Ludogorez Razgrad
Ludogorez Razgrad | |||
Basic data | |||
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Surname | Професионален футболен клуб Лудогорец Разград PFC Ludogorez Razgrad |
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Seat | Razgrad , Bulgaria | ||
founding | 2001 | ||
president | Kyril Domustschiev | ||
Board | Aleksandar Aleksandrov | ||
Website | ludogorets.com | ||
First soccer team | |||
Head coach | Pavel Vrba | ||
Venue | Arena Ludogorez | ||
Places | 8,808 | ||
league | A group | ||
2019/20 | 1st place (master) | ||
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The PFK Ludogorez Rasgrad ( Bulgarian ПФК Лудогорец Разград ) is a Bulgarian football club from the north-eastern Bulgarian city of Razgrad , which has played in the A Grupa , the top division of the country , since 2011 .
The club was founded in 2001. In the 2010/11 season the Bulgarian pharmaceutical entrepreneur and oligarch Kyril Domustschiev bought the club. With his financial help, a new team was bought for the winter break. At the end of the season, the club took first place in the eastern group of the second division ( B Grupa ) and rose to the first division, immediately after the promotion, the team became Bulgarian champions. This success was repeated in the seven following seasons.
The venue is the Ludogorez arena , which can seat 8,008 spectators.
The athletic rise of Ludogorez
Ludogorez became one of the leading clubs in Bulgaria after his promotion.
In the second qualifying round of the 2012/13 season Ludogorez met the Croatian participant Dinamo Zagreb . The first game in Razgrad ended 1-1, while the club lost the second leg 3-2, ending their debut in Europe early.
After winning the 2012/13 championship, the team qualified for the second qualifying round of the 2013/14 UEFA Champions League . There it lost away to the Slovak champions ŠK Slovan Bratislava , but prevailed 3-0 in the second leg. In the following round Ludogorez won both games against FK Partizan Belgrade , 2-1 in the first leg and 1-0 in the second leg. Since the club was defeated by FC Basel in the next round, he entered the UEFA Europa League .
Ludogorez won 2-0 in Eindhoven in his 2013/14 UEFA Europa League group stage debut against PSV Eindhoven . Ludogorez also won the following home game against Dinamo Zagreb 3-0. On the next match day, the Bulgarian champions celebrated their third win in their third game against the Ukrainian team Chornomorez Odessa .
Ludogorez Razgrad won the first game of the sixteenth-finals of the 2013/14 UEFA Europa League away from Lazio . This made the club the only team this season, along with FC Salzburg and FC Valencia , to have won all away games in four games.
In the second leg at the Wassil-Lewski-Nationalstadion on February 27, 2014 Ludogorez celebrated a place in the second round of the Europa League after a 3-3 draw against Lazio Rome . The game was attended by over 20,000 spectators from all over Bulgaria, it started with a goal by Keita Baldé - the second fastest goal in the history of the Europa League, after just 16 seconds of playing time. At the beginning of the second half, Lazio took a 2-0 lead. Ludogorez's team came back into the game with a goal from striker Roman Bezjak , who was the second top scorer in the competition with six goals on February 27, 2014. Ten minutes later, Christo Slatinski's shot from 25 meters equalized. The game was fiercely contested and Lazio briefly took the lead again. Thanks to a goal from Juninho Quixadá two minutes before the end of the game, PFK Ludogorez Razgrad secured a place in the round of 16 of the UEFA Europa League - with an overall result of 4: 3. The Valencia was the opponent of the knockout games.
The Spanish team won 3-0 against Ludogorez Razgrad in Sofia despite an early dismissal against Seydou Keita . The game at the Vasil Levski National Stadium was watched by 42,000 spectators - a record for a Bulgarian team in an official UEFA match outside their city. The second leg took place in Valencia on March 20, 2014 and Valencia won 1-0.
The club dominated the A Grupa for the 2013/14 season by celebrating its third championship title in a row on May 7, 2014. On May 15, 2014, the club achieved its "double" after a 1-0 win against Botew Plovdiv , the second after his promotion to the A Grupa.
In the 2014/15 season, Ludogorez qualified for the UEFA Champions League for the first time after center- back Cosmin Moți in the decisive penalty shootout of the play-offs against Steaua Bucharest, replacing goalkeeper Wladislaw Stojanow, who scored a penalty himself and scored two penalties Had kept.
