FC Dynamo Saint Petersburg

For the basketball club, see BC Dynamo Saint Petersburg.
Dynamo St. Petersburg
Full name Football Club Dynamo Saint Petersburg
Nickname(s) The Blues
Founded 1922
Ground MSA Petrovskiy, Saint Petersburg
Ground Capacity 2,809[1]
Owner Boris Rotenberg
Chairman Dmitry Rubashko (Director General)
Manager Aleksandr Tochilin
League Russian Professional Football League, Zone West
2015–16 7th
Website Club home page

FC Dynamo Saint Petersburg is an association football club from Saint Petersburg, in Northwest Russia. The club is one of the oldest clubs in Saint Petersburg, and until 1984 was the most popular football club in Saint Petersburg.

The club played in the Russian First Division in 2010 after winning the Western zone of the Russian Second Division in 2009. But, the club relegated back to the third level after finishing 16th in 2010. The club that played as Dynamo from 2007 to 2010 returned to their previous name, FC Petrotrest Saint Petersburg, and a new Dynamo was organized to play in the Amateur Football League. In 2013 the both clubs was merged under the traditional name of Dynamo and the club was playing in the Russian National Football League. It was relegated back to the third-tier Russian Professional Football League for the 2015–16 season.

Main sponsor is Baltic Marine Group owned by Director-General Dmitry Rubashko. In July 2015, the club was purchased by Boris Rotenberg.

History

The glorious past

The club was founded in 1922 as part of the All-Union Sport Society "Dinamo" that had its different sport clubs in variety of sports throughout the whole Soviet Union. That society was the main sposor of the club at that time. Dinamo debuted in the Soviet Top League in 1936 among the original seven teams in the very first edition of the Soviet Top League. The club reentered the Soviet Top League right after the World War II as the member of the interrupted edition of 1941. The club then participated in the Top League between 1936 and 1954, finishing in the top five, three times. In 1954, however, it was decided to replace Dynamo with another club, TRL, after the people in charge of football in Saint Petersburg were left unimpressed with the team's tenth-place finish in the League. From 1955-1961, they had only Jewish striker, Israel "Zolik" Olshanetsky.

The new beginning

Coincidentally, the club was resurrected in 1960 in place of the TRL and spent the next two seasons in "Class B", the second tier of the Soviet league pyramid, before finding its way back to the Top Division.

The other Dark Ages

Dynamo lost its professional status in 2000, because of the lack of financing. The club, however, was immediately re-established by a local building society, but lost its professional status once again in 2004.

FC Petrotrest Saint Petersburg

The new Dynamo Saint Petersburg was established on the base of another Saint Petersburg club FC Petrotrest Saint Petersburg in 2007. After their relegation from the Russian First Division in 2010, they returned to the name Petrotrest and a new team was established as FC Dynamo to play in the Amateur Football League.

The United FC Dynamo Saint Petersburg

In preparations to 2013–14 season, FC Petrotrest and Dynamo signed on an agreement of merging FC Petrotrest into Dynamo in order to play in the Russian First Division, now called the National Football League.

At the end of the 2014–15 season, the club was relegated to the third level league, the Russian Professional Football League. Following the season, the club was purchased by the billionaire Boris Rotenberg (technically, a new club called FC Dynamo-Saint Petersburg was formed, with SMP Racing becoming the new sponser) and at the end of June 2015 "Dynamo" has with the new founders and sponsors were allowed to participate in the Second Division.

The first season of the renewed team was not easy - meeting in full strength only a few days before the start of the Championship, Dynamo failed to show good performances in the first round, once in the basement of the standings at the end of the first part of the season. But in spring 2016, thanks to high-quality training in the winter and breeding spot, Dynamo straighten their figures, nearly becoming the best team in the "West" zone on the results of matches of the second stage of the Championship. in November 2016 The team finish in the 1st place in the table standing of Western Zone in the 2nd Division.

Team name history

Dynamo in action

Home Stadium

Dynamo Stadium

In 1929, Dinamo gained its own stadium, Dinamo.

The Dynamo Stadium was built and design by the architects O. Lyalin and Y. Svirskiy. The stadium was located on Krestovsky Island in Leningrad and was the home stadium for Dynamo F.C., the stadium had a capacity of 500 fans.

On May 22, 1936 the stadium host 12,000 fans in the first ever game of the Soviet Championship. The game was between Dynamo Leningrad and Lokomotiv Moscow and finished with winning of Lokomotiv 1:3. During the Siege of Leningrad, On May 31, 1942, the stadium host The Siege Game, between Dynamo Leningrad and the local football clubs.

