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Football in Ukraine

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Postage stamp of Ukraine, 2001

Football in Ukraine is the number one sport. Its heritage is from Soviet football, particularly of the 1970s and 1980s. With annexation of some territories during World War II, parts of western Ukraine were already involved in professional football in neighboring countries.

The major football events in Ukraine are supervised by the Football Federation of Ukraine, which was organized in 1991 to replace the Soviet Football Federation of Ukrainian SSR created in the 1920s. There are several types of football: professional male and female football, amateur male and female football, youth leagues and children's competitions, football veterans and beach football, indoor competition and separate competitions for students and military personnel. Ukraine fields a great number of different national teams for various types of international competitions including continental and world qualifications, Universiades, youth competitions, and international competitions for beach and indoor football.

Summary

The Ukraine national team, representing an independent nation, has qualified for the FIFA World Cup once, in 2006, where they reached the quarter-finals led by the former Soviet football star player Oleh Blokhin. Ukraine also has several younger squads that were a little more successful, yielding several new promising footballers.

On the club level the Ukrainian championship has primarily developed out of the Soviet competitions. With the unification of Ukraine in 1939-1940, in the newly acquired territories all but the Soviet clubs were dissolved or partially integrated into Soviet competitions, including selected players from Pogon Lwow's (Michał Matyas) and ST "Ukraina's" (Karlo Miklyosh). Among the notable Soviet footballers of that period Makar Honcharenko and goalkeeper Mykola Trusevych deserve mention. Dynamo Kyiv and Shakhtar Donetsk are among the big European clubs nowadays. Dynamo Kyiv traces its fame from the Soviet times as they won the European Cup Winners Cup twice in 1975 and 1986. In 1975 Dynamo extended its success into the UEFA Super Cup as well. Among the famous players to come out of Ukraine were Oleh Blokhin and Andriy Shevchenko. The legendary coach Valeri Lobanovski led Dynamo Kiev to their European Cup victories as well as coaching the former Soviet and later on the Ukraine national football team: He is a Ukrainian football hero.

Ukrainian football professional club competitions are organized in the three-tier league system. Parallel with them there is a knockout competition the Ukrainian Cup. There is also a Super Cup match up that is being conducted on annual basis among the top two best clubs in the country. Several amateur level tournaments are played nationally as well as in every region (oblast); for more information, please see Ukrainian football league system. Female football is less developed, however there is a female national team and a two-tier league system competition for clubs. Among the most successful clubs are Lehenda Chernihiv and Zhytlobud Kharkiv.

Ukraine has also highly developed children's and youth football. There is a national competition conducted by the professional clubs of Ukraine and the best national sports schools. It is a two-tier league with several regional divisions.[1] Each club is represented by four squads with players in age groups ranging from under 14 to under 17. Parallel to that there is an independent Student League which encompasses teams of various universities and institutions of higher education. Selected players from that league successfully compete at student Olympics, the Universiada. The regional amateur football competitions also provide training opportunities for the young soccer stars.

History

Modern Ukrainian club competitions derived mostly from the Soviet competitions. The first football leagues in Ukraine appeared in 1910s across a number of cities. The first recorded national competition started in 1921 and was a competition among city teams (Championship of cities) that represented a participating regional championship. Some Ukrainian teams participated in the Russian city championship that was short-termed and took place before World War I in 1912-14. There were also Ukrainian teams participating in the Championship of Galicia that took place around that time and was a precursor of the Polish Ekstraklasa League. However, due to the Polish state policy in regards to national minorities of that period, the Ukrainian clubs with few exceptions did not perform well. Soon after the establishment of the Soviet Union in 1924 many teams from Ukraine participated in the Soviet Championship of Cities.

The organization of the Ukrainian SSR Championship of Cities was organized by the All-Ukrainian Council of Physical Culture. The Ukrainian SSR Championship of Cities was discontinued in 1936 and was transformed into the Championship of Sports Societies and Departments that initiated as the second level of the Championship of cities in 1936. During World War II, a number of new clubs from the western Ukraine joined competition. The previous clubs of the region were dissolved and replaced with newly created Soviet clubs mostly as Spartak or Dynamo. Some players from the dissolved clubs joined the new Soviet counterparts, while others moved out of the country, were deported or pursued other goals. During the Nazi occupation there was no recorded national football competitions except for the Zakarpattia Oblast.

