Dnepr Mogilev
Full nameFootball Club Dnepr
Founded4 January 1960
GroundSpartak Stadium, Mogilev
Capacity7,350
ManagerVyacheslav Geraschenko
LeagueBelarusian Premier League
2023Belarusian First League, 2nd of 17 (promoted)
WebsiteClub website

FC Dnepr Mogilev (Belarusian: ФК Дняпро Магілёў, romanized: FK Dniapro Mahilyow; Russian: ФК Днепр Могилёв) is a Belarusian football team, playing in the city of Mogilev. Their home stadium is Spartak Stadium.

History

Dnepr Mogilev was founded in 1960 under the name Khimik Mogilev and began playing in the Class B (second-tier league) of the Soviet championship, which consisted of over 140 teams split into several regional zones. In 1963, the team was relegated to the third tier due to league structure reorganization, and their name was changed to Spartak Mogilev. In 1970, they dropped to the fourth tier, but the following year were brought back to the third, both times due to further league reorganizations. In 1973, the club adopted their current name, Dnepr Mogilev. Dnepr would spend all subsequent Soviet-era seasons in the third-tier league, with one exception. In 1982, Anatoly Baidachny led Dnepr to win their zone and then the final round between the zone winners and promotion to the Soviet First League. However, the club couldn't maintain their second-tier spot and relegated the following year.[1]

In 1992, Dnepr joined the newly created Belarusian Premier League. The team's results in the post-Soviet years varied from runners-up in 1992 and champions in 1998 to the unfortunate relegation in 2011. Since then, Dnepr has come back and was relegated again in 2014. As of 2015, Dnepr is playing in the Belarusian First League.

In spring 2019, the club merged with Premier League team Luch Minsk, citing the willingness to keep the city of Mogilev represented in the top flight. The united club was named Dnyapro Mogilev. It inherited Luch's Premier League spot and licence, their sponsorships and most of the squad while keeping only a few Dnepr players and relocating to Mogilev. Dnepr continued its participation in youth tournaments independently from Luch.

In 2020, Dnepr Mogilev reformed and joined the Second League after Dnyapro Mogilev ceased to exist following their relegation from the Premier League.[2]

Name changes

  • 1960: founded as Khimik Mogilev (Belarusian: Хімік)
  • 1963: renamed to Spartak Mogilev
  • 1973: renamed to Dnepr Mogilev
  • 1998: absorbed Transmash Mogilev and renamed to Dnepr-Transmash Mogilev (Дняпро-Трансмаш, Dniapro-Transmash)
  • 2006: renamed to Dnepr Mogilev
  • 2019: merged with Luch Minsk into Dnyapro Mogilev
  • 2020: reestablished as Dnepr Mogilev

Honours

Current squad

As of December 2023

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

No. Pos. Nation Player
1 GK Belarus BLR Timur Filipenko
4 MF Belarus BLR Bogdan Kartelev
5 DF Belarus BLR Vladislav Tarasenko
7 MF Russia RUS Yuri Klochkov
8 MF Russia RUS Daniil Vigovskiy
9 MF Belarus BLR Vladislav Stepanenko
11 MF Ukraine UKR Dmytro Tereshchenko
17 DF Belarus BLR Pavel Markaw
20 MF Belarus BLR Pavel Bordukov
21 MF Belarus BLR Gleb Vershinin
22 MF Belarus BLR Anton Lukashov
23 DF Belarus BLR Aleksey Dunayev
27 GK Belarus BLR Nikita Sednev
29 MF Belarus BLR Alyaksandr Aleksandrovich
No. Pos. Nation Player
30 GK Belarus BLR Andrey Ignatovich
33 FW Belarus BLR Krasimir Kapov
43 FW Belarus BLR Mark Mokin
54 GK Russia RUS Yegor Generalov
55 MF Belarus BLR Nikita Krasnov
88 DF Belarus BLR Fedor Yurkevich
91 MF Belarus BLR Martin Artyukh
DF Belarus BLR Ilya Boltrushevich
DF Belarus BLR Yaroslav Kostusev
MF Belarus BLR Vladislav Puninskiy
MF Belarus BLR Roman Kuleshov
MF Belarus BLR Yegor Malatkov
FW Belarus BLR Kirill Gusev

