Dynamo Bryansk is a Russian football club from Bryansk , founded in 1931. Plays in the Second Division , the “Center” zone , home stadium - “ Dynamo ” (after reconstruction it can hold 10,100 spectators)
Dynamo (Bryansk) | ||||
---|---|---|---|---|
Complete title | NP "Football club" Dynamo-Bryansk " [1] | |||
Nicknames | "Blue-white", "Bryansk wolves", "Guerrillas" | |||
Based | July 9, 1931 (88 years old) | |||
Stadium | Dynamo , Bryansk | |||
Capacity | 10,100 [2] | |||
The president | Alexander Zhigunov | |||
Use director | Dmitry Mitt | |||
Main coach | Alexander Gorbachev | |||
Captain | Andrey Lukanchenkov | |||
Sponsor | Government of Bryansk Region , Bryansk Regional Duma | |||
Site | fc-db.ru | |||
Competition | Second Division , Center Zone | |||
2017/2018 | 10 place | |||
|
Content
History
1931-1959 Dynamo ATC
The idea of creating a Dynamo team in Bryansk belongs to the employees of the United State Political Administration Grigory Pimashkin and Andrey Adamovich . The date of foundation of the club is July 9, 1931. This date is associated with the day of the first training of the team.
Bryansk Dynamo played in the League of the Western Regions. In those years, the principal rival was Smolensk Dynamo. In 1932, the team made a tour of Baku , where they faced a series of three matches with the leading teams of the city. In the first match, the Bryants won with a minimum score, in the second - a fighting draw 3: 3, and the third match was canceled due to bad weather conditions. Until 1936, Dynamo was among the leaders of its zone, the year 1933 turned out to be particularly bright, when Dynamo did not leave stone on stone from their rivals from Smolensk , Minsk , Kiev , Odessa , Dnepropetrovsk , Leningrad . Such combat players as Pimashkin, Nikolayevsky, Sharikov, Loginov, Baranov, Somvilov, Zhuravsky, Kozelkov, Borisevich, Moskalenko and Andreev were included in that combat squad. Successful performances continued until Bryansk was included in the Oryol region , then the club and lost its leading position until the beginning of World War II , when the club was disbanded.
After 1945, Dynamo was revived and became the leader in the newly created Bryansk region . In the first post-war season of 1946 the club took the third place in the competition of football teams of the Bryansk region . In 1947, the Cup was won. In the 1948 season, Bryansk Dynamo participated in the RSFSR championship, the Bryansk team took second place in their zone, losing to the teammates from the neighboring Smolensk championship. A year later, the Dynamo were able to score only 8 points in the standings among 11 clubs, and thus took the last place, winning only once. Bad results can be explained by the fact that the club was changing generations. Gradually, instead of experienced age players came young players who could not cope with football teams at the level of the national championship.
Four seasons in a row, from 1955 to 1958, the Dynamo Bryansk became silver medalists, and the champion season was 1959, when the club won the Championship of the Bryansk region.
1960–1991
The success of 1959 allowed the team in 1960 to participate in the Class "B" Championship. For the debut season of the club in big football, it was necessary to complete the line-up, which would allow the Dynamo FSO to gain a foothold in the second football echelon of the country. The best players of the region’s leading teams were invited to watch. On May 2, 1960, Dynamo held their first match on a visit to Tambov 's Spartak , also performing for the first time in Class B. In this meeting, the visiting team was stronger. Goals on account of Valentin Babakov and Sergei Kukhareva, and kept their gates are not printed. For the next game, the team with two points in the asset went to Voronezh to meet with a strong team " Trud ". And in this match, the Bryants do not know defeat - 1: 1. And on May 21, spectators at the Dynamo stadium in Bryansk saw the first home match of the team in professional football with the team “ Rocket ” from Gorky , which ranks third after two rounds. But, unfortunately, the first home game of the season was lost to the Moscow team 0: 2. After a home defeat, Dynamo conceded 0: 3 to the Novgorod club Ilmen and Shakhtyor from Stalinogorsk . Then in Kaluga, with the help of Kuzerin and Ivanov's heads, the local Sputnik was beaten up. That season, the wards of Ilya Bizyukov took the penultimate 15th place. The last match of the white-and-blue circle was held at home against the middle peasants of the league, Kaliningrad 's Baltika , the audience saw five unanswered goals against the home team. The result of the first round was the 13th place in the standings. The second round has developed more pitiable, although the beginning of the bottom-white again dawned successful. With a minimum score, Tambov's Spartak was defeated and two draws with Voronezh's Trud and Lipetsk- based Labor Reserves club with the same score 1: 1. But the subsequent away matches with “Rocket”, Tula “ Labor ” and Leningrad “ Spartak ” aggravated the already difficult position of the club. Thus, the Dynamo debut in Class “B” ended for the Bryantsevs in the penultimate 15th place.
The first international meeting in a friendly match on July 30, 1960 was held at the Bryansk stadium, the rival was the SONP club from the Czechoslovak city of Kladno . Despite the fact that the local team played in their home stadium, the Dynamo club was defeated with an indecently large score of 1: 6. The only goal for the blue-white scored Viktor Tolkachev.
This year, teammates from the capital were beaten up at a home friendly game, the Bryants won in a stubborn fight with a score of 4: 3, Babakov, Ivanin, Kukharev and Sviridov scored a goal.
In the 1961 season, Ivan Solovyov, who also headed the Dzerzhinets club from Bezhitsy for a long time, stood at the helm of the Dynamo team. Under his leadership, the Bryansk team took 9th place out of 13 this season. In the third season, B-class finished 13th in blue and white, and this league was relegated to the third level as a result of the next season. In 1967, the team won first place in class “B”, and in the qualifying round, “Dynamo” took fifth place. The return to the second elite division of the Soviet Union took place in the 1968 season, when Dynamo Bryansk entered the second class A group, becoming the champion of their zone and performing well in the final group stages. However, in view of the constant changes in the field of the football system of the USSR leagues, class A, in which the Dynamo bryansk club finished its performance on the sixth bottom, 14th line, has already been considered a rank lower rank since the 1970 season. In 1971–1991, the club represented Bryansk in the Second Soviet League , in which he performed with varying success. The highest achievement in these 20 years is a victory dated 1985 in the first zone, but in the final group tournament the team took the last 4th place. But there were still more failures for two dozen seasons than successes. Two seasons in a row, 1976 and 1977, the Bryants close the standings in 21 places, and after 2 seasons, in 1980, the club is again the last, but already in the league of 18 football teams.
