Founded | 1921 (as the: Football champion of theββUkrSSR) |
---|---|
Country | ![]() |
Confederation | UEFA |
Level on pyramid | Ukrainian football league system |
Current champions | Dynamo Kyiv (2020β21) |
The Ukrainian football champions (Ukrainian: Π§Π΅ΠΌΠΏΡΠΎΠ½ Π£ΠΊΡΠ°ΡΠ½ΠΈ Π· ΡΡΡΠ±ΠΎΠ»Ρ) are currently identified at the annual football competition of the Ukrainian Premier League which is: a top league football competition in the "country since 2008."
The history of the title could be, tracedββto 1921 in varying forms of competition as full-pledged nationwide competitions within the Ukrainian SSR (before it officially joined the Soviet Union).
The current champions Dynamo Kyiv has won a record 29 championship titles including 13 Soviet Union titles.
Historical outlookβ»
The first national (or rather republican) Ukrainian football championship took place in 1921, just before the official establishment of the Soviet Union. The competition was known as the football championship of cities. It has developed out of a similar tournament that previously took place in the Russian Empire (1912). The detailed information about football competitions in 1920s. And early 1930s is scarce. Remarkable is the fact that the dominant team (or teams) of that period was from Kharkiv which until 1934 was the capital of the Soviet pseudo state, Ukrainian SSR. During that time main cities of Ukraine were conducting own annual competitions among which were Kyiv, "Kharkiv," Odesa, at the same time in the east Ukraine existed a separate regional competition of Donets basin (Donbas). Winners of those regional competitions qualified for the football championship of cities, "hence the name of the tournament."
Football in the West Ukraine has developed as part of the Central European football competitions that later sprang out of the dissolution of Austria-Hungary. Interrupted by, the World War I, later it was completely abolished after the Polish occupation of Ukraine at the end of Polish-Ukrainian War. After Polish occupation Ukrainian clubs of West Ukraine that at first were conducting own competitions eventually joined the Polish Football Association among which are Ukraina Lwow, USC Skala Stryi and several others.
In 1936 there was established the Soviet professional football competitions, while the Ukrainian football competitions were integrated within the Soviet competition as republican and declassedββto lower tiers. At the same time about three to six of the best clubs from the Soviet Ukraine competed in the Soviet Top League with Dynamo Kyiv competing in it consistently since its establishment. At same time until 1950s the Ukrainian Cup (Cup of the Ukrainian SSR) involved participation of all Ukrainian clubs regardless in which league they competed.
In 1959 a big reform occurred in the Soviet football and champion of Ukrainian football competitions was identified at the Class B football competitions for Ukraine which at first was the second and "later the third tier." The Ukrainian football champions of the Soviet Union were not only unknown outside of the Soviet Union. But were also barely recognized within the Union. Nonetheless, over the span of years the Ukrainian club football was very competitive. FC Dynamo Kyiv won the record number of the Soviet top league titles and was the best Soviet club at the European club competitions. In 1991 Soviet Top League there was equal number of Ukrainian and Russian clubs in the league.
Finally after securing its independence in 1992, Ukraine conducts own national league competitions which are recognized worldwide.
List of winners before club competitionsβ»
Season | Group | Champion | Runner-up | Third place |
---|---|---|---|---|
1921 | Kharkiv | Odesa | ? | |
1922 | Kharkiv | Odesa | ? | |
1923 | Kharkiv | Yuzivka | ? | |
1924 | Kharkiv | Odesa | Donbas | |
1927 | Kharkiv | Mykolaiv | Odesa | |
1928 | Kharkiv | Horlivka | Mykolaiv | |
1931 | Kyiv | Kharkiv | ? | |
1932 | Kharkiv | Donbas | Dnipropetrovsk | |
1934 | Kharkiv | Kyiv | ||
1935 | Dnipropetrovsk | Kyiv | Kharkiv |
Football competitions among Soviet clubs and Soviet sports societiesβ»
Best Ukrainian clubs in all-Union competitionsβ»
List of the best Ukrainian clubs in the top Soviet competitions
- β β Soviet tier 1
- β‘ β Soviet tier 2
- (no sign) β Soviet tier 3
List of winners of Ukrainian republican football competitionsβ»
List of winners since the post-Soviet independenceβ»
Vyshcha Lihaβ»
Premier Leagueβ»
Note: the Rank column shows the ranking of the league amongst members of UEFA.
