Dynamo Kyiv and Shakhtar Donetsk in third place Their most remarkable feat was their participation in the 2009 European season when they had to face Dynamo Kyiv to earn a place in the quarter finals of the 2008 09 UEFA Cup but lost on the away goals rule That same 2008 09 UEFA Cup competition was won for the first time by Shakhtar Donetsk the first club of independent Ukraine to win the title It was also the last UEFA cup title before it changed its name to the Europa league In the 2008 09 season the league earned the highest UEFA league coefficient in Europe for that season Aerial duel between players of Shakhtar and Metalist in September 2009 including Fernandinho and Marko Devic On 15 November 2007 clubs presidents of the Vyshcha Liha adopted a decision to create the Premier League Premier Liha 28 At the same meeting session there was created a supervisory board that consisted of Ravil Safiullin Professional Football League Vitaliy Danilov FC Kharkiv Petro Dyminskyi FC Karpaty and Vadym Rabinovych FC Arsenal 28 During the next three months that body curated a process on creation of the Premier League s regulation and statute as well as a procedure of launching the championship starting from the 2008 09 season 28 On 15 April 2008 at one of the meetings among the presidents of clubs there was signed a protocol about establishing the Association of Professional Football Clubs of Ukraine Premier Liha 28 as an autonomous entity parting away from the PFL The Premier League has been split since the moment it was created in regards to its president The dispute went as far as even canceling the 13th round of 2009 10 season and moving it to the spring half while having the 14th round still playing in the fall The representatives of five clubs Arsenal Kyiv Dynamo Kyiv Dnipro Dnipropetrovsk Kryvbas Kryvyi Rih and Metalist Kharkiv have been boycotting most of the League meetings not complying with its financial obligations and giving the broadcasting rights to TV channels other than the League official supplier They justified their actions due to what they deem to be the illegal election of the Premier League president The representatives of the above mentioned clubs did not recognize the election in 2008 of Vitaliy Danilov as the president and believed that the elections should have been won by Vadim Rabinovich To resolve this conflict Vitaliy Danilov instigated the re election of the Premier League president in September 2009 and on 1 December 2009 won the election again with 11 clubs voting for his candidature 3 were against 1 abstained and 1 was absent This time most club presidents of the Premier League of Ukraine acknowledged Vitaliy Danilov legality In the subsequent elections on 9 December 2011 Vitaliy Danilov was challenged by Andriy Kurhanskyi through the proposal of Karpaty Lviv The other available candidates Miletiy Balchos president of the Professional Football League of Ukraine and Yuriy Kindzerskyi were not picked by any members of the Premier League Vitaliy Danilov managed to retain his seat with nine votes for him Big Four and two round league 2011 present Edit Results of the Big Four during the late 2000s early 2010s Season DNI DYN MET SHA2005 06 6 2 5 12006 07 4 1 3 22007 08 4 2 3 12008 09 6 1 3 22009 10 4 2 3 12010 11 4 2 3 12011 12 4 2 3 12012 13 4 3 2 12013 14 2 4 3 12014 15 3 1 6 2Top four 8 10 8 10Finishes out of 10 League champions Champions League UEFA Cup Europa League group stage UEFA Cup Europa League qualification UEFA Intertoto CupStarting from 2010 and to 2014 season FC Shakhtar led by Romanian coach Mircea Lucescu obtained five national league titles in a row making Lucescu the most successful manager in the history of the league with 9 titles At the same time in the beginning of 2010s the so called Big Four of clubs eventually formed consisting from Shakhtar Dynamo Metalist and Dnipro 29 These four clubs consecutively took all the top 4 places for five seasons from 2009 10 to 2013 14 and displayed the biggest financial abilities in the league 30 In 2012 13 Metalist Kharkiv finished second and qualified for the UEFA Champions League for the first time the achievement which was repeated by Dnipro in the next season In the same 2013 14 season Dynamo Kyiv for the first time since Ukrainian independence placed as low as fourth in league s season ranking which led to dismissal of former national team coach and the legend of Soviet football Oleh Blokhin as the club s manager In European football new club achievements were set in these years for Shakhtar in 2010 11 UEFA Champions League quarter finals and for Metalist in 2011 12 UEFA Europa League quarter finals The 2017 Liha Pari Match champions FC Shakhtar Donetsk with a pennant Hrayemo Chesno We Play Fair Because of the Russian aggression against Ukraine and subsequent cleaning of the league from the clubs that became financially unreliable Metalist Hoverla Metalurh Donetsk Dnipro the number of teams participating in the league was cut from 16 in the 2013 14 season to 14 in the following two seasons 31 Both of the seasons were won by Dynamo Kyiv with Serhii Rebrov as manager With the continuation of the military conflict in the eastern oblasts of Ukraine since 2014 and its economic impact the league was forced to change its format again and started to be contested by 12 teams after being cut from 14 after the 2015 16 season introducing the two stages of the competition after the standard two rounds of games the league would split into two 6 team groups according to their positions Under the new format Shakhtar Donetsk under the manager Paulo Fonseca managed to win three league titles in a row from 2016 17 to 2018 19 runner up in all the three seasons being Dynamo Kyiv In 2019 20 season Shakhtar set the record of the earliest title win in the history win 5 rounds remaining 32 In 2019 the decision was adopted to expand the league to 14 teams from the 2020 21 and to 16 teams from the 2021 22 season 33 In April 2022 it was announced that the current UPL season has been terminated due to the extension of martial law in Ukraine 34 The football clubs of the UPL also expressed their support for the termination since it is not possible to end the championship due to the country s current state Thus it was concluded that the standings as of February 24 2022 will be the final standings of the 2021 22 season and there will be no winners to be awarded 34 Officials EditPresidents Edit Vitaliy Danilov 27 May 2008 29 February 2016 until 1 July 2009 temporary acting as president of FC Kharkiv reelected on 1 July 2009 and 9 December 2011 35 Volodymyr Heninson 29 February 2016 6 April 2018 36 Thomas Grimm 6 April 2018 5 April 2020 37 executive director acting Yevhen Dykyi 38 TBA elections postponed previously to dates 27 April 2020 25 May 