1992 Vyshcha Liha

1992 Vyshcha Liha (Ukrainian: Чемпіонат серед команд вищої ліги) was the first football championship organized in Ukraine after the dissolution of the Soviet Union and officially recognized by the UEFA. The last Soviet season finished in fall of 1991.

Vyshcha Liha
Season1992
Dates6 March – 21 June
ChampionsSC Tavriya Simferopol
1st title
RelegatedNyva Vinnytsia
Naftovyk Okhtyrka
Prykarpattia Ivano-Frankivsk
Evis Mykolaiv
Temp Shepetivka
SC Odesa
Champions LeagueTavriya Simferopol
Cup Winners' CupChornomorets Odesa
UEFA CupDynamo Kyiv
Matches played182
Goals scored403 (2.21 per match)
Top goalscorer(12) Yuriy Hudymenko (Tavriya)
Biggest home winTavriya 6–0 Temp
Chornomorets 6–0 Nyva V.
Biggest away winEvis 1–6 Shakhtar
Highest scoringDnipro 4–3 SC Odesa
Evis 1–6 Shakhtar
Highest attendance36,000 – TavriyaDynamo (final)
Lowest attendance280 – DynamoNyva T.
1991

The Football Federation of Ukraine when organizing the competition decided to shift its calendar to synchronize it with one common in Europe "fall-spring" and organized a short championship.

The first two games of the Round 1 took place on 6 March 1992 in Odesa where local Chornomorets was hosting Karpaty, and Mykolaiv where local Evis was playing against the visiting Temp.

Teams and organization

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League's formation and issues

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Composition

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The league and its calendar were adopted at the FFU Executive Committee session on 10 September 1991[1] with the ongoing 1991 season of the All-Soviet football competitions. It was established that the new league will consist of 20 teams divided in two groups.[1] Six clubs (last three from each group) were set to be relegated and replaced with two best from the First League, thus reducing the league for the next season to 16. Winners of both groups were to play against one another for the national title. The league's final was originally planned to consist of two games (home and away), but later due to scheduling of the Ukraine national football team's games it was changed to one on a neutral field.[1]

To the league were included all Ukrainian clubs of the 1991 Soviet Top and First leagues (8 clubs), nine of eleven Ukrainian clubs out the 1991 Soviet Second League (all of them competed in the west zone), the two best teams of the 1991 Soviet Second (lower) League and the winner of the Ukrainian Cup.[1] The FFU president Viktor Bannikov was against to include the Ukrainian Cup winner into the top league.[1]

There were opponents of organization of the championship among the most notable was FC Metalurh Zaporizhya.[1] The FC Metalist Kharkiv was against with the condition if they would be relegated from the 1991 Soviet Top League.[1] Also against the championship was Yevhen Kucherevskyi[1] (FC Dnipro Dnipropetrovsk, one of few Ukrainian coaches who managed to win the Soviet Top League).

There were plenty of alternative proposition on the composition and the season's calendar among which from the president of Prykarpattia Anatoliy Revutskyi and the head coach of Temp Ishtvan Sekech.[1]

Calendar

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The championship started on March 6, about a month later after the qualification rounds of another national tournament, the first edition of Ukrainian Cup. The first half of the season was scheduled to finish on April 19 with the second one to resume on April 25 (6 days intermission). The last round was to be played on June 17.

Considering such a schedule and the fact that the Ukrainian Cup competition was on the way simultaneously, the Ukrainian clubs had to forfeit their scheduled games in the Soviet Cup competition. In addition to that Dynamo Kyiv also participated in the Champions League competition which ended for Dynamo only on April 15. Each team this season had at least two games scheduled every week on average.

Considering other official games (outside of the league), FC Torpedo Zaporizhzhia and FC Dynamo Kyiv has played the record of 26 games from February 18 through June 21 and the most among the other clubs in the League.