1992–2003
After the collapse of the USSR, Dynamo Bryansk played in the Second League . In 1992 and 1993, the team took the 14th and 15th places respectively, the last result meant that the club will play in the Third League next season. In the fourth strength division of the country, the Bryansk team spent 4 seasons in a row. The seasons of 1995 and 1996, the Bryan players finished the championship in 5th position, and in 1997, finishing the championship in 13th place, due to the reformation of the Second League, Dynamo again played in the Second Division. The team debuted their debut season after a four-year absence, settling down at the bottom of the tournament table. The next 5 seasons the team from Bryansk spent a shock. In 1999 there were major changes in the club. This season a lot of players came from the Bryansk “Spartak” (which sank into oblivion that same year), including Vyacheslav Novikov and its other leaders. This season the team finished in the lead, in 5th place. This season became a turning point for the team in many ways, and next year, the Bryants become silver medalists, giving Khimki the first place 2 points. And in the next two years, Dynamo slowed down a bit, but still remained in the lead, taking 3rd place in 2001 and 4 of 2002. In 2003, Dynamo Bryansk entered the season full of intentions for the first time in history to enter the First Division of the Russian Championship. Throughout the season, three clubs fought for a ticket to increase: Dynamo Bryansk, Belgorod Salyut-Energiya and Oryol . This season Dynamo finished the season at the top of the standings of the Center zone, gaining the same points with the Eagle team. Despite the superiority in the number of victories in the championship over the “Eagle” and in personal meetings, where the Bryants in the 14th round beat the neighbors at home 2: 0, and in the Orel in the derby with the same score, the winner was determined in the “Golden Match” in Tula, where blue and white lost 1: 2. After winning this inter-team competition, Oryol advanced to the First Division , but after the exclusion of Dynamo from St. Petersburg , Dynamo Bryansk, as the team taking the second place, was also promoted to the First Division, taking the place of Petersburgers.
2004—2012
Baranovsky Temnikov Dimidko (to) Bayryev William Beketov Fomichev Romashchenko Kalimulin Golubov Sorokin |
The approximate starting lineup for Dynamo in the 2011/12 season, when the team took a record 5th place in the FNL. |
This year the Dynamo club made its debut in the First Division of Russian football. The Bryansk team, at that time, had a similar experience of playing in the second most powerful league for the first time after the 1969 season. The club was tasked to enter the top ten teams of the First League, but finished the season in 15th place. This result saved the team residence in the division. The next three seasons, blue and white only added to their power. In 2005, Dynamo, just like a year ago, settled in the middle of the standings, moving forward only 2 lines. And in 2006–2007, the club finished in 9th and 8th places, respectively. In the 2007 season, the Bryansk team also achieved success in the national cup . The club in the quarter finals beat “ Rostov ” and reached the semifinal, where it lost to the Moscow club “ Moscow ” (1: 1 at home and 0: 1 away). Soon, after the cup success, the president of the RFU, Vitaly Mutko, personally handed in certificates of sports masters to 14 players [3] .
The following year for the Bryansk team ended in complete failure, ending the 2008 season at the penultimate, 21st place in the First Division, the club moved to the “Center” zone of the Second Division.
In the 2009 season, Dynamo took the second place with the best performance among the second places of all five zones, but the Dinamo management refused to offer to return to the First League instead of the retired Vityaz . In the offseason Soferbiy Yeshugov again became the head coach of the team. The list of participants of the first division in 2010 was approved in view of the refusal to act in the first division of the Podolsk club and the transition to the Premier League of Vladikavkaz Alania , which was replaced in accordance with the Rotor regulations from Volgograd and Dynamo. Thus, the team in 2010 performs in the PFL First Division.
According to the results of the first half of the championship, Dynamo took the last, 20th place, in May Yeshugov was dismissed, Sergey Ovchinnikov became the new head coach of the team. In the offseason, Ovchinnikov radically changed the composition of the team: 10 players left the team, 12 players were dozayavleny, among them were goalkeeper Veniamin Mandrykin , midfielders Branislav Krunich , Maxim Romashchenko , as well as a number of Lokomotiv and Spartak players who are not part of the main team . The management of the club announced the task to leave the First Division in the Premier League for three years. September 16, 2010, Sergei Ovchinnikov resigned, his place was taken by Alexander Smirnov , who kept the team in the league.
The 2011/2012 season in the FNL started for the team unsuccessfully and on May 20, 2011, by mutual consent, Alexander Smirnov terminated the contract with the club. On May 25, 2011, Valery Petrakov , a native of Bryansk, a well-known football expert, became the coach of Dynamo; the agreement was for a period of 3 years. Under his leadership, Dynamo continued to perform poorly in the championship, completing the first lap at the bottom of the table. In early 2012, Dynamo-Bryansk was the first of the FNL teams to acquire the official Twitter page [4] . Despite this position of the club after the first half of the first stage, the team managed to enter the TOP-8 teams of the league after two laps, and in the struggle to enter the Premier League, the team took 5th place - the highest result in more than 80 years of history.
On June 28, 2012, 10 days before the start of the new season of the FNL championship, the Appeals Committee of the RFU revoked the license from FC Dynamo-Bryansk, thus the club left the National Football League [5] .
