Founded | 1992 |
---|---|
Region | Ukraine |
Number of teams | 45 |
Qualifier for |
UEFA Europa League ( UEFA Cup Winners' Cup before 1999) |
Domestic cup(s) | Ukrainian Super Cup |
Current champions |
Dynamo Kyiv (13th title) |
Most successful club(s) |
Dynamo Kyiv Shakhtar Donetsk (13 titles each) |
Website | Official website |
2023–24 Ukrainian Cup |
The Ukrainian Cup ( Ukrainian: Кубок України) is an association football national knockout cup competition run by the Ukrainian Association of Football. The competition is conducted almost exclusively among professional clubs. [1] Since the 2003–04 season, the Cup winner qualifies to play the Ukrainian Premier League winner for the Ukrainian Super Cup.
For the competition are eligible first teams of all Ukrainian professional clubs. Beside professional clubs, to the competition is also invited both finalists of the Ukrainian Amateur Cup preceding season. If both finalists obtained professional status (admitted to the Second League (tier 3)), then two better performers of the amateur competition are invited. Beside the initial draw, all the draws are conducted the next day after all the matches of the round is played.
The format of this competition consists of two phases: a qualification phase with two rounds followed by the competition proper (four rounds and the final game) when all Premier League (tier 1) clubs enter the competition. [2] The Ukrainian Association of Football organizes the draw in qualification phase by geographic principles, so to accommodate "smaller" clubs (in lower tiers) by reducing their travel time. Often times the very first qualification round involves matches between the amateur teams and either the newly admitted professional clubs or clubs that struggled in prior season. For the next couple of qualification rounds enter clubs of the Second League (tier 3) and First League (tier 2). The final is usually taken place at the Olimpiyskiy National Sports Complex, however due reconstruction of the stadium to prepare to the UEFA Euro 2012, the final had been played at other venues temporarily. After that this tradition has ceased.
Past variations of the competition involved a home-away type of elimination, but the Ukrainian Cup has since changed to a single game per round format. In recent years, a conditional replay game was introduced to avoid penalty shootouts. Cup draws may be conducted for two consecutive rounds, but usually occur before each following round. The lower division teams are usually awarded the home-field advantage (or the first leg at home in case of a two-leg round).
Ukrainian Cup competitions have been conducted since at least 1936. [3] The first of season in 1936 was officially known as Spring Championship, the decision about which was adopted by the All-Ukrainian football Section. [3] Initially called also as the Spring Championship, sometime during the 1937 season the tournament was renamed by mass media as the Cup of the Ukrainian SSR ( Ukrainian: Кубок УРСР, Kubok URSR). [3] The official change was adopted by the Republican Football Conference only in April 1938. [3] To commemorate the event, in 1979 the Soviet Ministry of Communication released an envelope with depiction of the trophy (see the picture). [3] The streamer on top of a picture reads in Russian language "The first Cup of Ukraine in football" ( Russian: Первый кубок Украины по футболу, Pervyi kubok Ukrainy po futbolu), while the same thing is written at the picture's footer in Ukrainian language ( Ukrainian: Перший кубок України з футболу, Perhyi kubok Ukrayiny z futbolu).
In 1944 as compensation for the canceled republican championship there was conducted next tournament in September. [3] The decision to conduct the tournament was adopted on 6 September 1944 by the Central Committee of the Communist Party of Ukraine. [3] The tournament was also known as Ukrainian Cup [4] or Ukrainian Bowl ( Ukrainian: Келих УРСР, Kelykh URSR). [3] After World War II, subsequent editions of the national Cup were downgraded to a republican cup competition that was limited to lower league clubs and teams participating in the KFK competitions (amateurs). The timeframe of the tournament also shifted from spring time to fall (end of calendar year). [3] Already in 1948 FC Lokomotyv Kharkiv as one of the Soviet Top League clubs from Ukraine chose not to participate in the Ukrainian Cup competition. [3] In 1959 the tournament was cancelled completely and replaced with Football Cup among collective of physical culture (a predecessor to Ukrainian Amateur Cup).
In 1970s the Ukrainian Cup competitions were revived and conducted parallel to Ukrainian Amateur Cup for several seasons. In second half of 1970 the tournament was discontinued once again until 1990.
The first Cup competition in independent Ukraine had an unlikely winner, similar to the championship of 1992. The main contender, Dynamo Kyiv, settled for a draw in its first game at home against a team that was an amateur club in Soviet times, Skala Stryi. In the following quarter-finals round, the team faced defeat by Torpedo Zaporizhia. Eventually that competition was won by Chornomorets Odesa.
In 2008, the Football Federation of Ukraine signed a contract with the company Datagroup, [5] naming the company as the main sponsor of the tournament for the next four years. Datagroup introduced its new version of the cup trophy, [6] the first winner of which became Shakhtar Donetsk. [7] In 2010, there was an attempt to launch an independent website for the competition, which was active for only a couple of months.