2020 Directors Edit General director Oleksandr Yefremov 39 Executive director Yevhen Dykyi Sport director Petro Ivanov Development director Vadym HalahanCompetitions EditNational championship Favbet Liha Championship among under 21 Championship among under 19 Super CupClubs EditA total of 43 clubs have played in the Premier League up to 2019 20 season 20 of which were the founding members of the inaugural 1992 season and 23 other were promoted in the later seasons Current clubs Edit The following teams are competing in the 2021 22 season Note in parenthesis shown the actual home cities and stadiums Team Home city Stadium Capacity Position in2020 21 First seasonin PL Seasonsin PLChornomorets Odesa Odesa Stadion Chornomorets 34 164 FL 2nd 1992 25Desna Chernihiv Chernihiv Stadion imeni Gagarina 12 060 6th 2018 19 4Dnipro 1 Dnipro Dnipro Arena 31 003 7th 2019 20 3Dynamo Kyiva Kyiv Olimpiyskiy National Sports Complex 70 050 1st 1992 31Inhulets Petrove Petrove Kropyvnytskyi Stadion Zirka temporarily 14 628 12th 2020 21 2Kolos Kovalivka Kovalivka Stadion Kolos 5 000 4th 2019 20 3Lviv Lviv Arena Lviv 34 915 8th 2008 09 5Mariupol Mariupol Stadion imeni Boika 12 680 11th 1997 98 22Metalist 1925 Kharkiv Kharkiv Oblast Sports Complex Metalist 40 003 FL 3rd debut 1Mynai Mynai Uzhhorod Stadion Avanhard 12 000 14th 2020 21 2Oleksandriya Oleksandria Nika Concert and Sports Complex 7 000 9th 2001 02 10Rukh Lviv Lviv Arena Lviv 34 915 10th 2020 21 2Shakhtar Donetska Donetsk Kyiv Olimpiyskiy National Sports Complex 70 050 2nd 1992 31Veres Rivne Rivne Lutsk Stadion Avanhard temporarily 12 080 FL 1st 1992 93 5Vorskla Poltava Poltava Stadion Vorskla imeni Butovskoho 24 795 5th 1996 97 26Zorya Luhansk Luhansk Zaporizhzhia Slavutych Arena 12 000 3rd 1992 21a Team played in every Ukrainian top flight season Maps Edit Lviv teams RukhLviv Kropyvnytskyi Zaporizhia Lutsk Lviv Shakhtar Zorya Chornomorets Dynamo Desna Dnipro 1 Inhulets Kolos Mariupol Metalist 1925 Mynai Oleksandriya Veres Vorsklaclass notpageimage Home venues of teams in the 2021 22 Ukrainian Premier League Teams in italics are from a conflict zone of the war in Donbas and are playing their home games in different cities Dynamo Shakhtarclass notpageimage Kyiv city home venues of teams in the League In italics identified clubs that are not from Kyiv Rukh Lvivclass notpageimage Lviv city home venues of teams in the LeagueBroadcasting EditThe UPL broadcaster in the 2022 23 2023 24 and 2024 25 seasons is Setanta Sports All matches are broadcast on the OTT platform Also at least 4 matches of the tour are broadcast on the company s linear TV channels and 1 2 matches of the tour are broadcast free of charge on the Setanta YouTube channel International broadcasters Edit The main international broadcaster of the league in west Europe and some countries of Africa is the French Ma Chaine Sport providing coverage for such countries like France and satellite communities in Andorra Switzerland Belgium Luxembourg Monaco Algeria Morocco Tunisia Another broadcaster Sport Klub provides coverage in all countries of former Yugoslavia including Bosnia Herzegovina Croatia Macedonia Serbia and Slovenia National broadcasters of some other counties include 12 TV Armenia CBC Sport Azerbaijan Polsat Futbol Poland Futbol Russia and Dolce Sport Romania UEFA ranking and European competitions EditSee also Ukrainian football clubs in European competitions Shakhtar Donetsk against Arsenal in the 2010 11 UEFA Champions League Ukrainian clubs being part of the Soviet Union competed in European competitions since 1960s when the Soviet clubs started to participate in continental competitions In fact the very first Soviet club that took part in European competitions was Ukrainian club FC Dynamo Kyiv that took in the 1965 66 European Cup Winners Cup Before the fall of the Soviet Union the following Ukrainian clubs participated in European competitions FC Dynamo Kyiv 1965 FC Karpaty Lviv 1970 FC Zorya Luhansk 1973 FC Chornomorets Odessa 1975 FC Shakhtar Donetsk 1977 FC Dnipro 1984 and FC Metalist Kharkiv 1988 At least five clubs participated in top continental competitions the European Cup and the UEFA Champions League among which are FC Dynamo Kyiv FC Dnipro FC Metalist Kharkiv FC Shakhtar Donetsk and SC Tavriya Simferopol Two teams Dynamo and Shakhtar were able to obtain trophies of European competitions including two European Cup Winners Cups one European Super Cup and one UEFA Cup One more team Dnipro came just short to join their company losing in the 2015 UEFA Europa League Final International relations EditIn 2009 The Ukrainian Premier League joined the European Professional Football Leagues 40 Also in 2009 the league signed a partnership with IMG of which during the first month of cooperation sold broadcasting rights for the Ukrainian Cup to Poland and Armenia On its own initiative the Ukrainian Premier League sold broadcasting rights to Romania and Russia as well Results by season EditMain article List of Ukrainian football champions Higher League Vyshcha Liha Edit Professional Football League of Ukraine was the governing body of the Top League Vyshcha Liha from 1996 to 2008 Season Champion Runner up Third place Top goalscorer Rank1992 Tavriya Simferopol Dynamo Kyiv Dnipro Dnipropetrovsk Yuriy Hudymenko Tavriya Simferopol 12 goals N A a 1992 93 Dynamo Kyiv Dnipro Dnipropetrovsk Chornomorets Odesa Serhiy Husyev Chornomorets Odesa 17 goals 28 391993 94 Dynamo Kyiv Shakhtar Donetsk Chornomorets Odesa Tymerlan Huseinov Chornomorets Odesa 18 goals 24 441994 95 Dynamo Kyiv Chornomorets Odesa Dnipro Dnipropetrovsk Arsen Avakov Torpedo Zaporizhzhia 21 goals 24 471995 96 Dynamo Kyiv Chornomorets Odesa Dnipro Dnipropetrovsk Tymerlan Huseinov Chornomorets Odesa 20 goals 19 481996 97 Dynamo Kyiv Shakhtar Donetsk Vorskla Poltava Oleh Matveyev Shakhtar Donetsk 21 goals 22 481997 98 Dynamo Kyiv Shakhtar Donetsk Karpaty Lviv Serhii Rebrov Dynamo Kyiv 22 goals 17 491998 99 Dynamo Kyiv Shakhtar Donetsk Kryvbas Kryvyi Rih Andriy Shevchenko Dynamo Kyiv 18 goals 15 501999 00 Dynamo Kyiv Shakhtar Donetsk Kryvbas Kryvyi Rih Maksim Shatskikh Dynamo Kyiv 20 goals 12 502000 01 Dynamo Kyiv Shakhtar Donetsk Dnipro Dnipropetrovsk Andriy Vorobey Shakhtar Donetsk 21 goals 13 512001 02 Shakhtar Donetsk Dynamo Kyiv Metalurh Donetsk Serhiy Shyshchenko Metalurh Donetsk 12 goals 13 512002 03 Dynamo Kyiv Shakhtar Donetsk Metalurh Donetsk Maksim Shatskikh Dynamo Kyiv 22 goals 14 522003 04 Dynamo Kyiv Shakhtar Donetsk Dnipro Dnipropetrovsk Giorgi Demetradze Metalurh Donetsk 18 goals 14 522004 05 Shakhtar Donetsk Dynamo Kyiv Metalurh Donetsk Oleksandr Kosyrin Chornomorets Odesa 14 goals 15 522005 06 Shakhtar Donetsk Dynamo Kyiv Chornomorets Odesa Brandao Shakhtar Donetsk 15 goals Emmanuel Okoduwa Arsenal Kyiv 15 goals 13 