Central Sports Club of the Armed Forces of Ukraine
Central Sports Club of the Armed Forces of Ukraine (Ukrainian: Центральний Спортивний Клуб Збройних Сил України, transliteration: Tsentralnyi Sportyvnyi Klub Zbroinykh Syl Ukrayiny) or CSK ZSU (Ukrainian: ЦСК ЗСУ) is a sports club that was created on December 15, 1992 based on the Soviet Sports Club of Army (SKA Kyiv) in Kyiv (regional center of CKA), which dissolved after the fall of the Soviet Union. CSK ZSU is subordinated to the Sport Administration of Ministry of Defense (created on April 29, 1992).
Departments of CSK ZSUkraine | |||
---|---|---|---|
Football (I) | Football (II) | Basketball | Handball |
The club is a member of the National Olympic Committee of Ukraine and prepares Ukrainian Olympic reserve (Olympians) for Olympic Games.
The club also used administer couple of professional teams, particularly in football such as FC CSKA Kyiv and cooperated with CSKA-Borysfen (since 2001 known as FC Arsenal Kyiv).
Brief overview
Sports Club of the Army (Soviet Union)
The predecessor of CSK ZSU was the Sports Club of the Kyiv Military District (SK KVO) which was established on April 1, 1957 by the district's administration of military training as a regional department of the Sports Society of Armed Forces of the USSR. The club was based on the Sports Club of the Kyiv Military District Officers' Club (SKDO Kyiv). The newly established club included following sports establishments:
- Palace of sports (vulytsia Leitynantska, #1/3)
- Stadium (Povitroflotske shose, #32)
- Covered swimming pool (Povitroflotske shose, #32)
- Equestrian sports facilities (vulytsia Leitynantska, #1/3)
- Shooting sports facilities (shooting range at Koncha-Zaspa)
The Palace of sports, stadium and the shooting range were all inherited from the Officers' Club. The swimming pool, initially uncovered, was part of the Officers' Club since 1951. However after its reconstruction in 1956, it was handed to the administration of military training and was transferred to the sports club only on April 1, 1958, a year later. The equestrian sports facilities were created on the base of a liquidated stables of the 114th Separate Rifle Company and were transferred to the sports club as well. In 1957 the football squad of military servicemen from the Soviet Class B (third tier) were added to the club. The football squad was completely sponsored by the Kyiv Military District headquarters. In 1959 the team however was dissolved.
On May 10, 1960, a day after the Victory Day, the club was renamed into the Sports Club of Army (SKA Kyiv). On July 4, 1962 the shooting sports facilities were transferred to the military unit #01626. Since May 20, 1971 the club was transferred to the staff of #48/105-A and on December 15 it adopted the number 14 becoming the 14th Sports Club of Army. On February 12, 1980 the club created two children and youth sports schools. One school was for fighting sports and team sports, while another - for other Olympic sports.
Central Sports Club of the Armed Forces of Ukraine (Ukraine)
With fall of the Soviet Union all Soviet organization that were funded through the central government ceased to exist. In 1992 the Kyiv Military District was dissolved, some of its components were moved to Russia, while others were transferred to the Armed Forces of Ukraine. The former SKA Kyiv was discontinued and all its assets were transferred into the newly formed the Central Sports Club which absorbed all the Soviet Army centers based in Ukraine such as Odessa, Lviv, and Sevastopol (every one corresponds to the administrative center of a Soviet military district).
