FC Vitebsk









































FC Vitebsk
FC Vitebsk Logo.png
Full name Football Club Vitebsk
Founded 1960
Ground
Vitebsky Central Sport Complex,
Vitebsk, Belarus
Capacity 8,100
Manager Sergey Yasinsky
League Belarusian Premier League
2017 8th

















Home colours














Away colours




FC Vitebsk (Belarusian: ФК Віцебск, FK Vitsebsk) is a Belarusian football club based in Vitebsk. The club plays in the Belarusian Premier League, the top division in Belarusian football. Their home stadium is Vitebsky Central Sport Complex.




Contents






  • 1 History


    • 1.1 Name changes




  • 2 Honours


  • 3 Current squad


  • 4 League and Cup history


    • 4.1 Soviet Union era


    • 4.2 Belarus era




  • 5 FC Vitebsk in Europe


  • 6 Managers


  • 7 See also


  • 8 References


  • 9 External links





History


The club was founded in 1960 as Krasnoye Znamya Vitebsk (Red Flag Vitebsk). They began playing in Soviet Class B (second-tier league) the same year. After three seasons they relegated to the third tier. Vitebsk team would spend almost all of their subsequent Soviet-era seasons playing at the third level (Soviet Second League), with the exception of 1970 and 1990, when the team dropped to 4th level. The club went through several name changes. In 1963, they were renamed Dvina Vitebsk after local river. In 1985, the club was renamed Vityaz Vitebsk and in 1989 it was renamed KIM Vitebsk (both names relate to local industry companies).


In 1992 KIM joined Belarusian Premier League. During the 90s KIM (later renamed Dvina Vitebsk again in 1994 and Lokomotiv-96 Vitebsk in 1996) was one of the league top teams. They were league runners-up in 1992–93 and 1994–95, finished third in 1993–94 and 1997 and also won Belarusian Cup in 1998.[1] Since 2000s club's results declined. They have relegated to the First League several times and promoted back and were never able to fight the title in later years. In 2003, they shortened their name to Lokomotiv Vitebsk and in 2006 to the current version, FC Vitebsk.



Name changes



  • 1960: founded as Krasnoye Znamya Vitebsk

  • 1963: renamed Dvina Vitebsk

  • 1985: renamed Vityaz Vitebsk

  • 1989: renamed KIM Vitebsk

  • 1994: renamed Dvina Vitebsk

  • 1996: renamed Lokomotiv-96 Vitebsk

  • 2003: renamed Lokomotiv Vitebsk

  • 2006: renamed Vitebsk



Honours




  • Belarusian Premier League


    • Runners-up (2): 1992–93, 1994–95


    • 3rd place (2): 1993–94, 1997




  • Belarusian Cup

    • Winners (1): 1998




Current squad


As of August 2018


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










































































No.

Position
Player
1

Belarus

GK

Dzmitry Hushchanka
3

Belarus

MF

Kiryl Pyachenin
4

Belarus

MF

Artsyom Skitaw
5

Brazil

MF

Wanderson Maranhão
6

Belarus

MF

Syarhey Volkaw
7

Brazil

FW

Bruno Furlan
9

Belarus

FW

Ruslan Teverov
11

Belarus

MF

Anton Matsveenka
12

Belarus

DF

Yevgeniy Klopotskiy
16

Belarus

GK

Andrey Shcharbakow
































































No.

Position
Player
17

Belarus

DF

Mikhail Kazlow
23

Belarus

DF

Nikita Naumov
25

Ukraine

DF

Oleh Karamushka
28

Belarus

MF

Ilya Shkurin
29

Ukraine

MF

Artem Starhorodskyi
35

Belarus

MF

Nikolay Zolotov
77

Belarus

FW

Kiryl Vyarheychyk
88

Serbia

MF

Nenad Adamović


Belarus

GK

Vladislav Samovich



League and Cup history



Soviet Union Soviet Union era















































































































































































































































































































































































































































Season

Level

Pos

Pld

W

D

L
Goals
Points

Domestic Cup
Notes
1960 2nd 12 30 7 7 16 26–44 21
1961 2nd 8 30 12 8 10 44–46 32 Round of 128
1962 2nd 15 32 9 6 17 24–40 24 Round of 64 Relegated
1963 3rd 10 30 11 5 14 31–37 27 Round of 1024
1964 3rd 14 30 8 8 14 16–29 24 Round of 2048 Zone 1 (Ukraine)
1965 3rd 6 30 8 14 8 29–28 30 Round of 1024
1966 3rd 17 32 5 7 20 14–44 17 Round of 4096
1967 3rd 17 34 7 10 17 17–43 24
1968 3rd 7 38 19 8 11 39–31 46 Round of 4096
1969 3rd 14 32 9 10 13 30–34 28 Round of 161
Relegated2
1970 4th 11 32 10 8 14 27–36 28 Promoted3
1971 3rd 16 38 7 14 17 21–42 35
1972 3rd 15 38 12 8 18 31–35 44
1973 3rd 13 32 4 16 12 18–36
194

