Football Cup of the Ukrainian SSR

Football Cup of the Ukrainian SSR (Ukrainian: Кубок УРСР з футболу, romanizedKubok URSR z futbolu, Russian: Кубок УССР по футболу, romanizedKubok USSR po futbolu) was a playoff republican competitions in association football that were taken place in Ukrainian SSR in 1936–1991 and were predecessors of the Ukrainian Cup.[1] The competition was originally called as a Football championship of UkrSSR among the best teams of sports societies in 1936 and 1937.[1] The first cup was awarded in 1937 and starting since 1938, the competition was renamed as Football cup competitions of the Ukrainian SSR[1] as it was commemorated on the Soviet envelope.

First Ukrainian SSR Cup on cover of the Soviet Union

History edit

The participation was allowed to everybody whether it was a team of the Soviet Top League or a team of some education institution as long as none of the players competed in the Soviet Cup simultaneously. Early seasons of the cup tournament were called as a spring challenge, which allowed to consider them as a championship title competition rather than cup competition. However, older documents of the Ministry of Youth and Sports show that the spring challenge competitions were indeed considered as a football cup competition[citation needed].

In 1938, the Ukrainian Cup qualification stage was included into the 1938 Soviet Cup qualification for the first time, while in both later stages of the 1938 tournaments were conducted parallel to each other. It also was the first time when the Ukrainian Spring Championship was referred to as the Ukrainian Cup. Following that season, participation of the better Ukrainian teams in the Ukrainian Cup was disrupted and the 1939 season of the Ukrainian Cup did not include teams of masters that competed only in the Soviet Cup. In 1940 season had a similar organization as the previous 1939, but the 1940 Soviet Cup failed to take place due to scheduling issues and no Ukrainian teams of masters participated in any cup competition that season. The competition was interrupted in 1941–1943 due to the World War II.

In 1944 the Ukrainian Cup was renewed and played after the 1944 Soviet Cup. It also included all three better Ukrainian teams (Kyiv, Kharkiv, Stalino) that competed in the Soviet Cup. In 1945 both the 1945 Ukrainian Cup and the 1945 Soviet Cup included better Ukrainian teams such as Dynamo Kyiv, Shakhtar Donetsk (Stakhanovets Stalino at that time) and others. The both tournaments were conducted in the same timeframe during the autumn of 1945. The 1946 Soviet Cup was shortened and only two (2) teams from Ukraine competed in it (Dynamo Kyiv and Spartak Uzhhorod), while the 1946 Ukrainian Cup was conducted in full. In 1947, the 1947 Soviet Cup was conducted in the summer and included only teams from Pervaya Grouppa and Vtoraya Grouppa involving all Ukrainian teams of those "Grouppas", while the 1947 Ukrainian Cup was conducted in the fall and also included all Ukrainian teams of those "Grouppas" as well as other teams. The 1948 Soviet Cup was once again shortened and only two (2) Ukrainian teams (Dynamo Kyiv and Lokomotyv Kharkiv) competed in it, while the 1948 Ukrainian Cup involved participation of most of the Ukrainian teams.

In 1949, there was a big reform of the Soviet Cup, all participants of the Soviet Pervaya and Vtoraya "Grouppas" were excused from participation in their republican cup tournaments and had to competed only in the Soviet Cup, while winners of the republican cup tournaments were awarded a guaranteed place in the 1949 Soviet Cup. It revived the tournament organization of the 1939 Soviet Cup. Since then, the Ukrainian Cup was completely degraded as a regional level qualification stage of the Soviet Cup.

In 1957 all republican level cup competitions were removed from qualification for the Soviet Cup and winners (later better teams) of them were qualifying for the Soviet Amateur Cup, while the Soviet Cup was made exclusive predominantly for the league teams. Since then, the Ukrainian Cup was officially regarded as the competition of the collective of physical culture (KFK), a Soviet term for the amateur sports.