Membership
Tournaments
- Olympic games delegates to the National Olympic Committee of Ukraine (NOC Ukraine)
- World Cups
- Continental Cups
- World Cup among military service personnel
- Spartakiade of allied armies (Soviet Commonwealth)
Olympic laureates
1996 Summer Olympics
- Timur Taimazov (, weightlifting)
- Lieutenant Oleksandr Bahach (Bronze, athletics)
- (combined team) Volodymyr Shamenko (Bronze, gymnastics)
- (combined team) Senior Proporshchik Olena Pakholchyk (Bronze, sailing)
- Senior Proporshchik Olena Sadovnycha (Bronze, archery)
2000 Summer Olympics
- Lieutenant Olena Sadovnycha (Silver, archery)
- Lieutenant Olena Pakholchyk (Bronze, sailing)
- Praporshchik Roman Shchurenko (Bronze, athletics)
2004 Summer Olympics
- First Sergeant Hanna Kalinina (Silver, yacht)
- (team) Senior Praporshchik Oleh Lykov and Senior Praporshchik Leonid Shaposhnikov (Bronze, rowing)
- Senior Praporshchik Tetyana Semykina (Bronze, rowing)
- Praporshchik Viktoriya Styopina (Bronze, athletics)
- Senior Praporshchik Vladyslav Tretiak (Bronze, fencing)
2008 Summer Olympics
- (combined team) Halyna Pundyk and Olha Zhovnir (Gold, fencing)
- Praporshchik Iryna Lishchynska (Silver, athletics)
- Praporshchik Viktoriya Tereshchuk (Bronze, pentathlon)
2012 Summer Olympics
- (team) Nataliya Dovhodko, Junior Sergeant Anastasiya Kozhenkova, Junior Sergeant Kateryna Tarasenko, Lieutenant Yana Dementieva (Gold, rowing)
- Junior Lieutenant Yuriy Cheban (Gold, canoeing)
- Oleksandr Pyatnytsya (Silver, athletics)
- (combined team) Mariya Ryemyen (Bronze, athletics)
2015 European Games
- Oleh Vernyayev (2 Gold, gymnastics)
- (combined team) Senior Sergeant Olha Zhovnir, Alina Komashchuk, Olena Kravatska (Gold, fencing)
- Andriy Khloptsov (Gold and Bronze, swimming)
- Senior Private Andriy Yagodka (Gold, fencing)
- (combined team) Oleh Vernyayev (Silver, gymnastics)
- Private Olena Sayko (Silver, sambo)
- Senior Private Svitlana Yaryomka (Bronze, judo)
- Vasyl Shuptar (Bronze, wrestling)
Medal tables
Medals by Summer Games
Games | Gold | Silver | Bronze | Total |
---|---|---|---|---|
1996 Atlanta | 1 | 0 | 4 | 5 |
2000 Sydney | 0 | 1 | 2 | 3 |
2004 Athens | 0 | 1 | 4 | 5 |
2008 Beijing | 1 | 1 | 1 | 3 |
2012 London | 2 | 6 | 9 | 17 |
2015 Baku | 7 | 4 | 5 | 16 |
Totals (6 games) | 11 | 13 | 25 | 49 |
Medals by summer sport
Updated for 2012 Olympics
Sport | Gold | Silver | Bronze | Total |
---|---|---|---|---|
Rowing | 1 | 0 | 2 | 3 |
Fencing | 1 | 0 | 1 | 2 |
Canoeing | 1 | 0 | 0 | 1 |
Weightlifting | 1 | 0 | 0 | 1 |
Athletics | 0 | 2 | 4 | 6 |
Sailing | 0 | 1 | 2 | 3 |
Archery | 0 | 1 | 1 | 2 |
Gymnastics | 0 | 0 | 1 | 1 |
Modern pentathlon | 0 | 0 | 1 | 1 |
Totals (9 sports) | 4 | 4 | 12 | 20 |
Olympic centers and clubs
Centers
- Sports base for summer sports of Ministry of Defense, Lviv
- Army Sports Club Stadium (Lviv)
- "Vlasta" Hotel (before 1990 - "Rossiya")
- Sports base for winter sports "Tysovets", Skole
- Army Sports Club Stadium (Odessa) was illegally converted from a government property into private back in 1998. Criminal case on the issue is still pending.
- Kyiv Sports Complex, Kyiv
- CSK ZSU Stadium, a central venue of the club
Clubs
- Central Sports Club of the Armed Forces of Ukraine, Kyiv
- Sports club Odessa
- Sports club Bila Tserkva
- Sports club Sevastopol
- Group of athletes of the highest qualification
See also
External links
- Official website
- List of fitness-sports associations at the National Olympic Committee of Ukraine website
- Sports in Armed Forces of Ukraine (website of Ministry of Defense)
- Training and sports camp for summer sports in Lviv website
- Law of Ukraine on Fitness and Sports
- Red Army House (Officers' Clubs), Soviet archives
- Red Army House in Minsk
- List of Olympic centers