Dynamo is a Soviet and Ukrainian men's volleyball club from Lugansk . It was founded in 1965 , until 1982 it bore the name "Star". Repeated winner of the championships of the USSR and Ukraine, winner of the 1973 Cup Winners Cup .
Content
History
The Zvezda team was created in Lugansk in 1965 [1] . Under the leadership of Valentin Ivanovich Salin, whom the players called Stalin [2] for their adherence to strict discipline, Zvezda won the right to participate in the USSR championships in the first group in 1968, took fifth place in the debut season, and already in In 1972, she won silver medals, letting only CSKA forward in the standings. The team included the champion of the 1968 Olympic Games Vladimir Belyaev , Victor Alyoshin, Victor Beskhlebnikov, Boris Ivlev, Valery Krivov , Stanislav Matsenko, Vladimir Mokrushev, Vasily Nechay, Mikhail Razdabara, Valery Sleptsov, Vladimir Khaletsky and Nikolai Khorunzhiy.
In the same 1972, December 13, Valentin Salin was arrested [3] and was soon sentenced to 10 years under Art. 86 approx. The Criminal Code of the Ukrainian SSR for “theft of state or collective property on an especially large scale” [4] . The mentor of Zvezda became one of the victims of the Voroshilovgrad affair provoked by the conflict between the first secretary of the Central Committee of the Communist Party of Ukraine Volodymyr Scherbitsky and the first secretary of the Voroshilovgrad regional party committee Volodymyr Shevchenko (the head coach of the Voroshilovgrad Iskra was also convicted in a similar criminal case) Chernov ) [5] . In the meantime, Zvezda was headed by former assistant Salina Evgeny Aleksandrovich Severov, who worked almost unchanged as head coach of the team until it was disbanded.
In the 1973 USSR Championship, Zvezda took only 8th place, but was marked by victory in the European arena, becoming the first ever Cup winner. In the round finals of four teams in Athens, volleyball players from Voroshilovgrad beat the Italian Ruini, the Hungarian Chepel and the Bulgarian Levski Spartak. In the next draw of this Eurocup, Zvezda finished second, losing to Riga Radio Engineering in a key match in Brussels [6] .
In 1976 and 1979, wards of Yevgeny Severov won bronze medals in the championships of the USSR. Three-time winners of the Allied championships were Valery Krivov , Stanislav Matsenko, Valery Khaletsky and Nikolai Khorunzhiy. As part of the USSR team, Valery Krivov and Fedor Lashchenov won the gold of the 1978 World Cup and the Olympic Games in Moscow-1980 .
According to the results of the 1982 USSR Championship, Zvezda took 12th place and dropped out of the Premier League. In December 1982, the team was transferred to the Dynamo Society [7] and for 8 seasons played in the First Union League, gaining the right to return to the elite in 1990. Since 1992, Lugansk Dynamo played in the major league championship of Ukraine and three times became the winner of national championships. The national team of Ukraine in these years included Victor Loshakov, Igor Popov, Andrey Sidorenko, Yuri Filippov.
At the turn of the century, Dynamo faced a difficult financial situation [8] . In 2000 and 2001, the team finished in last place in the Super League championships and became a participant in transitional tournaments for the right to remain in the strongest division. In 2001, the Lugansk club dropped out of the Super League and subsequently ceased to exist.
National Championship Results
USSR Championships
|
CIS Open
| Championships of Ukraine
|
Achievements
- Silver medalist of the USSR Championship ( 1972 ).
- Bronze medalist of the USSR Championship ( 1976 , 1978/79 ).
- Silver medalist of the Ukrainian Championship ( 1992/93 , 1997/98 ).
- Bronze medalist of the championship of Ukraine ( 1992 ).
- Silver medalist of the Cup of Ukraine (1997).
- Bronze medalist of the Cup of Ukraine (1993, 1995).
- Cup Winner (1972/73).
- Silver Cup Winner (1973/74).
Notes
- ↑ Edelman, 1984 , p. 124-125.
- ↑ Volgodonsk. Chronicle in the faces. Trainers and athletes . BTV Broadcasting Company (May 26, 2015). Date of treatment January 4, 2015.
- ↑ Valentin Salin: “The Soviet system interrupted my flight” . Glavred (July 1, 2009). Date of treatment January 4, 2015.
- ↑ V. I. Salin - a test of fate (inaccessible link) . Volgodonsk.PRO (June 27, 2014). Date of treatment January 4, 2015. Archived March 5, 2016.
- ↑ Voroshilovgrad affair. 30 years later . " Soviet Belarus " (April 11, 2003). Date of treatment January 4, 2015.
- ↑ Edelman, 1984 , p. 167.
- ↑ 80 years in motion . “Racurs” (December 22, 2008). Date of treatment January 4, 2015. (unavailable link)
- ↑ Volleyball Lugansk in the final time pressure . The Day (April 13, 2000). Date of treatment January 4, 2015.
Literature
- Volleyball. Reference / Compiled by A. S. Edelman . - M .: "Physical Culture and Sports", 1984. - 224 p.