Squad 2019/20
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successes
- Bulgarian champion (9): 2011/12 , 2012/13 , 2013/14 , 2014/15 , 2015/16 , 2016/17 , 2017/18 , 2018/19 , 2019/20
- Bulgarian Cup Winner (2): 2012, 2014
- Bulgarian Supercup (4): 2012, 2014, 2018, 2019
European Cup balance sheet
season | competition | round | opponent | total | To | Back |
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2012/13 | UEFA Champions League | 2nd qualifying round | Dinamo Zagreb | 3: 4 | 1: 1 (H) | 2: 3 (A) |
2013/14 | UEFA Champions League | 2nd qualifying round | ŠK Slovan Bratislava | 4: 2 | 1: 2 (A) | 3: 0 (H) |
3rd qualifying round | Partizan Belgrade | 3: 1 | 2: 1 (H) | 1: 0 (A) | ||
Play-offs | FC Basel | 2: 6 | 2: 4 (H) | 0: 2 (A) | ||
2013/14 | UEFA Europa League | Group stage | PSV Eindhoven | 4-0 | 2: 0 (A) | 2: 0 (H) |
Dinamo Zagreb | 5: 1 | 3: 0 (H) | 2: 1 (A) | |||
Chornomorets Odessa | 2: 1 | 1: 0 (A) | 1: 1 (H) | |||
Round of 16 | Lazio Rome | 4: 3 | 1: 0 (A) | 3: 3 (H) | ||
Round of 16 | Valencia CF | 0: 4 | 0: 3 (H) | 0: 1 (A) | ||
2014/15 | UEFA Champions League | 2nd qualifying round | F91 Dudelange | 5: 1 | 4: 0 (H) | 1: 1 (A) |
3rd qualifying round | Partizan Belgrade | ( a ) 2: 2 | 0: 0 (H) | 2: 2 (A) | ||
Play-offs | Steaua Bucharest | 1: 1 | 0: 1 (A) | 1: 0 a.d. (H) | ||
Group stage | Liverpool FC | 3: 4 | 1: 2 (A) | 2: 2 (H) | ||
real Madrid | 1: 6 | 1: 2 (H) | 0: 4 (A) | |||
FC Basel | 1: 4 | 1: 0 (H) | 0: 4 (A) | |||
2015/16 | UEFA Champions League | 2nd qualifying round | FC Milsami | 1: 3 | 0: 1 (H) | 1: 2 (A) |
2016/17 | UEFA Champions League | 2nd qualifying round | FK Mladost Podgorica | 5-0 | 2: 0 (H) | 3: 0 (A) |
3rd qualifying round | FK Red Star Belgrade | 6: 4 | 2: 2 (H) | 4: 2 a.d. (A) | ||
Play-offs | Viktoria Plzen | 4: 2 | 2: 0 (H) | 2: 2 (A) | ||
Group stage | FC Basel | 1: 1 | 1: 1 (A) | 0: 0 (H) | ||
Paris Saint-Germain | 3: 5 | 1: 3 (H) | 2: 2 (A) | |||
Arsenal FC | 2: 9 | 0: 6 (A) | 2: 3 (H) | |||
2016/17 | UEFA Europa League | Round of 16 | FC Copenhagen | 1: 2 | 1: 2 (H) | 0: 0 (A) |
2017/18 | UEFA Champions League | 2nd qualifying round | FK Žalgiris Vilnius | 5: 3 | 1: 2 (A) | 4: 1 (H) |
3rd qualifying round | Hapoel Beer Sheva | a ) | 3: 3 (0: 2 (A) | 3: 1 (H) | ||
2017/18 | UEFA Europa League | Play-offs | Sūduva Marijampolė | 2-0 | 2: 0 (H) | 0: 0 (A) |
Group stage | Istanbul Basakşehir | 1: 2 | 0: 0 (A) | 1: 2 (H) | ||
TSG 1899 Hoffenheim | 3: 2 | 2: 1 (H) | 1: 1 (A) | |||
Sporting Braga | 3: 1 | 2: 0 (A) | 1: 1 (H) | |||
Round of 16 | AC Milan | 0: 4 | 0: 3 (H) | 0: 1 (A) | ||
2018/19 | UEFA Champions League | 1st qualifying round | Crusaders FC | 9-0 | 7: 0 (H) | 2: 0 (A) |
2nd qualifying round | Videoton FC | 0: 1 | 0: 0 (H) | 0: 1 (A) | ||
2018/19 | UEFA Europa League | 3rd qualifying round | HŠK Zrinjski Mostar | 2: 1 | 1: 0 (H) | 1: 1 (A) |