From 2012
On July 6, 2012, the team registered for participation in the Championship of Russia on the football of the Third Division , the Chernozemye zone under the name Dynamo Sports School [6] . On December 27, 2012, the club was renamed, the prefix "Youth" was excluded from the name [7] . On May 14, 2013, a meeting of the attestation commission of the Professional Football League took place in Moscow. According to its results, Dynamo-Bryansk club got the right to participate in the championship of the second division of Russian football in the 2013/2014 season. On June 8, 2013 in the 30th round, having defeated Avant-garde Kursk doubles 4: 1, Dynamo won the first place in the standings, becoming the champion of the Third Division in the Chernozemye season of the 2012/2013 season. The victory guaranteed the team access to the Second Division on a sporting basis.
At the end of the season 2013/2014 in the zone "Center" of the Second Division "Dynamo" took the 5th place.
Throughout the 2014/2015 season, the team showed predominantly interesting, sharply attacking football, but this was not always enough for the final victory in each particular match. In the end, in 30 rounds 9 victories were won (6 of them are away, one large house and one technical). In 5 out of 8 winning matches, the team scored 2 or more goals. The draw was fixed 11 times and the team lost 10 times. However, a loss of 2 goals was recorded only once (in the 2nd round after a home match with the future champion of the Center zone, Voronezh Torch, the final score was 1: 3). In the remaining 9 lost matches, Dynamo conceded with a difference of no more than one ball, and six out of nine matches ended with the same score 0-1, in the remaining three matches (all away) the team scored one or two goals. Season 2014/2015 "Dynamo" finished in 10th place in the standings of the zone "Center" of the Second Division.
In the season 2015/2016 the club won 8 matches, 7 played in a draw and 11 matches the team lost, ending the season in 9th place in the Center zone of the Second Division. In the matches, Dynamo scored 22, and conceded 25 goals (a difference of −3).
Season 2016/2017 Dynamo finished on the same 9th place, winning 8 matches, playing 6 games in a draw and losing 10 meetings.
June 14, 2017 was officially announced the new head coach of the “Blue-Whites” [8] . He was Soferby Yeshugov , who previously led the team from 2005–2007 and in 2010. It is significant that it was with this coach in the 2006/2007 season that Dynamo reached the 1/2 final of the Russian Football Cup 2006/2007 .
On February 20, 2018, Alexander Gorbachev became head coach, who had already worked at the Dynamo coaching staff in the 2009 season , when the team took 2nd place in the Second Division and entered the First Division.
The team completed the 2017/2018 season in 10th place, winning 10 games, playing 4 draws and losing in 12 matches.
Season 2018/2019 Dynamo took the 4th place. As the season progressed, the 15-match unbeaten run was framed (13 wins and 2 draws).
Dynamo form in 2015
Colors
Blue | White |
Club Anthem
The author of the Bryansk Dynamo anthem is the Russian singer Alexander Barykin [9] . He first played it on April 5, 2006, before the start of the first home match of the season, in a derby with the “Eagle”, in the stadium filled with Bryansk. It is noteworthy that this meeting of principal rivals ended in victory for the Bryansk club, and also this match became the most attended home meeting of the team at the Dynamo stadium after reconstruction in 2004. The match was attended by about 10,000 fans [10] .
Anthem Text
Once again, the stadium brought us together, Mature prove the strength of the game Speed, courage, excitement of struggle, Prove a cool game, Even if thunderstorm failures - Power passionate prove the game Power passionate prove the game Attack, Dynamo, we're with you! |
History of participation in national championships and cups
- In official competitions he has been performing since 1960.
USSR Championship
Season | A place | AND | AT | H | P | Goals | ABOUT | League | Trainer |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1960 | 15 (16) | thirty | 7 | 6 | 17 | 32 - 64 | 20 | Class "B", I zone of the RSFSR | Ilya Bizyukov |
1961 | 9 (13) | 24 | eight | four | 12 | 31 - 47 | 20 | Class "B", I zone of the RSFSR | Ivan Solovyov |
1962 | 13 (17) | 32 | 7 | ten | 15 | 32 - 43 | 24 | Class "B", I zone of the RSFSR | Ivan Soloviev |
1963 | 8 (16) | thirty | 13 | eight | 9 | 44 - 30 | 34 | Class "B", I zone of the RSFSR | Ivan Soloviev |
