Ukrainian football clubs in European competitions

Ukrainian football clubs have participated in European football competitions since 1965, when in the 1965–66 season, Dynamo Kyiv took part in the European Cup Winners' Cup – the first Ukrainian and the first Soviet club to do so. In total, 17 different clubs have represented Ukraine in European competition, among which 7 also previously represented the Soviet Union.

History

Dynamo Kyiv made a bold entry in the continental competitions back in 1965-66 as holders of the 1964 Soviet Cup.

Until 1993 Ukrainian clubs represented the Soviet Union. Upon dissolution of the Soviet Union all their points were passed on to the Russian football federation clubs boosting the Russian coefficient and placing Russia among best ranking federations in Europe, while Ukrainian federation clubs started out from scratch.

As part of the Soviet Union, Dynamo Kyiv participated in 24 various competitions playing over hundred games and winning three trophies. Its star player Oleh Blokhin became one of the most recognized players not for the Kyiv's club, but for the whole Soviet football.

Beside Dynamo, the Soviet football was also represented by other six clubs from Ukraine among which are Shakhtar Donetsk with 5 European seasons and Dnipro Dnipropetrovsk with 6 European seasons.

Since attaining independence, Ukraine was represented by many new clubs some of which played in Soviet competition, while some others never existed in the Soviet Union.

FC Dynamo Kyiv (1965), FC Karpaty Lviv (1970), FC Zorya Luhansk (1973), FC Chornomorets Odessa (1975), FC Shakhtar Donetsk (1977), FC Dnipro (1984), FC Metalist Kharkiv (1988), SC Tavriya Simferopol (1992), FC Nyva Vinnytsia (1996), FC Vorskla Poltava (1997), CSKA Kyiv (1998), FC Kryvbas Kryvyi Rih (1999), FC Metalurh Donetsk (2002), FC Metalurh Zaporizhia (2002), FC Illichivets Mariupol (2004), FC Oleksandriya (2016), FC Olimpik Donetsk (2017).

Summary

All-time table includes records for the Soviet period as well as the period of independent Ukraine.

As of 1 April 2020

#TeamPop. placeSGPWDLGSGAGDPtsNotes
1.DynamoKyiv5037916495120568431137587
2.ShakhtarDonetsk31241109498337733047376
3.DniproDnipro2112153284016713334187
4.MetalistKharkiv964301519885533105
5.ChornomoretsOdesa11501912195854469
6.VorsklaPoltava838147174655–949
7.ZoryaLuhansk7361210143236–446
8.MetalurhDonetsk72411674337639
9.KarpatyLviv5227782833–528
10.ArsenalKyiv3125161316–316other names: CSKA
11.TavriyaSimferopol4144371123–1215
12.MariupolMariupol310334914–512other names: Illichivets
13.MetalurhZaporizhia2824284410
14.OleksandriyaOleksandriya3121561019–98
15.KryvbasKryvyi Rih26204712–56
16.NyvaVinnytsia1410328–63
17.OlimpikDonetsk1201113–21
Total990425226339141211733391501

All-time coefficient

As of 31 March 2020

#TeamPop. placeCoef.[1]PtsSeasonsGPWDLNotes
TotalCL/EC
1.ShakhtarDonetsk11.380284.52520218984575
2.DynamoKyiv9.911277.52825261987192
3.MetalistKharkiv7.81262.58160291417
4.DniproDnipro6.7149414193441930
5.ChornomoretsOdesa4.57132703614913
6.KarpatyLviv3.12512.54020767
7.ZoryaLuhansk2.91717.5603210913
8.VorsklaPoltava2.57118703212416
9.MetalurhZaporizhia2.5005208242
10.ArsenalKyiv2.33373011515other names: CSKA
11.MetalurhDonetsk2.2861670241167
12.NyvaVinnytsia2.0002104103
13.OleksandriyaOleksandriya1.66753012156
14.TavriyaSimferopol1.5003216114
MariupolMariupol1.5004.53010334other names: Illichivets
16.KryvbasKryvyi Rih1.0002206204
17.OlimpikDonetsk0.5000.5102011
Total6.519843.512348835338198299

