Stroitel Football Club Pripyat (Russian: Футбольный клуб «Строитель» Припять, romanizedFutbol'nyy klub "Stroitel'" Pripyat'), also known as Budivelnyk Football Club Pripyat (Ukrainian: Футбольний клуб «Будівельник» Прип'ять, romanizedFutbol'nyy klub "Budivel'nyk" Pryp'yat') was a Soviet and Ukrainian football club (team) from Pripyat, Kyiv Oblast. Founded in the 1970s, it competed only at republican level competitions in Ukraine. Before the Chernobyl disaster the team was playing at a small stadium in Pripyat. In 1986, a new home ground, the Avanhard Stadium (Ukrainian: Стадіон «Авангард») was built but never used due to the disaster.

Stroitel Pripyat
Full nameFootball Club Stroitel Pripyat
Founded1970s
Dissolved1988; 36 years ago (1988)
GroundAvanhard Stadium,[1]
Pripyat, Ukraine
Capacity5000
Coordinates51°24′37.4″N 30°03′17.7″E / 51.410389°N 30.054917°E / 51.410389; 30.054917

History

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The team, whose name Stroitel means "builder", was founded in the middle of the 1970s with construction of the Chernobyl Nuclear Power Station along with the atomgrad Prypiat. The new club was mainly composed of players from the village of Chystohalivka, 4 km (2.5 mi) south of Prypiat. The team competed in district (raion) and regional (oblast) competitions. In 1981, it entered the KFK competition of Ukrainian SSR.[2] Please note, at Soviet football league system such republican football competitions (KFK championship) in 1971–1989 were conditionally at fourth tier just below the USSR Championship Vtoraya Liga, yet republican competitions, particularly football KFK, were administered by all 15 union republics individually. Since 1978 every winner of the Ukrainian football competitions among KFK were gaining promotion and obtaining the status of teams of masters.

The club achieved its best result in 1985 by reaching the second place in its group. The team never qualified for the final stage of the competition. In 1981–1983, for three years in the row, Stroitel was awarded the title of the Kyiv Oblast championship champions.

Stroitel was preparing for a cup semi-final against FC Borodyanka on the day of the Chernobyl disaster, Saturday 26 April 1986.[3] When the city of Pripyat was abandoned after the disaster, the new city of Slavutych was founded near Chernihiv at the end of the same year to replace it. The football club was moved there, changing its name to FC Stroitel Slavutych in 1987. Its activities ceased after the end of 1988 season.[2]

Players

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Source:[4]

Alexei Alekseevich Dmitirievich (30.12.1952)

Valery Anatoyevich Anjukhin (09.17.1950), Head Coach

Vyacheslav Yurievich Arseniyuk (12.12.1961)

Sergei Nikolayevich Bezotosny (01.06.1958)

Vladimir Nikolayevich Besedin (02.16.1952)

Sergei Vladimirovich Bondarenko (06.13.1955)

Vladimir Bordachenko

Yuri Borisovich Darchenko (07.01.1967)

Nikolai Vasilievich Gergel (01.12.1960)

Alexander Ivanovich Yatsenko (26.05.1967)

Nikolai Vladimirovich Koistrenko (09.19.1955)

Valentin Viktorivich Litvin (01.31.1960), Team Captain

Nikolai Viktorovich Litvin (11.27.1963)

Vladimir Ivanovich Panasiuk (08.07.1961)

Viktor Viktorovich Ponomarev (11.06.1955)

Vladimir Rastorugiev

Vladimir Vladimirovich Schegol (01.18.198)

Sergei Slyusar (1956)

Anatoliy Shepel (12.12.1949), Coach from 1980 - 1981

Anatoly Teredniy

Vladimir Igorevich Tyutyunov (10.10.1960)

Aleksandr Vladimirovich Vishnevskiy (05.28.1962)

Wasilij Zubko (1963)

Aleksij Ilicz Żurawliew

Wiktor Żylin

Stanislav Honcharenko (01.11.1960), Player from 1979 - 1981

Honours

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Kyiv Oblast Football Championship

  • Winners (1): 1981, 1982, 1983

League and cup history

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Season Division Pos/Teams Pld W D L GF GA GD Pts Notes
1981[2] 4th (Ukraine) 5/(11) 32 9 7 4 21 16 +5 25
1982[2] 8/(8) 14 2 4 8 6 17 −11 8
1983[2] 6/(8) 14 5 3 6 15 16 −1 13
1984[2] 6/(8) 14 3 4 7 16 23 −7 10
1985[2] 2/(8) 14 8 4 2 35 11 +24 20
1986[2] withdrew because of the Chernobyl accident
1987[2] 3/(9) 16 9 3 4 31 20 +11 21 [Note 1]
1988[2] 8/(12) 98734r5t837 7 4 11 28 36 −8 18 [Note 1]
  1. ^ a b Season played with the name FC Stroitel Slavutych

See also

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References

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  1. ^ (in Russian) Stadion Avangard of Pripyat (goroda-prizraki.narod.ru)
  2. ^ a b c d e f g h i j (in Russian) History of FC Stroitel Pripyat Archived March 27, 2016, at the Wayback Machine
  3. ^ Brown, Paul. "The football team destroyed by the Chernobyl disaster: FC Pripyat". FourFourTwo. Retrieved 18 January 2021.
  4. ^ Juźwiak, Krystian; TVP Sport (2021-04-26). "Atomowe śnieżynki. Czarnobyl – niedoszła potęga piłki?". sport.tvp.pl (in Polish). Retrieved 2023-10-14.
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