Location of teams

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Locations of teams home grounds in Ukrainian Premier League 1992

Qualified teams

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TeamLeague and position in 1991[1]CoachReplaced coach
Chornomorets OdesaSoviet Top League4Viktor Prokopenko
Dynamo Kyiv5Anatoliy Puzach
Dnipro Dnipropetrovsk9Mykola PavlovYevhen Kucherevsky
Shakhtar Donetsk12Valery Yaremchenko
Metalurh Zaporizhya13Ihor Nadein
Metalist Kharkiv15Leonid Tkachenko
Bukovyna ChernivtsiSoviet First League5Yukhym Shkolnykov
Tavriya Simferopol6Anatoliy Zayaev
Karpaty LvivSoviet Second League, West1Stepan Yurchyshyn
Zorya-MALS Luhansk2Anatoliy Kuksov
Nyva Ternopil4Leonid Koltun
Nyva Vinnytsia5Valery PetrovVyacheslav Hrozny
Torpedo Zaporizhzhia7Yevhen Lemeshko
Volyn Lutsk8Myron Markevych
SC Odesa10Serhiy Marusyn
Kremin Kremenchuk13Volodymyr Lozynskyi
Evis Mykolaiv15Ivan Balan
Naftovyk OkhtyrkaSoviet Second League B, Zone 1
Championship of the Ukrainian SSR
1Valery Dushkov
Prykarpattya2Yuriy ShuliatytskyiIvan Krasnetskyi
Temp ShepetivkaSoviet Second League B, Zone 1
Winner of Cup of the Ukrainian SSR
9Ishtvan Sekech

Note:

Clubs' name changes

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  • Zorya-MALS Luhansk before the season carried name Zorya Luhansk. Name extension was provided for sponsorship reasons.
  • Evis Mykolaiv before the season carried name Sudnobudivnyk Mykolaiv.
  • SC Odesa changed its name from SKA Odesa on May 5, 1992, due to restructuring of the Odesa Military District and Armed Forces of Ukraine.

Stadiums

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RankStadiumClubCapacityHighest
Attendance
Notes
1Republican StadiumDynamo Kyiv100,0005,000Round 8 (Zorya-MALS)
2Metalist StadiumMetalist Kharkiv38,6337,000Round 15 (Dnipro)
3Black Sea Shipping Central StadiumChornomorets34,3629,500Round 15 (Tavriya)
4Shakhtar StadiumShakhtar Donetsk31,7184,300Round 20 (Tavriya)
5Ukraina StadiumKarpaty Lviv28,05113,000Round 3 (Tavriya)
Tavriya Simferopol36,000Final (Dynamo)
6Central City StadiumEvis Mykolaiv25,17515,000Round 4 (Chornomorets)
7Meteor StadiumDnipro24,3816,000Round 13 (Dynamo)
8Lokomotyv StadiumNyva Vinnytsia24,00010,000Round 17 (Shakhtar)
9Avanhard StadiumZorya-MALS22,32017,200Round 14 (Dynamo)
10Lokomotiv StadiumTavriya Simferopol19,9783,500Round 17 (Karpaty)
11Dynamo StadiumDynamo Kyiv16,8732,500Round 17 (SC Odesa)as home ground in Round 12 and 17
12AutoZAZ StadiumTorpedo Zaporizhzhia15,0005,000Round 10 (Chornomorets)
13City StadiumNyva Ternopil12,75020,000Round 10 (Dynamo)
14Bukovyna StadiumBukovyna Chernivtsi12,00014,000Round 6 (Dynamo)
15Metalurh Central StadiumMetalurh Zaporizhya11,9838,000Round 1 (Shakhtar)
Dnipro3,000Playoff (Shakhtar)
16Dnipro StadiumKremin Kremenchuk11,30013,000Round 14 (Chornomorets)
17Avanhard StadiumVolyn Lutsk10,79220,000Round 9 (Dynamo)
18Elektron StadiumPrykarpattya15,000Round 5 (Dynamo)
19Naftovyk StadiumNaftovyk Okhtyrka5,2564,500Round 16 (Dnipro)
20SKA StadiumSC Odesa6,000Round 4 (Dynamo)
21Temp StadiumTemp Shepetivka10,000Round 8 (Shakhtar)

Managerial changes

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Managerial changes approximated