522006 07 Dynamo Kyiv Shakhtar Donetsk Metalist Kharkiv Oleksandr Hladkyi FC Kharkiv 13 goals 11 522007 08 Shakhtar Donetsk Dynamo Kyiv Bronze stripped Marko Devic Metalist Kharkiv 19 goals 12 53Premier League Edit Season Champion Runner up Third place Top goalscorer Rank2008 09 Dynamo Kyiv Shakhtar Donetsk Metalist Kharkiv Oleksandr Kovpak Tavriya Simferopol 17 goals 7 532009 10 Shakhtar Donetsk Dynamo Kyiv Metalist Kharkiv Artem Milevskyi Dynamo Kyiv 17 goals 7 532010 11 Shakhtar Donetsk Dynamo Kyiv Metalist Kharkiv Yevhen Seleznyov Dnipro Dnipropetrovsk 17 goals 8 532011 12 Shakhtar Donetsk Dynamo Kyiv Metalist Kharkiv Yevhen Seleznyov Shakhtar Donetsk 14 goals Maicon Volyn Lutsk 14 goals 9 532012 13 Shakhtar Donetsk Metalist Kharkiv Dynamo Kyiv Henrikh Mkhitaryan Shakhtar Donetsk 25 goals 7 532013 14 Shakhtar Donetsk Dnipro Dnipropetrovsk Metalist Kharkiv Luiz Adriano Shakhtar Donetsk 20 goals 9 532014 15 Dynamo Kyiv Shakhtar Donetsk Dnipro Dnipropetrovsk Alex Teixeira Shakhtar Donetsk 17 goals Eric Bicfalvi Volyn Lutsk 17 goals 8 542015 16 Dynamo Kyiv Shakhtar Donetsk Dnipro Dnipropetrovsk Alex Teixeira Shakhtar Donetsk 22 goals 8 542016 17 Shakhtar Donetsk Dynamo Kyiv Zorya Luhansk Andriy Yarmolenko Dynamo Kyiv 15 goals 8 552017 18 Shakhtar Donetsk Dynamo Kyiv Vorskla Poltava Facundo Ferreyra Shakhtar Donetsk 21 goal 8 552018 19 Shakhtar Donetsk Dynamo Kyiv Oleksandriya Junior Moraes Shakhtar Donetsk 19 goals 9 552019 20 Shakhtar Donetsk Dynamo Kyiv Zorya Luhansk Junior Moraes Shakhtar Donetsk 20 goals 10 552020 21 Dynamo Kyiv Shakhtar Donetsk Zorya Luhansk Vladyslav Kulach Vorskla Poltava 15 goals 12 552021 22 Shakhtar Donetsk Dynamo Kyiv Zorya Luhansk Artem Dovbyk SC Dnipro 1 14 goals 13 552022 23Notes Rank column shows the ranking of the league amongst members of UEFA In bold are the league winners that also won the Ukrainian Cup season double indicates a team that also won the Ukrainian Cup in the same season Metalist Kharkiv had been stripped of their bronze award for 2007 08 season after the Court of Arbitration for Sport in Lausanne ruled against the game Karpaty Metalist 19 April 2008 41 42 A citizen of Serbia Marko Devich was granted the Ukrainian citizenship after the 2007 08 season A citizen of Brazil Junior Moraes was granted the Ukrainian citizenship in March 2019 Performance by club Edit Club Winners Runners up Third place Winning yearsDynamo Kyiv 16 13 1 1992 93 1993 94 1994 95 1995 96 1996 97 1997 98 1998 99 1999 2000 2000 01 2002 03 2003 04 2006 07 2008 09 2014 15 2015 16 2020 21Shakhtar Donetsk 13 13 2001 02 2004 05 2005 06 2007 08 2009 10 2010 11 2011 12 2012 13 2013 14 2016 17 2017 18 2018 19 2019 20Tavriya Simferopol 1 1992Dnipro 2 7Chornomorets Odesa 2 3Metalist Kharkiv 1 6Metalurh Donetsk 3Zorya Luhansk 3Kryvbas Kryvyi Rih 2Vorskla Poltava 2Karpaty Lviv 1Oleksandriya 1Total 30 30 29Note Defunct teams marked in Italics Honored teams Edit A representative star is placed above the team s badge to indicate 10 league titles 43 Dynamo Kyiv became the first Ukrainian team to achieve the prestigious honor of winning the Soviet Top League for the 10th time in 1981 Dynamo Kyiv after having entered the Ukrainian championship has become the same dominant leader as during the Soviet times by earning its 20th national title at the top level in 1999 The two stars were added to the club s logo in 2007 44 Earning its 10th national title in 2017 Shakhtar Donetsk has not yet adopted a star on its crest Currently as of 2020 the following clubs earned the star element to be added to their crest Dynamo Kyiv 13 in Soviet Union 16 in Ukraine Shakhtar Donetsk 13 in Ukraine Dnipro 2 in Soviet Union Zorya Luhansk 1 in Soviet Union Tavriya Simferopol 1 in Ukraine Prestige trophy Edit From 2016 17 to 2019 20 seasons the league conducted season competition in two rounds where after the first double round robin tournament the league is split in half into two groups of six teams Then top six play second double round robin for the title while the bottom six play to determine teams to be relegated and Europa League playoff participants in the 2019 20 season The team that won the relegation group receives a consolation type honorary award the Prestige trophy 45 Season Prestige trophy2016 17 Vorskla Poltava2017 18 FC Oleksandriya2018 19 Vorskla Poltava2019 20 SC Dnipro 1Premier League players EditFurther information Football records in Ukraine Ex Dynamo Kyiv strikers Maksim Shatskikh and Serhii Rebrov hold the record for most Ukrainian Premier League goals with 123 with Shatskikh winning the top single season scorer title twice in 1999 2000 and 2002 03 Rebrov once in 1997 98 Since the first Ukrainian Premier League season in 1992 22 different players have won or shared the top scorer s title Only five players have won the title more than once Tymerlan Huseynov Maksim Shatskikh Yevhen Seleznyov Alex Teixeira and Junior Moraes Henrikh Mkhitaryan holds the record for most goals in a season 25 Serhii Rebrov and Maksim Shatskikh are the only two players to score at least 20 goals twice The most prolific all time scorers are Ivan Hetsko and Viktor Leonenko respectively attaining 0 59 and 0 57 goals per game All time Premier League appearance leaders Player Games Years Oleksandr Shovkovskyi 426 1994 2017 Oleh Shelayev 412 1994 2014 Vyacheslav Checher 410 46 1994 2017 Oleksandr Chizhevskiy 400 1992 2006 2008 2010 Oleksandr Horyainov 391 1994 2015 Ruslan Rotan 375 46 2000 2018 Serhiy Nazarenko 373 2000 2002 2017 Serhiy Shyshchenko 363 1993 2010 Ruslan Kostyshyn 359 1997 2012 Serhiy Zakarlyuka 356 1994 1997 2012Players in bold are still playing in Premier LeagueData as of 19 December 2021 46 47 All time Premier League scorers Player Goals Games Years Serhii Rebrov 123 261 1992 2000 2006 2008 Maksim Shatskikh 123 b 341 2000 2015 Yevhen Seleznyov 117 255 2007 2017 2020 Andriy Vorobey 105 315 1998 2013 Junior Moraes 103 189 2013 2021 Andriy Yarmolenko 99 228 2008 2018 Oleksandr Hladkyy 98 337 2005 2018 2020 Oleksandr Haydash 95 c 259 d 1993 2004 Marko Devic 90 219 2005 2014 Serhiy Mizin 90 342 1993 2008Players in bold are still playing in Premier LeagueData as of 19 December 2021 46 49 Premier League managers Edit Former Shakhtar Donetsk and current Dynamo Kyiv manager Mircea Lucescu is the most successful manager in Ukrainian Premier League history with 9 championships and the only who won it with multiple clubs Myron Markevych has managed the most games in Ukrainian Premier League participating in every season from the inaugurational 1992 to 2015 16 with the exception of 2004 05 The league s record holder for winnings is Mircea Lucescu Winning managers Manager Club s Wins Winning years Mircea Lucescu Shakhtar DonetskDynamo Kyiv 9 2004 05 2005 06 2007 08 2009 10 2010 11 2011 12 2012 13 2013 14 2020 21 Valery