FC Tiraspol

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Tiraspol
FC Tiraspol.png
Full name Football Club Tiraspol
Founded 1992 (as Constructorul Chișinău)
2001 (FC Tiraspol)
Dissolved 2015[1]
Ground Sheriff
Ground Capacity 14,300
Chairman Victor Tulba
Manager Lilian Popescu
League Divizia Naţională
2014–15 4th
Website Club home page

FC Tiraspol was a Moldovan football club based in Tiraspol, Moldova. They played in the Divizia Naţională, the top division in Moldovan football.

Founded in 1992 as Constructorul Chișinău, it entered the Moldovan National Division in 1995–96 season, winning its only title in 1996–97 and Moldovan Cups in 1996 and 2000. The club then relocated in 2001 to Cioburciu before moving to Tiraspol the year after. Despite the latter two settlements being in the breakway republic of Transnistria, their clubs play in the Moldovan league system.

History

Constructorul Chisinau

The side was founded in 1992 as Constructorul Chisinau, and played in Chisinau, the Moldovan capital. It entered the Moldovan National Division in 1995–96 season. Constructorul won their first silverware, the 1996 Moldovan Cup with a 2–1 win over Tiligul Tiraspol, and the next season won their only Moldovan National Division title by denying city rivals Zimbru Chișinău a sixth consecutive triumph.[2] The league triumph earned Constructorul a place in the 1997-98 UEFA Champions League, where they were knocked out by Belarusian club MPKC Mozyr 4–3 on aggregate in the first qualifying round.[3] In 2000 Constructorul won their second Cup, by beating Zimbru 1–0 in the final on 24 May.[4]

The club also participated in the UEFA Cup during the Constructorul era. In September 2000, the club was banned from appearing in European competitions for a year following a number of security breaches in a home match against Bulgarian side CSKA Sofia.[5]

Move to Transnistria

Before the 2001–02 season, the club relocated to Cioburciu, a small village outside Tiraspol, the capital of the breakaway republic of Transnistria, and was renamed Constructorul Cioburciu. The following season, the club moved into Tiraspol and became its current entity. The club has not won a Cup or National Division title since leaving Chisinau.

The only major European campaign since leaving Chisinau was the 2004-05 UEFA Cup. The club defeated Armenian team Shirak in the first qualifying round (4–1 on aggregate) [6] before a 5–1 aggregate elimination by Metalurh Donetsk of the Ukraine in the next round.[7]

Past crests

FC Constructorul Chişinău (1993–01)

Honours

Statistics

Until 2001, the club was known as Constructorul Chișinău, in 2001-02 as Constructorul Cioburciu, and FC Tiraspol since 2002.

Season Div Pos Pl W D L GS GA P Cup Europe Notes
1994–95 2D Quarter-finalists Promoted
1995–96 1D 3 30 24 2 4 71 16 74 Winner
1996–97 1 30 26 3 1 82 10 81 Round of 32 CWC 1st Round
1997–98 3 26 17 3 6 54 32 54 Runner-up UCL 1st qualifying round
1998–99 2 26 15 6 5 30 13 51 Runner-up CWC qualifying round
1999–00 3 36 18 11 7 52 23 65 Winner UC qualifying round
2000–01 4 28 10 9 9 30 30 39 Semi-finalists UC qualifying round
2001–02 4 28 10 7 11 36 42 39 Quarter-finalists
2002–03 5 24 7 5 12 27 38 26 Semi-finalists Intertoto 1st Round
2003–04 4 28 12 9 7 32 22 45 Quarter-finalists
2004–05 4 28 12 8 8 41 23 44 Quarter-finalists UC 2nd qualifying round
2005–06 3 28 8 13 7 24 21 37 Quarter-finalists
2006–07 5 36 10 16 10 37 32 46 Semi-finalists Intertoto 3rd Round
2007–08 4 30 16 7 7 36 21 55 Semi-finalists
2008–09 7 30 9 5 16 30 36 32 Semi-finalists Intertoto 2nd Round
2009–10 9 33 8 10 15 20 34 34 Quarter-finalists
2010–11 7 39 17 6 16 57 45 57 Quarter-finalists
2011–12 6 33 10 12 11 36 32 42 Quarter-finalists
2012–13 3 33 18 10 5 54 20 64 Winner
2013–14 2 33 21 9 3 60 27 72 Quarter-finalists UEL Round 1
2014–15 4 24 14 2 8 49 28 44 Semi-finalists UEL Round 1

European record

UEFA Champions League
UEFA Europa League
UEFA Intertoto Cup
UEFA Cup Winners' Cup

Current squad

As of 1 March, 2015. Note: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.

No. Position Player
1 Ukraine GK Oleksandr Ilyuschenkov
3 Spain DF Eric Barroso
4 Serbia MF Mihajlo Cakić
5 Moldova DF Andrei Novicov
8 Ukraine MF Serhiy Shapoval
9 Moldova FW Gheorghe Ovseanicov
10 Moldova FW Oleg Molla
11 Moldova FW Gheorghe Boghiu
12 Moldova GK Vladimir Livşiţ
14 Moldova MF Vadim Raţă
16 Ukraine DF Oleh Yermak
No. Position Player
17 Moldova MF Valentin Bîrdan
19 Moldova DF Serghei Mocanu
20 Moldova MF Alexandru Grosu
21 Moldova FW Serghei Alexeev
22 Moldova DF Andrei Macritchii
23 Moldova MF Victor Bulat
24 Moldova MF Igor Poiarchov
25 Moldova GK Alexei Coșelev
27 Moldova MF Vadim Bolohan
28 Moldova FW Artiom Puntus (on loan from Sheriff)

Coaching staff

  • Main trainer: Vlad Goian
  • Assistant trainer: Nicolai Panu
  • Assistant trainer: Yuri Solovyenko
  • Goalkeeper coach: Vitalie Carmac
  • Fitness trainer: Vitaliy Miliutin

Managers

References

External links