FC Slavia Mozyr

Slavia Mazyr
Full name Football Club Slavia Mazyr
Founded 1987
Ground Yunost Stadium, Mazyr, Belarus
Capacity 5,300
Chairman Andrey Vasilets
Manager Mihail Martsinovich
League Belarusian First League
2017 Premier League, 15th (Relegated)

FC Slavia Mazyr (Belarusian: ФК Славія Мазыр, FK Slaviya Mazyr) is a Belarusian football team, based in Mazyr, Belarus.

History

The team was founded in 1987 as Polesie Mozyr. Between 1987 and 1991 they played in Belarusian SSR league. From 1992 till 1995 they played in the Belarusian First League. They changed their name to MPKC Mozyr since 1994–95 season. MPKC stands for the Mozyr Industrial-Commercial Center. They won the First League the same year and made their debut in the Belarusian Premier League in fall 1995 season.

Their first few seasons were quite successful. They finished 2nd in 1995 and won the championship in 1996, becoming the first team other than Dinamo Minsk to win it. After changing their name to Slavia Mozyr in 1998, they again finished 2nd in 1999 and won the title in 2000. After that the results deteriorated and in 2005 they finished last and were relegated.

After the relegation they had to merge with ZLiN Gomel in order for both teams to survive in any form due to financial problems. The new team went through a number of name changes before arriving with the current name, FC Slavia Mazyr.

Name changes

  • 1987: Founded as FC Polesye Mozyr
  • 1994: Renamed FC MPKC Mozyr
  • 1998: Renamed FC Slavia Mozyr
  • 2006: Merged with ZLiN Gomel and renamed FC Mozyr-ZLiN
  • 2007: Renamed FC Mozyr
  • 2008: Renamed FC Slavia Mozyr

Honours

Winners (2): 1996, 2000
Runners-up (2): 1995, 1999
Winners (2): 1995–96, 1999–00
Runners-up (2): 1998–99, 2000–01

Current squad

As of August 2018 [1]

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

No. Position Player
2 Ukraine MF Ihor Voronkov
4 Belarus DF Ruslan Khadarkevich
5 Belarus DF Ilya Nechiporenko
7 Belarus MF Aliaksandr Anufryieu
9 Ukraine MF Dmytro Vorobey
11 Belarus FW Denis Trapashko
13 Moldova MF Igor Costrov
14 Belarus DF Pavel Chelyadko
17 Belarus FW Yawhen Lebedzew
18 Belarus DF Semen Kolybenko
22 Belarus GK Mikhail Baranovsky
27 Belarus MF Vadim Kurlovich
29 Belarus DF Dzyanis Kavalewski
30 Ukraine GK Rodion Syamuk
No. Position Player
31 Belarus DF Igor Tymonyuk
34 Belarus FW Artsyom Pyatrenka
50 Belarus FW Dmitri Khlebosolov
77 Ukraine MF Maksym Slyusar
88 Belarus MF Alyaksandr Raewski
91 Belarus FW Mikhail Gonchar
92 Belarus MF Dmitriy Yurchenko
97 Belarus DF Ivan Luzan
98 Belarus MF Dmitriy Krivosheyev
99 Belarus MF Gleb Shevchenko
Belarus DF Artem Shut
Belarus GK Dmitriy Kunets
Belarus FW Artem Gvozd
Belarus DF Nazar Pochapskiy

League and Cup history

Season Level Pos Pld W D L Goals Points Domestic Cup Notes
19922nd71556418–2216Round of 64
1992–932nd230225354–1449Round of 64
1993–942nd228195448–1843Round of 32
1994–952nd1302433106–1751Quarter-finalsPromoted
19951st215113144–936Winners
19961st130244264–1776Winners
19971st6301271139–3043Round of 16
19981st628129741–3645Quarter-finals
19991st230205574–2565Runners-up
20001st130235278–2574Winners
20011st726135849–2744Runners-up
20021st1126661438–6124Quarter-finals
20031st1430671729–6425Round of 16
20041st1230941732–5131Round of 32
20051st1426251914–6011Round of 16Relegated
20062nd4261110544–2443Round of 16
20072nd1326461626–4418Round of 32
20082nd1326651533–6223Round of 32
20092nd13271581423–4123Round of 32
20102nd9301071333–4437Round of 16
20112nd130225353–1571Round of 32Promoted
20121st1030761722–5827Round of 32
20131st1232581924–4723Round of 16Relegated
20142nd230186655–3860Round of 16Promoted
20151st1026751433-5026Round of 32
20161st1030981333-4935Round of 8
20171st-Round of 16
  • 1 Including additional game (2–1 win) for the 13th place, which was necessary as Slavia-Mozyr gained the same amount of points as Spartak Shklov while only one team should be relegated.

Slavia in European Cups

Season Competition Round Club 1st Leg 2nd Leg
1996–97 UEFA Cup Winners' Cup QR Iceland KR Reykjavík 2–2 (H) 0–1 (A)
1997–98 UEFA Champions League 1Q Moldova Constructorul Chişinău 1–1 (A) 3–2 (H)
2Q Greece Olympiacos 0–5 (A) 2–2 (H)
1997–98 UEFA Cup 1R Georgia (country) Dinamo Tbilisi 1–1 (H) 0–1 (A)
2000–01 UEFA Cup 1Q Israel Maccabi Haifa 1–1 (H) 0–0 (A)
2001–02 UEFA Champions League 1Q Faroe Islands VB Vágur 0–0 (A) 5–0 (H)
2Q Slovakia Inter Bratislava 0–1 (H) 0–1 (A)

Managers

References


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