With the transformation of the council's (All-Ukrainian Council of Physical Culture) football section into the Football Federation of the Ukrainian SSR in 1959, the Ukrainian championship was integrated into the Soviet championship of Master teams in the Class B starting from 1960, which eventually was transformed into the Soviet Second League. The Championship of Sports Societies and Departments was reorganized into competitions of physical culture collectives, better known as the republican KFK competitions. In 1990 there took another transformation in Soviet football and all republican championships were relegated to the Soviet Second League B or the lower second league, while the Soviet Second League was split into three regional groups instead of previous nine (republican-regional factor). Several former Soviet republics started the process of secession from the Union, such as the Baltic states and Georgia. In 1992 the Soviet championship ended and the 1991-92 Soviet Cup that was planned to be transformed into the CIS Cup was in reality simply an edition of the Russian Cup.

Ukrainian (Soviet) Football League structure / 1921–present
Ukraine Ukraine Ukraine Ukrainian SSR Ukrainian SSR Ukrainian SSR Ukrainian SSR World War II Ukrainian SSR Ukrainian SSR
Tier 2008–present 1996–2007 1992–1995 1971–1991 1964–1970 1960–1963 1945–1959 1942–1944 1936-1941 1921–1936
I Premier League Top League Top League Second League Class B Class B Championship of Ukrainian SSR ▼ ??? Championship of Ukrainian SSR City championships
II 1.League 1.League 1.League KFK competitions KFK competitions Regional 1.League Regional 1.League Regional 1.League Regional 1.League
III 2.League 2.League 2.League Regional 1.League Regional 1.League Regional 2.League Regional 2.League Regional 2.League ▼ ???
IV Amateur League Amateur League¹
(KFK competitions)
3.League² Regional 2.League Regional 2.League Regional 3.League Regional 3.League ▼ ???
V Regional 1.League Regional 1.League KFK competitions Regional 3.League Regional 3.League ▼ ??? ▼ ???
VI Regional 2.League4 Regional 2.League4 Regional 1.League ▼ ??? ▼ ???
VII Regional 3.League5 Regional 3.League5 Regional 2.League4
VIII Regional 3.League5

¹ In 1998 KFK competitions were transformed into the Amateur Association.
² From 1993 through 1995 there existed the 3rd League. KFK competitions were grandfathered from the Soviet times.
³ In selected years there existed the supplemental 2nd League.
4 District 1.League and City 1.League
5 District 2.League and City 2.League

Note: Until 1992 the Soviet Tier III was considered as the republican competition for the Ukrainian SSR (see Ukrainian Soviet competitions). In 1992 most of the Ukrainian-based clubs that competed in the top three tiers were reorganized into the Ukrainian Supreme League, while most of the rest non-amateur clubs were organized into the Ukrainian First League.

Football in post Austria-Hungary Empire

Halychyna (1920-1939)

In the western part of Ukraine that was part of Austria-Hungary official football competitions started in 1905 when the first Lemberg city championship took place. After World War I and the fall of the empire, the West Ukraine was annexed by the Second Polish Republic. The Soviet-Ukrainian and Soviet-Polish wars prevented the competition of 1920 from taking place. At the end, only Pogon was admitted, however, the other clubs entered the competition much later. The teams that were to enter the Polish League were Pogon Lwow, Czarni Lwow, Polonia Przemysl, and Rewera Stanislawow. Those are considered to be all-Polish teams consisting mostly of the Polish nationals. Pogon Lwow was the most successful at the start of the League, winning it four times in a row 1922-1926. The club was coached then by the Austrian manager Karl Fischer. Another club Sparta Lwow made the final of the first Polish Cup competition of 1926. Ukrainian football teams like Ukraina Lwow also existed at that time, but they competed on the amateur level. The Soviet aggression of 1939 disrupted football life in the region and all of the clubs were disbanded. The Soviet administration created its own local football clubs that were part of the Soviet Volunteer Societies.

Bukovina (1922-1940)

Bukovina in the interwar period was part of Romania. There were several clubs all from Chernivtsi that participated in the Romanian football competitions. The most successful club was FC Dragoş Voda Cernauţi. It was all-Romanian club. As in Halychyna the football clubs were ethnically based. Beside the above-mentioned club there were also Jewish clubs FC Maccabi Cernauţi, FC Hakoah Cernauţi, Polish FC Polonia Cernauţi, and German DFC Jahn Cernauţi. From 1922 to 1932 the clubs from Chernivtsi participated annually in the Romanian championship that was organized by the Olympic-system of elimination. Since the introduction of the regular League in the national competitions those clubs disappeared. Only FC Dragoş Voda Cernauţi participated in the 1937-38 edition of the league, placing last in its group. In 1940 Bukovina became occupied by the Soviet Union and all of the previously established sport organizations were abandoned.