The Ukrainian Cup finals are played most often at the main countries association football venue, Olympiyskiy National Sports Complex. Since 2008 and establishing of the Ukrainian Premier League, the final games started to be conducted at alternative stadiums among which most often was used the Metalist Oblast Sports Complex and the Dnipro Arena.
No | Name | Club(s) | Goals |
---|---|---|---|
1 | Andriy Shevchenko | Dynamo Kyiv | 4 |
Serhiy Atelkin | Shakhtar Donetsk | ||
3 | Oleksandr Hladkyy | Shakhtar Donetsk | 3 |
4 | Valiantsin Bialkevich† | Dynamo Kyiv | 2 |
Aliaksandr Khatskevich | Dynamo Kyiv | ||
Andriy Vorobei | Shakhtar Donetsk | ||
Diogo Rincón | Dynamo Kyiv | ||
Kléber | Dynamo Kyiv | ||
Alex Teixeira | Shakhtar Donetsk | ||
Tetê | Shakhtar Donetsk | ||
10 | 33 players | 1 |
Achievements of clubs since 1992 [11] [12]
Team | Winners | Winning years | Runners-up | Runners years | Finals |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Shakhtar Donetsk | 13 | 1995, 1997, 2001, 2002, 2004, 2008, 2011, 2012, 2013, 2016, 2017, 2018, 2019 | 6 | 2003, 2005, 2007, 2009, 2014, 2015 | 19 |
Dynamo Kyiv | 13 | 1993, 1996, 1998, 1999, 2000, 2003, 2005, 2006, 2007, 2014, 2015, 2020, 2021 | 5 | 2002, 2008, 2011, 2017, 2018 | 18 |
Chornomorets Odesa | 2 | 1992, 1994 | 1 | 2013 | 3 |
Tavriya Simferopol | 1 | 2010 | 1 | 1994 | 2 |
Vorskla Poltava | 1 | 2009 | 1 | 2020 | 2 |
Dnipro Dnipropetrovsk | – | — | 3 | 1995, 1997, 2004 | 3 |
Karpaty Lviv | – | — | 2 | 1993, 1999 | 2 |
CSKA Kyiv | – | — | 2 | 1998, 2001 | 2 |
Metalurh Donetsk | – | — | 2 | 2010, 2012 | 2 |
Zorya Luhansk | – | — | 2 | 2016, 2021 | 2 |
Metalist Kharkiv | – | — | 1 | 1992 | 1 |
Nyva Vinnytsia | – | — | 1 | 1996 | 1 |
Kryvbas Kryvyi Rih | – | — | 1 | 2000 | 1 |
Metalurh Zaporizhya | – | — | 1 | 2006 | 1 |
Inhulets Petrove | – | — | 1 | 2019 | 1 |
Top-10. All figures are correct through the 2017–18 season. [13]
PL | Team | Seasons | GP | W | D | L | GS | GA | Pts | Achievement |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 | Shakhtar Donetsk | 27 | 151 | 111 | 21 | 19 | 346 | 106 | 354 | champion |
2 | Dynamo Kyiv | 27 | 144 | 112 | 16 | 16 | 345 | 90 | 352 | champion |
3 | FC Dnipro | 27 | 117 | 68 | 17 | 32 | 188 | 105 | 221 | finalist |
4 | Tavriya Simferopol | 24 | 87 | 49 | 15 | 23 | 141 | 97 | 162 | champion |
5 | Karpaty Lviv | 27 | 89 | 45 | 12 | 32 | 130 | 96 | 147 | finalist |
6 | Vorskla Poltava | 27 | 84 | 44 | 12 | 28 | 113 | 97 | 144 | champion |
7 | Chornomorets Odesa | 27 | 92 | 44 | 12 | 36 | 148 | 99 | 144 | champion |
8 | Volyn Lutsk | 27 | 84 | 42 | 8 | 34 | 141 | 128 | 134 | semi-finalist |
9 | Metalurh Zaporizhia | 27 | 80 | 40 | 11 | 29 | 119 | 94 | 131 | finalist |
10 | Metalurh Donetsk | 20 | 70 | 37 | 10 | 23 | 107 | 91 | 121 | finalist |
Manager | Club(s) | Wins | Winning years |
---|---|---|---|
Mircea Lucescu | Shakhtar Donetsk | 7 | 2003–04, 2007–08, 2010–11, 2011–12, 2012–13, 2015–16 |
Dynamo Kyiv | 2020–21 | ||
Valery Lobanovsky | 3 | 1997–98, 1998–99, 1999–2000 | |
Viktor Prokopenko | Chonomorets Odesa | 1992, 1993–94 | |
Shakhtar Donetsk | 2000–01 | ||
Paulo Fonseca | 2016–17, 2017–18, 2018–19 | ||
Yozhef Sabo | Dynamo Kyiv | 2 | 1995–96, 2004–05 |
Anatoliy Demyanenko | 2005–06, 2006–07 | ||
Serhii Rebrov | 2013–14, 2014–15 | ||
Oleksiy Mykhaylichenko | 2002–03, 2019–20 | ||
Mykhailo Fomenko | Dynamo Kyiv | 1 | 1992–93 |
Vladimir Salkov | Shakhtar Donetsk | 1994–95 | |
Valeriy Yaremchenko | 1996–97 | ||
Nevio Scala | 2001–02 | ||
Mykola Pavlov | Vorskla Poltava | 2008–09 | |
Serhiy Puchkov | Tavriya Simferepol | 2009–10 |
This article needs to be updated.(February 2016) |
