Suvarna Garge (Editor)

PFC Sumy

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Ground Capacity
  
25,830

Head coach
  
Volodymyr Lyutyi

Founded
  
2000

Location
  
Sumy, Ukraine

Chairman
  
Kostiantyn Hryhoryshyn

2015–16
  
14th

Manager
  
Volodymyr Lyutyi

Ground
  
Yuvileiny Stadium


Full name
  
Professional Football Club Sumy

Leagues
  
Ukrainian First League, Ukrainian Second League

2013 08 11 pfc sumy fc niva ternopol


PFC Sumy is a professional Ukrainian football team based in the city of Sumy, which now plays in Persha Liha. The current club is the second football project in the city, established in 2008 based on the local Krasnopillya football school. The club's emblem is based on Krasnopillya's as well. The original professional club was established in 1982 as Yavir, renamed as Yarir-Sumy when it relocated to the city in 1998. In 1999, the club was renamed Spartak Sumy. It then got promoted to the Ukrainian First League and played there until the end of the 2006–07 season, after which it folded. The Krasnopillya football school then re-opened the current club.

Contents

Since 2009, FC Sumy has played in FC Spartak Sumy's former stadium, the Yuvileiny Stadium. The stadium was completed in 2001, and seats 25,830 spectators. It cost the investors over 50 million euros to construct, making it the most expensive and largest stadium that any Ukrainian Second League club uses.

2013 07 27 pfc sumy fc poltava


FC Sumy

In the fall of 2008 they changed their name once again to FC Sumy. They play in the yellow and green colors of their former stadium Kolos, which can accommodate up to 3,000 spectators. FC Sumy now play in the vastly superior Yuvileiny Stadium which can hold 25,830 spectators.

After the 2009–10 Ukrainian Second League season the club again found itself in financial distress and failed attestation, which was followed by their license being withdrawn by the PFL. In July 2010 FC Sumy were readmitted to the Ukrainian Second League – please refer to 2010–11 Ukrainian Second League for details.

Please, note that the city of Sumy for quite some time used to have its own football teams during the Soviet period such as Spartak, Frunzenets, and others which eventually were disbanded. The "FC Sumy" football project is another attempt to reestablish the football tradition in the city.

Previous names of the club

1999 – Sep 2008 – Futbol'nyi Klub "Yavir" Krasnopillya (Ukrainian: Футбольний Клуб «Явір» Краснопілля) (Football Club Yavir Krasnopillya)
Sep 2008 – Jun 2010 – Futbol'nyi Klub "Sumy" (Ukrainian: Футбольний Клуб «Суми») (Football Club Sumy)
Jul 2010–Present – Profesiynyi Futbol'nyi Klub "Sumy" (Ukrainian: Професійний Футбольний Клуб «Суми») (Professional Football Club Sumy)

Stadium

Current

Yuvileiny Stadium

Former

Kolos Stadium (3,000)

Current squad

As of 14 August 2016

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

Honors

  • Ukrainian Druha Liha: 1
  • 1994–95 Champions 2011–12 Champions

    League and cup history

    FC Yavir Krasnopillya (1992–1999)
    FC Yavir Krasnopillya (2002–2008)
    FC Sumy (2008–present)

    References

    PFC Sumy Wikipedia