Lobanovsky Dynamo Kyiv 5 1996 97 1997 98 1998 99 1999 2000 2000 01 Paulo Fonseca Shakhtar Donetsk 3 2016 17 2017 18 2018 19 Yozhef Sabo Dynamo Kyiv 2 1993 94 1995 96 Oleksiy Mykhailychenko 2002 03 2003 04 Serhii Rebrov 2014 15 2015 16 Anatoliy Zayaev Tavriya Simferopol 1 1992 Mykhailo Fomenko Dynamo Kyiv 1992 93 Mykola Pavlov 1994 95 Nevio Scala Shakhtar Donetsk 2001 02 Anatoliy Demyanenko Dynamo Kyiv 2005 06 Yuri Semin 2008 09 Luis Castro Shakhtar Donetsk 2019 20Note following dissolution of the Soviet Union the league was joined by three managers from Ukraine that previously won Soviet titles among which are Valeriy Lobanovskyi 1974 1975 1977 1980 1981 1985 1986 Yevhen Kucherevskyi 1988 and Anatoliy Puzach 1990 The league s record holder for games in the league is Myron Markevych All time top 20 managers with league games Rank Coach Games1 Myron Markevych 6202 Mykola Pavlov 5463 Mircea Lucescu 3994 Vitaliy Kvartsyanyi 3405 Valeriy Yaremchenko 2976 Mykhailo Fomenko 2947 Oleh Taran 2738 Semen Altman 2499 Vyacheslav Hrozny 22210 Volodymyr Sharan 22011 Yuriy Vernydub 21912 Oleksandr Ishchenko 20413 Volodymyr Bezsonov 19714 Anatoliy Zayaev 19115 Ihor Nadein 18416 Leonid Buryak 18017 Yuriy Maksymov 17318 Oleksandr Ryabokon 16819 Oleksandr Babych 16020 Valeriy Lobanovsky 152Coaches in bold are still active in the LeagueData as of 2022 50 Among other coaches who stayed in the league the longest there are Anatoliy Chantsev 150 Roman Sanzhar 145 Ihor Yavorskyi 144 Viktor Prokopenko 140 Nikolay Kostov 139 Vasyl Sachko 137 Oleksandr Zavarov 134 Roman Pokora 129 Oleksandr Sevidov 129 and Ivan Balan 123 Current managers Nat Name Club Appointed Time as manager Oleksandr Ryabokon Desna Chernihiv 16 March 2012 10 years 361 days Serhiy Lavrynenko Inhulets Petrove 31 August 2016 6 years 193 days Viktor Skrypnyk Zorya Luhansk 3 June 2019 3 years 282 days Yuriy Virt Veres Rivne 14 June 2019 3 years 271 days Yuriy Maksymov Vorskla Poltava 15 November 2019 3 years 117 days Mircea Lucescu Dynamo Kyiv 23 July 2020 2 years 232 days Ostap Markevych Mariupol 3 August 2020 2 years 221 days Valeriy Kriventsov Metalist 1925 Kharkiv 21 August 2020 2 years 203 days Igor Jovicevic Dnipro 1 22 September 2020 2 years 171 days Yuriy Hura Oleksandriya 18 May 2021 1 year 298 days Roberto De Zerbi Shakhtar Donetsk 25 May 2021 1 year 291 days Vasyl Kobin FC Mynai 15 June 2021 1 year 270 days Yuriy Moroz Chornomorets Odesa 23 June 2021 1 year 262 days Leanid Kuchuk Rukh Lviv 4 August 2021 1 year 220 days Syarhey Kuznyatsow Kolos Kovalivka 29 August 2021 1 year 195 days Aleh Dulub FC Lviv 6 September 2021 1 year 187 daysAll time participants EditThe table lists the place each team took in each of the seasons Vyshcha Liha era 1992 2008 Edit Season 1992 92 93 93 94 94 95 95 96 96 97 97 98 98 99 99 00 00 01 01 02 02 03 03 04 04 05 05 06 06 07 07 08Teams 20 16 18 18 18 16 16 16 16 14 14 16 16 16 16 16 16Arsenal Kyiv e 4 11 10 7 10 6 12 5 9 9 12 14 6Borysfen Boryspil 7 16 Bukovyna Chernivtsi 10 12 17 Chornomorets Odesa 5 3 3 2 2 7 15 15 8 5 6 3 6 7Dnipro 3 2 4 3 3 4 4 12 11 3 6 4 3 4 6 4 4Dynamo Kyiv 2 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 2 1 1 2 2 1 2Hoverla Uzhhorod 14 12 16 16Karpaty Lviv 13 6 5 8 8 5 3 4 9 10 8 7 15 8 10Kharkiv 13 12 14Kremin Kremenchuk 14 9 15 10 9 15 Kryvbas Kryvyi Rih 8 6 6 14 12 8 3 3 11 9 12 10 13 14 10 13Mariupol 14 5 8 4 10 10 8 5 4 15 Metalist Kharkiv 6 5 18 6 5 9 5 16 11 5 3 3 Metalurh Donetsk 6 14 7 5 3 3 4 3 9 9 12Metalurh Zaporizhya 11 7 16 9 5 8 9 8 6 8 4 15 11 10 8 7 9Mykolaiv 18 13 16 16 Naftovyk Ukrnafta Okhtyrka 16 15Nyva Ternopil 7 14 7 12 13 9 7 13 12 14 Nyva Vinnytsia 15 10 14 15 16 Obolon Kyiv 14 6 15 Odesa 20 Oleksandriya 13 13 Prykarpattya Ivano Frankivsk 17 11 11 13 13 15 14 Shakhtar Donetsk 4 4 2 4 10 2 2 2 2 2 1 2 2 1 1 2 1Stal Alchevsk 13 11 16 Tavriya Simferopol 1 10 8 5 12 6 12 9 13 7 7 9 12 7 7 5 5Temp Shepetivka 19 9 17 Torpedo Zaporizhzhia 8 13 13 7 7 14 16 Veres Rivne 16 11 18 Volyn Lutsk 9 11 12 15 17 6 13 8 15 Vorskla Poltava 3 5 10 4 12 11 11 14 14 10 13 8Zirka Kropyvnytskyi 6 10 11 11 16 16 Zorya Luhansk 12 15 14 16 18 11 11Premier League era 2008 present Edit Season 08 09 09 10 10 11 11 12 12 13 13 14 14 15 15 16 16 17 17 18 18 19 19 20 20 21 21 22Teams 16 16 16 16 16 16 14 14 12 12 12 12 14 16Arsenal Kyiv 11 7 9 5 8 16 12 Chornomorets Odesa 10 15 9 6 5 11 11 6 11 11 Desna Chernihiv 8 4 6 Dnipro 6 4 4 4 4 2 3 3 11 Dnipro 1 7 7 Dynamo Kyiv 1 2 2 2 3 4 1 1 2 2 2 2 1 Hoverla Uzhhorod 16 15 12 12 13 Inhulets Petrove 12 Karpaty Lviv 9 5 5 14 14 11 13 7 10 8 10 12 Kharkiv 16 Kolos Kovalivka 6 4 Kryvbas Kryvyi Rih 12 14 13 10 7 Lviv 15 6 11 8 Mariupol 14 12 14 11 9 10 14 5 4 8 11 Metalist Kharkiv 3 3 3 3 2 3 6 10 Metalist 1925 Kharkiv Metalurh Donetsk 4 8 8 7 5 6 10 Metalurh Zaporizhya 7 9 16 16 14 7 14 Mynai 14 Obolon Kyiv 11 10 15 Oleksandriya 16 6 5 7 3 5 9 Olimpik Donetsk 8 9 5 4 9 9 9 13 Rukh Lviv 10 Sevastopol 15 9 Shakhtar Donetsk 2 1 1 1 1 1 2 2 1 1 1 1 2 Stal Kamianske 8 8 12 Tavriya Simferopol 8 6 7 6 11 15 Veres Rivne 6 Volyn Lutsk 11 12 13 13 9 12 12 Vorskla Poltava 5 10 6 8 12 8 5 5 7 3 7 10 5 Zirka Kropyvnytskyi 9 10 Zorya Luhansk 13 13 12 13 10 7 4 4 3 4 5 3 3 Teams marking as of 2020 21 Competing in UPL 1st tier Competing in PFL 2nd tier Competing in PFL 3rd tier Competing in AAFU 4th tier Competing in regional championships below 4th tier Defunct clubsAll time table EditAll figures are correct through the 2021 22 season 51 52 53 Promotion relegation playoff games are not included Teams in bold currently compete in Premier League Numbers in bold indicate the record values for each column clubs that lost professional status or were dissolved Rank Team Seasons P W D L GF GA GD Pts Achievement Other names used1 Dynamo Kyiv 31 906 662 153 91 1950 596 1354 2139 champions 16 2 Shakhtar Donetsk 31 906 644 165 119 1930 664 1226 2057 champions 13 3 FC Dnipro 26 765 379 199 187 1127 718 409 1336 runners up 2 4 Karpaty Lviv 27 800 255 227 318 872 1003 131 992 3rd 1 5 Chornomorets Odesa 25 733 269 183 281 815 875 60 990 runners up 2 6 Vorskla Poltava 26 754 260 204 290 821 889 68 984 3rd 2 Vorskla Naftohaz7 Metalist Kharkiv f 20 573 254 144 175 755 664 91 906 runners up 1 8 Tavriya Simferopol g 23 681 237 170 274 795 873 78 881 champions 1 9 Metalurh Zaporizhya h 24 702 206 173 323 699 949 250 791 4th 1 10 Kryvbas Kryvyi Rih i 21 634 201 173 260 633 786 153 776 3rd 2 11 Metalurh Donetsk j 18 526 203 142 181 655 623 32 751 3rd 3 12 FC Mariupol 22 638 197 153 288 715 932 217 744 4th 3 Illichivets Metalurh13 Zorya Luhansk 20 580 204 125 251 666 816 150 737 3rd 3 Zorya MALS14 Arsenal Kyiv k 19 568 191 156 221 654 675 21 729 4th 1 l CSKA CSKA Borysfen15 Volyn Lutsk 16 472 140 102 230 473 710 237 519 6th 1 16 FC Oleksandriya m 10 285 89 82 114 312 375 63 349 3rd 1 