Ukrainian Cup

Ukrainian Cup
Founded 1992
Region  Ukraine
Number of teams 45
Current champions Shakhtar Donetsk
(10th title)
Most successful club(s) Dynamo Kyiv
(11 titles)
Website Official website
2016–17 Ukrainian Cup

The Ukrainian Cup (Ukrainian: Кубок України) is an association football national knockout cup competition run by the Football Federation of Ukraine. The competition is conducted almost exclusively among professional clubs.[1] Since the 2003–04 season, the Cup winner qualifies to play the Ukrainian Premier League winner for the Ukrainian Super Cup.

Current format

The format of this competition consists of two stages: a qualification stage with two rounds followed by the main event (four rounds and the final game).[2] The competition involves all professional clubs plus the two finalists of the Ukrainian Amateur Cup (since 2011).

Past variations of the competition involved a home-away type of elimination, but the Ukrainian Cup has since changed to a single game per round format. In recent years, a conditional replay game was introduced to avoid penalty shootouts. Cup draws may be conducted for two consecutive rounds, but usually occur before each following round. The lower division teams are usually awarded the home-field advantage (or the first leg at home in case of a two-leg round).

Organization

Ukrainian Football Amateur Association

The modern Ukrainian Cup competition is primarily limited to professional level clubs. Prior to 1996, however, the Cup was open to cup winners of all Ukrainian regional teams. In 1996, amateur clubs were omitted from participation in the Ukrainian Cup. In 1997 and 1998, only winners of the Ukrainian Amateur Cup were allowed to participate. In 1999, a new tournament, the Ukrainian Second League Cup, was established; with that change, amateur clubs were excluded from the Ukrainian Cup competition. In 2006, amateur clubs once again were allowed to compete by qualifying as the winner of the Amateur Cup. Since 2011, both finalists have qualified for the Ukrainian Cup.

Professional clubs

From the Round of 32, which is officially considered to be the first round of competition, the tournament is administrated by the Ukrainian Premier League (PFL, created in 2008). Earlier rounds are under the administration of the PFL Ukraine. Until the organization of the PFL in 1996, the tournament and league competitions were both administered by the Football Federation of Ukraine.

History

The All-Ukrainian Cup competitions began in 1937, involving top tier clubs in the nation (for example, Dynamo Kyiv). After World War II, subsequent editions of the national Cup were downgraded to a regional cup competition that was limited to amateur clubs participating in the KFK (clubs of fitness collectives). Those competitions included the Cup of Ukrainian SSR as the supplemental elimination tournament along with league competition.

The first Cup competition in independent Ukraine had an unlikely winner, similar to the championship of 1992. The main contender, Dynamo Kyiv, settled for a draw in its first game at home against a team that was an amateur club in Soviet times, Skala Stryi. In the following quarter-finals round, the team faced defeat by Torpedo Zaporizhia. Eventually that competition was won by Chornomorets Odesa.

In 2008, the Football Federation of Ukraine signed a contract with the company Datagroup,[3] naming the company as the main sponsor of the tournament for the next four years. Datagroup introduced its new version of the cup trophy,[4] the first winner of which became Shakhtar Donetsk.[5] In 2010, there was an attempt to launch an independent website for the competition, which was active for only a couple of months.

Cup of the Ukrainian SSR

First Ukrainian SSR Cup on cover of the Soviet Union

Unlike its replacement, the Cup of the Ukrainian SSR was a competition involving ~40,000 clubs of different levels. Participation in the competition was allowed for all teams, as long as none of the players competed in the Soviet Cup simultaneously.

Finals[6][7]

