FC Kolos Kovalivka

FC Kolos Kovalivka is a professional Ukrainian football club from the village of Kovalivka, Kyiv Oblast which competes in the Ukrainian Premier League, having been promoted from the Ukrainian First League on the 8 June 2019 for the first time in their history. The club colors are white and black.

Kolos Kovalivka
Full nameFC Kolos Kovalivka
Founded2012
GroundKolos Stadium
Capacity5,000
Chairman Andriy Zasukha
Head Coach Ruslan Kostyshyn
LeagueUkrainian Premier League
2019–206th
WebsiteClub website

The club has made a real cinderella story in 2020 transforming in five years from an amateur team into a continental challengers by advancing through the full league pyramid (4 tiers).[1] Outside of the league pyramid, the club also holds several honours of regional competitions for Kyiv Oblast which it represents.[1]

The club is named after the Ukrainian sports society Kolos (Agro Industrial Complex trade unions) that exists since after the World War II.

History

The club was established in 2012 and until 2015 it participated in championship of Kyiv Oblast playing its games in a neighboring town of Hlevakha. The team were champions three times from 2012 to 2014.[2]

The club in 2014 made their debut in the Ukrainian Football Amateur League. Later that year after winning the Oleh Makarov Memorial Tournament, which is played in winter the head coach Ruslan Kostyshyn announced that the club intended to go into professional football.[2] That year in 2015 after finishing third in the Ukrainian Football Amateur League the club obtained professional status and joined the PFL entering into the Ukrainian Second League.[2]

In their first season the club won the championship and were promoted to the Ukrainian First League.[3]

On 29 July 2020 FC Kolos in overtime beat FC Mariupol 1:0 and qualified for the European competitions. The head coach Ruslan Kostyshyn was merely shocked stating that did not expect his club to place higher the 8th place.[4]

Honours

Club emblem (201218)

Squad

As of 5 February 2021[5][6]

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

No. Pos. Nation Player
2 DF  SVN Matija Rom
5 DF  UKR Kyrylo Petrov
7 FW  UKR Volodymyr Lysenko
8 MF  UKR Yevhen Smyrnyi (on loan from Dynamo Kyiv)
9 MF  UKR Denys Antyukh
10 MF  UKR Yevhen Morozko
11 FW  UKR Yevhen Seleznyov
13 MF  UKR Vitaliy Havrysh (captain)
14 MF  UKR Vadym Milko
15 DF  UKR Oleksandr Chornomorets
17 FW  UKR Dmytro Khlyobas
19 FW  UKR Yevhen Isayenko (on loan from Dynamo Kyiv)
21 DF  UKR Yevhen Novak
22 FW  UKR Denys Kostyshyn
No. Pos. Nation Player
23 MF  UKR Mykyta Kravchenko (on loan from Dynamo Kyiv)
25 GK  UKR Yevhen Volynets
31 GK  UKR Vladyslav Kucheruk (on loan from Dynamo Kyiv)
38 MF  CMR Alvaro Ngamba
48 MF  UKR Pavlo Orikhovskyi
69 MF  UKR Oleh Ilyin
71 GK  UKR Yevhen Kucherenko
90 MF  UKR Andriy Bohdanov
94 MF  SEN Mamadou Danfa
99 MF  UKR Yevhen Zadoya
DF  UKR Yevhen Kostyuk
DF  BLR Nikolay Zolotov
MF  UKR Stanislav Sorokin

Out on loan

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

No. Pos. Nation Player

Coaches and administration

Administration[7] Coaching[8] (senior team) Coaching[9] (U-21 team)

League and cup history

Season Div. Pos. Pl. W D L GS GA P Ukrainian Cup Other Notes
2014 4th
(Championship among amateurs)
2 10 6 3 1 19 5 21 AC 12 finals
2 3 1 1 1 2 4 4
2015 1 6 6 0 0 26 3 18
2 10 5 1 4 17 5 16 joined the Second League
201516 3rd
(Second League)
1 26 19 3 4 62 22 60 132 finals Promoted
201617 2nd
(First League)
5 34 16 9 9 52 38 57 132 finals
201718 5 34 19 4 11 39 30 61 116 finals
201819 2 28 15 9 4 45 18 54 132 finals Promoted[11]
201920 1st 6 32 10 2 20 33 59 32 18 finals Europa League play-offs – Winners
202021 1st 3 3 2 0 1 7 4 6 116 finals EL 3rd qual. round

European record

Season Competition Round Club Home Away Aggregate
2020–21 UEFA Europa League 2Q Aris N/A 2–1 N/A
3Q Rijeka N/A 0–2 (aet) N/A

Notable players

Managers

References

This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.