In 1972, for the next five seasons, there was established Ukrainian Cup for the Ukrainian Second League teams which was revived once more in 1990. Until 1989 the conditional Ukrainian "Second League Cup" and the Ukrainian Cup existed simultaneously. After the 1989 season the competition for physical fitness clubs (actual Ukrainian Cup) discontinued. The last winner FC Temp Shepetivka of the Soviet Ukrainian Cup among the Second League teams was allowed to join the Ukrainian Premier League in 1991.

Following dissolution of the Soviet Union, the Ukrainian Cup was re-established as a normal competition which involves participation of all professional football clubs. Later in 1996, the Football Federation of Ukraine reorganized the Ukrainian Cup by introducing the Ukrainian Amateur Cup and limiting participation of the non-League clubs in the national cup competition.

During the World War II, the crystal trophy, cup of the Ukrainian SSR, was not evacuated and was stolen by one of employees of the All-Ukrainian Council of Physical Culture.[1] During the Nazi occupation of Kiev, the trophy appeared in a store of random things at Velyka Vasylkivska street and was spotted by Kiev footballers who stayed behind and played for a local team Rukh Kyiv.[1] The athletes informed the municipal department of education and culture which in turn on 19 May 1942 wrote a letter to the administration of the antique store with a request to return them the Cup and inform the name of individual who pawned it in the store.[1] It is unknown if the person who stole the trophy was ever found, but the Cup was returned.[1] In such way the athletes who later labeled as "traitors" by the Soviet regime saved the trophy for Ukrainian football of post war period.[1]

Championship of the Proletarian Sports Society Dynamo edit

Parallel to the championship of cities there also existed separate tournament that was played among teams of Dynamo society (Proletarian Sports Society (PST) Dynamo) located throughout the Ukrainian SSR. The first tournament was conducted as part of the All-Ukrainian Dynamo Festival which was organized on the orders of the top OGPU official in Ukraine Vsevolod Balitsky.

Season Champion Runner-up 3rd Position
1929[a] Dynamo Kharkiv Dynamo Kyiv Dynamo Dnipropetrovsk
Dynamo Stalino
1931[b] Dynamo Kyiv Dynamo Kharkiv Dynamo Odesa
Dynamo Stalino
1932[c] Dynamo Kharkiv Dynamo Kyiv Dynamo Odesa
Dynamo Stalino
1933[d] Dynamo Kyiv Dynamo Kharkiv Dynamo Odesa
Dynamo Stalino
1934[c] Dynamo Kharkiv Dynamo Kyiv Dynamo Stalino
Dynamo Dnipropetrovsk
1935[c] Dynamo Kyiv Dynamo Dnipropetrovsk Dynamo Kharkiv

Finals edit

Year Venue Winner Score Runner-up
1929
Final
7 July 1929 17:30 (MST)
KievChervonyi Stadium
Attendance: ?
Dynamo Kharkiv
Petro Mishchenko   58'
Oleksandr Shpakovsky   82', 87'
3 – 1
(0 – 1)
Dynamo Kyiv
Oleksandr Serdyuk   14'
1931
Final
12 June 1931 ?:? (MST)
KievChervonyi Stadium
Attendance: 12,000
Dynamo Kyiv
Kazimierz Piontkowski   ?', ?', ?'
3 – 0
(? – 0)
Dynamo Kharkiv
1932
Final
26 June 1932 ?:? (MST)
KharkivMetalist Stadium
Attendance: ?
Dynamo Kharkiv
Oleksandr Shpakovsky   ?'
1 – 0
(1 – 0)
Dynamo Kyiv
1933
Final
12 June 1933 ?:? (MST)
KyivBalytskyi Dynamo Stadium
Attendance: 18,000
Dynamo Kyiv
Mykola Makhynia   67'
Konstantin Schegotsky   88'
2 – 1
(0 – 0)
Dynamo Kharkiv
Ivan Privalov   69'
1934
Final
8 September 1934 ?:? (MST)
KyivBalytskyi Dynamo Stadium
Attendance: 10,000
Dynamo Kharkiv
Volodymyr Kulykov   12'
Kostyantyn Fomin   17'
Mykola Fomin   34'
Yan Yakubovych   65'
Volodymyr Fomin   67'
5 – 0
(3 – 0)
Dynamo Kyiv
1935
Final
26 October 1935 13:00 (MST)
KyivBalytskyi Dynamo Stadium
Attendance: 40,000
Dynamo Kyiv
Mykola Makhynia   1'
Ivan Kuzmenko   55', 66'
3 – 1
(1 – 1)
Dynamo Dnipropetrovsk
Petro Laiko   22'

