FK Dynamo Moscow

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Dynamo Moscow
Club emblem of Dynamo Moscow
Basic data
Surname Futbolny Club «Dinamo» Moskva
Seat Moscow , Russia
founding April 18, 1923
Colours white - blue
president Sergey Fedorov
Website fcdinamo.ru
First soccer team
Head coach Kirill Novikov
Venue VTB arena
Places 26,121
league Premjer League
2019/20 6th place
home
Away

The FC Dynamo Moscow ( Russian Футбольный клуб "Динамо" Москва , Futbolny club «Dinamo» Moskva ) is an out of the sports club Dynamo Moscow forth previous Russian football club , in Moscow , is resident, the capital of the country.

history

Soviet Union

The now independent club was founded on April 18, 1923 as the football division of the Dynamo Moscow sports club. In 1936 Dynamo was a founding member of the Soviet league and remained as one of only two teams, alongside Dynamo Kiev , since 1936 - with the exception of the interruption of play during the Great Patriotic War  - always in the highest Soviet league and is never in the 2nd Soviet League relegated. Dynamo Moscow is eleven times Soviet champions and was only surpassed by the Ukrainian club Dynamo Kiev, which is the Soviet record holder with thirteen championships won, and by city rivals Spartak Moscow (12 ×). At the time of the Soviet Union , the association was subordinate to the secret service KGB .

In 1945 Dynamo Moscow was the first Soviet football team allowed to travel to Western Europe . Four games were played on the British Isles. The until then largely unknown team in the West defeated Cardiff City 10: 1 and Arsenal 4: 3. Two games ended in a draw: 3: 3 against Chelsea and 2: 2 against Glasgow Rangers .

On May 27, 1972 Dynamo was in the final of the European Cup Winners' Cup against Glasgow Rangers at Camp Nou , which was lost 3-2.

Russia

After the dissolution of the Soviet Union, Dynamo Moscow was one of the founding members of the newly created Russian Supreme League . In the first two seasons in 1992 and 1993 , the team occupied third place in the table. The following season they became runner-up, which is the team's best performance in the Russian league so far. On June 14, 1995, the first Russian Cup victory (8: 7 on penalties against Rotor Volgograd ) was celebrated. In the 1997 and 2008 seasons again the third place was conquered. Otherwise the places in the secured table center field were occupied. In the 2011/12 season , the team from Moscow reached third place in the table and lost the cup final on May 9, 2012 against Rubin Kazan with 0: 1. On August 17, 2012, the Romanian Dan Petrescu took over the coaching position at FK Dynamo Moscow. By participating in the 2012 cup final, Dynamo took part in qualifying for the 2012/13 UEFA Europa League . In the third qualifying round, the fourth of the Scottish Premier League Dundee United were defeated 2-2 and 5-0. In the play-off round Dynamo was eliminated against the German representative VfB Stuttgart after 0: 2 and 1: 1.

In the 2012/13 season , Dynamo barely missed a place in a European competition as seventh in the table. In the cup they lost in the quarterfinals with a goal by Samuel Eto'o with 0: 1 after extra time against Anzhi Makhachkala . In 2013/14 , Dynamo qualified fourth again for qualifying for the 2014/15 UEFA Europa League . In the cup, Dynamo was eliminated in the fifth round against the second-rate club FK Salyut Belgorod . Following a 4-0 defeat at bottom Anhi Makhachkala in April 2014, head coach Dan Petrescu was dismissed. His successor was Stanislav Tschertschessow . After the successes in the third qualifying round against the Israeli league third Hapoel Ironi Kirjat Schmona and in the playoff round against Omonia Nicosia , Dynamo reached the group stage of the Europa League 2014/15 at the end of August 2014 . They won all six matches in their group, took first place in the table and thus qualified for the knockout round, in which they beat RSC Anderlecht in the round of 32 and thus "for the first time in 19 years a UEFA round of 16 Competition ”. Then they were eliminated in the round of 16 against SSC Napoli . Originally, Dynamo would have been allowed to take part in the third qualifying round of the 2015/16 UEFA Europa League with fourth place in the table in 2014/15 , but was banned by UEFA for violations of financial fair play and replaced by Rubin Kazan . In the cup, Dynamo was eliminated in the sixteenth finals against the second-rate club Schinnik Yaroslavl .

After a weak start in the domestic league, the previous head coach Stanislaw Tschertschessow had to leave the club on July 13, 2015. Ultimately, Dynamo occupied the penultimate place in the table in the Premjer League 2015/16 and had to relegate to the second division for the first time in the club's history. Seven matchdays before the end of the 2016/17 season , the club secured immediate promotion to the Premjer league.

In the Premjer-Liga 2017/18 Dynamo succeeded in establishing a corresponding establishment and achieved an 8th place in the table, far removed from the relegation ranks.