1964 | 8 (17) | 32 | 12 | ten | ten | 34 - 31 | 34 | Class "B", I zone of the RSFSR | Ivan Soloviev |
1965 | 6 (18) | 34 | 14 | eleven | 9 | 34 - 29 | 39 | Class "B", I zone of the RSFSR | Yury Lyudnitsky |
1966 | 14 (17) | 32 | eight | 9 | 15 | 28 - 33 | 25 | Class "B", I zone of the RSFSR | Vladimir Vedernikov |
1967 | 1 (18) | 34 | sixteen | ten | eight | 39 - 19 | 42 | Class "B", I zone of the RSFSR | Vladimir Vedernikov |
5 (5) | four | one | one | 2 | 3 - 6 | 3 | Semifinal of the RSFSR | ||
1968 | 1 (20) | 38 | 21 | eleven | 6 | 47 - 25 | 53 | Class "B", I zone of the RSFSR | Vladimir Vedernikov |
14) | 3 | 3 | 0 | 0 | 4 - 1 | 6 | Semifinal of the RSFSR | ||
4 (6) | five | one | 3 | one | 2 - 2 | five | Final RSFSR | ||
1969 | 14 (20) | 38 | eleven | 12 | 15 | 26–43 | 34 | Class "A", II group | Vladimir Vedernikov |
1970 | 21 (22) | 42 | 7 | eleven | 24 | 34 - 79 | 25 | Group II “A”, zone II | Vladimir Vedernikov |
1971 | 13 (20) | 38 | 9 | sixteen | 13 | 30 - 36 | 43 | Second League, II zone | Vadim Kublitsky |
1972 | 8 (19) | 36 | sixteen | 6 | 14 | 47 - 48 | 38 | League Two, Zone III | Vadim Kublitsky |
1973 | 18 (18) | 34 | 9 | 2 | nineteen | 43 - 54 | 20 | Second League, IV zone | Vadim Kublitsky |
1974 | 12 (20) | 38 | 15 | 7 | sixteen | 47 - 48 | 37 | Second League, II zone | Victor Terentyev |
1975 | 15 (20) | 38 | ten | ten | 18 | 34 - 50 | thirty | League Two, Zone III | Vladimir Bolotov |
1976 | 21 (21) | 40 | five | 9 | 26 | 28 - 59 | nineteen | League Two, Zone III | Vladimir Bolotov |
1977 | 21 (21) | 40 | 6 | five | 29 | 30 - 98 | 17 | League Two, Zone I | Yuri Marushkin |
1978 | 20 (24) | 46 | eleven | 9 | 26 | 37 - 72 | 31 | League Two, Zone I | Yuri Marushkin |
1979 | 14 (24) | 46 | 21 | 6 | nineteen | 60 - 56 | 48 | League Two, Zone I | Evgeny Sergeev |
1980 | 18 (18) | 34 | 3 | 2 | 29 | 28 - 79 | eight | League Two, Zone III | Vyacheslav Perfiliev |
1981 | 4 (17) | 32 | 17 | 6 | 9 | 47 - 25 | 40 | League Two, Zone I | Yuri Marushkin |
1982 | 3 (16) | thirty | 17 | four | 9 | 61 - 42 | 38 | League Two, V zone | Yuri Marushkin |
1983 | 2 (17) | 32 | 18 | 7 | 7 | 54 - 34 | 43 | League Two, V zone | Yuri Marushkin |
1984 | 4 (18) | 34 | 20 | 6 | eight | 61 - 40 | 46 | League Two, V zone | Yuri Marushkin |
1985 | 1 (17) | 32 | 23 | five | four | 73 - 30 | 51 | League Two, Zone I | Yuri Marushkin |
4 (4) | 6 | 0 | 2 | four | 9 - 19 | 2 | The final | ||
1986 | 12 (16) | thirty | eight | 9 | 13 | 37 - 43 | 25 | League Two, V zone | Yuri Marushkin |
1987 | 11 (18) | 34 | eleven | 6 | 17 | 34 - 44 | 28 | League Two, V zone | Yuri Marushkin |
1988 | 6 (18) | 34 | sixteen | 6 | 12 | 49 - 47 | 38 | League Two, V zone | Yuri Marushkin |
1989 | 2 (22) | 42 | 25 | ten | 7 | 89 - 48 | 60 | League Two, V zone | Yuri Marushkin |
1990 | 9 (22) | 42 | 18 | eight | sixteen | 59 - 51 | 44 | League II Center zone | Yuri Marushkin |
1991 | 11 (22) | 42 | 18 | five | nineteen | 47 - 50 | 41 | League II Center zone | Yuri Marushkin |
USSR Cup
Season | AND | AT | H | P | Goals | Last match | Stage | Trainer |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1961 | 2 | one | 0 | one | 2 - 2 | Metallurg (Cherepovets) , 1: 0 | Final Zone 1 of the RSFSR | Ivan Solovyov |
1962 | one | 0 | 0 | one | 0 - 3 | Vympel (Kaliningrad) , 0: 3 | 1/8 finals of Zone 1 of the RSFSR | Ivan Solovyov |
1963 | 3 | one | one | one | 2 - 2 | Volga (Kalinin) , 1: 2 | 1/4 finals of Zone 1 of the RSFSR | Ivan Solovyov |
1964 | 3 | one | one | one | 2 - 4 | Star (Serpukhov) , 0: 3 | 1/4 finals of Zone 1 of the RSFSR | Ivan Solovyov |
1965/1966 | 2 | one | 0 | one | 3 - 3 | Star (Serpukhov) , 3: 2 ( dv. ) | 1/4 finals of Zone 1 of the RSFSR | Vladimir Vedernikov |
1966/1967 | 2 | one | 0 | one | eleven | Locomotive (Kaluga ), 1: 0 | 1/4 finals of Zone 1 of the RSFSR | Vladimir Vedernikov |
1967/1968 | one | 0 | 0 | one | 0-1 | Spartak (Belgorod) , 1: 0 | 1/16 finals of Zone 1 of the RSFSR | Vladimir Vedernikov |
1970 | one | 0 | 0 | one | 0-1 | Metallurg (Lipetsk) , 1: 0 | 1/4 finals of Zone 2 | Vladimir Vedernikov |
1985/1986 | one | 0 | 0 | one | 0 - 6 | Daugava (Riga) 6: 0 | 1/64 finals | Yuri Marushkin |
1986/1987 | one | 0 | 0 | one | 0-4 | Transcarpathia (Uzhgorod) , 4: 0 | 1/64 finals | Yuri Marushkin |
1990/1991 | one | 0 | 0 | one | eleven | Lokomotiv (Moscow) , 1: 1 (4: 5 pen. ) | 1/64 finals | Yuri Marushkin |
RSFSR Cup
Season | AND | AT | H | P | Goals | Last match | Stage | Trainer |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1973 | one | 0 | 0 | one | 0 - 0 | Volga (Bitter) , 0: 0 (3: 4 pen. ) | 4 zone, 1/32 finals | Yuri Marushkin |