Nowadays, the stadium used as a training compound for Dynamo. In 2007 the Saint Petersburg City Administration announced on the project to destroy the stadium and replace it with a housing building and a business center. In 2009 the compound become a full municipal property after the City Administration was purchased the ground from Dymano's owners.

In 2008 The Dynamo stadium has become as a Training center for Dynamo.

Petrovsky Stadium

Since the end of the 2000s, Dinamo plays at Sport Complex Petrovsky in Saint Petersburg. The complex consists of two arenas (stadiums): the central sport arena (CSA) and the minor sport arena (MSA). Dinamo shares the complex with four other prefessional teams. In 2008 Zenit plays at CSA, the MSA is used by Dinamo, Zenit-2, Zenit-D, and Sever (Murmansk). The MSA provides 2,835 seats to its spectators. There are talks that Zenit will move out of this complex to its new stadium that will be built in 2009 in place of the Kirov Stadium. This migration might provide Dinamo with full exploitation of the whole complex.

League and cup history

Soviet Union Soviet Union
Season Division (Name) Pos./Teams Pl. W D L GS GA P Domestic Cup Europe Notes
1936 (Spring) 1st (Group A) 6/(7) 6 1 1 4 5 12 9 3 pts for win, 2 - draw, 1 – lost
1936 (Autumn) 1st (Group A) 7/(8) 7 1 3 3 7 15 12 ¼ finals 3 pts for win, 2 - draw, 1 – lost
1937 1st (Group A) 7/(9) 16 2 9 5 21 25 29 1/16 3 pts for win, 2 - draw, 1 – lost
1938 1st (Group A) 7/(26) 25 12 6 7 52 32 30 1/2 shifted to the two point system
1939 1st (Group A) 10/(14) 26 8 6 12 41 56 22 1/16
1940 1st (Group A) 5/(13) 24 11 5 8 47 44 21 No competition
1941 1st (Group A) 2/(15) 10 5 4 1 18 8 14 No competition Unofficial (did not finish due to World War II)
1942 Did not played due to World War II
1943 Did not played due to World War II
1944 1/4 Did not played due to World War II
1945 1st (1st Group) 5/(12) 22 11 3 8 42 29 25 1/4
1946 1st (1st Group) 5/(12) 22 10 4 8 37 35 24 1/8
1947 1st (1st Group) 10/(13) 24 7 5 12 32 48 19 1/2
1948 1st (1st Group) 6/(14) 26 10 5 11 42 47 25 1/8
1949 1st (1st Group) 9/(18) 34 12 10 12 53 53 34 1/16
1950 1st (Class A) 8/(19) 36 14 10 12 63 50 38 1/16
1951 1st (Class A) 9/(15) 28 11 5 12 46 53 27 1/16
1952 1st (Class A) 5/(14) 13 5 5 3 17 17 15 1/2
1953 1st (Class A) 10/(11) 20 5 4 11 20 33 14 1/8
1954 1st (Class A) 4/(13) 24 8 10 6 29 25 26 ? as TRL
1955 1st (Class A) 10/(12) 22 5 6 11 28 41 16 ? as TRL
1956 1st (Class A) 12/(12) 22 3 7 12 25 47 13 ? as TRL
relegated
1957 2nd ? as TRL
1958 2nd ? as TRL
1959 2nd ? as TRL
1960 2nd (II Zone) 9 28 9 6 13 46 43 24 ? reestablished in place of TRL
1961 2nd (II Zone) 3 30 18 9 3 58 28 45 1/128 Promoted
1962 1st (Class A) 16 30 8 6 16 27 49 22 1/16 replaced the disbanded FC Admiralteets Leningrad
1963 1st (Class A) 16 38 7 15 16 37 51 29 1/4 relegated
Russia Russia

Current squad

As of 31 August 2016, according to the PFL website.

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

No. Position Player
Russia GK Yegor Generalov
Russia GK Denis Kavlinov
Russia GK Anton Tsvetkov
Russia DF Igor Alexeyev
Russia DF Oleg Babenkov
Russia DF Valentin Filatov
Russia DF Valeri Kaptilov
Russia DF Mikhail Kovalenko
Russia DF Andrei Lukanchenkov
Russia DF Ilya Serikov
Russia DF Dmitri Shishkanov
Russia DF Maksim Starkov
Russia DF Andrei Yakovlev
Russia MF Semyon Fedotov
No. Position Player
Russia MF Yevgeni Gavrilov
Russia MF Yuri Kirillov
Russia MF Vitali Komisov
Russia MF Artyom Kulishev
Russia MF Yevgeni Pesegov
Russia MF Andrei Pochipov
Russia MF Maksim Rogov
Russia MF Dmitri Sukonkin
Russia FW Anton Apatin
Russia FW Mikhail Kozlov
Armenia FW Mikhail Markosov
Russia FW Aleksandr Subbotin
Russia FW Bogdan Zhbanov

Notable players

These are players who won international caps for their respective countries. Players whose name is listed in bold represented their countries while playing for Dynamo.