From 1925 to 1938, this territory was part of Czechoslovakia, and later part of Hungary. The most notable club of the region at that time was SK Rusj Užhorod from Užhorod/Ungvar, later Ungvári Rusznyi. It was the only club that participated in Slovak championship from the region. The club became champion of Slovakia on two occasions: 1933 and 1936. Rusj became known in Europe as the Flying Teachers, because they were the first club that used airplanes to travel to their games.[2] In 1938 the region became part of Hungary. In 1939 there was a tournament among seven teams of that region (Kárpátalja), the winner of which would earn the right to participate on the professional level in the Hungarian competitions. The tournament included four teams from Uzhhorod, including SC Rusj Užhorod, plus each team from Mukacheve, Chop, and Palanky. SC Rusj Užhorod won the tournament, and because of that four teams were allowed to enter the Hungarian competition from the region,[3] two from Uzhhorod Rusj and Ungvári AC,[4] and each from Berehove (Beregszászi FTC) and Mukacheve (Munkács SzE).

Soviet championship prior 1936

Before the establishment of a consistent Soviet football competition in 1936, the Ukrainian SSR had its own football competition from 1921 to 1936. This competition was on a volunteer basis and were not held regularly. These football competitions were a continuation of the imperial football competitions that started at the beginning of the 20th century in the Russian Empire. The winner qualified for the All-Union competition.

The first Ukrainian championship took place in 1921, before the establishment of the Soviet Union. Not much is known of that and the following championships and nothing is known of the competitions between 1924-1927. Remarkable is the fact that the dominant team of that period was from Kharkiv which until 1934 was the capital of the pseudo-state, Ukrainian SSR.

1921. Final tournament (Kharkiv)

Quarterfinals

  • Kharkiv - Kherson 5:0
  • Tahanroh - Kiev 1:0
  • Odessa - Katerynoslav 5:1
  • Mykolaiv - Poltava 7:0

Semifinals

  • Kharkiv - Tahanroh 2:1
  • Odessa - Mykolaiv 1:0

Final

  • Kharkiv - Odessa 2:1

Kharkiv: Vinnykov, Levin, Natarov, Shpakovsky, Bem, Bizyayev, Alfyorov, Kapustin, Varzhenynov, Makeyev, Ordin, Kazakov, Romanenko, Lazunenko.

1922. Final tournament (Kharkiv)

Quarterfinals

  • Kharkiv - Katerynoslav 2:0
  • Kiev - Poltava 3:0
  • Odessa - Crimea +:-
  • Mykolaiv - Druzhkivka 2:1

Semifinals

  • Kharkiv - Mykolaiv 4:0
  • Odessa - Kiev 5:2

Final

  • Kharkiv - Odessa 1:0

Kharkiv: Romanenko, Kolotukhin, Natarov, Shpakovsky, Romatovsky, Privalov, Bandurin, Kapustin, Varzhenynov, Krotov, Kazakov.

1923. Final tournament (Kharkiv)

Group 1

  • Kharkiv - Mykolaiv +:-
  • Odessa - Kiev +:-

Group finals

  • Kharkiv - Odessa 1:0

Group 2

  • Druzhkivka - Poltava 5:1
  • Crimea - Katerynoslav 2:1

Group finals

  • Druzhkivka - Crimea 2:0

Group 3

  • Yuzovka - Chernihiv +:-
  • Vinnytsia - Zhytomyr 2:1

Group finals

  • Yuzovka - Vinnytsia 8:0

Semifinal

  • Yuzivka - Druzhkivka 1:0

Final

  • Kharkiv - Yuzovka 1:1, 5:1 (replay)
1924. Final tournament (Kharkiv)

Preliminaries

  • Stalino - Katerynoslav 5:0
  • Odessa - Podillya +:-
  • Kharkiv - Poltava 1:0
  • Kiev - Chernihiv +:-

Final tournament (Kiev forfeited)

  • Kharkiv - Donbas 2:0
  • Kharkiv - Odessa 1:0
  • Odessa - Donbas 6:1

Final group. 1) Kharkiv, 2) Odessa, 3) Donbas
Kharkiv: Norov, Krotov, K. Fomin, Privalov, V. Fomin, Kapustin, Kazakov, Alfyorov, Natarov, Shpakovsky, Kostykov, Us, Vinnykov, Bem, Hrushyn, Hubaryev.

