FC Hoverla Uzhhorod

Hoverla Uzhhorod
Full name Football Club Hoverla Uzhhorod
Founded 15 August 1925 (1925-08-15)
Ground Avanhard Stadium
Ground Capacity 12,000
President Ivan Shufrych
Head coach Vyacheslav Hroznyi
League Ukrainian Premier League
2014–15 12th
Website Club home page
1950 Champion of Ukraine – the Zakarpattia Regional Council team (Spartak society)

Football Club Hoverla Uzhhorod (Ukrainian: Футбольний Клуб «Говерла» Ужгород [ɦo'vɛrlɐ 'uʒɦorod]) is a Ukrainian professional football club based in Uzhhorod.

History

See also: SC Rusj Uzhorod

The club was inaugurated in 1946 as Spartak Uzhhorod. However some of its emblems point out to its preceding club that existed before the World War II, SC Rus, which was created in 1925. Direct succession between the two franchises can hardly be traced. In 1961 Spartak was renamed to Verhovyna and in 1971 to Hoverla. In 1982 it was renamed to Zakarpattia and back to Verhovyna in 1997 for 2 years.

In 2001, Zakarpattia debut in the Ukrainian Premier League, however, a last place finish saw them demoted back to the Ukrainian First League. They resurfaced again in the 2004–05 and 2007–08 but the club was unable to avoid relegation once again after taking last place.

Before the start of the 2011–12 Ukrainian First League season the club renamed itself to FC Hoverla-Zakarpattia Uzhhorod.[1]

The team renamed themselves to Hoverla prior to the start of the 2012–13 Ukrainian Premier League season.[2]

Name Changes

Football kits and sponsors

Years[3] Football kit Shirt sponsor
2001–02 lotto/adidas  
2004–06 lotto
2007–08
2009–10
2012–14 adidas

Honors

Champions

2003–04
2008–09
2011–12
1998–09 Champions Group A

Runners Up

2001–02
2006–07

League and cup history

Season Div. Pos. Pl. W D L GS GA P Domestic Cup Europe Notes
1992 2nd "B" 5 26 13 5 8 28 25 31 1/32 finals
1992–93 2nd 16 42 13 10 19 45 56 36 1/64 finals
1993–94 2nd 14 38 12 8 18 33 53 32 1/32 finals
1994–95 2nd 17 38 12 10 20 40 62 46 1/16 finals
1995–96 2nd 17 42 14 8 20 49 67 50 1/32 finals
1996–97 2nd 15 46 17 7 22 56 78 58 1/32 finals 1st Stage as Verhovyna
1997–98 2nd 20 42 7 11 24 42 79 32 1/32 finals Relegated
as Verhovyna
1998–99 3rd "A" 1 28 20 6 2 48 14 66 1/64 finals Promoted
1999–00 2nd 13 34 14 6 14 36 49 48 1/16 finals
2000–01 2nd 2 34 19 7 8 50 38 64 1/8 finals Promoted
2001–02 1st 14 26 5 6 15 23 49 21 1/4 finals Relegated
2002–03 2nd 7 34 14 9 11 27 26 51 1/16 finals
2003–04 2nd 1 34 22 4 8 49 27 70 1/16 finals Promoted
2004–05 1st 12 30 7 10 13 21 30 31 1/32 finals
2005–06 1st 16 30 3 6 21 17 53 15 1/16 finals Relegated
2006–07 2nd 2 36 25 5 6 50 22 80 1/16 finals Promoted
2007–08 1st 16 30 3 9 18 17 54 18 1/16 finals Relegated
2008–09 2nd 1 32 21 6 5 55 28 69 1/8 finals Promoted
2009–10 1st 16 30 5 4 21 18 44 19 1/16 finals Relegated
2010–11 2nd 6 34 16 8 10 51 40 56 1/32 finals
2011–12 2nd 1 34 27 3 4 67 16 84 1/16 finals Promoted
2012–13 1st 15 30 5 7 18 29 57 22 1/8 finals
2013–14 1st 12 28 7 5 16 26 39 26 1/16 finals
2014–15 1st 12 26 3 10 13 22 47 19 1/8 finals
2015–16 1st 1/16 finals

Players

Current squad

As of 19 March 2016[4][5]

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

No. Position Player
2 Ukraine MF Viktor Hey
4 Ukraine MF Oleh Bilyi
5 Ukraine DF Mykhaylo Ryashko
6 Ukraine MF Dmytro Yeremenko
8 Ukraine MF Oleksiy Savchenko (on loan from Dynamo Kyiv)
10 Ukraine FW Ihor Khudobyak
11 Ukraine MF Vitaliy Hemeha (on loan from Dynamo Kyiv)
14 Ukraine MF Vitaliy Havrysh
17 Ukraine MF Orest Kuzyk (on loan from Dynamo Kyiv)
19 Ukraine MF Serhiy Pitel
No. Position Player
20 Latvia DF Vitālijs Jagodinskis (on loan from Dynamo Kyiv)
21 Ukraine DF Ihor Honchar (on loan from Shakhtar)
22 Ukraine MF Yuriy Toma
25 Ukraine MF Oleksiy Khomenko
29 Ukraine FW Mykhaylo Serhiychuk (on loan from Karpaty)
30 Ukraine DF Pavlo Ivanov
31 Ukraine GK Andriy Cherepko
32 Ukraine MF Yevhen Dobrovolskyi
33 Ukraine GK Dmytro Babenko (captain)
77 Ukraine DF Pavlo Kutas

Out on loan

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

No. Position Player
No. Position Player

Coaching

Managers

USSR

URS

References

External links

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the Sunday, April 17, 2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.