FC Dinamo Batumi

FC Dinamo Batumi is a Georgian football club based in Batumi, Adjara that competes in Erovnuli Liga, the top division of Georgian football system.

Dinamo Batumi
FoundedNovember 30, 1923 (1923-11-30)
GroundAdjarabet Arena
Capacity20,000
ChairmanVladimer Dvalishvili
ManagerGia Geguchadze
LeagueErovnuli Liga
2022Erovnuli Liga, 2nd of 10
WebsiteClub website

The club has won one league title, in 2021, one Georgian Cup, in 1997–98, and two Georgian Super Cups, in 1997–98 and 2022. In 1990, they changed their name to FC Batumi, only to reverse the decision in 1994.

Dinamo play their home matches at Batumi Stadium.[1]

History

Early period

Prior to the formation of this club, there were some other teams existing in the city. In 1923 newly established two clubs called Mezgvauri (The Sailor) and Tsiteli Raindi (The Red Knight) merged and became Dinamo Batumi.[2]

Football was becoming more popular in Adjara later, although Dinamo participated only in the lower divisions of Soviet championship. However, there were some players in the club, who later became successful footballers in USSR, including Revaz Chelebadze, Nodar Khizanishvili and Vakhtang Koridze. The famous Greek footballer Andreas Niniadis also started his career in the club. He later played for Olympiacos and Greece national football team.

Last six seasons of 1980s the team played in the First league, the second Soviet division.[3]

1990s and 2000s

The success for the Batumi-based club came when they won Georgian Cup in 1998, after losing two previous finals. The club defeated Dinamo Tbilisi in final. The goals were scored by Aleksandre Kantidze and Davit Chichveishvili.[4] The club won Georgian Super Cup during the same year as well. They again defeated Dinamo Tbilisi, by 2-1.[5] As one of the strongest teams of the league, starting from 1995 Dinamo represented the country in European competitions for four seasons in a row.

The next decade turned out disappointing for Dinamo, which failed to notch up any success on either competition. Amid construction boom in Adjara, in 2006 the club lost their stadium, located at the seaside, to be sold and demolished. Adeli stadium, which Dinamo started using as their home ground, met the same fate later on.[6] It coincided with deteriorating performance in the league. After 2007-08 they were relegated for the first time to Pirveli Liga, where as debutants the club took 8th place in an 11-team league. Overall, Dinamo spent next five seasons out of six in the second division.

In search for success

From 2013/14 the club revived their ambitions, first to gain promotion to Umaglesi Liga and then to secure a place among the league leaders. The silver, taken in 2015, was followed by the bronze the next year, but in 2017 Dinamo entered a period of instability with a drastic change of players and replacement of managers. Levan Khomeriki, the head coach for three successive years, left to be replaced by Ukrainian manager Kostyantyn Frolov, but he stepped down five months later.[7] Aslan Baladze took charge of the team, which finished the season in the relegation zone, despite having some experienced players such as Otar Martsvaladze, David Kvirkvelia and Elguja Grigalashvili in the squad. Dinamo suffered a worse setback in the play-off as dramatic two-leg tie against Sioni Bolnisi ended 5:5 on aggregate and the penalty shoot-out determined the winner.[8]

Prior to the new season in Liga 2 Gia Geguchadze was appointed in the club[9] and with the promotion set as their only goal, Dinamo convincingly won the league by an 11-point margin.[10]

Progress on the pitch and beyond

2019 brought some more encouraging news. 100% share of Dinamo Batumi owned by the Adjarian government was awarded to Lamini Ltd for 49 years.[11] Besides, a new prospect emerged for the issue of football ground, which had plagued the club for so long. While Dinamo played home matches either on their training base or at Rugby Arena, in January the government inaugurated the construction of new UEFA category IV stadium with the capacity of 20,000 seats due to be completed in late 2020.

Back in the top flight Dinamo rushed to the title-chasing battle, in which they initially performed beyond expectations. As no other newly promoted club had ever won the league, Dinamo Batumi appeared close to setting this record, although at the crucial point they slipped up, first squandering two points against relegation-bound WIT Georgia and then losing to another unmotivated club altogether.[12] Yet, the second place was definitely success for Dinamo, where some national team members - Jaba Jigauri, Giorgi Navalovski, Vladimer Dvalishvili - emerged at this stage.