Stadion

FK Dynamo Moscow played its home games in the 37,684-seat Dynamo Stadium , which was built in 1928. The home stadium was demolished in 2008 and replaced by a new building. A multifunctional arena was built on the site of the former Dynamo stadium . The entire stadium was demolished, only the listed facade was preserved. After the arena was completed in 2018, it was renamed the VTB-Arena-Park . Due to the construction work, Dynamo played its home games in the meantime in the Arena Khimki in Khimki in northwest Moscow. The first football game was scheduled to take place in Dynamo's new venue on March 10, but the stadium was classified as not ready to play at the end of February.

Sponsors

Since 2009, the main sponsor of the association has been the second largest Russian credit institution, Wneschtorgbank .

successes

National

International

Current squad 2019/20

Status: August 2019

No. position Surname
1 RussiaRussia TW Anton Schunin
31 RussiaRussia TW Igor Leshchuk
2 RussiaRussia FROM Grigori Morosow
3 RussiaRussia FROM Saurbek Pliev
4th RussiaRussia FROM Vladimir Rykov
13 RussiaRussia FROM Igor Kalinin
15th RussiaRussia FROM Roman Neustädter
17th RussiaRussia FROM Sergei Parshivlyuk
21st RussiaRussia FROM Dmitri Skopinsev
24 RussiaRussia FROM Roman Yevgenev
34 RussiaRussia FROM Konstantin Rausch
44 Bosnia and HerzegovinaBosnia and Herzegovina FROM Toni Šunjić
No. position Surname
6th RussiaRussia MF Artur Yusupov
7th PortugalPortugal MF Miguel Cardoso
11 PolandPoland MF Sebastian Szymanski
20th RussiaRussia MF Vyacheslav Grulyov
22nd BrazilBrazil MF Joãozinho
23 RussiaRussia MF Anton Sosnin
77 Burkina FasoBurkina Faso MF Charles Kaboré
78 RussiaRussia MF Danil Lipowoj
88 SwedenSweden MF Oscar Hiljemark
5 GermanyGermany ST Maximilian Philipp
8th RussiaRussia ST Kirill Panchenko
9 CameroonCameroon ST Clinton N'Jie
10 NigeriaNigeria ST Sylvester Igboun
48 RussiaRussia ST Yevgeny Lutsenko

Club records

Dynamo's record goal scorers

The most accurate attacker in the service of Dynamo Moscow was Sergei Solovyov . This scored a total of 135 goals in 209 games for the capital city. This makes him the only striker who has scored more than 100 goals for Dynamo.

space Name of the player Gates Period
1. RussiaRussia Sergei Solovyov 135 1940-1952
2. RussiaRussia Konstantin Beskov 93 1941-1954
3. RussiaRussia Vasily Karzew 72 1945–1951
4th RussiaRussia Valery Gassayev 70 1979-1985
5. RussiaRussia Igor Chislenko 68 1957-1970
6th RussiaRussia Vasily Trofimov 67 1939-1953
7th RussiaRussia Vladimir Ilyin 63 1946-1957
8th. RussiaRussia Vladimir Sawdunin 62 1945–1966
9. RussiaRussia Vladimir Kozlov 58 1967-1976
10. RussiaRussia Alexander Borodyuk 57 1982-1989

Note : Only league hits were counted. Goals in national and international cup competitions were not included.

Dynamo's record player

In 1987, Alexander Novikov set the record for the most league games in Moscow with 327 games for Dynamo. He replaced goalkeeper legend Lev Yashin , who played a total of 326 games for Dynamo between 1950 and 1970.

space Name of the player Calls Period
1. RussiaRussia Alexander Novikov 395 1973-1987
2. RussiaRussia Lev Yashin 326 1950-1970
3. RussiaRussia Viktor Anichkin 322 1960-1972
4th RussiaRussia Valery Maslow 319 1961-1971
5. RussiaRussia Viktor Tsaryov 298 1955-1966
6th RussiaRussia Alexander Machovikov 287 1971-1983
7th RussiaRussia Gennady Yevryushikhin 283 1966-1976
8th. RussiaRussia Sergei Nikulin 280 1969-1984
9. RussiaRussia Vladimir Sawdunin 249 1945–1966
10. RussiaRussia Alexei Petrushin 244 1970-1981

Note : Only league games were counted. Games in national and international cup competitions were not included.

