PFC Ludogorets Razgrad

Ludogorets Razgrad
Full name Professional Football Club Ludogorets Razgrad
Nickname(s) Орлите (The Eagles)
Founded 18 June 2001 (2001-06-18)
Ground Ludogorets Arena
Ground Capacity 8,808
Owner Kiril Domuschiev
Chairman Aleksandar Aleksandrov
Manager Georgi Dermendzhiev
League A Group
2014–15 A Group, 1st
Website Club home page

Professional football club Ludogorets Razgrad (Bulgarian: Професионален футболен клуб Лудогорец Разград), commonly known as Ludogorets Razgrad, or simply as Ludogorets, is a Bulgarian football club based in Razgrad, currently playing in the A Group, the top division of the Bulgarian football league system.

In their first season in A Group, Ludogorets became only the third Bulgarian team, after CSKA Sofia and Levski Sofia, to achieve a treble by winning the league, the Bulgarian Cup and the Bulgarian Supercup. Subsequently, the club also made a significant impact in the 2013–14 UEFA Europa League, where it reached the round of 16. Ludogorets are the second Bulgarian team (after Levski Sofia) to reach the group stage of the Champions League, a feat which they achieved in the following 2014–15 season. During that same season they became the first Bulgarian team to score points in the modern Champions League group stages when they defeated FC Basel 1–0 in Sofia.

The club's name comes from the name of the region in which Razgrad is located – the Ludogorie region (meaning "region of wild forests") of north-eastern Bulgaria. The club is nicknamed "The Eagles", and in 2014 it was presented with a live eagle by Europa League opponents Lazio;[1] the mascot was named Fortuna.[2]

The club's home colors are green and white. Ludogorets' home base is the Ludogorets Arena in Razgrad, a stadium with capacity of 8 808 seats and electric floodlights.[3]

History

Foundation and beginning

The club was founded in 2001 as Ludogorie Football Club. It adopted its current name from one of the first football clubs in the town, founded in 1945 and dissolved in 2006.

Domuschiev era (2010–present)

In September 2010, the club was purchased by the businessman Kiril Domuschiev, with the clear intention to bring Ludogorets to A Group. The takeover was followed by a flurry of bids for high-profile players. In May 2011, the club completed this feat in Domuschiev's first season by winning promotion to A Group for the first time in the club's history.[4] Prior to the start of season 2011–12, Ludogorets completed the transfers of Emil Gargorov, Alexandre Barthe, Stanislav Genchev, Svetoslav Dyakov, Uroš Golubović, Ľubomír Guldan and Marcelinho. Ivan Stoyanov signed during the first month of the season. Ludogorets were unbeaten in the first nine games of the season before losing 2–1 to Litex Lovech. In the last game before the winter break, Ludogorets drew 2–2 with CSKA Sofia, ending the autumn half of the season in first place. But, with three losses in a row in the middle of the spring half-season (to Lokomotiv Plovdiv, Slavia Sofia and Cherno More Varna), Ludogorets lost their lead in the standings to CSKA Sofia up until the end of the season. On the last day of season 2011–12 they won the game with CSKA Sofia 1–0, with a goal scored by former Levski striker Miroslav Ivanov. The game was effectively a champions title match since Ludogorets were two points behind the team from Sofia, and the victory made them champions of Bulgaria in their first season in the top division, just one point ahead of CSKA.[5] In May 2012, Ludogorets completed the domestic double when they won their first Bulgarian Cup title, after a 2–1 victory against Lokomotiv Plovdiv at Lazur Stadium in Burgas,[6] and in August 2012, they won the Bulgarian Supercup, beating Lokomotiv 3–1, and becoming the first team to win a treble in its first season in A Group.