Meanwhile, support for the club reached remarkable proportions by Georgian standards. While all of 1,500 seats on Angisa training base were full approximately three hours in advance, many more spectators watched the games from outside the fence. According to some estimates, an average number of fans per each match was around 6,400.[13]

The next season, shortened by coronavirus, saw a scenario resembling the previous one. After ten rounds Dinamo were unbeaten, sitting on the top of the table, but later they suffered two home defeats, including from direct rivals Dinamo Tbilisi, who taking this opportunity sealed the champion's fate.[14]

On 27 October 2020 a long-awaited official opening ceremony was held in Batumi. Finally, the second placed club for two seasons in a row representing the second largest city have proudly moved into their home.[15] In early December UEFA announced that this stadium will host some of U21 European championship matches in 2023.[16]

Тhe champions

This ultimate triumph was made possible from a third straight attempt. With the same head coach into the fourth season and a largely retained squad, the team had some advantage over their rivals from Tbilisi who were plagued by a frequent change of managers and key players. 1 point picked up by the latter in four head-to-head matches indicated which side looked stronger this year. Besides, an impressive European campaign boosted up the players from Adjara. As a result, seven of them were called up in early September for the national team's World Cup game against Spain.[17]

Inspired by fervent supporters, Batumi won six matches with a large margin, including 8-1, the biggest win of the season, and lifted up the Champion's Shield for the first time in their history.[18]

Statistics

Domestic

Champions Runners-up Third place Relegated Promoted
Season League Pos. Pl. W D L GF GA P Georgian Cup Georgian Super Cup Europe Manager
1990 Umaglesi Liga 6 341879 562861 Semi-finals N/A Shota Cheishvili
1991 Umaglesi Liga 5 191027 282132 Shota Cheishvili
1991–92 Umaglesi Liga 9 3815617 555851 Quarter-finals Shota Cheishvili
1992–93 Umaglesi Liga 11 3211615 565639 Runner-up Shota Cheishvili
1993–94 Umaglesi Liga 5 3216511 634653 Semi-finals Shota Cheishvili
1994–95 Umaglesi Liga 4 301668 694054 Runner-up Valerian Chkhartishvili
1995–96 Umaglesi Liga 6 301668 682854 Runner-up Runner-up CWC 1st Round Valerian Chkhartishvili
1996–97 Umaglesi Liga 3 301884 712262 Runner-up Runner-up CWC 1st Round Shota Cheishvili
1997–98 Umaglesi Liga 2 301875 581962 Winner Winner CWC qualifying Round Shota Cheishvili
1998–99 Umaglesi Liga 5 3013116 492250 Quarter-finals CWC qualifying Round Shota Cheishvili
1999–00 Umaglesi Liga 4 Semi-finals Aslan Baladze
2000–01 Umaglesi Liga 7 Round of 16 Giovanni Carnevali
2001–02 Umaglesi Liga 5 Quarter-finals Giovanni Carnevali
2002–03 Umaglesi Liga 8 Round of 16 Aslan Baladze
2003–04 Umaglesi Liga 10 Quarter-finals
2004–05 Umaglesi Liga 8 3691215 353339 Quarter-finals
2005–06 Umaglesi Liga 6 301776 422158 Round of 16
2006–07 Umaglesi Liga 9 268612 273030 Semi-finals
2007–08 Umaglesi Liga 13 264418 165116 Round of 16
2008–09 Pirveli Liga 8 309912 334236
2009–10 Pirveli Liga 5 281585 441753 Round of 32
2010–11 Pirveli Liga 5 321895 661863 Round of 16
2011–12 Pirveli Liga 1 181332 28942 Round of 16 Ioseb Nasuashvili
2012–13 Umaglesi Liga 11 328717 395531 Round of 16 Gia Guruli
2013–14 Pirveli Liga 2 261925 651759 Round of 16 Koba Zhorzhikashvili
2014–15 Umaglesi Liga 2 301848 402458 Round of 16 Levan Khomeriki
2015–16 Umaglesi Liga 8 3012810 413244 Round of 16 UEL 1st qualifying Round Levan Khomeriki
2016 Umaglesi Liga 3 15753 23726 Round of 32 Levan Khomeriki
2017 Erovnuli Liga 8 3610323 286033 Round of 32 UEL 1st qualifying Round Kostyantyn Frolov
2018 Erovnuli Liga 2 1 362376 602276 Round of 16 Gia Geguchadze
2019 Erovnuli Liga 2 362178 573170 Round of 32 Gia Geguchadze
2020 Erovnuli Liga 2 181062 291436 Round of 16 UEL 1st qualifying Round Gia Geguchadze
2021 Erovnuli Liga 1 3621123 732775 Semi-finals UECL 3rd QR Gia Geguchadze
2022 Erovnuli Liga 2 362385 873477 Round of 16 Winner CL 1st QR UECL 2nd QR Gia Geguchadze