1925-1926. ?
1927. Final tournament (Kharkiv)

A mass tournament with participation of some 41 teams took place. To the finals qualified Katerynoslav, Odessa, Mykolaiv, and Stalino. To the finals were also allowed Kharkiv and Kadiyevka, although they were defeated by Mykolaiv and Stalino, respectively.

#
Club
Win
Draw
Loss
Goals
Points
1 Kharkiv 4 1 0 24-5 9
2 Mykolaiv 4 0 1 14-14 8
3 Odessa 3 1 1 13-5 7
4 Dnipropetrovsk 1 0 4 13-17 2
5 Kadiyevka 0 1 4 4-14 1
6 Stalino 0 1 4 2-15 1

Games

  • Kharkiv: Mykolaiv 10:2, Odessa 1:1, Dnipropetrovsk 4:2, Kadiyevka 4:0, Stalino 5:0
  • Mykolaiv: Odessa 2:1, Dnipropetrovsk 5:3, Kadiyevka 3:0, Stalino 2:0
  • Odessa: Dnipropetrovsk 4:0, Kadiyevka 3:1, Stalino 4:1
  • Dnipropetrovsk: Kadiyevka 4:3, Stalino 4:1
  • Kadiyevka: Stalino 0:0

Kharkiv: Kravchenko, Kladko, Krotov, K.Fomin, Privalov, V.Fomin, Semenov, Lesny, Andreyev, Natarov, Shpakovsky, Myshchenko, Us, Sorokin, Bem, M.Fomin, Hubaryev.

1928. Final tournament (Kharkiv)

There were 30 teams participating in the qualifiers.

#
Club
Win
Draw
Loss
Goals
Points
1 Kharkiv 3 0 0 9-3 6
2 Horlivka 1 1 1 4-5 3
3 Mykolaiv 1 0 2 4-4 2
4 Dnipropetrovsk 0 1 2 2-7 1

Games

  • Kharkiv: Horlivka 3:1, Mykolaiv 2:1, Dnipropetrovsk 4:1
  • Horlivka: Mykolaiv 2:1, Dnipropetrovsk 1:1
  • Mykolaiv: Dnipropetrovsk 2:0

Kharkiv: Norov, Kladko, Moskvin, K.Fomin, Privalov, V.Fomin, Semenov, Volodymyrsky, Alfyorov, Kapustin, Shpakovsky, Myshchenko, Hubaryev.

1929-1930. ?
1931. Final tournament (Kiev)

Quarterfinals

  • Kiev - Dnipropetrovsk 4:0
  • Kadiyevka - Horlivka 2:1
  • Stalino - Kharkiv 2:6
  • Mykolaiv - Odessa 3:2

Semifinals

  • Kiev - Kadiyevka 3:1
  • Kharkiv - Mykolaiv 5:2

Final

  • Kiev - Kharkiv 3:1

Kiev: Idzkovsky, Denysov, Vesen'yev, Dolhov, Piontkowski, Tyutchev, Sadovsky, Korotkykh, Schultz-Serdyuk, Malkhasov, Svyrydovsky.

1932. Final tournament (Dnipropetrovsk / Zaporizhia)

Preliminaries

  • Stalino - Moldavian Autonomy 17:0
  • Kharkiv - Stalino +:-
  • Dnipropetrovsk - Odessa Region +:-
  • Vinnytsia - Kiev 3:1
#
Club
Win
Draw
Loss
Goals
Points
1 Kharkiv 2 0 1 11-3 4
2 Donbas 2 0 1 8-7 4
3 Dnipropetrovsk 1 0 2 4-11 2
4 Vinnytsia 1 0 2 5-7 2

Games

  • Kharkiv: Donbas 4:1, Dnipropetrovsk 6:0, Vinnytsia 1:2
  • Donbas: Dnipropetrovsk 4:1, Vinnytsia 3:2
  • Dnipropetrovsk: Vinnytsia 3:1
1933. Holodomor
1934.