Ludogorets started the 2012–13 season with eight wins in a row and nine matches without a loss, and finished the half-season in first place, as in the previous season, with just one loss and seven goals conceded out of 15 matches. But for the Bulgarian Cup the team was eliminated in the Round of 32 by CSKA Sofia with an aggregate score of 2–2 from the two legs and CSKA continuing into the next round on away goals. In the spring half-season Ludogorets occupied the first place with just three matches to go before the end of the season. Nevertheless, they were defeated 1–0 by Levski Sofia, and Levski took the lead of A Group. On the final day of the season Ludogorets had to beat the already relegated team Montana and to hope that Slavia Sofia would prevent Levski from winning the match. In the last minutes of the Levski-Slavia match Levski conceived an own goal which making the end result a 1–1 draw, allowing Ludogorets to win their second championship title. In the 2013 Supercup, they lost 5–3 on penalties to Beroe Stara Zagora after a 1–1 draw in regular time. In 2014 the team won their third consecutive championship title since promotion, two rounds before the end of the regular season.[7] They finished nine points ahead of runners-up CSKA Sofia. The team also secured a second domestic double, beating Botev Plovdiv 1–0 in the 2014 Bulgarian Cup Final.[8]

In Europe

After winning the 2011–12 Bulgarian title, Ludogorets entered in the second qualifying round of the UEFA Champions League for the 2012–13 season, but were eliminated 3–4 on aggregate and with a last minute goal by Dinamo Zagreb.

As 2012–13 Bulgarian champions, Ludogorets played in the 2013–14 Champions League where they came through the qualifiers, beating subsequently Slovan Bratislava and Partizan Belgrade. Ludogorets then lost to FC Basel in the play-offs, but earned the right to play in the Europa League.

Ludogorets played in Group B of the 2013–14 Europa League. They were unbeaten in the group stage finishing first in the group with five wins in six games, including both home and away victories over the prominent PSV Eindhoven and Dinamo Zagreb.[9] Their only dropped points were a 1–1 home draw with Chornomorets Odesa. In the knockout phase, Ludogorets beat the Italian cup holders, Lazio, 1–0 away and drew 3–3 at home, for a 4–3 aggregate win,[10] but then lost 0–3 at home, and 0–4 on aggregate to Valencia in the round of 16.[11]

Ludogorets Razgrad-Steaua București second leg play-off for the 2014–15 Champions League, hosted at the Vasil Levski National Stadium, Sofia.

In the 2014–15 Champions League, Ludogorets again won both their qualifiers, against F91 Dudelange of Luxembourg and Partizan Belgrade.[12][13] In the play-off they defeated Steaua București in dramatic fashion to reach the group stage for the first time.[14] Goalkeeper Vladislav Stoyanov was dismissed for a second yellow card in the last minute of extra time in the second leg, when Ludogorets had used all their substitutes. In the penalty shoot-out, centre-back Cosmin Moți, having converted the first penalty, went in goal and made two saves to put Ludogorets through 6–5 on penalties.[15]

Ludogorets made their debut in the 2014–15 Champions League group phase on 16 September 2014, grabbing a 1–1 equalizer away against Liverpool in the 90th minute scored by Dani Abalo, but in an eventual 1–2 loss,[16] because the newly signed goalkeeper Milan Borjan then gave away a penalty with a foul on Javi Manquillo, which Steven Gerrard converted to give Liverpool the victory.[17] Ludogorets made their home debut in the 2014–15 Champions League group phase on 1 October 2014, scoring a stunning goal in the 6th minute through Ludogorets' attacking midfielder Marcelinho against the current Champions League champion Real Madrid, but in an eventual 1–2 loss.[18] Interestingly, in this game Cristiano Ronaldo took two penalties, with first saved by the Ludogorets' goalkeeper Vladislav Stoyanov and second converted into goal for a 1–1 equalizer.[19] On 22 October 2014, Yordan Minev scored his first goal for Ludogorets, scoring a crucial last-minute winning goal in a 1–0 home win over Basel in the group stage of the Champions League.[20] On 26 November 2014, Dani Abalo scored in the 3rd minute and Georgi Terziev scored his first goal in the 88th minute, grabbing a 2–2 equalizer against Liverpool, in an eventual 2–2 draw.[21]

Ludogorets won their 4th consecutive A Group title, but were left by several main squad players. Also, they replaced the manager Georgi Dermendziev with Bruno Ribeiro. The changes led to a surprising elimination of Ludogorets in the second qualifying round of the 2015–16 UEFA Champions League by Milsami Orhei.