Multiple European competition winners from Ukraine

TeamNumber of WinsYears
Dynamo Kyiv31975 (2), 1986
Shakhtar Donetsk12009

European and World competition winners

Cup Winners Cup UEFA Cup/Europa League Super Cup
1974–75 – Dynamo Kyiv 2008–09 – Shakhtar Donetsk 1975 – Dynamo Kyiv
1985–86 – Dynamo Kyiv

UEFA Champions League/European Cup

Until 1992–93 Ukrainian teams represented the Soviet Union. The Soviet teams did not enter the European Cup competitions until 1966. In 1992 the competition's name has changed to UEFA Champions League.

Notes: Blue border colour indicates seasons for which UEFA coefficient earned by Ukrainian clubs was awarded to Russia.

Year Team Progress Score Opponents Venue(s)
1955–56 None entered
1956–57
1957–58
1958–59
1959–60
1960–61
1961–62
1962–63
1963–64
1964–65
1965–66
1966–67 Presented by Russian clubs ( Torpedo Moscow)
1967–68 Dynamo Kyiv Second round 2–3 Górnik Zabrze
1968–69 Soviet boycott (Dynamo Kyiv Ruch Chorzów)
1969–70 Dynamo Kyiv Second round 1–2 Fiorentina
1970–71 Presented by Russian clubs ( Spartak Moscow)
1971–72 Presented by Russian clubs ( CSKA Moscow)
1972–73 Dynamo Kyiv Quarter-finals 0–3 Real Madrid
1973–74 Zorya Voroshylovhrad Second round 0–1 Spartak Trnava
1974–75 Presented by Armenian clubs ( Ararat Yerevan)
1975–76 Dynamo Kyiv Quarter-finals 2–3 (a.e.t.) Saint-Étienne
1976–77 Dynamo Kyiv Semi-finals 1–2 Borussia Mönchengladbach
1977–78 Presented by Russian clubs ( Torpedo Moscow)
1978–79 Dynamo Kyiv Second round 0–2 Malmö FF
1979–80 Presented by Georgian clubs ( Dinamo Tbilisi)
1980–81 Presented by Russian clubs ( Spartak Moscow)
1981–82 Dynamo Kyiv Quarter-finals 0–2 Aston Villa
1982–83 Dynamo Kyiv 2–4 Hamburg
1983–84 Presented by Belarusian clubs ( Dinamo Minsk)
1984–85 Dnipro Dnipropetrovsk Quarter-finals 2–2 (3–5 p) Bordeaux
1985–86 Presented by Russian clubs ( Zenit Leningrad)
1986–87 Dynamo Kyiv Semi-finals 2–4 Porto
1987–88 Dynamo Kyiv First round 1–2 Rangers
1988–89 Presented by Russian clubs ( Spartak Moscow)
1989–90 Dnipro Dnipropetrovsk Quarter-finals 0–4 Benfica
1990–91 Presented by Russian clubs ( Spartak Moscow)
1991–92 Dynamo Kyiv 4th in group stage N/A Barcelona, Sparta Praha, Benfica
1992–93 Tavriya Simferopol First round 2–7 Sion
1993–94 Dynamo Kyiv 4–5 Barcelona
1994–95 Dynamo Kyiv 4th in group stage N/A Paris Saint-Germain, Bayern Munich, Spartak Moscow
1995–96 Dynamo Kyiv Qualifying round 4–1 (Disqualified) Aalborg BK
1996–97 Dynamo Kyiv 2–6
(UEFA)
Rapid Wien
1997–98 Dynamo Kyiv Quarter-finals 2–5 Juventus
1998–99 Dynamo Kyiv Semi-finals 3–4 Bayern Munich
1999–2000 Dynamo Kyiv 3rd in second group stage N/A Bayern Munich, Real Madrid, Rosenborg
2000–01 Dynamo Kyiv 4th in first group stage N/A Anderlecht, Manchester United, PSV Eindhoven