1974 | one | 0 | 0 | one | 0-1 | Spark (Smolensk) , 1: 0 | 3 zone, 1/32 finals | Victor Terentyev |
1975 | one | 0 | 0 | one | 3 - 4 | Mashinostroitel (Tula) , 4: 3 ( dv. ) | 3 zone, 1/32 finals | Vladimir Bolotov |
1976 | one | 0 | 0 | one | 2 - 2 | Lokomotiv (Kaluga) , 2: 2 (4: 5 pen. ) | 3 zone, 1/16 final | Vladimir Bolotov |
1977 | one | 0 | 0 | one | 0 - 3 | Volga (Kalinin) 3: 0 | 1 group, 1/8 final | Yuri Marushkin |
1980 | one | 0 | 0 | one | 0-2 | Mashuk (Pyatigorsk) , 0: 2 | 3 zone, 1/32 finals | Victor Zimin |
1981 | 3 | 2 | 0 | one | 6 - 5 | Banner of Labor (Orekhovo-Zuyevo) , 5: 0 | 1 zone, 1/8 final | Yuri Marushkin |
1983 | 3 | 2 | 0 | one | 6 - 5 | Zorky (Krasnogorsk) , 2: 2 (6: 5 pen. ) | 1 zone, 1/16 final | Yuri Marushkin |
1984 | one | 0 | 0 | one | 12 | Dawn (Kaluga), 1: 2 | 1 zone, 1/32 final | Yuri Marushkin |
1985 | 3 | 2 | 0 | one | 4 - 8 | Krasnaya Presnya (Moscow) , 6: 0 | 1 zone, 1/16 final | Yuri Marushkin |
1986 | one | 0 | 0 | one | 0-2 | Avangard (Kursk) , 2: 0 | 3 zone, 1/32 finals | Yuri Marushkin |
1987 | 3 | 2 | 0 | one | 4 - 5 | Dynamo (Vologda) , 3: 0 | 1 zone, 1/16 final | Yuri Marushkin |
1988 | four | 2 | one | one | 4 - 4 | Spark (Smolensk) , 2: 3 ( 0: 2 , 1: 2 ) | Zone 5, Final | Yuri Marushkin |
1989 | 3 | 2 | 0 | one | 3 - 1 | Baltika (Kaliningrad) , +: - | 1 zone, quarter finals | Yuri Marushkin |
Championship of Russia
Season | A place | AND | AT | H | P | Goals | ABOUT | League | Trainer |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1992 | 14 (22) | 42 | 13 | 12 | 17 | 44 - 60 | 38 | Second League, II zone | Nikolay Sergeev |
1993 | 15 (18) | 34 | eleven | five | 18 | 37 - 49 | 37 | League Two, Zone III | Nikolay Sergeev |
1994 | 12 (17) | 32 | eleven | 6 | 15 | 38 - 40 | 28 | Third League, II zone | Victor Zimin |
1995 | 5 (13) | 24 | eleven | eight | five | 32 - 16 | 41 | Third League, IV zone | Victor Zimin |
1996 | 5 (16) | thirty | 14 | ten | 6 | 52 - 27 | 52 | Third League, IV zone | Victor Zimin |
1997 | 13 (19) | 36 | 13 | 7 | sixteen | 38 - 42 | 46 | Third League, V zone | Victor Zimin |
1998 | 12 (21) | 40 | 14 | eight | 18 | 44 - 57 | 50 | League Two, Center Center | Alexander Sekselev |
1999 | 5 (19) | 36 | 18 | 9 | 9 | 51 - 24 | 63 | League Two, Center Center | Igor Belonovich |
2000 | 2 (20) | 38 | 26 | eight | four | 60 - 23 | 86 | League Two, Center Center | Igor Belonovich |
2001 | 3 (20) | 38 | 24 | ten | four | 64 - 23 | 82 | League Two, Center Center | Valery Korneev |
2002 | 4 (20) | 38 | 21 | 9 | eight | 50 - 28 | 72 | League Two, Center Center | Victor Zimin |
2003 | 1-2 (19) | 36 | 27 | 2 | 7 | 64 - 26 | 83 | League Two, Center Center | Igor Belonovich |
2004 | 15 (22) | 42 | 14 | 13 | 15 | 49 - 51 | 55 | First Division | Victor Zimin |
2005 | 13 (22) | 42 | 13 | 13 | sixteen | 44 - 49 | 52 | First Division | Sofbiy Yeshugov |
2006 | 9 (22) | 42 | 17 | ten | 15 | 42 - 38 | 61 | First Division | Sofbiy Yeshugov |
2007 | 8 (22) | 42 | sixteen | eleven | 15 | 49 - 55 | 59 | First Division | Vladimir Sychev |
2008 | 21 (22) | 42 | 6 | four | 32 | 30 - 81 | 22 | First Division | Leonid Nazarenko |
2009 | 2 (17) | 32 | 20 | 9 | 3 | 57 - 22 | 69 | Second Division, Center Zone | Sergey Bulatov |
2010 | 14 (20) | 38 | eleven | eleven | sixteen | 53 - 54 | 44 | First Division | Alexander Smirnov |
2011/12 | 6 (20) | 38 | 17 | 9 | 12 | 48 - 40 | 60 | FNL | Valery Petrakov |
5 (8) | 52 | 22 | 12 | 18 | 62 - 57 | 78 | Second phase | ||
2012/13 | 1 (15) | 28 | 22 | four | 2 | 68 - 17 | 70 | LFL, Chernozem region | Dmitry Larin |
2013/14 | 5 (16) | thirty | 14 | 6 | ten | 35 - 32 | 48 | Second Division, Center Zone | Dmitry Larin |
2014/15 | 10 (16) | thirty | 9 | eleven | ten | 30 - 26 | 38 | Second Division, Center Zone | Dmitry Larin |
2015/16 | 9 (14) | 26 | eight | 7 | eleven | 22 - 25 | 31 | Second Division, Center Zone | Oleg Garin |
2016/17 | 9 (13) | 24 | eight | 6 | ten | 22 - 19 | thirty | Second Division, Center Zone | Yury Bykov |
2017/18 | 10 (14) | 26 | ten | four | 12 | 33 - 29 | 34 | Second Division, Center Zone | Soferby Yeshugov , Alexander Gorbachev |
2018/19 | 4 (14) | 26 | 15 | 3 | eight | 40 - 21 | 48 | Second Division, Center Zone | Alexander Gorbachev |
Russian Cup
Season | AND | AT | H | P | Goals | Last match | Stage | Trainer |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1992/1993 | 2 | one | 0 | one | 20 | Atommash (Volgodonsk) , +: - | 1/128 finals | Nikolay Sergeev |
1994/1995 | 2 | one | 0 | one | 0-2 | Crystal (Smolensk) , 2: 0 | 1/128 finals | Victor Zimin |
1995/1996 | one | 0 | 0 | one | 0-1 | Turbo-builder (Kaluga) , 1: 0 | 1/256 finals | Victor Zimin |
