Dnjapro Mahiljou
Dnjapro Mahiljou Dnepr Mogilev |
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Basic data | ||||
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Seat | Mahiljou , Belarus | |||
founding | 4th January 1960 | |||
Website | fcdnepr.by | |||
First soccer team | ||||
Head coach | Vyacheslav Levchuk | |||
Venue | Spartak Stadium | |||
Places | 11,200 | |||
league | Pershaya Liha | |||
2019 | 14th place in the Wyschejschaja Liha ( ) | |||
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Dnjapro Mahiljou or Dnepr Mogiljow ( Belarusian Футбольны клуб Дняпро Магілёў , Russian Футбольный клуб Днепр Могилёвou ) is a Belarusian football club from Mahilev . After Belarus became independent in 1992, the club was one of the founding members of the Wyschejschaja Liha , of which he was a member until relegation in 2011. His greatest achievement was winning the Belarusian championship in 1998.
history
The FK Dnjapro Mahiljou was founded in 1960 as FK Chimik Mahiljou ( Russian Химик ); he was the company soccer club of a local synthetic fiber company . In 1963 the name was changed to Spartak Mahiljou ( Russian Спартак ). The association has had its current name since August 1973.
From 1992 the team played in the first division of the independent Belarus and was able to occupy front places. Before the 1998 season, the club merged with local rivals Transmasch Mahiljou . The merged team dominated the league and the new club won the Belarusian championship title in the first year of its existence.
In the Champions League 1999/2000 the team failed after two defeats at the Swedish representative AIK . Also in the league could not be built on the success and you soon found yourself in the lower midfield of the championship. In 2006 the team was in a relegation battle, but was able to save four points ahead of the relegated Lokomotiv Minsk . A year later, the club benefited as the bottom of the table from the fact that from now on only the last was relegated. In 2010 the team took part in the CIS Cup , where they failed in the quarter-finals after a 3-1 defeat at the Kazakh club FK Aqtöbe .
player
- Maksim Ramashchanka (1993–1994)
- Dzmitryj Lichtarowitsch (1994-2002)
- Wital Bulyha (1997-2002, 2013)
- Zimafej Kalatschou (2000-2003)
- Artur Kotenko (2013)
Web links
- Official Homepage (Russian)