PFC Shumen 2010

This article is about the original club. For the football club formed in 2013, see FC Shumen 1929.
Shumen 2010
Full name ПФК Шумен 2010
(PFC Shumen 2010)
Nickname(s) Пивоварите
(The Brewers)
Founded December 1, 1929 (1929-12-01)
as Panayot Volov
Dissolved 2013 (2013)
Ground Panayot Volov Stadium,
Shumen
Ground Capacity 24,390
(due to repairs currently down to 3,500)
Chairman Georgi Georgiev
2013–14 North-East V AFG, 14th (relegated)

Professional Football Club Shumen 2010 (Bulgarian: Професионален Футболен Клуб Шумен 2010) was a Bulgarian football club, playing in the city of Shumen. The club was established in 1929 under the name "Panayot Volov". They play their home games on "Panayot Volov", with a capacity of 24,390 people. The main kit-colours of the team are yellow and blue. Currently the team is playing in the Bulgarian North-East V football group, after finishing 12th in the 2012–13 B PFG and suffering relegation.

Because of the city's famous brand of Shumensko beer, the team are often affectionately called The Brewers.

History

Panayot Volov participated in the State Championship as Shumen region champion in 1934-35 and reached the semifinals. The club was again champion of Shumen region in 1935-36 and 1936–37, but was eliminated during the first matches of the State Championship. Panayot Volov changed names as DFS Shumen in 1980, Madara Shumen in 1984, and as FC Shumen in 1985.

After a successful spell in the Bulgarian A Professional Football Group during the early and late 1990's, which included a 4th place finish in 1993/94 and a UEFA Cup participation, the club lost its sponsors and went bankrupt. A newly formed entity acquired its license and merged with Yunak Shumen in 2001, eventually becoming FC Shumen 2001. The club briefly returned its original name in 2007, before entering financial difficulties once more and being renamed Shumen 2010 as it was demoted to the V group, the third tier in Bulgarian football.[1] The club regained its position in professional football after a two-year absence by winning the 2011-12 Northeastern V Amateur Group, but finished 12th out of 14 teams in its first season back, and was relegated to the third division for the 2013-14 season.

Panayot Volov played in the A Professional Group for a total of seven seasons: 1972-1973, 1983–1984, 1993–1996 and 1998-2000.[2] It reached the semifinals of the Bulgarian Cup on two occasions, in 1957 and 2006, when they narrowly lost 2:1 to Cherno More Varna after extra time.

Honours

Panayot Volov Stadium in January 2006, before repairs began. As of July 2012, only the main sector on the right has been covered with blue and yellow seats and reopened.

League

A PFG

B PFG

North-East V AFG

Cup

Bulgarian Cup

European Cups History

UEFA Cup:

Season Round Country Club Home Away Aggregate
1994-95 Q Cyprus Anorthosis Famagusta 1-2 0-2 1-4

Last squad

As of 18 June 2013 Note: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.

No. Position Player
Italy GK Davide Croce
Italy GK Stefano Rosciani
Bulgaria DF Ayan Irfan
Bulgaria DF Yuliyan Zagorov
Cameroon DF Merlin Boyomo
Italy DF Antonio Carrozza
Bulgaria DF Lyubomir Despotov
Italy DF Stefano Blaiotta
Spain MF Luis Jiménez
Bulgaria MF Banko Bankov
Italy MF Francesco Gherra
Slovenia MF Milan Kocic
No. Position Player
Bulgaria MF Nikolay Banov
Bulgaria MF Ilian Hristov
Italy MF Pio Impagliatelli
Slovenia MF Nejc Kolman
Bulgaria MF Petar Petrov
Italy FW Giovanni Cascella
Bulgaria FW Ahmed Ahmedov
Italy FW Alessandro Spada
Bulgaria FW Ivan Lazarski
Italy FW Gianmarco Piccioni
Italy FW Nicolò De Cesare

Foreign players

Up to one non-EU national can be registered and given a squad number for the first team in the B PFG. 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)

  • Cameroon Italy Merlin Boyomo

Non-EU Nationals

References

External links

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the Thursday, March 31, 2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.