1974 3rd 20 40 6 13 21 20–47 25
1975 3rd 16 34 6 7 21 20–57 19
1976 3rd 15 38 11 11 16 42–38 33
1977 3rd 14 40 11 12 17 29–38 34
1978 3rd 15 46 13 15 18 43–43 41
1979 3rd 12 46 15 21 10 49–38 51
1980 3rd 9 32 5 10 17 23–47 20
1981 3rd 9 40 8 12 20 38–60 28
1982 3rd 16 30 5 6 19 13–44 16
1983 3rd 10 32 9 11 12 28–42 29
1984 3rd 18 34 7 6 21 27–60 20
1985 3rd 14 30 7 6 17 32–49 20
1986 3rd 16 30 2 6 22 19–57 10
1987 3rd 17 34 6 8 20 28–51 20
1988 3rd 17 34 3 12 19 16–57 18
1989 3rd 13 42 17 8 17 41–47 42 Relegated5
1990 4th 2 32 20 6 6 59–31 46 Promoted
1991 3rd 20 42 11 8 23 43–55 30



  • 1 Separate cup for 3rd level teams, different for each zone.


  • 2 Relegated due to Class B (the league where Dvina was playing) changing its status from 3rd to 4th level in 1970, and the top two levels were reorganized into three with fewer teams.


  • 3 Promoted due to 3rd level (Class A Second Group, renamed to Second League since next season) expansion from 3 to 6 territorial zones (from 66 to 124 teams) in 1971 and dismissal of 4th level.


  • 4 In 1973 every draw was followed by a penalty shoot-out, with a winner gaining 1 point and loser gaining 0.


  • 5 Despite finishing 13th from the 22 teams in 1989, KIM relegated as the Second League (3rd level) was reduced from 9 zones (195 teams) to 3 zones (66 teams) and the Second Lower League with 9 zones was introduced as a 4th level.



Belarus Belarus era

































































































































































































































































































































































Season

Level

Pos

Pld

W

D

L
Goals
Points

Domestic Cup
Notes
1992 1st 6 15 7 3 5 21–14 17 Round of 16
1992–93 1st 2 32 18 11 3 55–21 47 Semifinals
1993–94 1st 3 30 17 9 4 32–14 43 Round of 16
1994–95 1st 2 30 16 13 1 46–15 45 Round of 32
1995 1st 7 15 5 5 5 12–12 20 Round of 32
1996 1st 5 30 13 10 7 48–27 49
1997 1st 3 30 18 5 7 46–30 59 Quarterfinals
1998 1st 4 28 14 6 8 35–24 48 Winners
1999 1st 11 30 9 7 14 40–45 34 Round of 16
2000 1st 11 30 8 7 15 34–50 31 Quarterfinals
2001 1st 12 26 4 7 15 18–51 19 Round of 16
2002 1st 14 26 3 0 23 20–77 9 Round of 32 Relegated
2003 2nd 1 311
23 4 4 59–22 73 Quarterfinals Promoted
2004 1st 15 312
8 3 20 35–58 27 Quarterfinals Relegated
2005 2nd 2 30 21 7 2 76–23 70 Round of 32 Promoted
2006 1st 6 26 9 11 6 21–18 38 Round of 32
2007 1st 8 26 9 8 9 25–28 35 Round of 16
2008 1st 5 30 14 9 7 39–26 51 Round of 16
2009 1st 10 26 10 2 14 26–37 32 Quarterfinals
2010 1st 9 33 7 11 15 31–52 32 Round of 32
2011 1st 11 33 8 8 17 29–46 32 Round of 16 Relegated3
2012 2nd 3 28 19 2 7 57–30 59 Round of 32
2013 2nd 3 30 16 7 7 40–29 55 Round of 32
2014 2nd 3 30 15 5 10 44–30 50 Round of 32 Promoted4
2015 1st 13 26 4 9 13 21-47 21 Round of 8
2016 1st 6 30 12 6 12 30-26 42 Round of 8



  • 1 Including additional game (2–1 win) against MTZ-RIPO Minsk for the 1st place as both teams finished with equal points.


  • 2 Including additional game (1–4 loss) against MTZ-RIPO Minsk for the 14th place as both teams finished with equal points.


  • 3 Lost relegation play-off to Partizan Minsk (0–2 away, 2–1 home)


  • 4 Won promotion play-off against Dnepr Mogilev (2–0 home, 1–1 away)



FC Vitebsk in Europe


Vitebsk played in European Cups under their former name Lokomotiv-96.






























Season
Competition
Round

Club
1st Leg
2nd Leg

1998–99

UEFA Cup Winners' Cup
QR

Bulgaria

Levski Sofia
1–8 (A)
1–1 (H)

1999

UEFA Intertoto Cup
1R

Croatia

Varteks Varaždin
1–2 (H)
2–2 (A)


Managers




  • Soviet Union Pyotr Vasilevsky (1989–91)


  • Belarus Georgi Kondratiev (2003–04)


  • Russia Andrey Chernyshov (2006–07)


  • Belarus Yury Konoplev (2007–08)


  • Belarus Alyaksandr Khatskevich (2008–09)


  • Belarus Yury Konoplev (2009–10)


  • Belarus Sergei Borovsky (2010–11)


  • Belarus Yury Konoplev (2012–14)


  • Belarus Sergey Vekhtev (2014–15)


  • Belarus Sergey Yasinsky (2015–)



See also


  • FC Vitebsk-2


References





  1. ^ History of FC Vitebsk




External links



  • Official Website (in Russian)








Popular posts from this blog

Mount Tamalpais

Indian Forest Service

Y