Quarterfinals

  • Kiev - Dnipropetrovsk 6:0
  • Moldavian Autonomy - Vinnytsia 0:7
  • Khakriv - Chernihiv 10:2
  • Odessa - Donbas 5:2

Semifinals

  • Vinnytsia - Kiev 0:4
  • Kharkiv - Odessa 7:0

Final

  • Kiev - Kharkiv 0:1

Kharkiv: Moskvin, Kyryllov, K.Fomin, M.Fomin, V.Fomin, Shvedov, Kulykov, Lesny, Zub, Parovyshnykov, Privalov.

1935. Group 1
#
Club
Win
Draw
Loss
Goals
Points
1 Dnipropetrovsk 2 1 1 9-6 9
2 Kiev 2 1 1 8-6 9
3 Kharkiv 1 2 1 7-8 8
4 Odessa 1 1 2 5-6 7
5 Stalino 1 1 2 5-8 7

Games

  • Dnipropetrovsk: Kiev 3:3, Kharkiv 1:2, Odessa 2:1, Stalino 3:0
  • Kiev: Kharkiv 3:2, Odessa 1:0, Stalino 0:1
  • Kharkiv: Odessa 1:1, Stalino 2:2
  • Odessa: Stalino 3:2

Dnipropetrovsk: Makhovsky, Hutaryev, Aleksopolski, Chyzhov, Belov, V.Kryvosheyev, Butenko, Hreber, Andreyev, Borodin, Bily, Laiko, Korchanynov, Kornylov, Zabuha, Shpynyov, P.Kryvosheyev, Starostin

1936.

Quarterfinals

Semifinals

Final

Dynamo Kyiv: Trusevych, Pravoverov, Klymenko, Tyutchev, Kuzmenko, Putystin, Honcharenko, Shylovsky, Shehodsky, Komarov, Korotkykh, Makhynya. Coach: Moisei Tovarovsky.

Team Winners Runners-Up Years
Kharkiv 8 1 1921, 1922, 1923, 1924, 1927, 1928, 1932, 1934
Kiev 2 2 1931, 1936
Dnipropetrovsk 1 0 1935
Odessa 0 4
Donbas (Horlivka) 0 2
Stalino 0 1
Mykolaiv 0 1

Soviet championship (1936-1991)

Until the creation of independent competitions, the Ukrainian republican championship had taken place in the Soviet First League after the World War II, the Soviet Second League (since 1963) or in the lower levels of the competition. Three to six of the best Ukrainian clubs competed in the Soviet Top League with Dynamo Kyiv competing in it consistently since its establishment; the Ukrainian champion was considered the team that has won the Ukrainian republican group which was part of the Soviet lower leagues.

Until World War II up to six clubs from Ukraine competed in the Soviet Top League. The nine non-amateur clubs from Ukraine participated in the first season of the Soviet competition: Dynamo Kyiv (I Division); Dynamo Dnipropetrovsk and Dynamo Kharkiv (II Division); Dynamo Odessa, Spartak Kharkiv, Vuhilnyki Staline, Lokomotyv Kyiv (III Division); Traktor Plant Kharkiv, Stal Dnipropetrovsk (IV Division). In 1938 the Soviet Top League was combined into the Super League with 26 clubs playing each other once. Ukraine was represented by six clubs. The following couple of years as the League was reduced only three Ukrainian teams participated in it.

A short time after World War II Ukraine was once again represented only by Dynamo Kyiv. Since 1949 and until 1964 the club was joined by Shakhtar Donetsk and Lokomotyv Kharkiv at the Top Level. In 1956 Lokomotyv was replaced by Avanhard, known today as Metalist. In 1965 Chornomorets Odessa returned to the Soviet Top League and was joined together with the SCA Odessa. Since that time Ukraine had four clubs in the League. In 1967 as the Odessa Army team was relegated, Zorya Luhansk emerged and soon thereafter winning the honors. The Luhansk's team was the first club from a provincial city in the Soviet Union that earned the top award. The club success indicated the big football boom in the region. At the start of 1970 Chornomorets Odessa and Shakhtar Donetsk were replaced with Karpaty Lviv and Dnipro Dnipropetrovsk, respectively. By mid-1970s there were again six Ukraine clubs participating. Dynamo Kyiv earned the Cup Winner's Cup and the European Super Cup where in the finals it defeated FC Bayern Munich the captain of which was Franz Beckenbauer. In 1980 the representation of Ukraine was reduced back to five clubs with the classic four: Dynamo Kyiv, Shakhtar Donetsk, Chornomorets Odessa, and Dnipro Dnipropetrovsk. Since 1982, those four were joined by Metalist Kharkiv and stayed at the top level to its dissolution in 1991, coincidentally all five of them represent the five metropoleis of Ukraine with over a million in population.[5] In 1990 Metalurh Zaporizhzhya joined the Soviet Premier League.