Crest, shirt and mascot

Ludogorets colours are green and white.

Period Kit manufacturer Shirt partner Shorts partner
2006–10 Bulgaria Tomy Sport None None
2010–12 Germany Adidas Huvepharma
2012–14 Navibulgar / Huvepharma
2014–16 Italy Macron eCasino.bg
2016– eCasino.bg / VIVACOM Spetema

Since 2014, the mascot of the team has been a female eagle called Fortuna, which was originally a gift from Lazio.[22]

Honours

Bulgarian A Group:

Bulgarian B Group:

Bulgarian Cup:

Bulgarian Supercup:

European tournaments

UEFA Europa League

UEFA Champions League

European record

Matches

Season Competition Round Club Home Away Aggregate
2012–13 UEFA Champions League 2Q Croatia Dinamo Zagreb 1–1 2–3 3–4
2013–14 UEFA Champions League 2Q Slovakia Slovan Bratislava 3–0 1–2 4–2
3Q Serbia Partizan 2–1 1–0 3–1
PO Switzerland Basel 2–4 0–2 2–6
UEFA Europa League Group B Netherlands PSV Eindhoven 2–0 2–0 1st
Croatia Dinamo Zagreb 3–0 2–1
Ukraine Chornomorets Odesa 1–1 1–0
Round of 32 Italy Lazio 3–3 1–0 4–3
Round of 16 Spain Valencia 0–3 0–1 0–4
2014–15 UEFA Champions League 2Q Luxembourg F91 Dudelange 4–0 1–1 5–1
3Q Serbia Partizan 0–0 2–2 2–2 (a)
PO Romania Steaua București 1–0 0–1 1–1 (6–5 p.)
Group B Spain Real Madrid 1–2 0–4 4th
Switzerland Basel 1–0 0–4
England Liverpool 2–2 1–2
2015–16 UEFA Champions League 2Q Moldova Milsami Orhei 0–1 1–2 1–3
Notes

UEFA ranking

As of 26 March 2016[23]

Rank Team Points
81France Saint-Étienne26.016
82Croatia Dinamo Zagreb25.775
83Bulgaria Ludogorets Razgrad25.625
84Belgium Gent25.000
85Switzerland Young Boys24.755

Players

First-team squad

As of 10 July 2015 [24]

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

No. Position Player
1 Canada GK Milan Borjan
4 Brazil DF Cicinho
6 Brazil DF Natanael
8 Brazil MF Lucas Sasha
11 Brazil FW Juninho Quixadá
12 Madagascar MF Anicet Abel
16 Colombia DF Brayan Angulo
17 Bulgaria FW Tsvetelin Chunchukov
18 Bulgaria MF Svetoslav Dyakov (captain)
19 Bulgaria MF Aleksandar Vasilev
21 Bulgaria GK Vladislav Stoyanov (vice-captain)
22 Brazil MF Jonathan Cafu
No. Position Player
25 Bulgaria DF Yordan Minev
27 Romania DF Cosmin Moți (3rd captain)
28 Romania FW Claudiu Keșerü
30 Romania MF Andrei Prepeliță
33 Bulgaria GK Georgi Argilashki
37 Bulgaria DF Ventsislav Kerchev
55 Bulgaria DF Georgi Terziev
77 Portugal DF Vitinha
84 Bulgaria MF Marcelinho
88 Brazil MF Wanderson
92 Democratic Republic of the Congo MF Jody Lukoki
93 Netherlands MF Virgil Misidjan
For recent transfers, see Transfers summer 2015 and Transfers winter 2015–16.
For reserve team players, see Ludogorets Razgrad II.

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
Tunisia FW Hamza Younés (at Concordia Chiajna until 30 June 2016)

Current reserve players with first-team appearances

Ludogorets Razgrad's reserve team, plays in the Bulgarian B Group. The following Ludogorets II players have made first-team appearances for the club.

