PFC Nyva Vinnytsia
Full name | PFC Nyva Vinnytsia | ||
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Founded | 1958 | ||
Ground | Tsentralnyi | ||
Capacity | 14,000 | ||
Chairman | Oleh Karavansky | ||
Head Coach | Oleh Fedorchuk | ||
League | Ukrainian First League | ||
2010–11 | 10th | ||
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PFC Nyva Vinnytsia was a professional Ukrainian football club based in the city of Vinnytsia. The name "Nyva" literally means "grain field". The club originally was created in 1958 in the Soviet Union and in 2006 it dissolved. A new club was revived in Ukraine the same year, which however also folded in 2012.
History
From 1992 to 1998, Nyva Vinnytsia played in the Ukrainian Premier League, after being initially chosen to participate for being one of the top 9 (of 11) Ukrainian teams from the West Division of the Soviet Second League in 1991.
It had a little break in the '93 season when it joined the company of the second division teams in the First League. Nyva was quickly promoted back to the elite next season after gaining the top seat.
Nyva Vinnytsia's best achievement in the Ukrainian Premier League was 10th place in the 1993–94 season. The club also surprisingly made the 1995–96 Ukrainian Cup finals, only to lose to Dynamo Kyiv. As a result, Nyva took part in the 1996–97 UEFA Cup Winners' Cup, even progressing to the First round after beating JK Tallinna Sadam on away goals (1:2 loss in Tallinn and 1:0 win in Vinnytsia). However, Swiss side FC Sion beat the Ukrainian side with a 6:0 score on aggregate (2:0 in Sion and 4:0 in Vinnytsia).
The club ceased to exist after it relegated from the First League in 2006 and because of financial difficulties. In 2006 it carried name FC Bershad of its farm-team and was based in little town Bershad, Vinnytsia oblast.
For the 2008–09 season the club reentered professional league competition into the Second League as FC Nyva-Svitanok, the new part of its name meaning dawn, or new beginning.
On 8 July 2008 the club changed their name from "FC Nyva-Svitanok Vinnytsia" to "PFC Nyva Vinnytsia".[1]
Stadiums
The club plays on one of two stadiums in Vinnytsia: the Khimik Arena that is a communal property with a capacity of 5,000 spectators and club's training facilities located there, and the Municipal Central Stadium (former Lokomotyv) that was expanded prior to 1980's Olympics with capacity of 24,000 spectators. The Central Stadium usually being used in "big" matches versus famous opponents, all the other matches were played in the Khimik Stadium.
Honors
Winner:
- 1964, 1984
Runner-up:
European record
Its first and the only European competition participation occurred in 1996–97 season in UEFA Cup Winners' Cup.
Season | Competition | Round | Opponent | Home | Away | Aggregate |
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1996–97 | UEFA Cup Winners' Cup | Q | JK Tallinna Sadam | 1–0 | 1–2 | 2–2 (a) |
1R | FC Sion | 0–4 | 0–2 | 0–6 |
- Notes
- 1R: First round
- Q: Qualifying round
League and Cup history
Season Div. Pos. Pl. W D L GS GA P Domestic Cup Europe Notes 1992 1st "A" 8 18 5 4 9 18 33 14 1/32 finals Relegated 1992–93 2nd 1 42 24 14 4 73 26 62 1/16 finals Promoted 1993–94 1st 10 34 7 6 21 25 51 20 1/8 finals 1994–95 1st 14 34 10 7 17 38 51 37 1/4 finals 1995–96 1st 15 34 11 7 16 28 36 40 Runners-up 1996–97 1st 16 30 4 6 20 19 48 18 1/4 finals CWC 1st round Relegated 1997–98 2nd 5 42 22 7 13 58 34 73 1/8 finals 1998–99 2nd 6 38 16 9 13 45 39 57 1/64 finals 1999–00 2nd 11 34 14 6 14 29 39 48 1/8 finals as FC Vinnytsia 2000–01 2nd 10 34 12 8 14 35 41 44 1/16 finals as FC Vinnytsia 2001–02 2nd 15 34 10 8 16 35 52 38 1/16 finals as FC Vinnytsia 2002–03 2nd 16 34 9 9 16 18 31 36 1/32 finals as FC Vinnytsia 2003–04 2nd 8 34 14 10 10 34 24 52 1/16 finals 2004–05 2nd 5 34 15 8 11 49 38 53 1/4 finals 2005–06 2nd 18 34 3 4 27 14 60 4 1/32 finals as FC Bershad[2] 2006 4th 2 6 2 3 1 7 3 9 as FC Nyva-Svitanok 2 6 3 2 1 14 5 11 as FC Nyva-Svitanok 4 3 0 0 3 0 2 0 as FC Nyva-Svitanok 2007–08 3rd "A" 9 30 10 5 15 23 40 35 Did not enter as FC Nyva-Svitanok 2008–09 3rd "A" 3 32 18 7 7 40 29 61 1/16 finals as PFC Nyva 2009–10 3rd "A" 2 20 12 4 4 43 16 40 1/32 finals Promoted[3] 2010–11 2nd 10 34 14 8 12 44 42 50 1/32 finals 2011–12 2nd 13 34 7 11 16 21 39 32 1/32 finals[4] Relegated [5]
Coaches
- Vyacheslav Hrozny 1992 (+1=1–3, 3–10)
- Valery Petrov 1992 (+4=3–6, 15–23)
Notes and references
- ↑ (Ukrainian) Ukrainian Professional Football League meeting on 8 July 2008
- ↑ The club merged its operations with FC Bershad' (5th Druha Liha 2004–05 Group A) and moved to Bershad' and renamed the club prior to the start of the season. 3 points deducted from FC Bershad for failure to comply with Federation directives (16 December 2005) and another 6 points (9 total) deducted for continual nonconformance of League directives (24 Feb. 2006) The club informed the PFL that the team is dissolved and will not play any more matches. (19 May 2006)
- ↑ Won playoff game 0–2 over FC Kremin Kremenchuk after Desna Chernihiv failed attestation for the next season and withdrew
- ↑ The club informed the PFL that the club was having financial difficulties and would not arrive for the scheduled cup game against Tytan Armyansk.
"Титан" автоматически вышел в 1\16 финала Кубка Украины [Tytan automatically advance to the 1/16 Round of the Ukrainian Cup] (in Russian). football.ua. 16 August 2011. Retrieved 16 August 2011. - ↑ The club informed the PFL that they were to withdraw from the league prior to the start of the 2012–13 season due to insufficient funds. Результати жеребкування другої ліги та Кубку України на сезон 2012–2013 років [Resulting draw for the Second League and preliminary rounds of the Ukrainian Cup for 2012–13]. Professional Football League of Ukraine (in Ukrainian). 5 July 2012. Retrieved 5 July 2012.
However, the city and the oblast administration informed the PFL guaranteeing sufficient funds for the next season. The Administration of the PFL presided at a special meeting and accepted the license. The club was relegated to the Ukrainian Second League for the next season.(10 July 2012)
Вінницька "Нива" братиме участь у змаганнях [Nyva Vinnytsia will take part in the competition] (in Ukrainian). PFL. 10 July 2012. Retrieved 10 July 2012.
External links
- (Ukrainian) Fan team website
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