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FC Minsk

Association football club in Belarus

FC Minsk

Summary

Association football club in Belarus

FieldValue
clubnameMinsk
imageFC Minsk logo.png
image_size205px
fullnameFootball Club Minsk
founded
groundFC Minsk Stadium
Minsk, Belarus
capacity3,000
chairmanIgor Shloido
managerArtyom Chelyadinsky
leagueBelarusian Premier League
season2024
positionBelarusian Premier League, 13th of 15
website
pattern_la1_minsk2324h
pattern_b1_minsk2324h
pattern_ra1_minsk2324h
leftarm1FF0000
body1FF0000
rightarm1FF0000
shorts1FF0000
socks1FF0000
pattern_la2_minsk2324a
pattern_b2_minsk2324a
pattern_ra2_minsk2324a
leftarm2FFFFFF
body2FFFFFF
rightarm2FFFFFF
shorts2FFFFFF
socks2FFFFFF

Minsk, Belarus

FC Minsk () is a Belarusian professional football club based in Minsk. They play in the Belarusian Premier League, the highest tier of Belarusian football. Their colours are red and navy blue.

History

The club was established in 2006 and was based on the Belarusian First League club Smena Minsk. FC Minsk took over Smena's license and was able to start immediately operating in the Belarusian First League without having to first play in the Second League, the third tier in Belarus. In the club's inaugural season in the First League, they were able to finish in first place guaranteeing them promotion to the Belarusian Premier League.

In their top tier debut season, FC Minsk showed weak performances and were relegated at end of 2007, but they managed to bounce straight back the following year with a dominant campaign in the Belarusian First League scoring 72 goals and failing to win in only 3 of the 26 games. 2008 therefore saw them once again competing in the Belarusian Premier League where they have remained ever since.

A 3rd-placed finish in 2010 saw FC Minsk embark on their first ever European campaign in the 2011–12 UEFA Europa League. In the first qualifying round, they were pitched against AZAL Baku of Azerbaijan and managed a 3–2 aggregate win over two legs. The second qualifying round saw them drawn against Gaziantepspor of Turkey. After a 1–1 draw at home, the away fixture in Gaziantep saw the Turkish side win 4–1 as the tie finished 5–2 on aggregate in favour of Gaziantepspor.

In 2013, FC Minsk changed their club crest for the current one. The same year they have qualified for the second qualifying round of the 2013–14 UEFA Europa League by winning Belarusian Cup. This campaign was more successful as Minsk first eliminated Valletta of Malta 3–1 on aggregate before beating the Scottish team St. Johnstone in the third qualifying round. After losing 0–1 at home, FC Minsk managed to win 1–0 in Perth and prevailed in penalty shootout 3–2, advancing to the play-offs, where they have lost to Standard Liège of Belgium 5–1 on aggregate.

Club crest

Upon their formation in 2006, FC Minsk adopted a simple white and blue crest which they kept for 7 years until 2013. In 2013, they changed their crest to the current red and navy blue.

Crest of FC Minsk (2006–2013)

Current squad

Out on loan

League and Cup history

SeasonLevelPosPldWDLGoalsPointsDomestic CupNotes
20062nd126175444–1356Promoted
20071st1426491318–3421Semi-finalsRelegated
20082nd126232172–1171Round of 16Promoted
20091st9261131233–2636Round of 16
20101st333186959–3260Round of 16
20111st9338111433–4035Quarter-finals
20121st6301161336–4639Runners-up
20131st9321081436–4038Winners
20141st7321641245–3652Semi-finals
20151st6261241029–2840Round of 32
20161st430158749–2453Semi-finals
20171st14303141319–3923Quarter-finals
20181st1130791434–4230Round of 16
20191st930991236–4436Round of 16
20201st11301151445–5738Round of 16
20211st1230891332–5233Quarter-finals
20221st6301281047–4344Third round
20231st928891133Round of 16

Honours

  • Belarusian Premier League
    • Third place (1): 2010
  • Belarusian Cup
    • Winners (1): 2013
    • Runners-up (1): 2012

FC Minsk in Europe

SeasonCompetitionRoundClub1st Leg2nd LegAggregate
2011–12UEFA Europa League1QAZE AZAL Baku1–12–13–2
2QTUR Gaziantepspor1–11–42–5[[File:Symbol delete vote.svg17px]]
2013–14UEFA Europa League2QMLT Valletta1–12–03–1
3QSCO St Johnstone0–11–0 (aet)1–1 (3–2 p.)[[File:Symbol keep vote.svg17px]]
POBEL Standard0–21–31–5[[File:Symbol delete vote.svg17px]]

;Notes

  • Home results are noted in bold.
  • 1Q: First qualifying round
  • 2Q: Second qualifying round
  • 3Q: Third qualifying round
  • PO: Play-off round

European record

CompetitionMatchesWDLGFGA
UEFA Europa League103341014

Managers

  • BLR Sergey Yaromko (Feb 23, 2006 – Oct 8, 2009)
  • BLR Vitali Tarakanov (Oct 8, 2009 – Oct 4, 2011)
  • BLR Andrey Downar (interim) (Oct 5, 2011 – Dec 12, 2011)
  • BLR Vadim Skripchenko (Dec 30, 2011 – Oct 12, 2013)
  • BLR Andrey Skorobogatko (interim) (Oct 13, 2013 – Dec 2, 2013)
  • BLR Andrey Skorobogatko (Dec 3, 2013 – June 3, 2014)
  • BLR Andrey Pyshnik (June 3, 2014–)

Women's team

Main article: FC Minsk (women)

The women's team of Minsk has won the Belarusian Premier League in 2013 and 2014, 2015, 2016, 2017, 2018, 2019. It also has won the Belarusian Women's Cup in 2011, 2013 and 2014.

References

References

  1. "Футбольный клуб "Минск" – Основой состав".
  2. "FK Minsk women trophies". soccerway.com.
Wikipedia Source

This article was imported from Wikipedia and is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 License. Content has been adapted to SurfDoc format. Original contributors can be found on the article history page.

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