Finals edit

Year Venue Winner Score Runner-up
1936
Final
24 June 1936 18:00 (MST)
KievBalytskyi Stadium
Attendance: 35,000
Dynamo Kyiv
Viktor Shylovsky   7', 23', 53'
Konstantin Shchegotsky   56'
Mykola Korotkykh   ?'
6 – 0
(2 – 0)
Dynamo Odessa
Volodymyr Tokar   ?' (own)
1937
Final
18 May 1937 18:00 (MST)
KievBalytskyi Stadium
Attendance: 25,000
Dynamo Kyiv
Oleksiy Klymenko   35' (own)
Makar Honcharenko   53'
Viktor Shylovsky   68'
Mykola Makhynia   94', 103'
4 – 2
(0 – 1)
Dynamo Odessa
Leonid Oriekhov   65' (pen.)
1938
Final
15 October 1938 16:00 (MST)
KievYezhov Stadium
Attendance: 15,000
Dynamo Kyiv
Petro Laiko   27', 76'
Viktor Shylovsky   84'
3 – 1
(1 – 0)
Lokomotyv Kyiv
Oleksandr Shatskyi   73'
among amateur teams
1939 Kramatorsk Avanhard Kramatorsk 2 – 0 Kharchovyk Odessa
1940 Dnipropetrovsk Dynamo Dnipropetrovsk 2 – 2
(6 – 2 replay)
Lokomotyv Odessa
After World War II reestablished as all-Ukrainian competition
1944
Final
Kiev Dynamo Kyiv won the Final Group
1945
Final
8 November 1945 ?:? (MST)
KievDynamo Stadium
Attendance: ?
Lokomotyv Kharkiv
Anatoliy Horokhov   ?'
1 – 0
(0 – 0)
Dynamo Kyiv
1946
Final
12 November 1946 14:30 (MST)
KievDynamo Stadium
Attendance: 20,000
Dynamo Kyiv
Pavlo Vinkovatyi   42', 45'
2 – 0
(2 – 0)
Lokomotyv Kharkiv
1947
Final
9 November 1947 14:00 (MST)
KievDynamo Stadium
Attendance: 12,000
Dynamo Kyiv
Mykhailo Chaplyhin   7', 10'
Fedir Dashkov   20'
Pavlo Vinkovatyi   47'
Pyotr Dementiev   49'
5 – 1
(3 – 1)
Kharchovyk Odesa
Mykola Potapov   34'
1948
Final
26 October 1948 15:00 (MST)
KievDynamo Stadium
Attendance: 7,000
Dynamo Kyiv
Viktor Zhylin   16', 44'
Heorhiy Ponomariov   46'
Pavlo Vinkovatyi   78'
4 – 1
(2 – 0)
Bilshovyk Mukacheve
József Egervári   83' (pen.)
among amateur teams
1949 Kharkiv VPS Kharkiv 5 – 1 Vodnyk Odessa
1950 Kiev Spartak Uzhhorod 4 – 2 Metalurh Zaporizhia
1951 Kiev Metalurh Zaporizhia 4 – 0 BO Lviv
1952 Zaporizhia Metalurh Zaporizhia 6 – 3 BO Lviv
1953 Kirovohrad Torpedo Kirovohrad 3 – 1 Lokomotyv Poltava
1954 Kiev Mashbud Kyiv 1 – 0, 3 – 1 OBO Kyiv
1955 Kiev Mashbud Kyiv 2 – 1 Lokomotyv Artemivsk
1956 Kiev Kolhospnyk Poltava 4 – 0 Mashbud Zaporizhia
Qualifiers for the Soviet Amateur Cup
1957 Kiev SKMD Odessa 2 – 0 Kolhospnyk Rivne
1958 Ternopil Torpedo Kharkiv 2 – 1 aet Avanhard Ternopil
There were no competitions from 1959 till 1971. Ukrainian Amateur Cup established as a feeder of the Soviet Amateur Cup.
1972 Kiev Avtomobilist Zhytomyr 1 – 0, aet Shakhtar Donetsk
1973 Kiev Zirka Kirovohrad 1 – 0 Spartak Ivano-Frankivsk
1974 home/away basis Tavriya Simferopol 2 – 0, 2 – 1 Avtomobilist Zhytomyr
1975 home/away basis Zirka Kirovohrad 2 – 0, 1 – 2 Tavriya Simferopol
1976 Horlivka SKA Kyiv 2 – 0 Shakhtar Horlivka
There were no competitions from 1977 till 1989.
1990 home/away basis Polissya Zhytomyr 4 – 0, 1 – 3 Naftovyk Okhtyrka
1991 home/away basis Temp Shepetivka 1 – 1, 2 – 1 Veres Rivne