Rank | Player | Year(s) | Games per team(s) [a] | Games total | |
1 | Ruslan Kostyshyn | 1995 – 2012 | Advis (2), Podillia (2), CSKA/Arsenal (28), Dnipro (25), Kryvbas (6) | 63 | |
2 | Oleksandr Shovkovskyi | 1993 – 2015 | Dynamo-3 (2), Dynamo (58) | 60 | |
3 | Oleksandr Chyzhevskyi | 1993 – 2009 | Karpaty (32), Metalurh Z (7), Volyn (1), Tavriya (13), Zakarpattia (5) | 58 | |
4 | Oleksandr Holovko | 1992 – 2006 | Tavriya (24), Dynamo (32) | 56 | |
Vitaliy Reva | 1994 – 2010 | Polihraftekhnika (4), CSKA/Arsenal (34), Dynamo (16), Tavriya (2) | 56 | ||
Hennadiy Zubov | 1994 – 2008 | Stal A (3), Shakhtar (48), Illichivets (2), Metalurh D (1), Zoria (1), Komunalnyk (1) | 56 | ||
Volodymyr Yezerskyi | 1996 – 2014 | Harai (6), Karpaty (7), Dynamo (2), Kryvbas (4), Dnipro (20), Shakhtar (12), Zoria (2), Tavriya (2), Hoverla (1) | 56 | ||
8 | Dmytro Shutkov | 1992 – 2007 | Shakhtar | 54 | |
Ruslan Rotan | 2001 – 2018 | Dnipro (42), Dynamo (12) | 54 | ||
10 | Andriy Vorobei | 1996 – 2013 | Shakhtar (4), Shakhtar (44), Dnipro (2), Arsenal (1), Metalist (2) | 53 | |
11 | Serhii Rebrov | 1992 – 2010 | Shakhtar (6), Dynamo (44), Irpin (1) | 51 | |
Mykhailo Starostiak | 1994 – 2007 | Prykarpattia (6), Shakhtar (42), Kryvbas (3) | 51 | ||
13 | Serhiy Mizin | 1993 – 2008 | Dynamo-2 (3), Dynamo (18), Dnipro (2), CSKA/Arsenal (5), Karpaty (11), Kryvbas (7), Metalist (4) | 50 | |
The table includes players who played over 50 games in the competition. Players who share number of tallies placed in order of seniority by years and then alphabetical order. Data is through winter of 2020–2021. [14] |
Rank | Player | Year(s) | Goals per team(s) [b] | Goals total | |
1 | Andriy Vorobei | 1996 – 2013 | Shakhtar-2 (2), Shakhtar (22), Metalist (1) | 25 | |
2 | Maksim Shatskikh | 2000 – 2015 | Dynamo (22), Arsenal (1), Hoverla (1) | 24 | |
3 | Oleksandr Palianytsia | 1992 – 2003 | Dnipro (7), Veres (4), Karpaty (5), Kryvbas (3), Metalist (3) | 22 | |
4 | Andriy Shevchenko | 1994 – 2012 | Dynamo-2 (5), Dynamo (16) | 21 | |
5 | Serhii Rebrov | 1992 – 2010 | Shakhtar (1), Dynamo (19) | 20 | |
6 | Andriy Pokladok | 1992 – 2008 | Karpaty (15), Metalurh D (2), Rava (1), Halychyna L (1) | 19 | |
Andriy Yarmolenko | 2007 – 2017 | Dynamo | 19 | ||
8 | Oleh Matveyev | 1992 – 2003 | Shakhtar (16), Metalurh Z (1) | 17 | |
9 | Oleksiy Antiukhin | 1992 – 2001 | Metalurh Z (1), Tavria (13), Vorskla (2) | 16 | |
Luiz Adriano | 2007 – 2015 | Shakhtar | 16 | ||
11 | Valentyn Poltavets | 1993 – 2013 | Shakhtar Pavlohrad (1), Metalurh Z (8), Dnipro (1), Chornomorets (1), Dniester (4) | 15 | |
Bohdan Yesyp | 1996 – 2014 | Dynamo-3 (4), Zirka (1), Zakarpattia (3), Naftovyk (7) | 15 | ||
Oleh Husiev | 2003 – 2016 | Arsenal (1), Dynamo (14) | 15 | ||
The table includes players who scored over 15 goals in the competition. Players who share number of tallies placed in order of seniority by years and then alphabetical order. Data is through winter of 2020–2021. [15] |
Founded | 1992 |
---|---|
Region | Ukraine |
Number of teams | 45 |
Qualifier for |
UEFA Europa League ( UEFA Cup Winners' Cup before 1999) |
Domestic cup(s) | Ukrainian Super Cup |
Current champions |
Dynamo Kyiv (13th title) |
Most successful club(s) |
Dynamo Kyiv Shakhtar Donetsk (13 titles each) |
Website | Official website |
2023–24 Ukrainian Cup |
The Ukrainian Cup ( Ukrainian: Кубок України) is an association football national knockout cup competition run by the Ukrainian Association of Football. The competition is conducted almost exclusively among professional clubs. [1] Since the 2003–04 season, the Cup winner qualifies to play the Ukrainian Premier League winner for the Ukrainian Super Cup.