Shakhtar Donetsk 3rd in first group stage UEFA Arsenal, Lazio, Sparta Praha
2001–02 Dynamo Kyiv 4th in first group stage N/A Liverpool, Boavista, Borussia Dortmund
Shakhtar Donetsk Third qualifying round 1–5 Borussia Dortmund
2002–03 Dynamo Kyiv 3rd in first group stage UEFA Juventus, Newcastle United, Feyenoord
Shakhtar Donetsk Third qualifying round 2–2 (1–4 p)
(UEFA)
Club Brugge
2003–04 Dynamo Kyiv 4th in group stage N/A Arsenal, Lokomotiv Moscow, Internazionale
Shakhtar Donetsk Third qualifying round 2–3
(UEFA)
Lokomotiv Moscow
2004–05 Dynamo Kyiv 3rd in group stage UEFA Bayer Leverkusen, Real Madrid, Roma
Shakhtar Donetsk UEFA Milan, Barcelona, Celtic
2005–06 Dynamo Kyiv Second qualifying round 2–3 Thun
Shakhtar Donetsk Third qualifying round 1–3
UEFA
Internazionale
2006–07 Dynamo Kyiv 4th in group stage N/A Lyon, Real Madrid, Steaua București
Shakhtar Donetsk 3rd in group stage UEFA Valencia, Roma, Olympiacos
2007–08 Dynamo Kyiv 4th in group stage N/A Manchester United, Roma, Sporting CP
Shakhtar Donetsk N/A Milan, Celtic, Benfica
2008–09 Dynamo Kyiv 3rd in group stage UEFA Porto, Arsenal, Fenerbahçe
Shakhtar Donetsk Barcelona, Sporting CP, Basel
2009–10 Dynamo Kyiv 4th in group stage N/A Barcelona, Internazionale, Rubin Kazan
Shakhtar Donetsk Third qualifying round 2–2 (a)
UEFA
Timișoara
2010–11 Dynamo Kyiv Play-off round 2–3
UEFA
Ajax
Shakhtar Donetsk Quarter-finals 1–6 Barcelona
2011–12 Dynamo Kyiv Third qualifying round 1–4
UEFA
Rubin Kazan
Shakhtar Donetsk 4th in group stage N/A APOEL, Zenit Saint Petersburg, Porto
2012–13 Dynamo Kyiv 3rd in group stage UEFA Paris Saint-Germain, Porto, Dinamo Zagreb
Shakhtar Donetsk Round of 16 2–5 Borussia Dortmund
2013–14 Shakhtar Donetsk 3rd in group stage UEFA Manchester United, Bayer Leverkusen, Real Sociedad
Metalist Kharkiv Third qualifying round 3–1
(Disqualified)
PAOK
2014–15 Shakhtar Donetsk Round of 16 0–7 Bayern Munich
FC Dnipro Dnipropetrovsk Third qualifying round 0–2
UEFA
Copenhagen
2015–16 Shakhtar Donetsk 3rd in group stage UEFA Real Madrid, Paris Saint-Germain, Malmö
Dynamo Kyiv Round of 16 1–3 Manchester City
2016–17 Shakhtar Donetsk Third qualifying round 2–2 (2–4 p)
(UEFA)
Young Boys
Dynamo Kyiv 4th in group stage N/A Napoli, Benfica, Beşiktaş
2017–18 Shakhtar Donetsk Round of 16 2–2 (a) Roma
Dynamo Kyiv Third qualifying round 3–3 (a)
(UEFA)
Young Boys
2018–19 Shakhtar Donetsk 3rd in group stage UEFA Manchester City, Lyon, 1899 Hoffenheim
Dynamo Kyiv Play-off round 1–3
(UEFA)
Ajax
2019–20 Shakhtar Donetsk 3rd in group stage UEFA Manchester City, Atalanta, Dinamo Zagreb
Dynamo Kyiv Third qualifying round 3–4
(UEFA)
Club Brugge
2020–21 Shakhtar Donetsk
Dynamo Kyiv

Note: UEFA denotes qualified for the UEFA Cup/Europa League.