TeamOutgoing head coachManner of departureDate of vacancyTableIncoming head coachDate of appointmentTable
FC Nyva Ternopil Mykhailo DunetsPre season Leonid KoltunPre season
FC Dnipro Dnipropetrovsk Yevhen KucherevskyiMarch 10, 19921st Mykola PavlovMarch 10, 19921st
FC Nyva Vinnytsia Vyacheslav HroznyMarch 28, 199210th Valery PetrovMarch 28, 199210th
FC Spartak Ivano-Frankivsk Ivan KrasnetskyiApril 19929th Yuriy ShuliatytskyiApril 19929th

First stage

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Qualified teams

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Tavriya SimferopolDynamo KyivChornomorets Odessa

Group A final standings

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PosTeamPldWDLGFGAGDPtsQualification or relegation
1Tavriya Simferopol (C)181161309+2128Qualification to Final playoff
2Shakhtar Donetsk1810623110+2126Qualification to Third place playoff
3Chornomorets Odesa189723012+1825Qualification to Cup Winners' Cup qualifying round
4Torpedo Zaporizhzhia186752116+519
5Metalurh Zaporizhzhia186662019+118
6Karpaty Lviv185671518−316
7Kremin Kremenchuk184861723−616
8Nyva Vinnytsia (R)185491833−1514Relegated to Ukrainian First League
9Evis Mykolaiv (R)1834111229−1710
10Temp Shepetivka (R)182412934−258
Updated to match(es) played on unknown. Source: [citation needed]
Rules for classification: 1st points; 2nd wins; 3rd goal difference
(C) Champions; (R) Relegated
Home \ AwayCHOEVSKREKARMZANVISHATAVTMPTOR
Chornomorets Odesa2–11–12–22–06–03–00–03–12–1
Evis Mykolaiv1–20–01–11–02–11–61–21–01–1
Kremin Kremenchuk1–12–11–00–11–02–31–11–11–1
Karpaty Lviv2–12–01–10–02–11–00–22–00–0
Metalurh Zaporizhzhia1–12–01–01–14–11–12–23–10–1
Nyva Vinnytsia0–02–04–23–01–10–00–10–03–1
Shakhtar Donetsk0–02–02–01–02–05–00–02–00–0
Tavriya Simferopol1–01–03–01–02–14–11–16–02–0
Temp Shepetivka0–21–12–31–00–20–10–41–01–1
Torpedo Zaporizhzhia0–22–00–02–13–04–01–21–12–0
Source: uafootball.net.ua
Legend: Blue = home team win; Yellow = draw; Red = away team win.

Notes:

Team ╲ Round1234567891011121314151617181920
Chornomorets Odesa61335523332222222233
MFC Mykolaiv23567897898888889999
Kremin Kremenchuk24676666666666666667
Karpaty Lviv45889988787777777776
Metalurh Zaporizhya78453334543344444445
Nyva Vinnytsia89101010101010101010101091098888
Shakhtar Donetsk56212242224433333322
Tavriya Simferopol12121111111111111111
Temp Shepetivka810998779979991091010101010
Torpedo Zaporizhzhia107744455455555555554
Source: Aleksey Kobyzev's Web-Site (in Russian)

Group B final standings

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PosTeamPldWDLGFGAGDPtsQualification or relegation
1Dynamo Kyiv1813413113+1830Qualification to Final playoff
2Dnipro Dnipropetrovsk (O)1810352615+1123Qualification to Third place playoff
3Metalist Kharkiv188552116+521
4Nyva Ternopil188551612+421
5Volyn Lutsk188282421+318
6Bukovyna Chernivtsi187471716+118
7Zorya-MALS Luhansk186572323017
8Naftovyk Okhtyrka (R)1853101228−1613Relegated to Ukrainian First League
9Prykarpattya Ivano-Frankivsk (R)18369918−912
10Odesa (R)1831141532−177
Source: [citation needed]
Rules for classification: 1st points; 2nd wins; 3rd goal difference
(O) Play-off winners; (R) Relegated
Home \ AwayBUKDNIDYNMETNAFNVTODEPIFVOLZOR
Bukovyna Chernivtsi1–20–00–13–02–13–10–02–13–1
Dnipro0–10–12–12–04–14–31–03–02–0
Dynamo Kyiv1–02–22–11–01–04–22–02–02–1
Metalist Kharkiv0–01–02–12–00–00–21–03–11–0
Naftovyk Okhtyrka0–00–11–31–00–03–11–02–12–2
Nyva Ternopil1–01–00–21–12–01–02–02–02–0
SC Odesa3–01–11–30–30–10–11–00–20–1
Prykarpattia Ivano-Frankivsk0–10–10–01–14–10–01–00–02–1
Volyn Lutsk2–01–02–33–13–01–03–01–12–0
Zorya-MALS Luhansk2–11–11–12–23–01–11–04–02–1
Source: uafootball.net.ua
Legend: Blue = home team win; Yellow = draw; Red = away team win.