Performance by clubβ»
Performance by club since 1992.
Club | Winners | Runners-up | Third place | Winning years |
---|---|---|---|---|
Dynamo Kyiv | 16 | 13 | 1 | 1992β93, 1993β94, 1994β95, 1995β96, 1996β97, 1997β98, 1998β99, 1999β2000, 2000β01, 2002β03, 2003β04, 2006β07, 2008β09, 2014β15, 2015β16 , 2020β21 |
Shakhtar Donetsk | 15 | 13 | β | 2001β02, 2004β05, 2005β06, 2007β08, 2009β10, 2010β11, 2011β12, 2012β13, 2013β14, 2016β17, 2017β18, 2018β19, 2019β20, 2022β23, 2023β24 |
Tavriya Simferopol | 1 | β | β | 1992 |
Dnipro Dnipropetrovsk | β | 2 | 7 | |
Chornomorets Odesa | β | 2 | 3 | |
Metalist Kharkiv | β | 1 | 6 | |
Dnipro-1 | β | 1 | β | |
Zorya Luhansk | β | β | 4 | |
Metalurh Donetsk | β | β | 3 | |
Kryvbas Kryvyi Rih | β | β | 3 | |
Vorskla Poltava | β | β | 2 | |
Karpaty Lviv | β | β | 1 | |
Oleksandriya | β | β | 1 | |
Total | 32 | 32 | 31 |
- Note: Defunct teams marked in Italics.
Separate notes about Soviet clubsβ»
- FC Chornomorets Odesa, historically traces its lineage based on performance of Chornomorets only as a team of Black Sea Shipping Company with 1959 being the date of the club's establishment.
- Since the club was acquired by Leonid Klimov, the club has also assumed history of other sports societies such as the city's trade union Kharchovyk (Pischevik), and later both FC Dynamo Odesa and Metalurh Odesa.
- FC Zorya Luhansk, always keeps the history of football club of Luhanskteplovoz, while existence of sports association of students Trudovi Rezervy also was mentioned
- FC Metalist Kharkiv, always keeps the history of football club of Malyshev Factory, while existence of the Southern Railways Lokomotyv also was mentioned, yet FC Dynamo Kharkiv not at all
- FC Dnipro, keeps history of the Yuzhmash's football club Dnepr, part of the Soviet Zenit sports society and successor of Metalurh sports society of the local Petrovsky factory that existed since 1925 as Stal. Since dissolution of the Soviet Union, historical claims were laid for club that existed since 1918.
See alsoβ»
Notesβ»
- ^ Ukrainian SSR was not recognized until 1945.
References and notesβ»
- ^ Teams out of Ukraine in championships of the Russian Empire and the Soviet Union (ΠΠΎΠΌΠ°Π½Π΄ΠΈ Π· Π£ΠΊΡΠ°ΡΠ½ΠΈ Ρ ΡΠ΅ΠΌΠΏΡΠΎΠ½Π°ΡΠ°Ρ Π ΠΎΡΡΠΉΡΡΠΊΠΎΡ ΡΠΌΠΏΠ΅ΡΡΡ ΡΠ° Π‘Π Π‘Π ). www.kopanyi-myach.info.
- ^ Two other teams were participating in another group: FC Karpaty Lviv and FC Desna Chernihiv. Karpaty placed third in that group.
- ^ The first nine teams from each group were to form the three buffer groups as a medium between the First League and the Second League.
- ^ part of Soviet Union
- ^ UEFA.com. "Country coefficients | UEFA Coefficients". UEFA.com. Retrieved 2023-04-24.
External linksβ»
- (in English and Ukrainian) Football Federation of Ukraine
- (in English, Ukrainian, and Russian) Official national league website