Formed: 1936
Nickname: Hirnyky (The Pitmen)
UEFA club competition honours
• UEFA Cup: 2009
• UEFA Cup: 2009
Domestic honours (most recent triumph in brackets)
• League title: 6 (2011)
• Soviet/Ukrainian Cup: 11 (2011)
• League title: 6 (2011)
• Soviet/Ukrainian Cup: 11 (2011)
History
• Founded by coal miners in the Donbass region of Ukraine, then part of the Soviet Union, the club were called Stakhanovets Stalino before switching to FC Shakhtar Donetsk in 1946.
• Founded by coal miners in the Donbass region of Ukraine, then part of the Soviet Union, the club were called Stakhanovets Stalino before switching to FC Shakhtar Donetsk in 1946.
• The 1960s brought a
turnaround in the club's fortunes as Shakhtar stormed to a surprise
victory against an all-star FC Torpedo Moskva side in the 1961 Soviet
Cup final, retaining the trophy 12 months later. Over the next decade
they established themselves as one of the strongest teams in the Soviet
Top League. Two more Soviet Cups, two silver and bronze medals came in
1980s before the 1991 establishment of an independent football league in
Ukraine.
• Relegated for the only time in their history in 1971,
they bounced back up and finished 1975 as Soviet runners-up. It brought
Shakhtar's debut in European club competition in the 1976/77 UEFA Cup,
reaching the third round before losing to eventual winners Juventus.
•
On 11 October 1996 Rinat Akhmetov was appointed club president and
under his command they began to establish themselves as worthy
challengers to FC Dynamo Kyiv.
• Along with domestic honours,
Akhmetov has worked to establish Shakhtar on the European stage and in
2008/09 Mircea Lucescu led the club to victory in the last edition of
the UEFA Cup. The 2010 title, meanwhile, was their fifth in total, and
their fourth since the Romanian coach took over in 2004, while the
following season he guided Shakhtar into the UEFA Champions League round
of 16 for the first time.
• In 2011, Shakhtar broke new ground by
reaching the UEFA Champions League quarter-finals, where they lost to
eventual winners FC Barcelona.
Club records
Most appearances: Mykhaylo Sokolovskiy (481)
Most goals: Andriy Vorobey (114)
Record victory: Shakhtar 8-0 FC Torpedo Gorkiy (Soviet Top League, 1951)
Shakhtar 9-1 FC Torpedo Zaporizhya (Premier League, 1996/1997)
Record defeat: FC Dinamo Moskva 10-1 Shakhtar (Soviet Top League, 1949)
Most appearances: Mykhaylo Sokolovskiy (481)
Most goals: Andriy Vorobey (114)
Record victory: Shakhtar 8-0 FC Torpedo Gorkiy (Soviet Top League, 1951)
Shakhtar 9-1 FC Torpedo Zaporizhya (Premier League, 1996/1997)
Record defeat: FC Dinamo Moskva 10-1 Shakhtar (Soviet Top League, 1949)
* Last updated 1 June 2011
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