Polihraftekhnika PFC Oleksandriya17 Nyva Ternopil 10 296 93 62 141 319 388 69 341 7th 3 18 Zirka Kropyvnytskyi n 8 248 62 58 128 209 368 159 244 6th 1 Zirka NIBAS19 Torpedo Zaporizhzhia o 7 210 64 42 104 214 315 101 234 7th 2 20 Olimpik Donetsk 7 206 56 55 95 210 324 114 223 4th 1 21 Prykarpattya Ivano Frankivsk p 7 206 55 52 99 215 315 100 217 10th 1 22 Kremin Kremenchuk q 6 180 54 40 86 182 269 87 202 9th 2 23 Hoverla Uzhhorod r 9 256 41 64 151 186 421 235 187 12th 3 Zakarpattia24 Obolon Kyiv s 6 180 44 44 92 153 253 100 176 6th 1 25 Veres Rivne t 5 148 40 44 64 132 191 59 164 6th 1 26 Desna Chernihiv 4 108 46 22 40 154 133 21 160 4th 1 27 Nyva Vinnytsia u 5 150 42 32 76 140 213 73 158 10th 1 28 FC Lviv 5 138 31 37 70 113 217 104 130 6th 1 29 SC Dnipro 1 v 3 77 36 11 30 114 101 13 119 7th 2 30 FC Kharkiv w 4 120 25 33 62 94 156 62 108 12th 1 31 Kolos Kovalivka 3 78 29 16 33 88 109 21 103 4th 1 32 SC Mykolaiv 4 116 26 23 67 100 208 108 101 13th 1 Evis33 Stal Kamianske x 3 90 24 24 42 72 106 34 96 8th 2 34 Temp Shepetivka y 3 86 24 16 46 79 113 34 88 9th 1 35 Bukovyna Chernivtsi 3 82 23 18 41 69 99 30 87 11th 1 36 Stal Alchevsk z 3 86 17 21 48 67 126 59 72 11th 1 37 FC Sevastopol aa 2 58 17 11 30 58 91 33 62 9th 1 PFC Sevastopol38 Borysfen Boryspil 2 60 14 19 27 40 60 20 61 7th 1 40 Rukh Lviv 2 43 10 16 17 43 60 17 46 10th39 Naftovyk Ukrnafta Okhtyrka ab 2 48 11 11 26 30 66 36 44 15th 1 Naftovyk41 Inhulets Petrove 2 43 8 15 20 37 47 10 39 12th42 FC Mynai 2 44 5 13 26 28 77 49 28 14th43 Metalist 1925 Kharkiv 1 18 6 1 11 17 29 12 1944 SC Odesa ac 1 18 3 1 14 15 32 17 10 20th SKA OdesaList of bankrupt clubs Edit FC Dnipro formerly Dnipro Dnipropetrovsk soon after playing at the 2015 UEFA Europa League Final the club was forced into relegation due to ignoring the FIFA sanctions and eventually its first team was dissolved FC Metalist Kharkiv denied license due to heavy debts 54 FC Hoverla Uzhhorod denied license due to heavy debts 55 FC Kryvbas Kryvyi Rih denied license for failure to provide evidence of stable financial support 56 FC Kharkiv denied license for giving false documentation about financial condition in the club 57 FC Arsenal Kyiv club was not able to finish the 2013 14 season 58 FC Arsenal Kyiv Kyiv is considered a direct successor of Arsenal Kyiv 2001 2013 soon after relegation in 2019 it announced about liquidation of its first team 59 FC Karpaty Lviv was not able to finish the 2019 20 and announced that it is a bankrupt but allowed to keep professional status and restart at the third tier In 2020 it was split and original club following 2020 21 was dissolved while the newly formed was admitted to the third tier from amateurs SC Tavriya Simferopol playing since 1958 the club became liquidated in 2014 by the Russian authorities following occupation of the Autonomous Republic of Crimea In 2016 it was revived based out of neighboring Kherson Oblast and playing in lower tiers until the full scale Russian invasion in 2022 FC Metalurh Zaporizhia during the 2015 16 season on 2 March 2016 Metalurh was recognized as bankrupt on decision of the commercial court of Zaporizhzhia Oblast and a liquidation procedure was initiated 60 FC Metalurh Donetsk was merged with FC Stal Dniprodzerzhynsk in 2015 due to hardship caused by the 2014 Russian aggression against Ukraine FC Mariupol in connection with the full scale invasion of Ukraine by Russia and occupation of the city of Mariupol as well as financial inability of to keep the club on 27 April 2022 it was announced that the club withdraws from national competitions and dissolves List of successions Edit FC Karpaty Lviv it joined Ukraine national competitions already as a phoenix club of the same club that was merged with SKA Lvov and later revived in 1989 In 2020 Karpaty were expelled from the Premier League due to financial hardship The same year the club was recreated for the second time being split between two entities one joining the third tier competition while another the fourth In 2021 the split was resolved by one of the clubs becoming disbanded FC Vorskla Poltava it joined Ukraine national competitions already as a phoenix club of Kolos Poltava that was disbanded and revived in 1984 based on its football academy FC Metalist Kharkiv created in 2019 as Metal Kharkiv in 2021 it was officially recognized as a successor of the Metalist that bankrupted back in 2016 FC Kryvbas Kryvyi Rih renewed its participation in national competitions in 2018 in 2020 FC Hirnyk Kryvyi Rih changed its name to Kryvbas allowing to continue on the legacy with all its colors and logos of bankrupted FC Kryvbas Kryvyi Rih while at the same time keeping its academy s name as Hirnyk FC Arsenal Kyiv it is considered a successor of the club that appeared in national competitions in 1993 as FC Boryspil that was admitted to the third tier in place of FC Nyva Myronivka Nyva Borysfen In 1995 it was already promoted to the top tier as a joint venture along the Ministry of Defense and named as CSKA Borysfen Kyiv while the original CSKA team was kept playing in lower tiers In 1996 the merger was dissolved and until 2001 in the top tier competed CSKA Kyiv while in the second tier competed its reserves CSKA 2 Kyiv In mid season 2001 02 the club was sold to the city of Kyiv and renamed to Arsenal Kyiv in honour of another club that existed back in 1960s Around 2008 2010 it ran a campaign to claim heritage of the Arsenal Kyiv factory club SC Arsenal Unable to finish the 2013 14 in 2013 it folded Yet already in 2014 it was revived as Arsenal Kyiv Kyiv and soon it made through several tiers back to the top tier where after a single season folded again in 2019 Heritage claims Edit FC Chornomorets Odesa created in 1958 it lays claims also to heritage of Pischevik Odessa Metalurh Odesa and Dynamo Odesa FC Metalist 1925 Kharkiv created in 2016 it lays claims also to heritage of the Metalist that bankrupted in 2016 MFC Metalurh Zaporizhia following bankruptcy of the original club and its exclusion from competitions in 2016 there was created new Metalurh Zaporizhia based on a privately owned local amateur team Rosso Nero and for few seasons competed in lower leagues and at the same time another Metalurh Zaporizhia was created in 2017 based on the older Metalurh academy sports school being financed by the city authorities In 2018 the UAF denied license for the Rosso Nero s Metalurh when the Zaporizhia city s Metalurh was admitted to the Professional League third tier Post season play offs EditThere were several instances when the games outside of regular double round robin tournament and split group seasons were scheduled or required They were held either for determining the league position golden and third place matches international competitions qualification Europa League play off or promotion