Performances edit

Team Winners Winning years Runners-up Runner-up years Finals
Dynamo Kyiv 10 1931, 1933, 1935, 1936, 1937, 1938, 1944, 1946, 1947, 1948 4 1929, 1932, 1934, 1945 14
Dynamo Kharkiv 3 1929, 1932, 1934 2 1931, 1933 5
Zirka Kirovohrad 3 1953, 1973, 1975 0 3
Metalurh Zaporizhia 2 1951, 1952 1 1950 3
Polissya Zhytomyr 2 1972, 1990 1 1974 3
Mashynobudivnyk Kyiv 2 1954, 1955 0 2
Lokomotyv Kharkiv 1 1945 2 1944, 1946 3
Dynamo Dnipropetrovsk 1 1940 1 1935 2
Tavriya Simferopol 1 1974 1 1975 2
SKA Kyiv 1 1976 1 1954 2
Avanhard Kramatorsk 1 1939 0 1
VPS Kharkiv 1 1949 0 1
Spartak Uzhhorod 1 1950 0 1
Kolhospnyk Poltava 1 1956 0 1
SKVO Odessa 1 1957 0 1
Torpedo Kharkiv 1 1958 0 1
Temp Shepetivka 1 1991 0 1
Dynamo Odessa 0 2 1936, 1937 2
Kharchovyk Odesa 0 2 1939, 1947 2
DO Lviv 0 2 1951, 1952 2
Veres Rivne 0 2 1957, 1991 2
Lokomotyv Kyiv 0 1 1938 1
Lokomotyv Odessa 0 1 1940 1
Bilshovyk Mukacheve 0 1 1948 1
Vodnyk Odessa 0 1 1949 1
Lokomotyv Poltava 0 1 1953 1
Lokomotyv Artemivsk 0 1 1955 1
Mashynobudivnyk Zaporizhia 0 1 1956 1
Avanhard Ternopil 0 1 1958 1
Shakhtar Donetsk 0 1 1972 1
Spartak Ivano-Frankivsk 0 1 1973 1
Shakhtar Horlivka 0 1 1976 1
Naftovyk Okhtyrka 0 1 1990 1

Notes edit

  1. ^ officially named as the All-Ukrainian Dynamo Festival
  2. ^ officially named as the Cup of the All-Ukrainian PST Dynamo
  3. ^ a b c officially named as the Challenge of the All-Ukrainian PST Dynamo
  4. ^ officially named as the All-Ukrainian Spartakiade of Dynamo

References edit

External links edit