Year Venue Winner Score Runner-Up
1992
Final
31 May 1992 19:00 (EEST)
KievRepublican Stadium
Attendance: 12,000
Chornomorets Odesa
Ilia Tsymbalar  107'
1 – 0
(0 – 0)
(aet)
Metalist Kharkiv
1992–93
Final
30 May 1993 ? (EEST)
KievRepublican Stadium
Attendance: 47,000
Dynamo Kyiv
Victor Leonenko  23'
Dmytro Topchiyev  64'
2 – 1
(1 – 0)
Karpaty Lviv
Ihor Plotko  89' (Pen)
1993–94
Final
29 May 1994 17:00 (EEST)
KievRepublican Stadium
Attendance: 5,000
Chornomorets Odesa 0 – 0
(aet)
5–3 (pen.)
Tavriya Simferopol
1994–95
Final
28 May 1995 ? (EEST)
KievRepublican Stadium
Attendance: 42,500
Shakhtar Donetsk
Ihor Petrov  78'
1 – 1
(0 – 1)
(aet)
7–6 (pen.)
Dnipro Dnipropetrovsk
Aleksandr Zakharov  23'
1995–96
Final
26 May 1996 ? (EEST)
KievNSC "Olimpiyskiy"
Attendance: 47,000
Dynamo Kyiv
Serhiy Rebrov  27'
Yuri Maximov  59'
2 – 0
(1 – 0)
Nyva Vinnytsia
1996–97
Final
25 May 1997 ? (EEST)
KievNSC "Olimpiyskiy"
Attendance: 26,000
Shakhtar Donetsk
Serhiy Atelkin  36'
1 – 0
(1 – 0)
Dnipro Dnipropetrovsk
1997–98
Final
31 May 1998 ? (EEST)
KievNSC "Olimpiyskiy"
Attendance: 43,500
Dynamo Kyiv
Andriy Shevchenko  1'
Andriy Shevchenko  30'
2 – 1
(2 – 0)
CSKA Kyiv
Vasyl Novokhatskyi  54'
1998–99
Final
30 May 1999 ? (EEST)
KievNSC "Olimpiyskiy"
Attendance: 71,000
Dynamo Kyiv
Andriy Shevchenko  18'
Valentin Belkevich  19'
Andriy Shevchenko  67'
3 – 0
(2 – 0)
Karpaty Lviv
1999–00
Final
27 May 2000 ? (EEST)
KievNSC "Olimpiyskiy"
Attendance: 45,500
Dynamo Kyiv
Aliaksandr Khatskevich  45'
1 – 0
(1 – 0)
Kryvbas Kryvyi Rih
2000–01
Final
27 May 2001 17:00 (EEST)
KievNSC "Olimpiyskiy"
Attendance: 55,000
Shakhtar Donetsk
Serhiy Atelkin  78'
Serhiy Atelkin  119'
2 – 1
(0 – 1; 1 – 1)
(aet)
CSKA Kyiv
Ruslan Kostyshyn  7'
2001–02
Final
26 May 2002 19:00 (EEST)
KievNSC "Olimpiyskiy"
Attendance: 81,000
Shakhtar Donetsk
Serhiy Popov  10'
Serhiy Atelkin  81'
Andriy Vorobei  99'
3 – 2
(1 – 1; 2 – 2)
(aet)
Dynamo Kyiv
Valentin Belkevich  31'
Maksim Shatskikh  50'
2002–03
Final
25 May 2003 17:00 (EEST)
KievNSC "Olimpiyskiy"
Attendance: 71,000
Dynamo Kyiv
Aliaksandr Khatskevich  56'
Diogo Rincón  90+'
2 – 1
(0 – 1)
Shakhtar Donetsk
Andriy Vorobei  18'
2003–04
Final
30 May 2004 17:00 (EEST)
KievNSC "Olimpiyskiy"
Attendance: 60,000
Shakhtar Donetsk
Oleksiy Byelik  1'
Anatoliy Tymoshchuk  90+'
2 – 0
(1 – 0)
Dnipro Dnipropetrovsk
2004–05
Final
29 May 2005 17:00 (EEST)
KievNSC "Olimpiyskiy"
Attendance: 68,000
Dynamo Kyiv
Diogo Rincón  11' (Pen)
1 – 0
(1 – 0)
Shakhtar Donetsk
2005–06
Final
2 May 2006 17:00 (EEST)
KievNSC "Olimpiyskiy"
Attendance: 25,000
Dynamo Kyiv
Kléber  47'
1 – 0
(0 – 0)
Metalurh Zaporizhya
2006–07
Final
28 May 2007 19:00 (EEST)
KievNSC "Olimpiyskiy"
Attendance: 64,500
Dynamo Kyiv
Kléber  58'
Oleh Husyev  80'
2 – 1
(0 – 0)
Shakhtar Donetsk
Elano  89'
2007–08
Final
7 May 2008 19:00 (EEST)
KharkivOSC "Metalist"
Attendance: 28,000
Shakhtar Donetsk
Oleksandr Hladkyy  44'
Oleksiy Hai  78'
2 – 0
(1 – 0)
Dynamo Kyiv
2008–09
Final
31 May 2009 17:00 (EEST)
DnipropetrovskDnipro Arena
Attendance: 25,700
Vorskla Poltava
Vasyl Sachko  50'
1 – 0
(0 – 0)
Shakhtar Donetsk
2009–10
Final
16 May 2010 17:00 (EEST)
KharkivOSC "Metalist"
Attendance: 21,000
Tavriya Simferopol
Feschuk  2'
Kovpak  40' (pen.)
Idahor  96'
3 – 2
(2 – 0; 2 – 2)
(aet)
Metalurh Donetsk
Mkhitaryan  51'
Mário Sérgio  74'
2010–11
Final
25 May 2011 20:15 (EEST)
SumyYuvileiny Stadium
Attendance: 27,800
Shakhtar Donetsk
Eduardo  64'
Luiz Adriano  87'
2 – 0
(0 – 0)
Dynamo Kyiv
2011–12
Final
6 May 2012 19:30 (EEST)
KievNSC "Olimpiyskiy"
Attendance: 47,314
Shakhtar Donetsk
Teixeira  23'
Kucher  104'
2 – 1
(1 – 0; 1 – 1)
(aet)
Metalurh Donetsk
Morozyuk  68'
2012–13
Final
22 May 2013 19:45 (EEST)
KharkivOSC "Metalist"
Attendance: 40,003
Shakhtar Donetsk
Fernandinho  41'
Teixeira  53'
Taison  73'
3 – 0
(1 – 0)
Chornomorets Odesa
2013–14
Final
15 May 2014 20:00 (EEST)
PoltavaButovsky Vorskla Stadium
Attendance: 9,700
Dynamo Kyiv
Kucher  40' (o.g.)
Vida  43'
2 – 1[8]
(2 – 0)
Shakhtar Donetsk
Douglas Costa  57'
2014–15
Final
4 June 2015 21:00 (EEST)
KievNSC "Olimpiyskiy"
Attendance: 53,455
Dynamo Kyiv 0 – 0
(aet)
5–4 (pen.)
Shakhtar Donetsk
2015–16
Final
21 May 2016 17:00 (EEST)
LvivArena Lviv
Attendance: 21,720
Shakhtar Donetsk
Hladkyy  42', 57'
2 – 0
Zorya Luhansk