Top scorers

SeasonDiv.PlayerGoals
2011/122ndGeorgia (country)Mikheil Jorbenadze8
2012/131stGeorgia (country)Mikheil Jorbenadze6
2013/142ndGeorgia (country)Amiran Abuselidze8
2014/151stGeorgia (country)Giorgi Beriashvili9
2015/161stGeorgia (country)Giorgi Beriashvili10
20161stGeorgia (country)Elguja Lobjanidze, Georgia (country)Temur Shonia5
20171stUkraineYaroslav Kvasov8
20182ndBrazilFlamarion24
20191stBrazilFlamarion17
20201stGeorgia (country)Jaba Jigauri8
20211stGeorgia (country)Jaba Jigauri, Georgia (country)Giorgi Pantsulaia13
20221stBrazilFlamarion19

European campaign

Dinamo's European history began with the 1995 Cup Winners' Cup competition. In a memorable home game against Celtic Glasgow more than 15,000 spectators witnessed good attacking football from both sides. The Georgians took the early lead but conceded twice in the first period. They equalized later and came close to the draw, although the Scots scored at the end of the regular time to cruise to victory.[19]

A year later the draw paired Dinamo against PSV Eindhoven. Even though the Dutch side were the ultimate winners, Batumi played decently enough to earn a point in the first game. Goals in this game were scored by Amiran Mujiri and Luc Nilis.[2]

Another remarkable event occurred in 1998 when they beat the powerful Yugoslav team Partizan Belgrade at home.

In 2021 the club narrowly missed UEFA Conference League play-offs after an extra-time draw at Sivasspor preceded by a sensational away victory over BATE Borisov.[20]

As of match played 28 July 2022
Competition Pld W D L GF GA
UEFA Champions League 2 0 1 1 1 2
UEFA Cup Winners' Cup 12 5 2 5 18 18
UEFA Europa League 5 1 0 4 1 10
UEFA Europa Conference League 8 3 2 3 14 11
Total 27 9 5 13 34 41
Season Competition Round Club Home Away Aggregate
1995–96 UEFA Cup Winners' Cup QR Federal Republic of Yugoslavia Obilić 2–2 1–0 3–2
1R Scotland Celtic 2–3 0–4 2–7
1996–97 UEFA Cup Winners' Cup QR Faroe Islands HB Torshavn 6–0 3–0 9–0
1R Netherlands PSV Eindhoven 1–1 0–3 1–4
1997–98 UEFA Cup Winners' Cup QR Armenia Ararat Yerevan 0–3[21] 2–0 2–3
1998–99 UEFA Cup Winners' Cup QR Federal Republic of Yugoslavia Partizan 1–0 0–2 1–2
2015–16 UEFA Europa League 1QR Cyprus AC Omonia 1–0 0–2 1–2
2017–18 UEFA Europa League 1QR Poland Jagiellonia Białystok 0–1 0–4 0–5
2020–21 UEFA Europa League 1QR Israel Hapoel Be'er Sheva 0–3
2021–22 UEFA Europa Conference League 1QR San Marino Tre Penne 3–0 4–0 7–0
2QR Belarus BATE Borisov 0–1 4–1 4–2
3QR Turkey Sivasspor 1–2 1–1 (a.e.t.) 2–3
2022–23 UEFA Champions League 1QR Slovakia Slovan Bratislava 1–2 (a.e.t.) 0–0 1–2
UEFA Europa Conference League 2QR Poland Lech Poznań 1–1 0–5 1–6
2023–24 UEFA Europa Conference League 1QR

Honours

Crest and colours

Kit manufacturers and shirt sponsors

Period Kit manufacturer Shirt sponsor Ref
2020-21 Puma Europebet [22]
2022 Errea 7th Heaven Residence

Management

Vladimer Dvalishvili, who spent last two years as a player for Dinamo Batumi, replaced Aslan Baladze in December 2020 as Sporting director.[23]

Head coach Giorgi (Gia) Geguchadze, the former manager of Zestafoni, Torpedo Kutaisi, Dinamo Tbilisi and Georgian U21, has been in charge since January 2018.

