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The Ukraine national football team (Ukrainian: Збірна України з футболу [ˈzʲbʲirnɐ ʊkrɐˈjine z fʊdˈbɔɫʊ]) represents Ukraine in men's international football, and is governed by the Ukrainian Association of Football, the governing body for football in Ukraine. Ukraine's home ground is the Olimpiyskiy Stadium in Kyiv.
The Olympic Stadium (also known as Olimpiyskiy National Sports Complex; Ukrainian: Національний спортивний комплекс "Олімпійський", romanized: Natsionalnyi sportyvnyi kompleks "Olimpiiskyi" [nɐt͡sʲiɔˈnalʲnei̯ spɔrˈtɪu̯nei̯ ˈkɔmpɫeks ɔlʲimˈpʲii̯sʲkei̯]) is a multi-use sports and recreation facility in Kyiv, Ukraine, located on the ...
Postage stamp of Ukraine, 2001. Football is the most popular sport in Ukraine. The Ukrainian Association of Football (previously Football Federation of Ukraine) is the national governing body and is responsible for overseeing all aspects of the game of football in the country. It was organised in 1991 to replace the Soviet republican-level ...
The 2000–01 Ukrainian Cup was the tenth annual edition of Ukraine's football knockout competition, ... NSC Olimpiyskiy, Kyiv. Attendance: 55,000. Referee: Vasyl ...
CNN has reached out to European football’s governing body UEFA and the Ukraine football federation for comment. Ukraine needed to win to finish second in the group and qualify automatically for ...
"Ukraina" is also an alternative stadium for the Ukraine national football team where it played several of its qualification games for various tournaments. The stadium is located in the central part of the city in the Snopkiv Park which is classified as the monument of park architecture (landscape art).
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 stadium was built in 1952, its architects are Yevhen Valts, Emil Egresi and Sandor Kavac. The size of the field is 104X68 m. On 29 April 1992, the Ukraine national football team played its first international game after independence against Hungary at Avanhard Stadium lost by a score of 1–3.