Performances

Team Winners Runners-up Semi–finalists Winning Years
Dynamo Kyiv 11 3 2 1993, 1996, 1998, 1999, 2000, 2003, 2005, 2006, 2007, 2014, 2015
Shakhtar Donetsk 10 6 4 1995, 1997, 2001, 2002, 2004, 2008, 2011, 2012, 2013, 2016
Chornomorets Odesa 2 1 4 1992, 1994
Tavriya Simferopol 1 1 2 2010
Vorskla Poltava 1 2009
Dnipro Dnipropetrovsk 3 5
Karpaty Lviv 2 3
Metalurh Donetsk 2 3
CSKA Kyiv 2
Metalist Kharkiv 1 3
Kryvbas Kryvyi Rih 1 2
Metalurh Zaporizhya 1 2
Nyva Vinnytsia 1
Zorya Luhansk 1
Volyn Lutsk 3
Torpedo Zaporizhya 2
Zirka Kirovohrad 2
Illichivets Mariupol 2
Veres Rivne 1
Arsenal Kyiv 1
Kremin Kremenchuk 1
Sevastopol 1
Slavutych Cherkasy 1
Olimpik Donetsk 1
Oleksandriya 1

Top scorers of finals

No Name Club(s) Goals Remarks
1 Ukraine Andriy Shevchenko Dynamo Kyiv 4
Ukraine Serhiy Atelkin Shakhtar Donetsk
3 Ukraine Oleksandr Hladkyy Shakhtar Donetsk 3
4 Belarus Valiantsin Bialkevich Dynamo Kyiv 2
Belarus Aliaksandr Khatskevich Dynamo Kyiv
Ukraine Andriy Vorobei Shakhtar Donetsk
Brazil Diogo Rincón Dynamo Kyiv
Brazil Kléber Dynamo Kyiv
Brazil Alex Teixeira Shakhtar Donetsk

Top 10 managers

Rating Name Club(s) Holder Finalist Semifinalist
1 Romania Mircea Lucescu Shakhtar Donetsk 6 5
2 Ukraine Valeriy Lobanovskyi Dynamo Kyiv 3 1
3 Ukraine Viktor Prokopenko Chornomorets Odesa (2)
Shakhtar Donetsk (1)
3
4 Ukraine Anatoliy Demyanenko Dynamo Kyiv (2)
Volyn Lutsk
2 1
5 Ukraine Yozhef Sabo Dynamo Kyiv 2
Ukraine Serhiy Rebrov Dynamo Kyiv 2
7 Ukraine Valeriy Yaremchenko Shakhtar Donetsk (1)
Kremin Kremenchuk
1 1 2
8 Ukraine Mykhaylo Fomenko Dynamo Kyiv (1)
CSKA Kyiv
Tavriya Simferopol
1 1 1
9 Ukraine Oleksiy Mykhaylychenko Dynamo Kyiv 1 1
Russia Vladimir Salkov Shakhtar Donetsk 1 1
Ukraine Mykola Pavlov Metalurh Mariupol
Vorskla Poltava (1)
1 1