    UEFA Europa League/UEFA Cup

    Until 1992–93 Ukrainian teams represented the Soviet Union. The Soviet teams did not play in the Inter-Cities Fairs Cup. In 2009 the competition's name has changed to UEFA Europa League.

    Notes: Blue border colour indicates seasons for which UEFA coefficient earned by Ukrainian clubs was awarded to Russia.

    Year Team Progress Score Opponents Venue(s)
    1971–72 Presented by Russian clubs ( Spartak Moscow)
    1972–73 Presented by Armenian and Georgian clubs ( Ararat Yerevan, Dinamo Tbilisi)
    1973–74 Presented by Georgian clubs ( Dinamo Tbilisi)
    Dynamo Kyiv Third round 2–3 VfB Stuttgart
    1974–75 Presented by two Russian clubs ( Spartak Moscow, Dinamo Moscow)
    1975–76 Presented by two Russian clubs ( Spartak Moscow, Torpedo Moscow)
    Chornomorets Odesa First round 1–3 Lazio
    1976–77 Presented by Russian clubs ( Dinamo Moscow)
    Shakhtar Donetsk Third round 1–3 Juventus
    1977–78 Presented by Georgian clubs ( Dinamo Tbilisi)
    Dynamo Kyiv First round 1–1 (a) Eintracht Braunschweig
    1978–79 Presented by Georgian and Russian clubs ( Torpedo Moscow, Dinamo Tbilisi)
    1979–80 Dynamo Kyiv Third round 2–2 (a) Lokomotiv Sofia
    Shakhtar Donetsk First round 2–3 AS Monaco
    1980–81 Presented by Russian clubs ( Dinamo Moscow)
    Dynamo Kyiv First round 1–1 (a) Levski Sofia
    Shakhtar Donetsk 1–3 Eintracht Frankfurt
    1981–82 Presented by three Russian clubs ( Spartak Moscow, Zenit Leningrad, CSKA Moscow)
    1982–83 Presented by two Russian and Georgian clubs ( Spartak Moscow, Dinamo Moscow, Dinamo Tbilisi)
    1983–84 Presented by Russian clubs ( Spartak Moscow)
    Dynamo Kyiv First round 0–1 Stade Lavallois
    1984–85 Presented by Russian and Belarusian clubs ( Spartak Moscow, Dinamo Minsk)
    1985–86 Presented by Russian clubs ( Spartak Moscow)
    Chornomorets Odesa Second round 1–2 Real Madrid
    Dnipro Dnipropetrovsk Third round 0–3 Hajduk Split[note 10]
    1986–87 Presented by Russian and Belarusian clubs ( Spartak Moscow, Dinamo Minsk)
    Dnipro Dnipropetrovsk First round 0–1 Legia Warszawa
    1987–88 Presented by three Russian and Georgian clubs ( Spartak Moscow, Dinamo Moscow, Zenit Leningrad, Dinamo Tbilisi)
    1988–89 Presented by Russian, Lithuanian and Belarusian clubs ( Torpedo Moscow, Zhalgiris Vilnius, Dinamo Minsk)
    Dnipro Dnipropetrovsk First round 2–3 Bordeaux
    1989–90 Presented by two Russian and Lithuanian clubs ( Spartak Moscow, Zenit Leningrad, Zhalgiris Vilnius)
    Dynamo Kyiv Third round 0–1 Fiorentina
    1990–91 Presented by Russian clubs ( Torpedo Moscow)
