FC Nikopol-NPHU

FC Nikopol-NPHU
Full name FC Nikopol-NPHU
Founded 2009
Ground Elektrometalurh Stadium,[1] Nikopol, Dnipropetrovsk Oblast
Chairman Anatoly Akimochkin
Manager Spartak Zhyhulin
League Ukrainian Second League
2014–15 8th

FC Nikopol-NPHU is a professional Ukrainian football club from the city of Nikopol, Dnipropetrovsk oblast. Before the 2014 civil war was based in Makiivka under the name FC Makiyivvuhillya Makiyivka.


History

Makiyivvuhillya (Makeyevugol)

Emblem of Makiyivvuhillya (2009–2015)

The club was formed in 2009 and became professional in 2011 entering the Professional Football League of Ukraine. The name of the club is associated Makiyivka's coal industry, since the city of Makiyivka is close proximity to the city of Donetsk. The football team was created out of the state mining enterprise Makiyivvuhillya in the summer of 2009 to participate in the Coal Industry Cup. In the finals of the Coal Industry Cup, a tournament which Makiyivka defeated SE "Dzerzhynskvuhillya." [2]

After the event the company decided to continue supporting the football team, with general director Stanislav Tolchin becoming the honorary president of football club. The President of the club became Anatoly Akimochkin and head coach was Spartak Zhyhulin.[2]

In the winter of 2009 Makiyivvuhillya won the city championship in Makiyivka and finished 3rd in the Donetsk oblast championship. In 2010 the team became a finalist of the Coal Industry Cup (losing to FC Shakhtar Sverdlovsk) and 3rd place again in the Donetsk oblast championship. In 2011, the team participated in the Ukrainian Amateur championship.

In the Second League the club played its home games at the Bazhanovets Stadium, which was also used by the former Soviet/Ukrainian club Shakhtar Makiyivka (also known as Bazhanovets) but the stadium was found lacking in facilities. Later the club played at Metalurh Stadium in Yenakiieve.

Nikopol-NPHU

In 2014 the club was forced to relocate to Nikopol, Dnipropetrovsk Oblast, due to the 2014 Russian aggression against Ukraine. It also lost its main sponsor Makiyivvuhillya, but in Nikopol the club was taken under its wing the Independent Trade Union of Miners of Ukraine (NPHU) which added own abbreviation to the club's name as Makeyevugol-NPHU. After the 2014–15 season the club formally withdrew from the PFL and reentered under the name of FC Nikopol-NPHU.[3]

The club plays at the stadium of FC Elektrometalurh-NZF Nikopol, while trains at the stadium of FC Kolos Chkalove from Chkalove.

In Nikopol is another FC Nikopol that participated in the 2007 Ukrainian Amateur Cup. Both FC Nikopol and FC Kolos Chkalove were withdrawn from the Dnipropetrovsk Oblast championship in 2015.

League and cup history

Season Div. Pos. Pl. W D L GS GA P Domestic Cup Europe Notes
2011 4th 4 8 2 2 4 6 11 8
2011–12 3rd "B" 14 26 5 2 19 17 8 17 1/32 finals
2012–13 3rd "B" 12 24 5 2 17 21 58 17 1/64 finals
3rd "4" 4 32 8 3 21 32 71 27 Stage 2[4]
2013–14 3rd 13 36 13 6 17 33 47 45 1/64 finals
2014–15 3rd 8 27 5 6 16 23 45 21 moved to Nikopol
2015–16 3rd 14 26 2 6 18 18 51 12 1/32 finals reorganized as FC Nikopol-NPHU
201617 3rd 1/64 finals

External links

References

  1. Elektrometalurh Stadium at the club's website
  2. 1 2 "История (History of the club)" (in Russian). Makiyivvuhillya Makiyivka Official web site. Retrieved 2011-06-22.
  3. (Russian) "Сталь и еще пять клубов вышли из состава ПФЛ, восемь – включено" [Stal and other five clubs left the PFL, while other eight were included]. UA-Football. 20 June 2015. Retrieved 24 June 2015.
  4. Competition held in two stages. Points from Stage One carried over
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