or relegation relegation play off Golden matches Edit League finals for Premier League took place on two occasions In the inaugural 1992 season the league was conducted in two groups of 10 teams due to transition to the autumn spring competition calendar The teams in each group played a double round robin tournament after which the winners of both groups faced each other in the one match league final at neutral field The final was played on 21 June 1992 crowning Tavriya Simferopol as the first champions of independent Ukraine after their 1 0 win over Dynamo Kyiv Starting from the 2005 06 season if multiple teams finish tied on points on the top of the table Golden match is required to determine the champion In the same season this rule came into effect for the first and only to the moment time Shakhtar Donetsk and Dynamo Kyiv both finished with 75 points after the regular season In the following final game Shakhtar managed to win the title after the 100th minute goal from Julius Aghahowa which concluded their 2 1 extra time win Season Winner Result Runner up Venue Date1992 Tavriya Simferopol 1 0 Dynamo Kyiv Ukraina Stadium Lviv 21 June 19922005 06 Shakhtar Donetsk 2 1 a e t Dynamo Kyiv Metalurh Stadium Kryvyi Rih 14 May 2006Third place matches Edit Similarly to the league final in the inaugural 1992 season the third place match was played between the runners up of both 10 team groups that formed the league in the season In the game at neutral field Dnipro Dnipropetrovsk from Group B defeated Shakhtar Donetsk from Group A 3 2 and won their first bronze medals in the league Season Group A team Result Group B team Venue Date1992 Shakhtar Donetsk 2 3 Dnipro Dnipropetrovsk Metalurh Central Stadium Zaporizhzhia 20 June 1992Europa League play offs Edit In the 2019 20 season play offs for qualification to the UEFA Europa League are played for the first time between the 5th and 6th teams from the Championship round and two top teams from the Relegation round 7th and 8th The play off consists of the semi final and final stages with ties in both played as single matches on the field of the team ranked higher in the season standings Season Home team Result Away team Venue Date2019 20 Semi finalsFC Oleksandriya 1 2 FC Mariupol CSC Nika Stadium Oleksandriya 25 July 2020Kolos Kovalivka 4 1 Dnipro 1 NSC Olimpiyskiy Kyiv 25 July 2020FinalKolos Kovalivka 1 0 a e t FC Mariupol NSC Olimpiyskiy Kyiv 29 July 2020Relegation play offs Edit For the first tome play off to determine the participant of the next Vyshcha Liha season was held unplanned at the end of the 1998 99 season Third placed team of 1998 99 First League Torpedo Zaporizhzhia who was to be promoted filed for bankruptcy at the end of the season The league regulations at the time did not specify what actions are needed to be taken in such situation so PFL made a decision to held a play off game between the highest ranked relegated team Prykarpattia Ivano Frankivsk and highest ranked not promoted team FC Cherkasy at neutral field in Kyiv The game ended with Prykarpattia defending their league place 3 1 61 62 In the 2001 02 season due to league enlargement play off was held between the second lowest Vyshcha Liha team Polihraftekhnika Oleksandriya and fourth First League team Polissya Zhytomyr The game on a neutral field in Kyiv ended 1 0 in favour of Oleksandriya 62 Since 2017 18 season the play offs are held in home and away format between the 10th and 11th teams from Premier League and 2nd and 3rd from First League During this time 3 teams were promoted by play offs and another 1 managed to defend its place However in the 2019 20 season there will be no playoffs because of the league enlargement and three teams will promote from First League directly 63 Season Premier League team Result First League team Venue Date1998 99 Prykarpattia Ivano Frankivsk 3 1 FC Cherkasy Dynamo Stadium Kyiv 4 July 19992001 02 Polihraftekhnika Oleksandriya 1 0 Polissya Zhytomyr CSK ZSU Stadium Kyiv 16 June 20022017 18 Zirka Kropyvnytskyi 1 10 4 Desna Chernihiv Home and away 23 and 27 May 2018Chornomorets Odesa 1 00 3 a e t FC Poltava2018 19 Karpaty Lviv 0 03 0 Volyn Lutsk 4 and 8 June 2019Chornomorets Odesa 0 00 2 Kolos Kovalivka2021 22 TBD x xx x TBD TBATBD x xx x TBDRivalries and city derbies EditKlasychne derby Edit See also Klasychne derby and List of sports derbies in Ukraine The central feature of the league is a rivalry between Shakhtar Donetsk and Dynamo Kyiv which has adopted its name as Klasychne derby The rivalry started ever since the end of 1990s when both teams started consistently to place the top two places from season to season The rivalry became really established when Shakhtar obtained its first national title in 2002 Other championship contenders Edit The surprising win of the first season by SC Tavriya Simferopol has never turned the club into a real contender for another title and the club was not always successful to secure a place among the top five In the beginning of 1990s FC Chornomorets Odessa and the two time Soviet champions FC Dnipro were also among the main contenders The 1972 Soviet champions FC Zorya Luhansk until 2013 really struggled to stay in the top league Among other contenders there were FC Metalist Kharkiv that were the league s runners up in 2012 13 and FC Metalurh Donetsk that showed some consistent form in the early 2000s Other rivalries Edit There are few smaller regional rivalries such between Karpaty and Volyn Metalist and Dnipro Zorya and Shakhtar Among city derbies there were no running city derbies in the league for the 2017 18 season Among the most notable previously there were Zaporizhzhia derby between Metalurh and Torpedo Kyiv derby between Dynamo and Arsenal CSKA Donetsk derby between Shakhtar and Metalurh Other derbies existed in Lviv Odesa Kharkiv West Ukrainian football derby and others Stadiums and attendance EditFurther information List of football stadiums in Ukraine Ukraine has several big stadiums with capacity of 30 000 spectators and at least two stadiums with capacity of over 50 000 which also are considered to be by UEFA the elite stadiums Since the 2014 Russian aggression against Ukraine the access to some stadiums was restricted Many stadiums in Ukraine and their surrounding infrastructure were renovated in preparation to the Euro 2012 UEFA Elite Stadiums Edit Stadium Capacity City Club Opened1 Olimpiysky National Sports Complex 70 050 Kyiv Ukraine Dynamo Kyiv 1923 20112 Donbass Arena 52 518 Donetsk Shakhtar Donetsk 2009Other major stadiums Edit Among 30 000 football stadiums or multi use stadiums adopted for football are Arena Lviv Chornomorets Stadium Dnipro Arena Metalist Stadium and others Other UEFA 4 category stadiums in the league Stadium Capacity City Club Opened UEFA category1 Metalist Stadium 