    Chornomorets Odesa Second round 0–1 AS Monaco
    Dnipro Dnipropetrovsk First round 2–4 Heart
    1991–92 Presented by three Russian clubs ( Spartak Moscow, Dinamo Moscow, Torpedo Moscow)
    1992–93 Dynamo Kyiv Second round 2–7 Anderlecht
    1993–94 Dnipro Dnipropetrovsk 1–2 Eintracht Frankfurt
    1994–95 Shakhtar Donetsk Preliminary round 3–4 Lillestrøm
    1995–96 Chornomorets Odesa Second round 0–4 Lens
    1996–97 Chornomorets Odesa First round 0–2 Naţional Bucureşti
    Dynamo Kyiv 1–2 Neuchâtel Xamax
    1997–98 Vorskla Poltava Second qualifying round 0–4 Anderlecht
    • 0–2 at Constant Vanden Stock Stadium,
    • 0–2 at Stadion Vorskla
    Dnipro Dnipropetrovsk 2–6 Alania Vladikavkaz
    1998–99 Shakhtar Donetsk 3–6 Zürich
    1999–2000 Shakhtar Donetsk First round 1–5 Roda JC
    Karpaty Lviv 2–2 (2–4 p) Helsingborg
    Kryvbas Kryvyi Rih 2–6 Parma
    2000–01 Shakhtar Donetsk Third round 0–1 Celta Vigo
    Kryvbas Kryvyi Rih First round 0–6 Nantes
    Vorskla Poltava 2–4 Boavista
    2001–02 CSKA Kyiv Second round 0–7 Club Brugge
    Dnipro Dnipropetrovsk First round 1–2 Fiorentina
    Shakhtar Donetsk 2–4 CSKA Sofia
    2002–03 Dynamo Kyiv Third round 1–3 Beşiktaş
    Shakhtar Donetsk First round 2–5 Austria Wien
    Metalurh Donetsk 2–10 Werder Bremen
    Metalurh Zaporizhia 1–2 Leeds United
    2003–04 Dnipro Dnipropetrovsk Third round 0–1 Marseille
    Shakhtar Donetsk First round 2–5 Dinamo Bucureşti
    Metalurh Donetsk 1–4 Parma
    2004–05 Shakhtar Donetsk Round of 16 2–5 AZ
    Dynamo Kyiv Round of 32 0–2 Villarreal
    Dnipro Dnipropetrovsk 2–3 Partizan
    Metalurh Donetsk First round 0–6 Lazio
    Illichivets Mariupol Second qualifying round 0–3 Austria Wien
    2005–06 Shakhtar Donetsk Round of 32 2–3 Lille
    Dnipro Dnipropetrovsk 4th in group stage N/A Middlesbrough, AZ, Litex Lovech, Grasshopper
    Metalurh Donetsk First round 3–3 (a) PAOK
    2006–07 Shakhtar Donetsk Round of 16 4–5 (a.e.t.) Sevilla
    Chornomorets Odesa First round 1–4 Hapoel Tel Aviv
    Metalurh Zaporizhia 1–2 Panathinaikos
    2007–08 Dnipro Dnipropetrovsk First round 1–1 (a) Aberdeen
    Metalist Kharkiv 3–4 Everton
    2008–09 Shakhtar Donetsk Winners 2–1 (a.e.t.) Werder Bremen Şükrü Saracoğlu Stadium
    Dynamo Kyiv Semi-finals 2–3 Shakhtar Donetsk
    Metalist Kharkiv Round of 16 3–3 (a) Dynamo Kyiv
    Dnipro Dnipropetrovsk Second qualifying round 4–4 (a) Bellinzona
    2009–10 Shakhtar Donetsk Round of 32 2–3 Fulham
    Vorskla Poltava Play-off round 2–5 Benfica
    Metalist Kharkiv 1–2 Sturm Graz
    Metalurh Donetsk 4–5 (a.e.t.) Austria Wien