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

No. Position Player
13 Bulgaria MF Veselin Lyubomirov
24 Bulgaria DF Preslav Petrov
34 Bulgaria MF Oleg Dimitrov
37 Bulgaria DF Ventsislav Kerchev
38 Bulgaria MF Kristiyan Kitov
No. Position Player
71 Bulgaria FW Yanaki Smirnov
80 Bulgaria FW Denislav Aleksandrov
83 Bulgaria DF Hristo Popadiyn
91 Bulgaria GK Ivan Čvorović
95 Bulgaria FW Borimir Karamfilov

Foreign players

Up to five non-EU nationals can be registered and given a squad number for the first team in the A PFG however only three can be used during a match day. Those non-EU nationals with European ancestry can claim citizenship from the nation their ancestors came from. If a player does not have European ancestry he can claim Bulgarian citizenship after playing in Bulgaria for 5 years.

EU Nationals

EU Nationals (Dual citizenship)

Non-EU Nationals

Recent seasons

League positions

Bulgarian A Football Group Bulgarian B Football Group Bulgarian V AFG
Season Group Position M W D L G D P Bulgarian Cup Bulgarian Super Cup UEFA Champions League UEFA Europa League Notes
2009–10 North-East V Group 2 34 26 2 6 79 28 80 Did not participate Did not participate Did not participate Did not participate Promoted
2010–11 East B Group 1 24 12 8 4 38 16 44 Round of 32 Did not participate Did not participate Did not participate Promoted
2011–12 A Group 1 30 22 4 4 73 16 70 Winner Winner Did not participate Did not participate Achieved treble
2012–13 A Group 1 30 22 6 2 58 13 72 Round of 32 Finalist First round Did not participate
2013–14 A Group 1 38 25 9 4 74 20 84 Winner Winner Play-off round Round of 16 Achieved treble
2014–15 A Group 1 32 18 9 5 63 24 63 Semi-final Finalist Group Stage Did not participate
2015–16 A Group 1 26 18 7 2 42 13 61 Round of 16 TBD First round Did not participate Not concluded yet
2016–17 A Group TBD TBD TBD TBD TBD TBD TBD TBD TBD TBD TBD TBD

Records and notable stats

Goalscoring and appearance records

As of 30 April 2016

Most appearances for the club in A PFG

RankNameCareerAppearances
1BrazilBulgaria Marcelinho2011–129
2Bulgaria Svetoslav Dyakov2011–125
3Bulgaria Yordan Minev2011–103
4Romania Cosmin Moți2012–96
5Bulgaria Mihail Aleksandrov2010–201696
6Brazil Juninho Quixadá2011–92
7Bulgaria Vladislav Stoyanov2013–85
8Brazil Júnior Caiçara2012–201583
9France Alexandre Barthe2011–201573
10Bulgaria Miroslav Ivanov2011–201367

Most goals for the club in A PFG

RankNameCareerGoals
1BrazilBulgaria Marcelinho2011–39
2Brazil Juninho Quixadá2011–25
3Bulgaria Ivan Stoyanov2011–201325
4Netherlands Virgil Misidjan2013–21
5Slovenia Roman Bezjak2012–201520
6Bulgaria Emil Gargorov2011–201319
7Bulgaria Mihail Aleksandrov2010–201615
8Brazil Wanderson2014–14
9Romania Claudiu Keșerü2015–13
10Spain Dani Abalo2013–201513

Notable players

Had international caps for their respective countries, or held any club record. Players whose name is listed in bold represented their countries while playing for Ludogorets.

Bulgaria

Europe
North America

South America
Africa

Supporters

The ultras of Ludogorets Razgrad are mainly organized under the group of "Green Front". A women's fan club was also established under the name "Green Ladies". Ludogorets has national fan clubs in Razgrad and Sofia, while other smaller fan clubs are also organised in cities and towns like Popovo, Varna, Sandanski and Ruse.