40 003 Kharkiv Metalist KharkivMetalist 1925 Kharkiv 1926 2 Arena Lviv 34 915 Lviv LvivRukh Lviv 2011 3 Chornomorets Stadium 34 164 Odesa Chornomorets Odesa 1935 ad 4 Dnipro Arena 31 003 Dnipro DniproDnipro 1 1940 ae 5 Butovsky Vorskla Stadium 24 795 Poltava Vorskla Poltava 1951 6 Slavutych Arena 11 883 Zaporizhzhia Metalurh ZaporizhyaZorya Luhansk 1938 af Attendance Edit Source citation needed See also Edit Association football portal Ukraine portalUkrainian First League Ukrainian Second League Ukrainian derby Football records in Ukraine List of foreign Ukrainian Premier League playersNotes Edit part of Soviet Union On 22 July 2017 Ukrainian Premier League announced that Maksim Shatskikh might have scored 123 goals instead of 124 due to one of the autogoals own goals being counted towards his tally 48 Other time the same news outlet claims that Shatskikh indeed scored 124 46 Haidash who is recorded with 95 goals in reality did score 96 but the game in which he scored was cancelled along with his record 48 Some records indicate that Haidash played 258 games 48 Arsenal Kyiv was renamed from CSKA Kyiv in 2001 the original CSKA Kyiv was recreated in the First League in place of CSCA 2 Kyiv Club was denied license in 2016 for failing to pay debts and ceased operations afterwards The original club was forced to be dissolved due to the Russian aggression against Ukraine it was later re established and plays home games in Beryslav Kherson oblast The original club dissolved due to bankruptcy Later it was revived in 2016 2018 based on amateur club FC Rosso Nero and in 2017 replaced with municipal club The club lost profession status due to bankruptcy and later was revived as an amateur club competing in regional competitions of Dnipropetrovsk Oblast Due to financial situation and hardship being forced to play away from home because of the Russian aggression against Ukraine in 2015 the club merged with FC Stal Kamianske Being reorganized based on the first team of CSKA Kyiv in 2001 02 the club dissolved due to bankruptcy and was later revived based on its academy as FC Arsenal Kyiv Arsenal Kyiv s record includes the record of its predecessor CSKA Kyiv when the club was sponsored by the Ministry of Defence It does not include the 14 games that it played in 2013 14 that were annulled later The club was reformed in 2004 as a city team in 2014 merged with FC UkrAhroKom Holovkivka The original club dissolved in 2006 due to bankruptcy was later was revived based on the local football school Olimpik In 2019 team withdrew from professional competitions again The club dissolved due to bankruptcy The original club FC Prykarpattia dissolved due to bankruptcy later a new team with the same name was formed The club was dissolved and revived again two times The club was denied license in 2016 for failing to pay salary to players and later was dissolved The club was administratively reorganised in 2013 and had to change its name and start from the lower leagues The original club was liquidated in 2011 and in 2015 was revived as NK Veres Rivne In 2018 it merged with FC Lviv at the same time re entering Second League The club dissolved two times in 2005 and 2012 and both times was later revived The off shot club that was created after the FIFA sanctions were applied to FC Dnipro forcing the latter to be relegated to amateurs The club folded in 2010 The club dissolved in 2018 The club dissolved in 1995 The club dissolved due to the Russian aggression against Ukraine The club dissolved due to the Russian aggression against Ukraine and in its place was created Russian club SKChF which later changed its name to FC Sevastopol The club dissolved in 2018 The club merged with FC Chornomorets in 1999 The Central Stadium of the Black Sea Shipping Company was completely rebuilt in 2011 Original Metalurh Stadium was completely rebuilt in 2008 Original Metalurh Stadium was completely rebuilt in 2006References Edit a b Hunchenko O Kazakov V Kulikovska O Historic and geographic characteristics of football development in Ukraine ISTORIKO GEOGRAFIChNI OSOBLIVOSTI ROZVITKU FUTBOLU V UKRAYiNI Historic profile Professional Football League of Ukraine There was adopted a decision on creation of the football Premier League of Ukraine Prijnyato rishennya pro stvorennya futbolnoyi Prem yer ligi Ukrayini Electronic Library of Ukraine In Ukraine was created Premier League V Ukrayini stvoreno Prem yer ligu Champion Ukrayinska Pravda 27 May 2008 a b Poll Dynamo is ahead of Shakhtar in popularity Opituvannya Dinamo viperedzhaye Shahtar za populyarnistyu Archived 9 May 2015 at the Wayback Machine UNIAN 12 September 2013 a b c Ukrainian football championship Kick off by Igor Nitsak The Soyuz Viktan group of companies became a partner of the Ukrainian championship as well as the Ukraine national and youth teams Gruppa kompanij Soyuz Viktan stala partnerom Chempionata Ukrainy a takzhe nacionalnoj i molodezhnoj komand strany Sport ua 20 July 2006 Soyuz Viktan became a title sponsor of Ukrainian football championship Soyuz Viktan stal titulnym sponsorom ChU po futbolu Kommersant ru 20 July 2006 Godskiy Everyone gets own Kazhdomu svoe Football ua Opinion column 24 July 2007 A lion in its own juice Lev v sobstvennom soku Pressing 3 August 2007 The Ukrainian championship received its title sponsor Chempionat Ukrainy poluchil titulnogo sponsora Korrespondent net 20 July 2006 The leaders of the Soyuz Viktan firm were convicted to 15 years of imprisonment RUKOVODITELI FIRMY SOYuZ VIKTAN PRIGOVORENY K 15 GODAM LIShENIYa SVOBODY Mirror Weekly 23 August 2002 Andrei Dneprov The Ukrainian vodka Soyuz Viktan will be taught to respected the Russian laws Ukrainskuyu vodku Soyuz Viktan nauchat uvazhat rossijskie zakony FOTO Newdaynews ru 1 March 2007 a b Aleksandr Khlepytko Evolution of the UPL emblem from Epitsentr to bookmakers Evolyuciya emblemy UPL ot Epicentra do bukmekerov Tribuna com 7 August 2019 Epitsentr is a title sponsor of the Ukrainian football championship EpiCentr Titulnyj sponsor Chempionata Ukrainy po futbolu Sport ua 29 July 2008 A title sponsor of the Ukrainian championship will pay more than 5 million Titulnyj sponsor chempionata Ukrainy zaplatit bolee 5 mln Championat 8 April 2008 Oleg Barkov The official name of the 2015 16 Ukrainian championship is Liha Pari Match Oficialnoe nazvanie chempionata Ukrainy v sezone 2015 16 Liga Pari Match Footboom 17 June 2015 The Liha Pari Match 43 million hryvnias for two years Liga Pari Match 43 mln griven za dva goda Football ua 25 June 2015 The Pari Match was deprived of the opportunity to carry out financial obligations for the Premier League Pari Match lishen vozmozhnosti vypolnyat finansovye obyazatelstva pered Premer ligoj UA Football 1 December 2015 a b Sergej Harchenko Rynok edinyh kommercheskih prav