    2010–11 Dynamo Kyiv Quarter-finals 1–1 (a) Braga
    Metalist Kharkiv Round of 32 0–6 Bayer Leverkusen
    Karpaty Lviv 4th in group stage N/A Paris Saint-Germain, Sevilla, Borussia Dortmund
    Dnipro Dnipropetrovsk Play-off round 0–1 Lech Poznań
    Tavriya Simferopol 1–6 Bayer Leverkusen
    2011–12 Metalist Kharkiv Quarter-finals 2–3 Sporting CP
    Dynamo Kyiv 3rd in group stage N/A Beşiktaş, Stoke City, Maccabi Tel Aviv
    Vorskla Poltava 4th in group stage N/A Standard Liège, Hannover 96, Copenhagen
    Dnipro Dnipropetrovsk Play-off round 1–3 Fulham
    Karpaty Lviv 1–3 PAOK
    2012–13 Dynamo Kyiv Round of 32 1–2 Bordeaux
    Dnipro Dnipropetrovsk 1–3 Basel
    Metalist Kharkiv 0–1 Newcastle United
    Metalurh Donetsk Third qualifying round 1–2 Tromsø
    Arsenal Kyiv 2–3 Mura 05
    2013–14 Shakhtar Donetsk Round of 32 2–3 Viktoria Plzeň
    Dynamo Kyiv 0–2 Valencia
    Chornomorets Odesa 0–1 Lyon
    Dnipro Dnipropetrovsk 2–3 Tottenham Hotspur
    Metalurh Donetsk Third qualifying round 1–2 Kukësi
    2014–15 Dnipro Dnipropetrovsk Final 2–3 Sevilla Stadion Narodowy
    Dynamo Kyiv Quarter-finals 1–3 Fiorentina
    Metalist Kharkiv 4th in group stage N/A Legia Warsaw, Trabzonspor, Lokeren
    Zorya Luhansk Play-off round 4–5 Feyenoord
    Chornomorets Odesa Third qualifying round 0–2 RNK Split
    2015–16 Shakhtar Donetsk Semi-finals 3–5 Sevilla
    Dnipro Dnipropetrovsk 3rd in group stage N/A Lazio, Saint-Étienne, Rosenborg
    Zorya Luhansk Play-off round 2–4 Legia Warsaw
    Vorskla Poltava Third qualifying round 3–3 (a) Žilina
    2016–17 Shakhtar Donetsk Round of 32 1–2 (a.e.t.) Celta Vigo
    Zorya Luhansk 4th in group stage N/A Fenerbahçe, Manchester United, Feyenoord
    Vorskla Poltava Third qualifying round 2–3 Lokomotiva
    FC Oleksandriya 1–6 Hajduk Split
    2017–18 Dynamo Kyiv Round of 16 2–4 Lazio
    Zorya Luhansk 3rd in group stage N/A Athletic Bilbao, Östersund, Hertha BSC
    FC Oleksandriya Play-off round 2–3 BATE Borisov
    Olimpik Donetsk Third qualifying round 1–3 PAOK
    2018–19 Dynamo Kyiv Round of 16 0–8 Chelsea
    Shakhtar Donetsk Round of 32 3–6 Eintracht Frankfurt
    Vorskla Poltava 3rd in group stage N/A Arsenal, Sporting CP, Qarabağ
    Zorya Luhansk Play-off round 2–3 RB Leipzig
    FC Mariupol Third qualifying round 2–5 Bordeaux
    2019–20 Shakhtar Donetsk
    Dynamo Kyiv 3rd in group stage N/A Malmö, Copenhagen, Lugano
    FC Oleksandriya 4th in group stage N/A Gent, Wolfsburg, Saint-Etienne
    FC Mariupol Third qualifying round 0–4 AZ
    Zorya Luhansk Play-off round 3–5 Espanyol
    2020–21 Zorya Luhansk
    Desna Chernihiv
    TBD