Personnel

Board of directors

Position Name Nationality
OwnerKiril DomuschievBulgaria
PresidentAlexander AlexandrovBulgaria
Chairman of the Board of DirectorsTemenuga GazdovaBulgaria
Managing DirectorAngel PetrichevBulgaria
Director Youth Academy Yakov PaparkovBulgaria
Public Relations Vladislav TrifonovBulgaria

Current technical body

Position Name Nationality
Sports Director Metodi TomanovBulgaria
Head Coach Georgi Dermendzhiev Bulgaria
Assistant Coach Stefan Genov Bulgaria
Ludogorets II Coach Galin IvanovBulgaria
U19 Coach Petar PenchevBulgaria
Goalkeeper coach Milan StojkovićSerbia
Physical Coach Sergio MatriSpain
Physical Coach Javier CastilloSpain
Physiotherapist Toni TodorovBulgaria
Physiotherapist Petko PetrovBulgaria
Physiotherapist Stoyan AleksievBulgaria
Physiotherapist Marco AlvesPortugal
Doctor Yavor YakimovBulgaria
Administrator Plamen YordanovBulgaria
Housekeeper Dimitar MihovBulgaria

Managers

Dates Name Honours
2001–10 Unknown
2010–13 Bulgaria Ivaylo Petev 2 A Group titles
1 B Group
1 Bulgarian Cup
1 Bulgarian Supercup
2013–14 Bulgaria Stoycho Stoev 1 A Group title
1 Bulgarian Cup
2014–15 Bulgaria Georgi Dermendzhiev 1 A Group title
1 Bulgarian Supercup
2015 Portugal Bruno Ribeiro
2015 BulgariaPortugal Eduard Eranosyan
2015– Bulgaria Georgi Dermendzhiev

References

  1. Meranzov, Martin (26 March 2014). "Lazio sent an eagle to the Bulgarian Eagles". Lazioland.com. Retrieved 19 May 2014.
  2. "Fortuna is the name of the Ludogorets eagle". Ludogorets.com. 30 March 2014. Retrieved 19 May 2014.
  3. Ludogorets arena with the best electric floodlights in the league (in Bulgarian)
  4. "Ludogorets crash the party in Bulgaria". uefa.com. Retrieved 2011-10-24.
  5. "Ludogorets celebrate maiden Bulgarian title". uefa.com. Retrieved 2012-05-23.
  6. "Ludogorets clinch maiden Bulgarian Cup". uefa.com. Retrieved 2012-05-16.
  7. Невиждано постижение! Лудогорец ликува! Три сезона в елита – три титли! (видео) (Sportal.bg, 7 May 2014) (in Bulgarian)
  8. "Ludogorets secure double, fans pelt players with seats and stones". uefa.com. Retrieved 2014-05-16.
  9. Europa League: Ludogorets win 2–1 at Dinamo Zagreb in Group B, Sky Sports, 12 December 2013
  10. Europa League: Ludogorets progress after 4–3 victory over Lazio, Sky Sports, 27 February 2014
  11. Europa League: Valencia beat Ludogorets 1–0 to reach quarter-finals, Sky Sports, 20 March 2014
  12. Dudelange striker Turpel frustrates Ludogorets, UEFA.com, 22 July 2014
  13. Ludogorets squeeze out Partizan, UEFA.com, 6 August 2014
  14. Ludogorets Razgrad win 6–5 on penalties, BBC, 27 August 2014
  15. "Ludogorets defender Cosmin Moti stands in for sent off goalkeeper before making vital penalty shootout saves to send Bulgarians through to Champions League group stage". Daily Mail. 27 August 2014. Retrieved 29 August 2014.
  16. "Liverpool 2–1 Ludo Razgd". BBC Sport. 16 September 2014. Retrieved 16 September 2014.
  17. "Liverpool 2–1 Ludo Razgd". BBC Sport. 16 September 2014. Retrieved 16 September 2014.
  18. Real Madrid recover to down dogged Ludogorets
  19. Real Madrid recover to down dogged Ludogorets
  20. "Ludogorets 1–0 Basel: Minev snatches victory at the death against 10-man Swiss champions". goal.com. 22 October 2014.
  21. "Liverpool hit by late Ludogorets leveller". UEFA.com. 26 November 2014. Retrieved 26 November 2014.
  22. Орлицата Фортуна в неизвестност! Птицата с нов опит за бягство, topsport.bg, 18 April 2014
  23. UEFA Team Ranking 2016 (http://kassiesa.home.xs4all.nl/bert)
  24. "А отбор" [A team]. PFC Ludogorets Razgrad (in Bulgarian). ludogorets.com. Retrieved 31 August 2013.

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