Well-known former players

Russia

CIS and former Soviet Union

Europe

America

Africa

Asia / Oceania

Trainer

(incomplete)

Name of the trainer Period comment
RussiaRussia Konstantin Kwashin 1936 • 1936: 1st Soviet championship title
RussiaRussia Viktor Dubinin 1937 • 1937: 2nd Soviet championship title
• 1937: 1st Soviet cup win
RussiaRussia Mikhail Towarovsky 1938
RussiaRussia Viktor Dubinin 1939
RussiaRussia Viktor Teterin 1939
RussiaRussia Lev Korchebokov 1939
RussiaRussia Boris Arkadyev 1940-1944 • 1940: 3rd Soviet championship title
RussiaRussia Lev Korchebokov 1944
RussiaRussia Mikhail Yakushin 1944-1950 • 1945: 4th Soviet championship title
• 1949: 5th Soviet championship title
RussiaRussia Viktor Dubinin 1950-1951
RussiaRussia Mikhail Semichastny 1952-1953
RussiaRussia Mikhail Yakushin 1953-1960 • 1954: 6th Soviet championship title
• 1955: 7th Soviet championship title
• 1957: 8th Soviet championship title
• 1959: 9th Soviet championship title
• 1953: 2nd Soviet cup win
RussiaRussia Vsevolod Blinkow 1961
RussiaRussia Alexander Ponomarev 1962-1965 • 1963: 10th Soviet championship title
RussiaRussia Vyacheslav Solovyov 1965-1966
RussiaRussia Konstantin Beskov 1967-1972 • 1967: 3rd Soviet Cup win
• 1970: 4th Soviet Cup win
• 1972: Finalist in the European Cup Winners' Cup
RussiaRussia Gavriil Kachalin 1973-1974
RussiaRussia Alexander Sewidov 1975-1979 • 1976: 11th and last Soviet championship title
• 1977: 5th Soviet Cup win
• 1977: 1st and last Soviet Super Cup win
• 1976: Ciutat de Barcelona (only international cup)
RussiaRussia Viktor Tsaryov 1979
RussiaRussia Yevgeny Gorjansky 1980
RussiaRussia Vyacheslav Solovyov 1980-1983
RussiaRussia Vadim Ivanov 1983
RussiaRussia Alexander Sewidov 1983-1985 • 1984: 6th and last Soviet Cup win
RussiaRussia Eduard Malofejew 1985-1987
RussiaRussia Anatoly Byschowets 1987-1990
RussiaRussia Semyon Altman 1990-1991
RussiaRussia Valery Gassayev 1991-1993
RussiaRussia Adamas Golodets 1993
RussiaRussia Konstantin Beskov 1994-1995 • 1995: 1st Russian Cup win
RussiaRussia Adamas Golodets 1995-1998
RussiaRussia Georgi Yarzew 1998-1999
RussiaRussia Alexei Petrushin 1999
RussiaRussia Valery Gassayev 2000-2001
RussiaRussia Alexander Novikov 2001-2002
UkraineUkraine Viktor Prokopenko 2002-2003
Czech RepublicCzech Republic Jaroslav Hřebík 2003-2004
RussiaRussia Viktor Bondarenko 2004
RussiaRussia Oleg Romanzew 2004-2005
BrazilBrazil Ivo Wortmann 2005
RussiaRussia Andrei Kobelev 2005
RussiaRussia Yuri Syomin 2006
RussiaRussia Andrei Kobelev 2006-2010
MontenegroMontenegro Miodrag Božović 2010-2011
RussiaRussia Sergei Silkin 2011–2012
RussiaRussia Dmitri Chochlow 2012
RomaniaRomania Dan Petrescu 2012-2014
RussiaRussia Stanislav Cherchessov 2014-2015
RussiaRussia Andrei Kobelev 2015-2016
UkraineUkraine Yuri Kalitwinzew 2016-2017
RussiaRussia Dmitri Chochlow 2017-2019

Current coaching staff

Web links

Commons : FC Dinamo Moscow  - Collection of images, videos and audio files

Individual evidence

  1. championat.com: Петреску стал новым главным тренером московского "Динамо" article from August 17, 2012 (Russian)
  2. de.uefa.com: uefa.com: “Stuttgart with one leg in the group stage” Article from August 22, 2012
  3. gazeta.ru: Петреску уволили из "Динамо" article from April 7, 2014 (Russian)
  4. kicker.de: EL group draw , published and accessed on August 29, 2014
  5. de.uefa.com: Dinamo Moskva turns game against Anderlecht Article from February 26, 2015
  6. spiegel.de: "Europa League: Uefa excludes Dynamo Moscow" Article from June 19, 2015
  7. uefa.com: Descent 2015/16 article from May 21, 2016
  8. championat.com: «Динамо» досрочно обеспечило себе выход в РФПЛ Article of April 12, 2017 (Russian)
  9. Preserving Petrovski Park: Erick van Egeraat wins international competition to design VTB Arena Park ( Memento of the original from October 27, 2011 in the Internet Archive ) Info: The archive link was inserted automatically and has not yet been checked. Please check the original and archive link according to the instructions and then remove this notice. , Announcement on worldarchitecturenews.com dated June 30, 2010. @1@ 2Template: Webachiv / IABot / www.worldarchitecturenews.com
  10. stadionwelt.de: VTB Arena will not open until the beginning of 2018 Article dated February 7, 2017