    UEFA Cup Winners' Cup

    The UEFA Cup Winners' Cup became the first continental competition in which Soviet clubs began their international participation in 1965. Until 1992–93 Ukrainian teams represented the Soviet Union.

    Notes: Blue border colour indicates seasons for which UEFA coefficient earned by Ukrainian clubs was awarded to Russia.

    Year Team Progress Score Opponents Venue(s)
    1960–61 None entered
    1961–62
    1962–63
    1963–64
    1964–65
    1965–66 Dynamo Kyiv Quarter-finals 1–4 Celtic
    1966–67 Presented by Russian clubs ( Spartak Moscow)
    1967–68 Presented by Russian clubs ( Torpedo Moscow)
    1968–69 Soviet boycott, presented by Russian clubs ( Dynamo Moscow)
    1969–70 Presented by Russian clubs ( Torpedo Moscow)
    1970–71 Karpaty Lviv First round 3–4 Steaua Bucureşti
    1971–72 Presented by Russian clubs ( Dynamo Moscow)
    1972–73 Presented by Russian clubs ( Spartak Moscow)
    1973–74 Presented by Russian clubs ( Torpedo Moscow)
    1974–75 Dynamo Kyiv Winners 3–0 Ferencváros St. Jakob Stadium
    1975–76 Presented by Armenian clubs ( Ararat Yerevan)
    1976–77 Presented by Georgian clubs ( Dinamo Tbilisi)
    1977–78 Presented by Russian clubs ( Dynamo Moscow)
    1978–79 Shakhtar Donetsk First round 1–4 Barcelona
    1979–80 Presented by Russian clubs ( Dynamo Moscow)
    1980–81 Presented by Georgian clubs ( Dinamo Tbilisi)
    1981–82 Presented by Georgian and Russian clubs ( Dinamo Tbilisi) and ( SKA Rostov)
    1982–83 Presented by Russian clubs ( Torpedo Moscow)
    1983–84 Shakhtar Donetsk Quarter-finals 3–4 Porto
    1984–85 Presented by Russian clubs ( Dynamo Moscow)
    1985–86 Dynamo Kyiv Winners 3–0 Atlético Madrid Stade de Gerland
    1986–87 Presented by Russian clubs ( Torpedo Moscow)
    1987–88 Presented by Belarusian clubs ( Dinamo Minsk)
    1988–89 Metalist Kharkiv Second round 0–1 Roda JC
    1989–90 Presented by Russian clubs ( Torpedo Moscow)
    1990–91 Dynamo Kyiv Quarter-finals 3–4 Barcelona
    1991–92 Presented by Russian clubs ( CSKA Moscow)
    1992–93 Chornomorets Odesa First round 1–3 Olympiacos
    1993–94 Karpaty Lviv Qualifying round 2–3 Shelbourne
    1994–95 Chornomorets Odesa First round 1–3 Grasshopper
    1995–96 Shakhtar Donetsk First round 1–2 Club Brugge
    1996–97 Nyva Vinnytsia First round 0–6 Sion
    1997–98 Shakhtar Donetsk Second round 2–5 Vicenza
    1998–99 CSKA Kyiv First round 1–5 Lokomotiv Moscow

    UEFA Intertoto Cup

    Year Team Progress Score Opponents Venue(s)
    1995 Did not participate
    1996 Shakhtar Donetsk 4th in group stage N/A Rotor Volgograd, Basel, Antalyaspor, Ataka-Aura Minsk
    1997 Did not participate
    1998 Vorskla Poltava Third round 2–5 Fortuna Sittard
    1999 Did not participate
    2000
    2001 Tavriya Simferopol Third round 0–5 Paris Saint-Germain
    2002 Did not participate
    2003
    2004
    2005
    2006 Dnipro Dnipropetrovsk Third round 2–2 (a) Marseille
    2007 Chornomorets Odesa Third round 1–3 Lens
    2008 Tavriya Simferopol Third round 1–1 (9–10 p) Rennais
    • 0–1 at Stade de la Route de Lorient,
    • 1–0 (9–10 p) at RSC Lokomotyv