1996/1997 | four | 3 | 0 | one | 8 - 4 | Shinnik (Yaroslavl) , 2: 3 | 1/32 finals | Victor Zimin |
1997/1998 | 2 | one | 0 | one | 5 - 5 | TsSK VVS-Kristall (Smolensk) , 5: 3 | 1/64 finals | Victor Zimin |
1998/1999 | 2 | one | 0 | one | 18 | Metallurg (Lipetsk) , 8: 1 | 1/64 finals | Alexander Sekselev |
1999/2000 | 2 | one | 0 | one | 2 - 1 | Don (Novomoskovsk) , 1: 1 (3: 1 pen. ) | 1/128 finals | Igor Belonovich |
2000/2001 | one | 0 | 0 | one | 12 | Lokomotiv (Kaluga) , 2: 1 ( dv. ) | 1/256 finals | Igor Belonovich |
2001/2002 | one | 0 | 0 | one | 0 - 0 | Eagle , 0: 0 (4: 1 pen. ) | 1/256 finals | Valery Korneev |
2002/2003 | one | 0 | 0 | one | 0 - 0 | Eagle , 0: 0 (7: 8 pen. ) | 1/256 finals | Victor Zimin |
2003/2004 | one | 0 | 0 | one | 12 | Eagle 2: 1 | 1/256 finals | Igor Belonovich |
2004/2005 | 3 | one | 0 | 2 | sixteen | Torpedo (Moscow) , 4: 0 ( 0: 2 , 2: 0 ) | 1/16 final | Victor Zimin |
2005/2006 | 3 | one | one | one | 2 - 5 | Dynamo (Moscow) , 0: 4 ( 0-0 0: 4 ) | 1/16 final | Sofbiy Yeshugov |
2006/2007 | eight | 3 | 3 | 2 | 7 - 5 | Moscow , 2: 1 ( 1: 1 , 1: 0 ) | 1/2 finals | Sofbiy Yeshugov |
2007/2008 | 2 | one | 0 | one | 2 - 4 | Zenit (St. Petersburg) , 1: 4 | 1/16 final | Vladimir Sychev |
2008/2009 | 2 | one | 0 | one | 12 | Spartak (Moscow) , 1: 2 | 1/16 final | Leonid Nazarenko |
2009/2010 | one | 0 | 0 | one | 0-1 | Rusichi (Eagle) , 1: 0 | 1/128 finals | Sergey Bulatov |
2010/2011 | one | 0 | 0 | one | 0-1 | Metallurg (Lipetsk) , 1: 0 | 1/32 finals | Alexander Smirnov |
2011/2012 | 3 | 2 | 0 | one | 5 - 3 | Zenit (St. Petersburg) , 2: 0 | 1/8 final | Valery Petrakov |
2012/2013 | 2 | one | 0 | one | 2 - 3 | Chemist (Novomoskovsk) , 3: 2 ( 1: 3 , 0: 1 ) | 1/8 final Zones "Black Earth" | Dmitry Larin |
2013/2014 | 2 | one | 0 | one | 0-2 | Avangard (Kursk) , 2: 0 | 1/128 finals | Dmitry Larin |
2014/2015 | 2 | one | 0 | one | 4 - 3 | Kolomna (Kolomna) , 3: 0 | 1/64 finals | Dmitry Larin |
2015/2016 | four | 2 | 0 | 2 | 2 - 2 | Lokomotiv (Liski) , 0: 1 | Match for reaching the 1/32 finals | Oleg Garin |
2016/2017 | 2 | one | 0 | one | 2 - 2 | Torpedo (Moscow) , 2: 0 | 1/64 finals | Yury Bykov |
2017/2018 | 3 | 2 | 0 | one | 4 - 2 | Avangard (Kursk) , 0: 1 | 1/32 finals | Sofbiy Yeshugov |
2018/2019 | 3 | 2 | 0 | one | 3 - 3 | Avangard (Kursk) , 1: 3 | 1/32 finals | Alexander Gorbachev |
Legend
- The country's first league in level - The teams of the country's first league start to fight for the cup - The second in terms of league of the country - The teams in the second in terms of league - Third level league of the country - Teams of the Third level league of the country join the fight for the cup - The fourth league of the country - The teams of the fourth league of the country join the fight for the cup |
Performance statistics
Competition | Period of participation | Number of games | Goal difference | Best result | Biggest win | Biggest defeat | Club record holders |
USSR Championship | 1960–1991 | 1158 (425 V, 256 N, 477 P) | 1394 - 1525 | 9th place in the class "B" (1961) | 7: 0 Avangard Kolomna (1966) | 0:10 Metallurg Tula (1970) | Ivan Marochkin, spent about 450 matches Vladimir Frolenkov, scored over 140 goals |
Championship of the RSFSR | 1985, 1988, 1989, 1991 | 18 (9 V, 6 N, 3P) | 40 - 18 | 1st place (1989) | 11: 0 Wings of the Soviets Kuibyshev (1989) | 1: 4 Uralmash Sverdlovsk (1988) 0: 3 " APK " Azov (1991) | |
USSR Cup | 1961-1966, 1967, 1970, 1985-1986, 1990 | 24 (5 V, 2 N, 11 P) | 11 - 28 | 1/64 finals (1991) | 2: 0 Granitas Klaipeda (1968) | 0: 6 Daugava Riga (1985) | |
RSFSR Cup | 1973-1977, 1980-1981, 1983-1989 | 27 (11 V, 5 N, 11 P) | 34 - 46 | Finalist zone (1988) | 3: 0 “Moskvich” Moscow (1981) 3: 0 “ North ” Murmansk (1981) | 0: 6 Red Presnya (1985) | |
Championship of Russia | c 1992 [11] | 870 (375 V, 205 N, 290 P) | 1115 - 922 | 5th place in the First Division (2011/2012) | 10: 1 Zvezda-M Ryazan (2012) | 1: 6 Irgiz Balakovo (1992) | Alexander Fomichev, spent 346 matches Ruslan Usikov , scored 87 goals |
Cup of Russia | 1992, since 1994 [12] | 54 (23 V, 4 N, 27 P) | 48 - 64 | 1/2 finals (2006/2007) | 4: 1 Crystal Dyatkovo (1996) | 1: 8 Metallurg Lipetsk (1998) | Ruslan Usikov , scored 8 goals |
During the period from 1960 to 2016, in the championships of the USSR and Russia, 2,046 matches were played, in which 809 victories were won, 467 games were drawn and 770 times the team was defeated. The ratio of goals scored and missed: 2549-2465. Club record holders by the number of matches played in the USSR Championships and Russian Championships - Vladimir Sychev (470), Victor Lagutin (450) [13] .