Ukrainian teams in the Soviet Top League

Team Seasons First
season
Last
season
Played Won Drawn Lost Goals
for
Goals
against
Points1 1st 2nd 3rd
Dinamo Kiev 54 1936 1991 1483 681 456 346 2306 1566 1810 13 11 3
Shakhter Donetsk[6] 44 1938 1991 1288 434 379 475 1522 1641 1241 - 2 2
Chernomorets Odessa[7] 26 1938 1991 789 260 230 299 841 986 744 - - 1
Dnepr Dnepropetrovsk 19 1972 1991 554 227 154 173 729 634 604 2 2 2
Metallist Kharkov[8] 14 1960 1991 438 133 124 181 413 530 390 - - -
Zorya Voroshylovgrad 14 1967 1979 412 125 135 152 416 469 377 1 - -
Karpaty Lvov 9 1971 1980 244 68 85 91 250 301 218 - - -
Lokomotiv Kharkov 4 1949 1954 34 23 57 47 112 176 91 - - -
SKA Odessa 2 1965 1966 68 4 19 45 38 121 27 - - -
Metallurg Zaporozhye 1 1991 1991 30 9 7 14 27 38 25 - - -
Tavriya Simferopol 1 1981 1981 34 8 7 19 27 54 23 - - -
Selmash Kharkov 1 1938 1938 25 8 6 11 34 45 22 - - -
Lokomotiv Kiev 1 1938 1938 25 8 5 12 43 64 21 - - -
Spartak Kharkov 1 1938 1938 25 5 7 13 43 63 17 - - -

1Two points for a win. In 1973, a point for a draw was awarded only to a team that won the subsequent penalty shootout. In 1978–1988, the number of draws for which points were awarded was limited.

Ukrainian teams in the Soviet First League

Club Winners Runners-Up 3rd Position
Chernomorets Odessa 4 1 3
Lokomotiv Kharkov 3
Karpaty Lvov 2 1
Zorya Lugansk 2
Dnepr Dnepropetrovsk 1 3 1
Shakhter Donetsk 1 2 1
Metallist Kharkov 1 2
Metallurg Zaporozhye 1 2
Tavriya Simferopol 1 2
SKA Odessa 2 1
Spartak Ivano-Frankovsk 1
Spartak Lvov 1
Sudnostroitel Nikolayev 1
SKA Kiev 4
SKA Karpaty Lvov 2
Lokomotiv Vinnitsa 2
SKCF Sevastopol 1
Kolos Nikopol 1

The first decade (1992-2000)

The independent championship was hastily organized at the start of the spring of 1992 after creation of the Ukrainian Premier League. 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 eleven out of the Soviet Second League. The other two of that eleven were placed in the Ukrainian Persha Liha as they were to be relegated no matter what. Also the two best teams of the Soviet Second League B of the Ukrainian Zone were placed in the Ukrainian Premier League along with the winner of the 1991 Ukrainian Cup holder that placed ninth in the same group. The 20 participants were split in two groups with winners playing for the champion title and runners-up for the third place. Three teams from each group were to be relegated. As was expected, the five favorites, Dynamo Kyiv, Shakhtar Donetsk, Chornomorets Odessa, Dnipro Dnipropetrovsk, and Metalist Kharkiv placed at the top of each group. In the championship play-off game in Lviv, a sensation took place as the Tavriya Simferopol beat Dynamo Kyiv 1-0. The Creamians earned the first Ukrainian title (thus far the only), losing only once to FC Temp Shepetivka.

After being stunned in the first championship by the tragedy in Lviv, Dynamo Kyiv was anxious to earn its first title on the second go. In the second championship that had a regular League format of 16 teams, the main rival of the Kievans was Dnipro Dnipropetrovsk which won the first half of the season. By the end of the season both teams were going shoulder to shoulder and at the end they finished with the same amount of earned points. The champion title was awarded to Dynamo Kyiv as they had better goal difference. Neither the Golden match or the fact that Dnipro had a better head-to-head record was considered.