    Stadiums

    UEFA Champions League / European Cup

    UEFA Europa League / UEFA Cup

    UEFA Cup Winners' Cup

    UEFA Intertoto Cup

    Statistics by club

    Notes

      1. Dynamo Kyiv played their home match at Tsentralny Stadion ChMP, Odesa, instead of their regular stadium Kiev Tsentralny Stadion, Kyiv, due to frozen pitch.
      2. Dynamo Kyiv played their home match at Simferopol Stadion Lokomotyv, Simferopol, instead of their regular stadium Kiev Tsentralny Stadion, Kyiv, due to weather conditions.
      3. Dynamo Kyiv played their home matches at Kharkiv Stadion Metalist, Kharkiv, instead of their regular stadium Kiev Tsentralny Stadion, Kyiv, due to reconstruction in preparation to the 1980 Summer Olympics.
      4. Dynamo Kyiv played their home match at Tbilisi Stadion Dinamo imenni Vladimira Lenina, Tbilisi, instead of their regular stadium Kiev Tsentralny Stadion, Kyiv, due to weather conditions.
      5. FC Dnipro played their home matches at Kryvyi Rih Stadion Metalurh, Kryvyi Rih, instead of their regular stadium Dnipropetovsk Stadion Meteor, Dnipro as the city of Dnipropetrovsk was a closed city.
      6. Shakhtar Donetsk played their home matches at Arena Lviv, Lviv, instead of their regular stadium Donbass Arena, Donetsk, due to the war conditions in Eastern Ukraine
      7. FC Dnipro played their home matches at NCS Olimpiyskiy, Kyiv, instead of their regular stadium Dnipro Arena, Dnipro, due to the pro-Russian unrest in Ukraine.
      8. Shakhtar Donetsk played their home match at OSC Metalist, Kharkiv instead of their regular stadium, Donbass Arena, Donetsk, due to the war conditions in Eastern Ukraine.
      9. Dynamo Kyiv played their home matches at Kiev Stadion Dynamo, Kyiv, instead of their regular stadium Kiev Tsentralny Stadion, Kyiv, due to reconstruction in preparation to the 1980 Summer Olympics.
      10. Croatian, not Serbian, club from Yugoslavia
      11. CSKA Kyiv played their home matches at Kyiv Stadion Dynamo, Kyiv, instead of their regular stadium Stadion TsSK ZSU, Kyiv as it did not meet UEFA requirements.
      12. Metalurh Zaporizhia played their home match at Stadion Meteor, Dnipropetrovsk, instead of their regular stadium Metalurh Stadium, Zaporizhia, due to reconstruction of latter.
      13. Panathinaikos played their home match at Pampeloponnisiako Stadium, Patras, instead of their regular stadium Olympic Stadium, Athens, due to 2006 IAAF World Cup being held there.
      14. Bellinzona played their home match at Cornaredo Stadium, Lugano, instead of their regular stadium Stadio Comunale Bellinzona, Bellinzona as it did not meet UEFA criteria.
      15. UEFA awarded Mura 05 a 3–0 win due to Arsenal Kyiv fielding suspended player Éric Matoukou in the first leg. The original match had ended in a 3–0 win for Arsenal Kyiv.
      16. On 19 February 2014, UEFA announced that it had decided to change the venue of the Dynamo Kyiv v Valencia match from NSC Olimpiyskiy, Kyiv, to GSP Stadium, Nicosia, due to riots in Kiev.
      17. The match was played at Stadion Dynamo imeni Valeria Lobanovskoho, Kiev instead of Zorya Luhansk's home stadium, Luhansk Stadion Avanhard, Luhansk, due to the war conditions in Eastern Ukraine.
      18. Lokomotiva played their third qualifying round and play-off round home matches at Stadion Maksimir, Zagreb, instead of their regular stadium Stadion Kranjčevićeva, Zagreb.
      19. The match was played at Stadion Dynamo imeni Valeria Lobanovskoho, Kyiv instead of Zorya Luhansk's home stadium, Luhansk Stadion Avanhard, Luhansk, due to the war conditions in Eastern Ukraine.
      20. The match was played at Slavutych Arena, Zaporizhia instead of Zorya Luhansk's home stadium, Luhansk Stadion Avanhard, Luhansk, due to the war conditions in Eastern Ukraine.
      21. The match was played at Stadion Chornomorets, Odesa instead of FC Mariupol's home stadium, Stadion imeni Volodymyra Boika, Mariupol, due to the war conditions in Eastern Ukraine.
      22. After a roof collapse on 10 August 2019 at their regular stadium, AFAS Stadion, Alkmaar, AZ's third qualifying round home match was moved to Cars Jeans Stadion, The Hague.
      23. Zorya Luhansk played their home matches at Slavutych-Arena, Zaporizhia, instead of their regular stadium Avanhard Stadium, Luhansk, due to the war conditions in Eastern Ukraine.

      References

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