Leagues
USSR Championship
Championship of Russia
Achievements
USSR Championship
Championship of the Bryansk region
- Champion (1): 1959
- Silver medalist (4): 1955, 1956, 1957, 1958
- Bronze medalist (1): 1946
Cup of the Bryansk region
- Champion (1): 1947
Class "B" USSR
- Champion (2): 1967 , 1968
Second League of the USSR
- Champion (1): 1985
- Silver medalist (2): 1983 , 1989
- Bronze medalist (1): 1982
Championship of Russia
Division Two
- Silver Medalist (3): 2000 , 2003 , 2009
- Bronze medalist (1): 2001
Cup of Russia
- Semifinalist (1) : 2006/2007
Third division
- Champion (1): 2012/2013
Club Management
Position | Name |
The president | Zhigunov Alexander Mikhailovich [14] |
Executive Director | Dmitry Y. Mitt [15] |
Technical Director | Misnik Alexander Mikhailovich [15] |
Deputy executive safety director | Borodulin Gennady Viktorovich [15] |
Youth Football Leader | Zimin, Viktor Vasilyevich [14] |
Administrator | Lagutin Viktor Ivanovich [16] |
Press officer | Kakoshin Igor Mikhailovich [15] |
Videographer | Perepyolkin Vyacheslav Vyacheslavovich [16] |
Coaching and Medical Staff
Position | Name |
Main coach | Gorbachev, Alexander Nikolaevich [17] |
Assistant coach | Fomichev Alexander Ivanovich [16] |
Team leader | Durnev Dmitry Vyacheslavovich [18] |
Doctor | Sinitsky Vladimir Ivanovich [18] |
Senior massage therapist | Popov Albert Aleksandrovich [16] |
Masseur | Grigoriev Ivan Vasilyevich [16] |
Current Composition
Core Composition
on June 22, 2019 [18] [19] :
No | Player | A country | Date of Birth | Former club |
---|---|---|---|---|
Goalkeepers | ||||
sixteen | Alexey Kuznetsov | August 20, 1996 (22 years) | Zimbru ( Chisinau ) | |
32 | Pavel Sergeev | February 10, 1992 (27 years) | Spartak ( Kostroma ) | |
Defenders | ||||
3 | Daniel Luppa | May 24, 1998 (21 years) | Dynamo-M ( Bryansk ) | |
7 | Andrey Lukanchenkov | February 7, 1986 (33 years) | Dinamo ( St. Petersburg ) | |
12 | Alexey Sapaev | January 28, 1983 (36 years) | Murom ( Murom ) | |
14 | Valery Sorokin | March 27, 1987 (32 years) | Spartak ( Kostroma ) | |
21 | Alexander Kryuchkov | July 20, 1985 (34 years) | Spartak ( Kostroma ) | |
24 | Sergey Tsukanov | January 14, 1986 (33 years) | Syzran-2003 ( Syzran ) | |
Midfielders | ||||
eight | Pavel Baranov | May 16, 1999 (20 years) | Dynamo-M ( Bryansk ) | |
9 | Maxim Novikov | June 28, 1995 (24 years) | SGAFKST ( Smolensk ) | |
ten | Vladislav Drogunov | February 3, 1996 (23 years) | → Baltika ( Kaliningrad | |
eleven | Ilya Vasilyev | April 22, 1997 (22 years) | Tosno- mole. ( Tosno ) | |
18 | Vladislav Melnichenko | April 3, 1998 (21 years) | Starodub ( Starodub ) | |
nineteen | Maxim Picatov | May 10, 2001 (18 years old) | Dynamo-M ( Bryansk ) | |
20 | Dmitry Picatov | August 10, 1996 (22 years) | Zenith ( Penza ) | |
thirty | Andrey Pazin | January 20, 1986 (33 years) | Mordovia ( Saransk ) | |
44 | Yevgeny Khudobko | August 25, 1990 (28 years old) | Spartak ( Kostroma ) | |
88 | Nikolay Maraev | April 16, 1995 (24 years) | Banner of Labor ( Orekhovo-Zuyevo ) | |
Forwards | ||||
6 | Ilya Arkhipov | May 16, 2000 (19 years old) | Strogino -M ( Moscow ) | |
17 | Denis Frolov | July 26, 1996 (22 years) | Dynamo-M ( Bryansk ) | |
25 | Nikolay Vdovichenko | April 21, 1989 (30 years old) | Spartak ( Kostroma ) | |
91 | Artemy Ukomsky | April 29, 1998 (21 years) | Dolgoprudny ( Dolgoprudny ) | |
Matvey Burlakov | September 28, 2001 (17 years) | Secondary school Dynamo ( Bryansk ) |
Youth composition
The Dynamo youth team does not participate in the 2019 season. Graduates of the secondary school "Dynamo" play for the UchHoz Kokino team in the Championship of the Bryansk region .
List of trainers
- For a full list of coaches of the Dynamo Bryansk club, about which there are Wikipedia articles, see here .