For the competition are eligible first teams of all Ukrainian professional clubs. Beside professional clubs, to the competition is also invited both finalists of the Ukrainian Amateur Cup preceding season. If both finalists obtained professional status (admitted to the Second League (tier 3)), then two better performers of the amateur competition are invited. Beside the initial draw, all the draws are conducted the next day after all the matches of the round is played.
The format of this competition consists of two phases: a qualification phase with two rounds followed by the competition proper (four rounds and the final game) when all Premier League (tier 1) clubs enter the competition. [2] The Ukrainian Association of Football organizes the draw in qualification phase by geographic principles, so to accommodate "smaller" clubs (in lower tiers) by reducing their travel time. Often times the very first qualification round involves matches between the amateur teams and either the newly admitted professional clubs or clubs that struggled in prior season. For the next couple of qualification rounds enter clubs of the Second League (tier 3) and First League (tier 2). The final is usually taken place at the Olimpiyskiy National Sports Complex, however due reconstruction of the stadium to prepare to the UEFA Euro 2012, the final had been played at other venues temporarily. After that this tradition has ceased.
Past variations of the competition involved a home-away type of elimination, but the Ukrainian Cup has since changed to a single game per round format. In recent years, a conditional replay game was introduced to avoid penalty shootouts. Cup draws may be conducted for two consecutive rounds, but usually occur before each following round. The lower division teams are usually awarded the home-field advantage (or the first leg at home in case of a two-leg round).
Ukrainian Cup competitions have been conducted since at least 1936. [3] The first of season in 1936 was officially known as Spring Championship, the decision about which was adopted by the All-Ukrainian football Section. [3] Initially called also as the Spring Championship, sometime during the 1937 season the tournament was renamed by mass media as the Cup of the Ukrainian SSR ( Ukrainian: Кубок УРСР, Kubok URSR). [3] The official change was adopted by the Republican Football Conference only in April 1938. [3] To commemorate the event, in 1979 the Soviet Ministry of Communication released an envelope with depiction of the trophy (see the picture). [3] The streamer on top of a picture reads in Russian language "The first Cup of Ukraine in football" ( Russian: Первый кубок Украины по футболу, Pervyi kubok Ukrainy po futbolu), while the same thing is written at the picture's footer in Ukrainian language ( Ukrainian: Перший кубок України з футболу, Perhyi kubok Ukrayiny z futbolu).
In 1944 as compensation for the canceled republican championship there was conducted next tournament in September. [3] The decision to conduct the tournament was adopted on 6 September 1944 by the Central Committee of the Communist Party of Ukraine. [3] The tournament was also known as Ukrainian Cup [4] or Ukrainian Bowl ( Ukrainian: Келих УРСР, Kelykh URSR). [3] After World War II, subsequent editions of the national Cup were downgraded to a republican cup competition that was limited to lower league clubs and teams participating in the KFK competitions (amateurs). The timeframe of the tournament also shifted from spring time to fall (end of calendar year). [3] Already in 1948 FC Lokomotyv Kharkiv as one of the Soviet Top League clubs from Ukraine chose not to participate in the Ukrainian Cup competition. [3] In 1959 the tournament was cancelled completely and replaced with Football Cup among collective of physical culture (a predecessor to Ukrainian Amateur Cup).
In 1970s the Ukrainian Cup competitions were revived and conducted parallel to Ukrainian Amateur Cup for several seasons. In second half of 1970 the tournament was discontinued once again until 1990.
The first Cup competition in independent Ukraine had an unlikely winner, similar to the championship of 1992. The main contender, Dynamo Kyiv, settled for a draw in its first game at home against a team that was an amateur club in Soviet times, Skala Stryi. In the following quarter-finals round, the team faced defeat by Torpedo Zaporizhia. Eventually that competition was won by Chornomorets Odesa.
In 2008, the Football Federation of Ukraine signed a contract with the company Datagroup, [5] naming the company as the main sponsor of the tournament for the next four years. Datagroup introduced its new version of the cup trophy, [6] the first winner of which became Shakhtar Donetsk. [7] In 2010, there was an attempt to launch an independent website for the competition, which was active for only a couple of months.