Notes:

Team ╲ Round1234567891011121314151617181920
Bukovyna Chernivtsi21121112223222453456
Dnipro14777454532233222222
Dynamo Kyiv22312221111111111111
Metalist Kharkiv73233533354466634333
Naftovyk Okhtyrka45666885646788888988
Nyva Ternopil77444667485655345544
Odesa9109910101010101010101010101010101010
Ivano-Frankivsk56888778999999999899
Volyn Lutsk57544346778544566765
Zoria Luhansk1099109999867877777677
Source: Aleksey Kobyzev's Web-Site (in Russian)

Second stage

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Championship playoff

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SC Tavriya Simferopol1 – 0FC Dynamo Kyiv
Shevchenko 75'Report
goal (video)
Attendance: 36,000[3]

MATCH OFFICIALS

MATCH RULES

  • 90 minutes.
  • 30 minutes of extra-time if necessary.
  • Penalty shoot-out if scores still level.
  • Seven named substitutes
  • Maximum of 3 substitutions.

Tavriya Simferopol qualified for 1992–93 European Cup Preliminary round and Dynamo Kyiv qualified for 1992–93 UEFA Cup First round.

Third place playoff

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Season statistics

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Top scorers

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RankPlayerClubGoals[5]
(Pen.)
1 Yuriy HudymenkoTavriya Simferopol12
2 Timerlan HuseinovZorya-MALS Luhansk11
3 Serhii RebrovShakhtar Donetsk10
Ivan HetskoChornomorets Odesa10 (6)
5 Oleksandr ZayatsTorpedo Zaporizhzhia9 (3)
6 Serhiy ShevchenkoTavriya Simferopol8 (2)
7 Yuriy HrytsynaDynamo Kyiv7
Ivan KorponayKremin Kremenchuk7
Serhiy HusyevChornomorets Odesa7 (1)
Oleh SalenkoDynamo Kyiv7 (3)

Clean sheets

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RankPlayerClubClean
sheets
1 Dmytro ShutkovShakhtar Donetsk11
Oleh KolesovTavriya Simferopol11
3 Ihor MoiseyevTorpedo Zaporizhia8
Oleksandr PomazunMetalist Kharkiv8
Anatoliy ChystovNyva Ternopil8
Mykhailo BurchVolyn Lutsk8

Hat-tricks

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PlayerForAgainstResultDate
Ivan Hetsko
6–0
4 April 1992[6]
Pavlo Shkapenko
4–1
28 April 1992[7]
Serhii Rebrov
1–6
3 June 1992[8]
Yuriy Hudymenko*
6–0
9 June 1992[9]
Yuriy Hrytsyna
1–3
17 June 1992[10]

Notes:

  • (*) Asterisk identifies players who scored four goals (poker).

Medal squads

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(league appearances and goals listed in brackets)

1. SC Tavria Simferopol
Goalkeepers: Oleh Kolesov (19 / -9), Dmitriy Gulenkov (1).

Defenders: Mykola Turchynenko (19), Oleksandr Holovko (18), Ihor Volkov (17 / 1), Vidmantas Vyšniauskas (15), Yuriy Getikov (14), Sefer Alibayev (9), Serhiy Voronezhsky (7), Dmitriy Smirnov (5).
Midfielders: Andriy Oparin (19 / 1), Vladislav Novikov (18 / 1), Yuriy Mikhailus (2), Oleksandr Kundenok (2), Serhiy Yesin (1).
Forwards: Sergei Gladyshev (19 / 6), Yuriy Hudymenko (18 / 12), Serhiy Shevchenko (18 / 8), Sergey Andreev (15 / 2), Toliat Sheykhametov (7), Marat Mulashev (2).