Coaches

Name Nationality From To
Pavel Batyrev  Soviet Union 1936 1936
Antonín Fivébr  Czech Republic 1936 1936
Mikhail Butusov  Soviet Union 1937 1938
Vasili Zimmerberg  Soviet Union 1939 1939
P. Batyrev  Soviet Union 1939 1939
Mikhail Okun  Soviet Union 1940 1947
M. Butusov  Soviet Union 1948 1953
Vasili Lotkov  Soviet Union 1960 1961
Nikolai Lyukshinov  Soviet Union 1961 1962
Gennadi Bondarenko  Soviet Union 1963 1964
Arkadi Alov  Soviet Union 1965 1966
G. Bondarenko  Soviet Union 1966 1968
Vyacheslav Solovyov  Soviet Union 1969 1971
Valentin Fyodorov  Soviet Union 1971 1972
Anatoli Vasilyev  Soviet Union 1973 1979
Stanislav Belikov  Soviet Union 1979 1983
G. Bondarenko  Soviet Union 1984 1987
Anatoli Zinchenko  Soviet Union 1988 1989
Vladimir Pronin  Soviet Union
 Russia
1990 1992
Vladimir Goncharov  Russia 1992 1993
Aleksandr Fyodorov  Russia 1994 1996
Mark Abramovich Rubin  Russia 1997 1997
Boris Rappoport  Russia 1998 1999
Sergei Lomakin  Russia 2001 2001
Sergei Vedeneev  Russia 2001 2001

Name Nationality From To
S. Lomakin  Russia 2001 2002
Dmitri Galiamin  Russia 2002 2002
Valeri Gladilin  Russia 2002 2002
Oleg Dolmatov  Russia 2003 2003
Vladimir Kazachyonok  Russia 2003 2003
Sergey Dmitriyev  Russia 2007 2007
Yuri Zheludkov  Russia 2007 2007
Leonid Tkachenko  Russia 2007 2008
Vyacheslav Melnikov  Russia 2008 2008
Eduard Malofeyev  Russia 2008 2009
Aleksandr Averyanov  Russia 2010 2010
Grigori Mikhalyuk  Russia 2010 2010
Boris Zhuravlyov  Russia 2010 2010
E. Malofeyev  Russia 2010 2010
Sergey Frantsev  Russia 2010 2010
Igor Zazulin  Russia 2010 2010
Roman Izrailev  Russia 2011 2011
Boris Zhuravlyov  Russia 2013 2013
Pavel Panteleyevich Gusev  Russia 2013 2014
Viktor Demidov  Russia 2014 2014
Adyam Kuzyayev  Russia 2014 2015
Aleksandr Tochilin  Russia 2015 present

Honours and Achiements

Soviet Cup:

City Championship:

FC Petrotrest

FC Petrotrest Saint Petersburg
Full name Football Club Petrotrest Saint Petersburg
Founded 2001 (2001)
Dissolved 2013 (2013)

FC Petrotrest Saint Petersburg (Russian: ФК "Петротрест" Санкт-Петербург) is a former association football club from Saint Petersburg, Russia, founded in 2001.

In 2002 the team played in Amateur Football League (North-West zone), in 2003, 2004, 2006 and since 2011 - in Second Division (West zone), in 2005 - in First Division (was relegated).

From 2007 to 2010 the team played under the name of FC Dynamo Saint Petersburg. After the team was relegated to the Russian Second Division after the 2010 season, the team returned to their previous name FC Petrotrest and another independent team called FC Dynamo was organized to play in the Amateur Football League. In 2012 the club was finished in the 1st place and was promoted to the First division. In 2013 it was merged into Dynamo Saint Petersburg.

See also

References

  1. Stadium characteristics on the official web-site
  2. Dynamo has finished in 4th position at league's table, but the Russian Football Federation has decided to give a technial loses to Dynamo in some games, due to breaking some regulations in the league. This loses make Dynamo stand in the 16th position. Russian Source: Сообщение ЦОС ПФЛ от 27 ноября 2002 года

External links

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