The Ukrainian Cup finals are played most often at the main countries association football venue, Olympiyskiy National Sports Complex. Since 2008 and establishing of the Ukrainian Premier League, the final games started to be conducted at alternative stadiums among which most often was used the Metalist Oblast Sports Complex and the Dnipro Arena.
Year | Venue | Winner | Score | Runner-up |
---|---|---|---|---|
1992 Final |
31 May 1992 19:00 (
EEST) Kyiv – Republican Stadium Attendance: 12,000 |
Chornomorets Odesa Ilia Tsymbalar 107' |
1 – 0 (0 – 0) ( a.e.t.) |
Metalist Kharkiv |
1992–93 Final |
30 May 1993 ? (
EEST) Kyiv – Republican Stadium Attendance: 47,000 |
Dynamo Kyiv Victor Leonenko 23' Dmytro Topchiyev 64' |
2 – 1 (1 – 0) |
Karpaty Lviv Ihor Plotko 89' ( pen.) |
1993–94 Final |
29 May 1994 17:00 (
EEST) Kyiv – Republican Stadium Attendance: 5,000 |
Chornomorets Odesa | 0 – 0 (0 – 0) ( a.e.t.) (5–3 p) |
Tavriya Simferopol |
1994–95 Final |
28 May 1995 ? (
EEST) Kyiv – Republican Stadium Attendance: 42,500 |
Shakhtar Donetsk Ihor Petrov 78' |
1 – 1 (0 – 1) ( a.e.t.) (7–6 p) |
Dnipro Dnipropetrovsk Aleksandr Zakharov 23' |
1995–96 Final |
26 May 1996 ? (
EEST) Kyiv – NSC "Olimpiyskiy" Attendance: 47,000 |
Dynamo Kyiv Serhii Rebrov 27' Yuri Maximov 59' |
2 – 0 (1 – 0) |
Nyva Vinnytsia |
1996–97 Final |
25 May 1997 ? (
EEST) Kyiv – NSC "Olimpiyskiy" Attendance: 26,000 |
Shakhtar Donetsk Serhiy Atelkin 36' |
1 – 0 (1 – 0) |
Dnipro Dnipropetrovsk |
1997–98 Final |
31 May 1998 ? (
EEST) Kyiv – NSC "Olimpiyskiy" Attendance: 43,500 |
Dynamo Kyiv Andriy Shevchenko 1', 30' |
2 – 1 (2 – 0) |
CSKA Kyiv Vasyl Novokhatskyi 54' |
1998–99 Final |
30 May 1999 ? (
EEST) Kyiv – NSC "Olimpiyskiy" Attendance: 71,000 |
Dynamo Kyiv Andriy Shevchenko 18', 67' Valentin Belkevich 19' |
3 – 0 (2 – 0) |
Karpaty Lviv |
1999–00 Final |
27 May 2000 ? (
EEST) Kyiv – NSC "Olimpiyskiy" Attendance: 45,500 |
Dynamo Kyiv Aliaksandr Khatskevich 45' |
1 – 0 (1 – 0) |
Kryvbas Kryvyi Rih |
2000–01 Final |
27 May 2001 17:00 (
EEST) Kyiv – NSC "Olimpiyskiy" Attendance: 55,000 |
Shakhtar Donetsk Serhiy Atelkin 78', 119' |
2 – 1 (0 – 1; 1 – 1) ( a.e.t.) |
CSKA Kyiv Ruslan Kostyshyn 7' |
2001–02 Final |
26 May 2002 19:00 (
EEST) Kyiv – NSC "Olimpiyskiy" Attendance: 81,000 |
Shakhtar Donetsk Serhiy Popov 10' Serhiy Atelkin 81' Andriy Vorobei 99' |
3 – 2 (1 – 1; 2 – 2) ( a.e.t.) |
Dynamo Kyiv Valentin Belkevich 31' Maksim Shatskikh 50' |
2002–03 Final |
25 May 2003 17:00 (
EEST) Kyiv – NSC "Olimpiyskiy" Attendance: 71,000 |
Dynamo Kyiv Aliaksandr Khatskevich 56' Diogo Rincón 90+' |
2 – 1 (0 – 1) |
Shakhtar Donetsk Andriy Vorobei 18' |
2003–04 Final |
30 May 2004 17:00 (
EEST) Kyiv – NSC "Olimpiyskiy" Attendance: 60,000 |
Shakhtar Donetsk Oleksiy Byelik 1' Anatoliy Tymoshchuk 90+' |
2 – 0 (1 – 0) |
Dnipro Dnipropetrovsk |
2004–05 Final |
29 May 2005 17:00 (
EEST) Kyiv – NSC "Olimpiyskiy" Attendance: 68,000 |
Dynamo Kyiv Diogo Rincón 11' ( pen.) |
1 – 0 (1 – 0) |
Shakhtar Donetsk |
2005–06 Final |
2 May 2006 17:00 (
EEST) Kyiv – NSC "Olimpiyskiy" Attendance: 25,000 |
Dynamo Kyiv Kléber 47' |
1 – 0 (0 – 0) |