Grigory Pimashkin ( games. tr. ) | 1931-1941 |
Joseph Mochanis | 1945-1960 |
Ilya Bizyukov | |
Ivan Solovyov | |
Vladimir Ilyin | 1962-1964 |
Yury Lyudnitsky | 1965-1966 |
Vladimir Vedernikov | 1967-1970 |
Vadim Kublitsky | 1971-1972 |
Yuri Marushkin ( games. tr. ) | |
Victor Terentyev | |
Vladimir Bolotov | 1975-1976 |
Yuri Marushkin | 1977-1978 |
Lev Drozdov | |
Evgeny Sergeev | 1979-1980 |
Victor Zimin | |
Yuri Marushkin | 1981–1990 |
Vyacheslav Perfilyev | |
Nikolay Sergeev | 1992-1993 |
Victor Zimin | 1994–1997 |
Alexander Sekselev | 1997–1998 |
Igor Belonovich | 1999–2000 |
Valery Korneev | 2000—2001 |
Victor Zimin | 2001–2002 |
Igor Belonovich | |
Korney Sperling | |
Victor Zimin | |
Igor Belonovich | 2004—2005 |
Sofbiy Yeshugov | 2005—2007 |
Vladimir Sychev ( and. about. ) | |
Andrey Chernyshov | 2007—2008 |
Leonid Nazarenko | |
Sergey Bulatov | |
Sergey Ovchinnikov | |
Alexander Smirnov | 2010—2011 |
Valery Petrakov | 2011—2012 |
Dmitry Larin | 2012—2015 |
Oleg Garin | 2015—2016 |
Yury Bykov | 2016—2017 |
Sofbiy Yeshugov | |
Alexander Gorbachev |
Famous Football Players
- For a complete list of Dynamo Bryansk players with Wikipedia articles, see here .
- Agayev, Emin Rafael oglu
- Anichkin, Viktor Ivanovich
- Astapovsky, Vladimir Alexandrovich
- Balyasnikov, Valery Fedorovich
- Belyaev, Maxim Aleksandrovich
- Boule, jean
- Gerus, Roman Vladimirovich
- Davydov, Sergey Sergeevich
- Delov, Oleg Leonidovich
- Dimidko, Alexander Alexandrovich
- Efimov, Sergey Dmitrievich
- Zabolotny, Anton Konstantinovich
- Ivanov, Valentin Valentinovich
- Ilyaskin, Andrei Grigorievich
- Jokic, George
- Canenda, Iso
- Korytko, Vladimir Mikhailovich
- Krunich Branislav
- Kuzmichev, Vladimir Vladimirovich
- Kutas, Pavel Vitalyevich
- Litvinov, Vitaly Viktorovich
- Loginov, Sergey Igorevich
- Mandrykin, Veniamin Anatolevich
- Marushkin, Yuri Fedorovich
- Navochenko, Viktor Leonidovich
- Narubin, Sergey Vladimirovich
- Nidbaykin, Vitaly Anatolyevich
- Oliveira, Willer Souza
- Oliveira, William Arthur de
- Santos, Junior
- Petrakov, Valery Y.
- Romashchenko, Maxim Yurievich
- Savelyev, Alexey Vitalevich
- Sidorenko, Valery Aleksandrovich
- Solovyov, Vyacheslav Evgenievich
- Filippenkov, Sergey Alexandrovich
- Chizhov, Valery Nikolaevich
- Shtapov, Vladimir Mikhailovich
Notes
- ↑ On November 1, NP Dinamo-Bryansk Non-Commercial Partnership Began operating . Official site of FC Dynamo-Bryansk . FC-DB.RU (November 2, 2012). Archived November 5, 2012.
- Д Dynamo Stadium . Official site of FC Dynamo-Bryansk . FC-DB.RU. Archived July 23, 2013.
- ↑ Vitaly Mutko handed the certificates of masters of sports to Dynamo . News Bryansk . Yansk.ru. Archived September 30, 2012.
- ↑ Vladimir Mitrofanov. Bryansk Dynamo acquired an official twitter page . Information football portal Onedivision.ru . OneDivision.RU (January 9, 2012). Archived July 23, 2013.
- ↑ Vladimir Mitrofanov. Bryansk Dynamo leaves FNL . Information football portal Onedivision.ru . OneDivision.RU (June 28, 2012). Archived August 6, 2012.
- ↑ Let's start from the beginning . Official site of FC Dynamo-Bryansk . FC-DB.RU (June 7, 2012). Archived July 23, 2013.
- ↑ MOA "Chernozemye" approved the renaming of the Bryansk club . Official site of FC Dynamo-Bryansk . FC-DB.RU (201212-27). Archived January 5, 2013.
- ↑ Football club "Dynamo Bryansk" | The official site of the football club . fkdb.ru. The appeal date is June 14, 2017.
- ↑ The Championship of Russia began with the anthem performed by Barykin . Official site of FC Dynamo-Bryansk . FC-DB.RU (June 4, 2011). Archived June 3, 2012.
- ↑ Dynamo Br - Orel 1: 0 live stream of the match - Championship.com . Informational sports portal Championship.com . Championship.com (April 5, 2006). Archived August 3, 2013.
- ↑ as of May 30, 2016
- As of August 7, 2016
- Happy anniversary, Viktor Ivanovich! Official site of FC Dynamo-Bryansk . FC-DB.RU (September 11, 2011). Archived June 3, 2012.
- ↑ 1 2 Thanks Ivan Pavlovich! (inaccessible link) . Official site of FC Dynamo-Bryansk . FC-DB.RU. The appeal date is April 4, 2014. Archived April 7, 2014.
- ↑ 1 2 3 4 Manual . Official site of FC Dynamo-Bryansk . FC-DB.RU. Archived June 3, 2012.
- ↑ 1 2 3 4 5 Coaching and administrative staff . Official site of FC Dynamo-Bryansk . FC-DB.RU. Archived June 3, 2012.
- ↑ Football club "Dynamo Bryansk" | The official site of the football club . fkdb.ru. The appeal date is June 15, 2017.
- ↑ 1 2 3 Application Dinamo Bryansk . PFL official site .
- ↑ Team members . Official site "Dynamo" Bryansk .