Current squad

As of 1 May 2023[24]

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 Georgia (country) GEO Guram Giorbelidze (on loan from Zagłębie Lubin)
3 DF Nigeria NGA Benjamin Teidi
4 DF Georgia (country) GEO Luka Kapianidze
5 MF Ukraine UKR Ivan Lytvynenko
6 MF Georgia (country) GEO Tsotne Mosiashvili
7 MF Georgia (country) GEO Giorgi Zaria
8 FW Egypt EGY Alexander Jakobsen
9 MF Georgia (country) GEO Tornike Kapanadze
10 MF Georgia (country) GEO Guga Palavandishvili
11 MF Georgia (country) GEO Mate Vatsadze
13 GK Georgia (country) GEO Luka Kharatishvili
14 MF Serbia SRB Vladan Vidaković (on loan from Maribor)
15 MF Georgia (country) GEO Mukhran Bagrationi
17 MF Georgia (country) GEO Vladimer Mamuchashvili
No. Pos. Nation Player
18 DF Georgia (country) GEO Giorgi Rekhviashvili
19 MF Georgia (country) GEO Sandro Altunashvili
20 MF Georgia (country) GEO Giorgi Kvernadze
21 GK Georgia (country) GEO Giorgi Begashvili
23 DF Georgia (country) GEO Mamuka Kobakhidze (captain)
24 FW Georgia (country) GEO Irakli Bidzinashvili
27 MF Georgia (country) GEO Paata Gudushauri
29 FW Senegal SEN Moussa Konaté
30 MF Georgia (country) GEO Giorgi Kharebava
31 GK Belarus BLR Anton Chichkan
33 DF Montenegro MNE Saša Balić
35 DF Georgia (country) GEO Grigol Chabradze
40 FW Brazil BRA Flamarion

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
DF Georgia (country) GEO Iva Gelashvili (at Saburtalo Tbilisi)
MF Georgia (country) GEO Zuriko Davitashvili (at Bordeaux)
FW Georgia (country) GEO Davit Zurabiani (at Kolkheti 1913)

References

  1. "ეროვნული ლიგა, XVI ტური: ბათუმის დინამომ ახალ სტადიონზე გამარჯვება იზეიმა". sportall.ge (in Georgian). 21 November 2020.
  2. "The history of FC Dinamo Batumi". Dinamobatumi.com. 12 December 2016. Archived from the original on 20 December 2016. Retrieved 13 April 2017.
  3. "Dinamo Bt in Soviet leagues". wildstat.com.
  4. "Georgian Cup season 1997-98". Msy.gov.ge (Ministry of Sport and Youth Affairs of Georgia). Retrieved 13 April 2017.
  5. "Georgian Super 1998". Msy.gov.ge (Ministry of Sport and Youth Affairs of Georgia). Retrieved 13 April 2017.
  6. ""ადელის" სტადიონის ადგილზე აპარტამენტები აშენდება". batumelebi.netgazeti.ge (in Georgian).
  7. "ბათუმის "დინამოს" მთავარმა მწვრთნელმა კონსტანტინ ფროლოვმა თანამდებობა დატოვა". 1tv.ge (in Georgian).
  8. "2017 play-offs". soccerway.com.
  9. "ბათუმის დინამოს გია გეგუჩაძე გაუძღვება". fanebi.com (in Georgian). 13 January 2018.
  10. "2018, Liga 2". flashscore.com.
  11. "რა პირობით გასხვისდა "დინამო ბათუმი"". batumelebi.netgazeti.ge (in Georgian).
  12. "Erovnuli Liga, 2019". soccerway.com.
  13. "ბათუმის დინამოს საოცარი ისტორია". intermedia.ge (in Georgian).
  14. "Erovnuli Liga, 2020". eliga.ge.
  15. "UEFA Category IV stadium opens in Batumi". agenda.ge.
  16. "Romania and Georgia to host U21 finals in 2023". uefa.com. 3 December 2020.
  17. "Spain vs Georgia, Match report". uefa.com.
  18. "ზეიმი ბათუმში – დინამო ბათუმმა საჩემპიონო ფარი ჩაიბარა". netgazeti.ge (in Georgian). 4 December 2021.
  19. "Dinamo Batumi vs Celtic". worldfootball.net.
  20. "BATE vs Dinamo Batumi, Match report". uefa.com.
  21. Ararat Yerevan were awarded a 3–0 win in the qualifying round first leg after Dinamo Batumi were found guilty of fielding an ineligible player ― Sotogashvili. The match originally ended as a 4–2 win for Dinamo Batumi.
  22. "FC Dinamo Batumi Kit History". Football Kit Archive. Retrieved 2023-03-14.
  23. "ლადო დვალიშვილმა კარიერა დაასრულა და დინამოს სპორტული დირექტორი გახდა". fanebi.com (in Georgian). 11 December 2020.
  24. "Squad". erovnuliliga.ge. Retrieved 1 May 2023.
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