Metalurh Zaporizhya |
2006–07 Final |
28 May 2007 19:00 (
EEST) Kyiv – NSC "Olimpiyskiy" Attendance: 64,500 |
Dynamo Kyiv Kléber 58' Oleh Husyev 80' |
2 – 1 (0 – 0) |
Shakhtar Donetsk Elano 89' |
2007–08 Final |
7 May 2008 19:00 (
EEST) Kharkiv – OSC "Metalist" Attendance: 28,000 |
Shakhtar Donetsk Oleksandr Hladkyy 44' Oleksiy Hai 78' |
2 – 0 (1 – 0) |
Dynamo Kyiv |
2008–09 Final |
31 May 2009 17:00 (
EEST) Dnipropetrovsk – Dnipro Arena Attendance: 25,700 |
Vorskla Poltava Vasyl Sachko 50' |
1 – 0 (0 – 0) |
Shakhtar Donetsk |
2009–10 Final |
16 May 2010 17:00 (
EEST) Kharkiv – OSC "Metalist" Attendance: 21,000 |
Tavriya Simferopol Maksym Feschuk 2' Oleksandr Kovpak 40' ( pen.) Lucky Idahor 96' |
3 – 2 (2 – 0; 2 – 2) ( a.e.t.) |
Metalurh Donetsk Henrikh Mkhitaryan 51' Mário Sérgio 74' |
2010–11 Final |
25 May 2011 20:15 (
EEST) Sumy – Stadium "Yuvileiny" Attendance: 27,800 |
Shakhtar Donetsk Eduardo da Silva 64' Luiz Adriano 87' |
2 – 0 (0 – 0) |
Dynamo Kyiv |
2011–12 Final |
6 May 2012 19:30 (
EEST) Kyiv – NSC "Olimpiyskiy" Attendance: 47,314 |
Shakhtar Donetsk Alex Teixeira 23' Oleksandr Kucher 104' |
2 – 1 (1 – 0; 1 – 1) ( a.e.t.) |
Metalurh Donetsk Mykola Morozyuk 68' |
2012–13 Final |
22 May 2013 19:45 (
EEST) Kharkiv – OSC "Metalist" Attendance: 40,003 |
Shakhtar Donetsk Fernandinho 41' Alex Teixeira 53' Taison 73' |
3 – 0 (1 – 0) |
Chornomorets Odesa |
2013–14 Final |
15 May 2014 20:00 (
EEST) Poltava – Stadium "Vorskla" Butovskoho Attendance: 9,700 |
Dynamo Kyiv Oleksandr Kucher 40' ( o.g.) Domagoj Vida 43' |
2 – 1
[10] (2 – 0) |
Shakhtar Donetsk Douglas Costa 57' |
2014–15 Final |
4 June 2015 21:00 (
EEST) Kyiv – NSC "Olimpiyskiy" Attendance: 53,455 |
Dynamo Kyiv | 0 – 0 (0 – 0) ( a.e.t.) (5–4 p) |
Shakhtar Donetsk |
2015–16 Final |
21 May 2016 17:00 (
EEST) Lviv – Arena Lviv Attendance: 21,720 |
Shakhtar Donetsk Oleksandr Hladkyy 42', 57' |
2 – 0 (1 – 0) |
Zorya Luhansk |
2016–17 Final |
17 May 2017 21:00 (
EEST) Kharkiv – OSC "Metalist" Attendance: 25,000 |
Shakhtar Donetsk Marlos 81' |
1 – 0 (0 – 0) |
Dynamo Kyiv |
2017–18 Final |
9 May 2018 20:30 (
EEST) Dnipro – Dnipro Arena Attendance: 28,155 |
Shakhtar Donetsk Facundo Ferreyra 48' Yaroslav Rakytskyi 61' |
2 – 0 (0 – 0) |
Dynamo Kyiv |
2018–19 Final |
15 May 2019 21:00 (
EEST) Zaporizhia – Slavutych Arena Attendance: 11,100 |
Shakhtar Donetsk Tetê 28', 39' Júnior Moraes 45+2' Manor Solomon 65' |
4 – 0 (3 – 0) |
Inhulets Petrove |
2019–20 Final |
8 July 2020 21:30 (
EEST) Kharkiv – OSC "Metalist" Attendance:0 |
Dynamo Kyiv Benjamin Verbič 28' |
1 – 1 (1 – 1) ( a.e.t.) (8–7 p) |
Vorskla Poltava Ruslan Stepanyuk 11' |
2020–21 Final |
13 May 2021 19:00 (
EEST) Ternopil – Roman Shukhevych Ternopil city stadium Attendance: 3,000 |
Dynamo Kyiv Viktor Tsyhankov 98' |
1 – 0 (0 – 0) ( a.e.t.) |
Zorya Luhansk |
2021–22 | 11 May 2022 (the final was scheduled) | interrupted at quarterfinals due to war | ||
2022–23 | no competition due to war | |||
2023–24 Final |
15 May 2024 Rivne – Stadium "Avanhard" Attendance: |
Shakhtar Donetsk |
v |
Vorskla Poltava |
No | Name | Club(s) | Goals |
---|---|---|---|
