FC Dunav Ruse

Dunav Ruse
Full name Football Club Dunav 2010
Nickname(s) Drakonite (The Dragons)
Founded 1949 (1949)
Ground Gradski Stadium, Ruse
Ground Capacity 19,960
Chairman Simeon Simeonov
Head coach Veselin Velikov
League Bulgarian First League
2015–16 B Group, 1st
/promoted/
Website Club home page

FC Dunav Ruse (Bulgarian: Футболен клуб Дунав Русе) is a Bulgarian football club based in Ruse, that competes in the Parva Liga, the top flight of the Bulgarian football league system.

Dunav Ruse were established on February 16, 1949 as a merger between two football clubs in the city, Dinamo and Rusenets. Dunav's home colours are sky blue and white. The club is named after the Danube River (Bulgarian: река Дунав), on the banks of which the city of Ruse is situated. They play their home matches at the local Gradski Stadium (City Stadium) which has a capacity of around 20,000 spectators.

History

Domestic

Over the course of its history, the club carried a variety of different names such as Sava, Napredak, Levski, Varush, Angel Kanchev, Rakovski, Rusenets, Dinamo, Spartak, DNA, Torpedo and Partizanin. Dunav played in the A Group over a number of seasons between 1937–1940, 1951, 1956, 1958–67, 1968–73, 1974–77, 1984–86, 1988–91 and 1996–98, before being relegated again.

Dunav playing Roma at the Gradski Stadium in 1975.

Among the club's most notable achievements are a final in the Bulgarian championship in 1937, an A Group fourth place in 1975 and four domestic cup finals in 1938, 1939, 1941 and 1962.

Following years of several movements between lower divisions, the team, under playing manager Engibar Engibarov, eventually won the Cup of Bulgarian Amateur Football League in 2003–04, and for the next season they finally gained promotion to the B PFG after a long-term hiatus in the amateur divisions. It was to be their first appearance in professional football since the team were relegated from the A Group in 1991.

From January 5, 2006 until 2 October of the same year, Dunav were managed by Ferario Spasov. He acquired some well-known footballers and loaned talented players from Litex Lovech in an unsuccessful attempt to reach the first division again.

The 2009–10 season in the B Group was very narrow for the club as the dream of reaching the A Group almost became a reality. Dunav finished the first half of the season in first place, leaving behind the teams of Kaliakra Kavarna and Nesebar. The second half of the season started very well and the team was in a row with a couple of very significant wins, but they won only one game in their last 7 matches and eventually failed to gain promotion to the top flight.

In the following years, Dunav again failed to impress and was mostly seen as a middle table club in the final ranking of the B Group. In 2010–11, the club was left by some of its good players, as a result of ongoing financial difficulties in the team. Dunav subsequently withdrew from the B Group in February 2011, after being unable to reduce its financial debts to the municipality and a majority of its squad players. A few days later, the club announced bankruptcy and was dissolved.

In 2011, Dr. Simeon Simeonov established a new entity under the name Dunav 2010, which was approved by the BFU to start from the lowest levels of Bulgarian football. The team obtained license and after several court decisions in the following months, it regained the traditions and history of its predecessor. In 2015, the club won the Bulgarian Amateur Cup and was promoted to the second division.

In 2016, Dunav became champions of the 2015-16 B Group and were promoted to the top flight for the first time since 1991, 25 years after their last participation. They will also compete in the debut season of the newly reformed Bulgarian First League.

European

On an international basis, Dunav has one appearance in the 1975-76 UEFA Cup, where they were drawn against A.S. Roma of the Italian Serie A. Dunav were subsequently eliminated after a 2–0 defeat in Rome and a notable 1–0 win over the Italian team in Ruse.[1]

Season Competition Round Country Club Home Away Aggregate
1975–76 UEFA Cup 1 Italy AS Roma 1–0 0–2 1–2

Current squad

As of 6 October 2016 Note: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.

No. Position Player
1 Bulgaria GK Martin Lukov
3 Bulgaria DF Mario Petkov
4 Bulgaria DF Petar Patev
5 Bulgaria DF Teynur Marem
6 Bulgaria MF Samir Ayass
7 Bulgaria DF Nikolay Kolev
8 Bulgaria MF Ivaylo Radentsov
9 Bulgaria FW Miroslav Budinov
10 Bulgaria MF Vasil Shopov
11 Bulgaria MF Diyan Dimov (captain)
12 Bulgaria MF Svetoslav Chitakov
15 Republic of Macedonia DF Darko Stojanov
No. Position Player
16 Bulgaria MF Stefan Mitev
17 Bulgaria MF Spas Georgiev
18 Bulgaria MF Anton Ognyanov
22 Bulgaria DF Mihail Milchev
28 Bulgaria DF Atanas Atanasov
30 Bulgaria GK Evgeni Aleksandrov
66 Tajikistan DF Iskandar Dzhalilov
77 Bulgaria FW Branimir Kostadinov
86 Bulgaria GK Stanislav Antonov
88 Bulgaria MF Yanislav Ivanov
91 Tajikistan MF Nuriddin Davronov
94 Bulgaria FW Yuliyan Nenov
For recent transfers, see Transfers summer 2016.

Past seasons

Season Lvl League Place W D L GF GA Pts Bulgarian Cup
2010–11IVA RFG 1 9 0 2 20 8 27 First round
2011–12IIIV Group 6 12 10 6 48 19 46 not qualified
2012–13IIIV Group 2 24 2 2 86 15 74 not qualified
2013–14IIB Group 13 6 9 11 24 32 27 First round
2014–15III V Group 1 28 1 1 121 11 85 Second round
2015–16IIB Group 1 18 10 2 53 19 64 Second round
2016–17IParva Liga         Quarterfinals*
Green marks a season followed by promotion, red a season followed by relegation.

References

  1. UEFA Europa League 1975/76 History - Dunav UEFA.com Retrieved 28 Mar 2016.

External links

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