Play-offs | Torpedo Kutaisi | 5-0 | 1: 0 (A) | 4: 0 (H) | ||
Group stage | Bayer 04 Leverkusen | 3: 4 | 2: 3 (H) | 1: 1 (A) | ||
FC Zurich | 1: 2 | 0: 1 (A) | 1: 1 (H) | |||
AEK Larnaka | 1: 1 | 1: 1 (A) | 0: 0 (H) | |||
2019/20 | UEFA Champions League | 1st qualifying round | Ferencváros Budapest | 3: 5 | 1: 2 (A) | 2: 3 (H) |
2019/20 | UEFA Europa League | 2nd qualifying round | Valur Reykjavík | 5: 1 | 1: 1 (A) | 4: 0 (H) |
3rd qualifying round | The New Saints FC | 9-0 | 5: 0 (H) | 4: 0 (A) | ||
Play-offs | NK Maribor | ( a ) 2: 2 | 0: 0 (H) | 2: 2 (A) | ||
Group stage | CSKA Moscow | 6: 2 | 5: 1 (H) | 1: 1 (A) | ||
Ferencváros Budapest | 4: 1 | 3: 0 (A) | 1: 1 (H) | |||
Espanyol Barcelona | 0: 7 | 0: 1 (H) | 0: 6 (A) | |||
Round of 16 | Inter Milan | 1: 4 | 0: 2 (H) | 1: 2 (A) | ||
2020/21 | UEFA Champions League | 1st qualifying round | FK Budućnost Podgorica | 3: 1 | 3: 1 (A) | |
2nd qualifying round | FC Midtjylland | 0: 1 | 0: 1 (H) | |||
2020/21 | UEFA Europa League | 3rd qualifying round | bye | |||
Play-offs |
Overall record: 92 games, 32 wins, 28 draws, 32 defeats, 134: 111 goals (goal difference +23)
player
- Júnior Caiçara (2012-2015)
Records
- After FC Levadia Tallinn, Ludogorez is the second club in the world to have achieved a triple after advancing to the first division in their country by winning all three trophies (championship, cup and supercup).
- In the 2011/12 season , the club received 73 goals scored and only 16 goals conceded, the award for the club with the best offensive and defensive of the Bulgarian A Grupa
- 42,000 spectators in the Vasil Levski National Stadium - an absolute record for a team in Bulgaria in an official UEFA game outside of its city.
Web links
- Club homepage (Bulgarian, English)
Individual evidence
- ↑ The whiz kid from the crazy forest . Swiss radio and television, August 21, 2013
- ^ Ludogorets Arena - football temple of the North-East . ( Memento of June 6, 2012 in the Internet Archive ) Website of the PFC Ludogorez, accessed on August 28, 2014.
- ↑ Europa League, 2013/14, group stage, 2nd matchday: Ludogorez Rasgrad - Dinamo Zagreb 3-0 (2-0) . Kicker, October 3, 2013
- ↑ Ludogorets continue run at Chornomorets . UEFA Europa League News, October 24, 2013.
- ↑ Europa League intermediate round : double red in Lazio embarrassment . Spox.com , Feb. 20, 2014
- ↑ Ludogorets fights against Lazio . UEFA website, 27 February 2014
- ↑ Simon Hart: Valencia gives Ludogorets no chance . UEFA website, 13 March 2014.
- ↑ Лудогорец издуха рекордите . PFC Ludogorez website, accessed August 28, 2014 (Bulgarian).
- ↑ Delfin Ramirez: Alcácer makes everything clear for Valencia . UEFA.com, March 20, 2014
- ↑ Field player saves two penalties and becomes a hero. In: Spiegel Online from August 28, 2014 (accessed on August 28, 2014).
- ↑ Ludogorets thanks to Moţi in the group stage. UEFA Online, August 27, 2014 (accessed August 28, 2014).