Chempionata Ukrainy na dannyj moment razrushen EpiCentr Titulnyj sponsor Chempionata Ukrainy po futbolu Set gipermarketov Epicentr stala titulnym sponsorom sbornoj Ukrainy po futbolu Sostoyalas prezentaciya Ligi Pari Match 2015 2016 FPL ua Oficialnyj veb sajt Obedineniya professionalnyh futbolnyh klubov Ukrainy Premer liga in Russian Obedinenie professionalnyh futbolnyh klubov Ukrainy Premer liga Archived from the original on 29 June 2015 Retrieved 25 June 2015 Chempionat Ukrainy smenil logotip i teper nazyvaetsya Favbet liga football ua Retrieved 24 January 2020 Oficialno Titulnym sponsorom UPL stala bukmekerskaya kompaniya VBET UA Football Retrieved 1 July 2021 a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q Volodymyr Mylenko The Ukrainian quarter The 1991 where who wants to play Ukrainskij kvoter 1991 gde kto hochet igrat UA Football 14 April 2016 a b c d e Mykola Motornyi Ukraine A breakthrough into the independence Ukraina Proryv v nezavisimost Fanat ua a b c d At first there was a decision Spochatku bulo rishennya Ukrainian Premier League 16 November 2017 Ukrainian Championship breakthrough or beginning of the end Chempionat Ukrayini z futbolu proriv chi pochatok kincya BBC News Ukrainian 11 June 2013 Mid table clubs of Ukrainian Premier League are reducing players salaries Serednyaki Ukrayinskoyi Prem yer Ligi znizhuyut zarplati futbolistiv Ukrinform 12 July 2013 Ukraine trying to revive Crimean champion football club USA Today 19 June 2015 Shakhtar equaled Real Barcelona and PSG the most dominating European clubs Shahtar stav v odin ryad z Realom Barselonoyu i PSZh najbilsh dominuyuchi klubi Yevropi Football 1 20 June 2020 Number of participating clubs in the UPL will increase to 16 for the 2021 22 season Kilkist klubiv uchasnikiv UPL u sezoni 2021 22 zroste do 16 Ukrainian Association of Football 10 July 2020 a b Ukraine league season terminated due to martial law Reuters 27 April 2022 Retrieved 27 April 2022 Danylov re elected as president of Ukrainian football premier league Dec 02 2009 KyivPost 2 December 2009 Oficialno Vladimir Geninson novyj prezident UPL iSport ua 29 February 2016 Tomas GRIMM UPL poluchit novogo prezidenta 6 aprelya SPORT UA Ihor Tsyhanyk I get awfully angry when I get named as television presenter or commentator Igor Ciganik Ya strashenno zlyusya koli mene nazivayut televeduchim chi komentatorom 1927 kiev ua 23 May 2020 In the UPL is a new general director U UPL novyj generalnyj direktor Football ua 28 July 2009 Ukrainian Premier League Lausanne announced a verdict on the game Karpaty Metalist Lozanna ozvuchila verdikt po matchu Karpaty Metallist ua football com 2 August 2013 Football Match Fixing Archived 15 October 2013 at the Wayback Machine Court of Arbitration of Sport Lausanne 2 August 2013 Will Dynamo have two stars Television Service of News TSN 12 June 2007 FC Dynamo Kyiv has a new emblem Interfax Ukraine 4 July 2011 Dnipro 1 is the owner of the Prestige trophy for the 2019 20 season Dnipro 1 volodar Trofeyu prestizhu sezonu 2019 20 rokiv Ukrainian Premier League 19 July 2020 a b c d e Navigation through national records Oriyentiri na nacionalni rekordi Ukrainian Premier League 29 December 2020 Ukrainian football championship List of players with 200 or more appearances since 1992 Allplayers in ua a b c And on the horizon Yarmolenko A na gorizonti Yarmolenko Ukrainian Premier League 22 July 2017 Ukrainian football championship all scorers since 1992 Allplayers in ua Ukrainskij futbol ot Dmitriya Troshiya www uafootball net ua Grand tournament table of the Ukrainian Championship 1992 2015 Archived 8 March 2016 at the Wayback Machine ukr football org Summarized table of championships Ukrainskiy Futbol ot Dmitriya Troshchiya Ukrainian Football from Dmitriy Troshchiy Summarized table of all years Wildstat Metalist with a debt of 112 million hryvnia is heading the ranking of Ukrainian most indebted enterprises Metallist s dolgom 112 mln griven vozglavil rejting ukrainskih predpriyatij dolzhnikov UA Football 31 October 2018 Metalistu Goverli i Volini vidmovleno v atestaciyi Dnipro dopushenij do chempionatu UA Football 25 April 2016 FFU deprived Kryvbas of license FFU lishila Krivbass licenzii Sport ua 31 May 2013 The license of FC Kharkiv is withdrawn UA Football 23 June 2010 On 29 October 2013 the general director of FC Arsenal Kyiv Viktor Holovko announced that the club was filing for bankruptcy and withdrawing from competitions as it was unable to find any sponsors Arsenal Kyiv director general says club out of all competitions bankruptcy procedures launched Interfax Ukraine 1 November 2013 FC Arsenal Kyiv starts bankruptcy procedure drops out of competition says director Interfax Ukraine 31 October 2013 The General Assembly of the Ukrainian Premier League was unable to reach a quorum and hence no decision was made on the expulsion of the club from the UPL Gendirektor UPL poyasniv chomu Danilov ne priyihav na Zagalni zbori General Director of UPL explained why Danilov did not come to the General Assembly in Ukrainian ua football com 18 December 2013 18 December 2013 On 12 February 2014 Arsenal Kyiv was officially expelled from the league and all club s results were annulled Decision 53 League Directory PDF in Ukrainian 12 February 2014 Archived from the original PDF on 22 February 2014 Retrieved 8 April 2014 Arsenal Kiev prodolzhit sushestvovanie no bez professionalnoj komandy UA Football 23 July 2019 Ex sports director of Metalurh Zaporizhzhia Mike Snoei wants to sue the club more than 15 mln hryvnia Eks sportdirektor zaporizkogo Metalurga Majk Snui hoche vidsuditi u klubu ponad 15 mln griven Football 24 6 December 2017 In 1999 play off match was held for the first time in the Vyshcha Liha history It was introduced because of Torpedo s collapse V 1999 vpervye v istorii Vysshej ligi sostoyalsya stykovoj match Ego pridumali iz za razvala Torpedo UA Football 25 May 2020 a b How and why after seasons were played in Ukrainian football Yak i chomu gralisya pislyasezonnya v ukrayinskomu futboli UA Football 25 May 2020 UAF Executive Committee approved a system of team exchange between leagues at the conclusion of 2019 2020 season Vikonkom UAF zatverdiv sistemu obminu komand mizh ligami za pidsumkami sezonu 2019 2020 Ukrainian Association of Football 25 May 2020External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Ukrainian Premier League UPL ua official website FPL ua former official website at the Wayback Machine archived 14 December 2016 Premier League 2012 2013 Regular Season Soccerway Ukraine List of Champions RSSSF com Official Fantasy League Game Real Manager UPL statistics and mathematics Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Ukrainian Premier League amp oldid 1136985461, 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