This table shows the most successful managers in the Cup since its foundation in 1991.
The cup was also won by Italy Nevio Scala (Shakhtar) and Serhiy Puchkov (Tavriya).
– Managers that have retired from the sport. Bold font denotes managers that are still active in the current season. In parentheses are cups for the respective team.

Players' statistics

All-time Ukrainian Cup scorers
Rank Player Club(s) Goals Games Ratio
1 Ukraine Andriy Vorobei Shakhtar, Dnipro, 25 53 0.472
2 Uzbekistan Maksim Shatskikh Dynamo, Arsenal 23 46 0.5
3 Ukraine Oleksandr Palyanytsia Dnipro, Veres, Karpaty, Metalist, Kryvbas 22 48 0.458
4 Ukraine Andriy Shevchenko Dynamo-2, Dynamo 21 31 0.677
5 Ukraine Serhiy Rebrov Shakhtar, Dynamo 20 51 0.392
6 Ukraine Andriy Pokladok Karpaty, Metalurh D, Rava, Halychyna L 19 47 0.404
7 Ukraine Oleh Matveyev Shakhtar, Metalurh Z 17 32 0.531
8 Ukraine Oleksiy Antyukhin Metalurh Z, Tavria, Vorskla 16 34 0.471
9 Ukraine Bohdan Yesyp Dynamo, Zirka, Zakarpattia, Naftovyk 15 37 0.405
10 Ukraine Valentyn Poltavets Shakhtar Pavlohrad, Metalurh Z, Dnipro, Chornomorets, Dniester 15 48 0.313
Data through 21 August 2014.[9][10]
Seasonal top scorers
Year Top Scorer(s) Goals
1992 Ukraine Oleksandr Zayets (Torpedo) 6
1993 Ukraine Vitaliy Parakhnevych (Odessa) 8
1994 Ukraine Oleksiy Antiukhin (Tavria)
Ukraine Eduard Valenko (Lviv, Karpaty)
5
1995 Ukraine Andriy Shevchenko (Dynamo-2, Dynamo) 6
1996 Ukraine Oleksandr Palyanytsia (Dnipro)
Ukraine Oleksandr Ihnatyev (FC Nyva Myronivka)
Ukraine Oleksandr Perenchuk (FC Nyva Myronivka)
4
1997 Ukraine Yakiv Kripak (Metalurh Z) 5
1998 Ukraine Andriy Shevchenko (Dynamo) 8
1999 Ukraine Artem Lopatkin (Stal A)
Ukraine Vyacheslav Tereschenko (Odessa)
8
2000 Ukraine Valentyn Poltavets (Metalurh Z)
Uzbekistan Maksim Shatskikh (Dynamo)
4
2001 Ukraine Andriy Vorobei (Shakhtar D) 6
2002 Ukraine Yevhen Arbuzov (Tytan A)
Ukraine Andriy Vorobei (Shakhtar D)
Uzbekistan Maksim Shatskikh (Dynamo)
5
2003 Ukraine Andriy Vorobei (Shakhtar D)
Uzbekistan Maksim Shatskikh (Dynamo)
5
2004 Ukraine Oleksandr Kosyrin (Chornomorets) 5
2005 Brazil Diogo Rincón (Dynamo) 6
2006 Brazil Kléber (Dynamo) 5
2007 Ukraine Ruslan Levyha (Illichivets) 6
2008 Belarus Wladzimir Karytska (Chornomorets) 5
2009 Ukraine Andriy Yarmolenko (Dynamo) 5
2010 Ukraine Oleksandr Kovpak (Tavriya) 5
2011 Ukraine Andriy Oliynyk (Karpaty Ya.) 5
2012 Brazil Maicon (Volyn) 5
2013 Brazil Luiz Adriano & Alex Teixeira (Shakhtar) 4
2014 Croatia Eduardo (Shakhtar) 4
2015 Ukraine Anton Kotlyar (Stal D) 5
Data through 2013–14 season.[9]

See also

References

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the 11/24/2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.