League and Cup history

Soviet Union

Season Level Pos Pld W D L Goals Points Domestic Cup Notes
19602nd13305101536–5420
19612nd430148845–3736Round of 256
19622nd6321310935–3236Round of 256Relegated1
19633rd11308111121–3327Round of 512
19643rd8301281031–2532Round of 2048
19653rd1030617714–1829Round of 256
19663rd93210101225–3330
19673rd18346101818–3822Round of 4096
19683rd103811141325–2836Round of 256
19693rd7321211937–2335Round of 16Relegated2
19704th332195834–1943Promoted3
19713rd14389161330–4043
19723rd17389131625–4740
19733rd16327111421–38174
19743rd124014101637–5338
19753rd11348131326–4229
19763rd1938892134–6025
19773rd124015111444–4141
19783rd164615102151–5640
19793rd174612132141–6237
19803rd732991437–4827
19813rd2382051358–3945
19823rd130188460–3244
143018–46Final round, promoted
19832nd204212131740–6036Round of 64Relegated
19843rd134226671–2450Round of 32
19853rd330159664–3439Round of 64
19863rd5301551056–3135Round of 128
19873rd634178941–2942Round of 32
19883rd434198749–3646
19893rd9421971652–4745
19903rd13421761958–5440Round of 64
19913rd12421861847–3742
1992Round of 64
  • 1 Relegated due second level reduction from 10 zones (150 teams) in 1962 to a single group of 18 teams in 1963
  • 2 Relegated as Class B changed 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.

Belarus

Season Level Pos Pld W D L Goals Points Domestic Cup Notes
19921st215112228–424Runners-up
1992–931st532177854–3341Quarter-finals
1993–941st430176745–2240Round of 16
1994–951st530129944–3533Semi-finals
19951st61571726–2322Round of 16
19961st9301161333–3639
19971st430157848–3252Semi-finals
19981st128214355–1267Semi-finals
19991st430179453–2760Quarter-finals
20001st730147955–3349Round of 16
20011st926871129–3731Round of 16
20021st9261061038–3736Round of 16
20031st9308101238–4634Quarter-finals
20041st9301141529–3737Round of 16
20051st626127748–3643Quarter-finals
20061st1226651529–4723Round of 32
20071st1326581321–3323Round of 16
20081st9309111045–4238Quarter-finals
20091st3261241031–2640Round of 32
20101st8331171540–5340Round of 16
20111st12336141329–5132Round of 32Relegated
20122nd128203575–2263Round of 32Promoted
20131st1132961728–4233Round of 16
20141st12322141619–4220Semi-finalsRelegated via play-off
20152nd430175848–2156Round of 16
20162nd226204261–1963[1]Round of 32Promoted
20171st1230681627–4826First round
20181st1630372017–5316Semi-finalsRelegated
2019Round of 32
20203rd-
  1. ^
    One point deducted due to financial irregularities

Dnepr Mogilev in Europe

Season Competition Round Club 1st Leg 2nd Leg
1995 UEFA Intertoto Cup Group 8 Federal Republic of Yugoslavia Bečej 2–1 (H)
Poland Pogoń Szczecin 3–3 (A)
France Cannes 2–2 (H)
Romania Farul Constanţa 0–2 (A)
1998 UEFA Intertoto Cup 1R Hungary Debrecen 2–4 (H) 0–6 (A)
1999–2000 UEFA Champions League 2R Sweden AIK 0–1 (H) 0–2 (A)
2000 UEFA Intertoto Cup 1R Denmark Silkeborg 2–1 (H) 2–1 (A)
2R Czech Republic Chmel Blšany 2–6 (A) 0–2 (H)
2010–11 UEFA Europa League 1Q Albania Laçi 1–1 (A) 7–1 (H)
2Q Norway Stabæk 2–2 (A) 1–1 (H)
3Q Czech Republic Baník Ostrava 1–0 (H) 2–1 (A)
Play-off Spain Villareal 0–5 (A) 1–2 (H)

Managers

References

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