1 | Andriy Shevchenko | Dynamo Kyiv | 4 |
Serhiy Atelkin | Shakhtar Donetsk | ||
3 | Oleksandr Hladkyy | Shakhtar Donetsk | 3 |
4 | Valiantsin Bialkevich† | Dynamo Kyiv | 2 |
Aliaksandr Khatskevich | Dynamo Kyiv | ||
Andriy Vorobei | Shakhtar Donetsk | ||
Diogo Rincón | Dynamo Kyiv | ||
Kléber | Dynamo Kyiv | ||
Alex Teixeira | Shakhtar Donetsk | ||
Tetê | Shakhtar Donetsk | ||
10 | 33 players | 1 |
Achievements of clubs since 1992 [11] [12]
Team | Winners | Winning years | Runners-up | Runners years | Finals |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Shakhtar Donetsk | 13 | 1995, 1997, 2001, 2002, 2004, 2008, 2011, 2012, 2013, 2016, 2017, 2018, 2019 | 6 | 2003, 2005, 2007, 2009, 2014, 2015 | 19 |
Dynamo Kyiv | 13 | 1993, 1996, 1998, 1999, 2000, 2003, 2005, 2006, 2007, 2014, 2015, 2020, 2021 | 5 | 2002, 2008, 2011, 2017, 2018 | 18 |
Chornomorets Odesa | 2 | 1992, 1994 | 1 | 2013 | 3 |
Tavriya Simferopol | 1 | 2010 | 1 | 1994 | 2 |
Vorskla Poltava | 1 | 2009 | 1 | 2020 | 2 |
Dnipro Dnipropetrovsk | – | — | 3 | 1995, 1997, 2004 | 3 |
Karpaty Lviv | – | — | 2 | 1993, 1999 | 2 |
CSKA Kyiv | – | — | 2 | 1998, 2001 | 2 |
Metalurh Donetsk | – | — | 2 | 2010, 2012 | 2 |
Zorya Luhansk | – | — | 2 | 2016, 2021 | 2 |
Metalist Kharkiv | – | — | 1 | 1992 | 1 |
Nyva Vinnytsia | – | — | 1 | 1996 | 1 |
Kryvbas Kryvyi Rih | – | — | 1 | 2000 | 1 |
Metalurh Zaporizhya | – | — | 1 | 2006 | 1 |
Inhulets Petrove | – | — | 1 | 2019 | 1 |
Top-10. All figures are correct through the 2017–18 season. [13]
PL | Team | Seasons | GP | W | D | L | GS | GA | Pts | Achievement |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 | Shakhtar Donetsk | 27 | 151 | 111 | 21 | 19 | 346 | 106 | 354 | champion |
2 | Dynamo Kyiv | 27 | 144 | 112 | 16 | 16 | 345 | 90 | 352 | champion |
3 | FC Dnipro | 27 | 117 | 68 | 17 | 32 | 188 | 105 | 221 | finalist |
4 | Tavriya Simferopol | 24 | 87 | 49 | 15 | 23 | 141 | 97 | 162 | champion |
5 | Karpaty Lviv | 27 | 89 | 45 | 12 | 32 | 130 | 96 | 147 | finalist |
6 | Vorskla Poltava | 27 | 84 | 44 | 12 | 28 | 113 | 97 | 144 | champion |
7 | Chornomorets Odesa | 27 | 92 | 44 | 12 | 36 | 148 | 99 | 144 | champion |
8 | Volyn Lutsk | 27 | 84 | 42 | 8 | 34 | 141 | 128 | 134 | semi-finalist |
9 | Metalurh Zaporizhia | 27 | 80 | 40 | 11 | 29 | 119 | 94 | 131 | finalist |
10 | Metalurh Donetsk | 20 | 70 | 37 | 10 | 23 | 107 | 91 | 121 | finalist |
Manager | Club(s) | Wins | Winning years |
---|---|---|---|
Mircea Lucescu | Shakhtar Donetsk | 7 | 2003–04, 2007–08, 2010–11, 2011–12, 2012–13, 2015–16 |
Dynamo Kyiv | 2020–21 | ||
Valery Lobanovsky | 3 | 1997–98, 1998–99, 1999–2000 | |
Viktor Prokopenko | Chonomorets Odesa | 1992, 1993–94 | |
Shakhtar Donetsk | 2000–01 | ||
Paulo Fonseca | 2016–17, 2017–18, 2018–19 | ||
Yozhef Sabo | Dynamo Kyiv | 2 | 1995–96, 2004–05 |
Anatoliy Demyanenko | 2005–06, 2006–07 | ||
Serhii Rebrov | 2013–14, 2014–15 | ||
Oleksiy Mykhaylichenko | 2002–03, 2019–20 | ||
Mykhailo Fomenko | Dynamo Kyiv | 1 | 1992–93 |
Vladimir Salkov | Shakhtar Donetsk | 1994–95 | |
Valeriy Yaremchenko | 1996–97 | ||
Nevio Scala | 2001–02 | ||
Mykola Pavlov | Vorskla Poltava | 2008–09 | |