The next seven years were known as the total hegemony of Dynamo Kyiv. During this period the Soviet stereotypes changed as some of the best teams were going into a crisis. After the 1993-94 season suddenly Metalist Kharkiv was relegated to the Persha Liha. In the 1995-96 season Shakhtar Donetsk had its worst year in the club's history, placing tenth. Chornomorets Odessa was relegated twice during that first decade after Leonid Buriak left the team. Also couple of newly created teams have emerged, Arsenal Kyiv and Metalurh Donetsk and, in addition, FC Vorskla Poltava has astonished everyone placing the third in the first club's season at the Top Level in 1997.

The decade of Kiev - Donetsk stand-off (2001-2010)

The next decade was marked by fierce competition between Dynamo Kyiv and Shakhtar Donetsk. Since 2000, Donetsk club proved to be the real challengers to Kiev's dominance. In 2000 Shakhtar earned their first qualification to the Champions League and their place in the Group stage. Nonetheless, Dynamo is still considered the standard of excellence in the country and the primary feeder to the Ukrainian 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 bring the Donetsk club to its next Ukrainian Cup title as well. Since that time the issue of foreign players became particularly acute and brought series of court cases (see Players section). The FFU and PFL worked together to solve that issue, coming with the plan to force the transitional limitation of the foreign players over the time.

The clubs such as Dnipro and Chornomorets recent contenders for the title had to put up a fierce competition against the newly established contenders Metalurh from Donetsk and Metalist from Kharkiv to qualify for the European competitions. FC Metalist Kharkiv did exceptionally well in the late 2000s, consistently placing right behind Dynamo and Shakhtar. Most remarkable was their participation in the 2009 European season when they had to compete against Dynamo Kyiv to advance to the Quarter-finals of the UEFA Cup 2009. Later the UEFA Cup edition was won for the first time by the Shakhtar Donetsk, the first club of the independent Ukraine.

Latest wins and events

UEFA Euro 2012 or simply Euro 2012, was the 14th European Championship for men's national football teams organised by UEFA and was co-hosted for the first time by Poland and Ukraine. Poland and Ukraine's bid was chosen by UEFA's Executive Committee in 2007.

In May 2015, Dnipro Dnipropetrovsk reached their first Europa League final after defeating Napoli 1–0 in Kiev

Performance of Ukraine based professional clubs in different championships

Club Winners Runners-Up 3rd Position Seasons Won
Dynamo Kyiv 28 18 3 1992-93, 1993-94, 1994-95, 1995-96, 1996-97, 1997-98, 1998-99, 1999-00, 2000-01, 2002-03, 2003-04, 2006-07, 2008-09, 2014-15, 2015-16
Shakhtar Donetsk 9 14 2 2001-02, 2004-05, 2005-06, 2007-08, 2009-10, 2010-11, 2011-12, 2012-13, 2013-14
Dnipro Dnipropetrovsk 2 4 9
Tavriya Simferopol 1 0 0 1992
Zorya Luhansk 1 0 0
Chornomorets Odesa 0 2 4
Metalist Kharkiv 0 0 4
Metalurh Donetsk 0 0 3
Kryvbas Kryvyi Rih 0 0 2
Vorskla Poltava 1 0 1
Karpaty Lviv 0 0 1

Titles by Region and Championship

The following table lists the Ukraine-based football champions by the Ukrainian regions.

Region Ukraine Soviet Union
City of Kiev
15
13
Donetsk Oblast
9
Dnipropetrovsk Oblast
2
Crimea
1
Luhansk Oblast
1

European Competitions

UEFA Champions League

The following teams have qualified for elimination rounds in the UEFA Champions League.

UEFA Cup Winners' Cup

The following teams have qualified for elimination rounds in the UEFA Cup Winners' Cup.

UEFA Europa League / UEFA Cup

The following teams have qualified for elimination rounds of the UEFA Cup.

Awards

Symbolic team of 2010
by the readers of ua-football.com.[9]
Head coach: Mircea Lucescu.
Other 2010 awards (ua-football.com readers)
[9]

Second symbolic team: Maksym Koval - Vitaliy Denisov, Milan Obradovic, Papa Gueye, Artem Fedetsky - Willian, Fernandinho, Oleksandr Aliyev, Denys Oliynyk - Taison, Artem Milevsky - Coach: Myron Markevych

See also

References