Manager: Anatoliy Zayayev.

Transferred out during the season: Marat Mulashev (to Rubin Kazan), Oleksandr Kundenok (to Polissya Zhytomyr).

2. FC Dynamo Kyiv
Goalkeepers: Valdemaras Martinkėnas (10 / -7), Ihor Kutepov (9 / -7).

Defenders: Andriy Annenkov (17), Serhiy Zayets (15 / 1), Anatoliy Bezsmertny (14), Oleh Luzhnyi (13 / 2), Serhiy Shmatovalenko (9), Akhrik Tsveyba (9), Gintaras Kvitkauskas (6), Ervand Sukiasian (5 / 2), Andrey Aleksanenkov (2).
Midfielders: Volodymyr Sharan (19 / 2), Yuriy Moroz (19), Stepan Betsa (14 / 1), Pavlo Yakovenko (12 / 1), Oleh Volotek (11 / 2), Serhiy Kovalets (12 / 1).
Forwards: Oleh Salenko (16 / 7), Yuriy Hritsyna (13 / 7), Oleh Matveyev (10 / 1), Valeriy Yesipov (6), Viktor Leonenko (5 / 3).

Manager: Anatoliy Puzach.

Transferred out during the season: ?.

3. FC Dnipro Dnipropetrovsk
Goalkeepers: Valeriy Horodov (19 / -17), Mykola Medin.

Defenders: Serhiy Diriavka (17), Volodymyr Horily (17), Volodymyr Bahmut (14 / 3), Serhiy Bezhenar (9 / 2), Serhiy Mamchur (9), Andriy Yudin (8).
Midfielders: Andriy Polunin (17 / 2), Oleksandr Zakharov (17 / 2), Yevhen Pokhlebayev (16), Oleksiy Sasko (16), Yuriy Maksymov (14 / 3), Vadym Tyshchenko (13 / 2), Dmytro Mykhailenko (1), Oleksandr Omelchuk (1).
Forwards: Valentyn Moskvin (19 / 3), Serhiy Konovalov (14 / 5), Serhiy Dumenko (7 / 4), Oleksandr Palianytsia (7 / 1), Vladimir Lebed (7 / 1), Oleksandr Tiehayev (2).

Manager: Yevhen Kucherevsky (until March 15 (3 games)), Mykola Pavlov (since March 15 (15 games)).

Transferred out during the season: Vladimir Lebed (to Krystal Kherson).

Note: Players in italic are whose playing position is uncertain.

See also

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References

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  1. ^ a b c d e f g h i j Mylenko, V. First steps in Ukrainian club football (Первые шаги украинского клубного футбола). Football.ua. 26 November 2010.
  2. ^ Spartak Moscow qualified for the CWC releasing their UEFA Cup spot.
  3. ^ "Historical protocol" (in Russian). Kobyzev, Aleksey. 2006-05-31. Retrieved 2009-10-07.
  4. ^ a b 20 years Tavria became the first champion of Ukraine. SK Tavria press release. June 21, 2012. (photos)
  5. ^ Top scorers (Бомбардиры).uafootball.net.ua
  6. ^ "Hat-tricks". uafootball.net. 4 April 1992. Retrieved 7 September 2014.
  7. ^ "Hat-tricks". uafootball.net. 28 April 1992. Retrieved 7 September 2014.
  8. ^ "Hat-tricks". uafootball.net. 3 June 1992. Retrieved 7 September 2014.
  9. ^ "Hat-tricks". uafootball.net. 9 June 1992. Retrieved 7 September 2014.
  10. ^ "Hat-tricks". uafootball.net. 17 June 1992. Retrieved 7 September 2014.
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