Serhiy Puchkov | Tavriya Simferepol | 2009–10 |
This article needs to be updated.(February 2016) |
Rank | Player | Year(s) | Games per team(s) [a] | Games total | |
1 | Ruslan Kostyshyn | 1995 – 2012 | Advis (2), Podillia (2), CSKA/Arsenal (28), Dnipro (25), Kryvbas (6) | 63 | |
2 | Oleksandr Shovkovskyi | 1993 – 2015 | Dynamo-3 (2), Dynamo (58) | 60 | |
3 | Oleksandr Chyzhevskyi | 1993 – 2009 | Karpaty (32), Metalurh Z (7), Volyn (1), Tavriya (13), Zakarpattia (5) | 58 | |
4 | Oleksandr Holovko | 1992 – 2006 | Tavriya (24), Dynamo (32) | 56 | |
Vitaliy Reva | 1994 – 2010 | Polihraftekhnika (4), CSKA/Arsenal (34), Dynamo (16), Tavriya (2) | 56 | ||
Hennadiy Zubov | 1994 – 2008 | Stal A (3), Shakhtar (48), Illichivets (2), Metalurh D (1), Zoria (1), Komunalnyk (1) | 56 | ||
Volodymyr Yezerskyi | 1996 – 2014 | Harai (6), Karpaty (7), Dynamo (2), Kryvbas (4), Dnipro (20), Shakhtar (12), Zoria (2), Tavriya (2), Hoverla (1) | 56 | ||
8 | Dmytro Shutkov | 1992 – 2007 | Shakhtar | 54 | |
Ruslan Rotan | 2001 – 2018 | Dnipro (42), Dynamo (12) | 54 | ||
10 | Andriy Vorobei | 1996 – 2013 | Shakhtar (4), Shakhtar (44), Dnipro (2), Arsenal (1), Metalist (2) | 53 | |
11 | Serhii Rebrov | 1992 – 2010 | Shakhtar (6), Dynamo (44), Irpin (1) | 51 | |
Mykhailo Starostiak | 1994 – 2007 | Prykarpattia (6), Shakhtar (42), Kryvbas (3) | 51 | ||
13 | Serhiy Mizin | 1993 – 2008 | Dynamo-2 (3), Dynamo (18), Dnipro (2), CSKA/Arsenal (5), Karpaty (11), Kryvbas (7), Metalist (4) | 50 | |
The table includes players who played over 50 games in the competition. Players who share number of tallies placed in order of seniority by years and then alphabetical order. Data is through winter of 2020–2021. [14] |
Rank | Player | Year(s) | Goals per team(s) [b] | Goals total | |
1 | Andriy Vorobei | 1996 – 2013 | Shakhtar-2 (2), Shakhtar (22), Metalist (1) | 25 | |
2 | Maksim Shatskikh | 2000 – 2015 | Dynamo (22), Arsenal (1), Hoverla (1) | 24 | |
3 | Oleksandr Palianytsia | 1992 – 2003 | Dnipro (7), Veres (4), Karpaty (5), Kryvbas (3), Metalist (3) | 22 | |
4 | Andriy Shevchenko | 1994 – 2012 | Dynamo-2 (5), Dynamo (16) | 21 | |
5 | Serhii Rebrov | 1992 – 2010 | Shakhtar (1), Dynamo (19) | 20 | |
6 | Andriy Pokladok | 1992 – 2008 | Karpaty (15), Metalurh D (2), Rava (1), Halychyna L (1) | 19 | |
Andriy Yarmolenko | 2007 – 2017 | Dynamo | 19 | ||
8 | Oleh Matveyev | 1992 – 2003 | Shakhtar (16), Metalurh Z (1) | 17 | |
9 | Oleksiy Antiukhin | 1992 – 2001 | Metalurh Z (1), Tavria (13), Vorskla (2) | 16 | |
Luiz Adriano | 2007 – 2015 | Shakhtar | 16 | ||
11 | Valentyn Poltavets | 1993 – 2013 | Shakhtar Pavlohrad (1), Metalurh Z (8), Dnipro (1), Chornomorets (1), Dniester (4) | 15 | |
Bohdan Yesyp | 1996 – 2014 | Dynamo-3 (4), Zirka (1), Zakarpattia (3), Naftovyk (7) | 15 | ||
Oleh Husiev | 2003 – 2016 | Arsenal (1), Dynamo (14) | 15 | ||
The table includes players who scored over 15 goals in the competition. Players who share number of tallies placed in order of seniority by years and then alphabetical order. Data is through winter of 2020–2021. [15] |
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