Soviet Top League


The Soviet Top League, known after 1970 as the Higher League, served as the football league system|top division (tier)] of Soviet Union football championship from 1936 until 1991. Over the years, the league's name has changed several times. Created in 1936, the tier was originally known as "Gruppa A" and was one of four tiers that comprised the Soviet football championship.
It was owned and governed by the All-Union Committee of Physical Culture. The winner of the competition was honored with the title "USSR Champion" and awarded the All-Union Committee banner.
From its inception to its eclipse, the top tier operated in conjunction with the second tier for most of the time, allowing for participants to exchange between tiers through promotion and relegation. In 1963, a third tier was introduced. Starting from 1971, the full official name was the USSR Championship in football: Top League. An attempt to create an independent league as an autonomously governed business entity or organization during "perestroika" period was denied by the Federation due to the political culture in the Soviet Union.
Although the competition is considered professional, there were no professional sports in the Communist state due to its political stance on that issue. The teams that played in the league were composed of players who, officially, in fiscal books, were employed and paid by the state enterprises or agencies that the teams represented. Also, players from the state agencies' teams, SKA or Dynamo, held a rank, captain, lieutenant, major, etc. Also, the naming of teams was strictly controlled and had to be approved by the central government. Only after the death of Stalin, teams were allowed to have names associated with their geographic location, due to the Soviet political stance on the national issue. Also, officially, teams represented so-called "voluntary" sports societies..
After the World War II, along with the competition among the first teams, there were also conducted official competitions among reserve squads. It carried the name of "Tournament of the Doubles". The reserve squads' competitions were running parallel to the first teams' competitions, normally scheduled a day prior, with relegation rules completely dependent on the league standing of their respective first team.
The Top League was one of the best football leagues in Europe, ranking second among the UEFA members in the 1988–89 season. Three of its representatives reached the finals of the European club tournaments on four occasions: FC Dynamo Kyiv, FC Dinamo Tbilisi, and FC Dynamo Moscow. In the same way Russia politically succeeded the Soviet Union, UEFA considers the Russian Premier League to have succeeded the Soviet Top League.

Overview

Introduction and popularization

The league was established on the initiative of head of Spartak sport society, Nikolai Starostin. Starostin proposed to create eight professional club teams in six Soviet cities and hold two championship tournaments per calendar year. With minor corrections, the Soviet Council on Physical Culture accepted Starostin's proposal, creating a league of "demonstration teams of masters" which were sponsored by sport societies and factories. Nikolai Starostin de facto became a godfather of the Soviet championships. Numerous mass events took place to promote the newly established competition, among which there was an introduction of football exhibition game as part of the Moscow Physical Culture Day parade, and the invitation to the Basque Country national football team which was on the side supported by Soviet Union in the Spanish Civil War and others.
In 1936, the first secretary of Komsomol, Kosarev, came up with the idea of playing an actual football game at the Red Square as part of the Physical Culture Day parade. Stalin never attended any sports events, but the Physical Culture Day was an exclusion to the rule. The 1936 Physical Culture Day parade was directed by Russian theatre director Valentin Pluchek. For the football game, a giant green felt carpet was sewn by Spartak athletes and laid down on the Red Square's cobblestones. A night before the parade, the rug was stitched together in sections, rolled up and then stored in a vestibule of the GUM department store located at the square. Following the 1936 Red Square game, it became a tradition before the World War II and part of the Physical Culture Day parade event.
In the late 1930s Spartak was giving out thousands of tickets per game to members of the Central Committee of the All-Union Communist Party (Bolsheviks). Among serious football fans was Lavrentiy Beria who proposed to have one team from each of union republics in the league. In July 1937 a conflict erupted following a successful tour to the Soviet Union of the Basque national team during which the main governing body of sports in the country, the All-Union Council of Physical Culture, was accused by the party and Komsomol for failing the sports policy. Spartak's leadership and Starostin in particular were accused of corruption and implementing "bourgeoisie methods" in Soviet sport.
The most prominent clubs of the league were FC Dynamo Kyiv, FC Spartak Moscow, and FC Dynamo Moscow. The most popular clubs besides the above-mentioned were PFC CSKA Moscow, FC Ararat Yerevan, and FC Dinamo Tbilisi. Dinamo Tbilisi became famous for finishing third but never winning the title.
They won their first title in 1964.

Development

Until the 1960s the main title contenders in the league were the Moscow clubs of Spartak and Dynamo whose dominance was disrupted for only a brief period after World War II by CSKA Moscow, nicknamed 'The team of lieutenants'. The first team that won 10 championships was Dynamo Moscow in 1963, followed by Spartak in 1979.
Eleven clubs spent over 30 seasons in the league, with five of them from Moscow. Dynamo Moscow and Dynamo Kyiv were the only clubs that participated in all seasons of the league. Among other prominent Russian clubs were SKA Rostov/Donu, Zenit Leningrad, and Krylia Sovietov Kuibyshev.
Over the years, the league changed; however, from the 1970s its competition structure solidified with 16 participants, except from 1979 through 1985 when the number of participants was extended to 18.
One uniquely Soviet innovation around this time was the "draw limit", whereby a team would receive zero points for any draws above a fixed number, first 8, then 10. This rule had consequences for both the title race and relegation while it was in place. A 1973 experiment to resolve drawn games by penalty shoot-out lasted only one season.
Dynamo Kyiv's success as a Ukrainian club was supplemented in the 1980s with the appearance of Dnipro Dnipropetrovsk led by its striker Oleh Protasov, who set a new record for goals scored in a season. In 1984, Zenit Leningrad became Soviet champions for the first time.
With the unravelling of the Soviet Union in the late 1980s, the structure of the league also became unstable as more and more clubs lost interest in continuing to participate in the league, prompting several rounds of reorganisation. The main effect of these was to boost the number of Ukrainian clubs to be on par with the Russians.
Since the fall of the Soviet Union, it has been suggested that the competition be re-established along the lines of the Commonwealth of Independent States Cup, but due to a lack of interest on various levels, the venture has never been implemented.

Participants

The uneven population of the Soviet Union meant that the participants in a typical Top League season fell into three blocs. This was particularly apparent at the lower tiers of the Soviet Football Championship, such as the third tier, but sustained with less transparency up to the top/first tier.Russian clubs. Russian football was dominated by the "four-wheeled cart" of Moscow clubs: Spartak, Dynamo, CSKA and Torpedo. These four were often joined in the Top League by Lokomotiv, Zenit Leningrad, or assorted clubs from smaller cities. Please note that although officially the Lokomotiv sports society represented "railroad workers", the Soviet Union also had an oversized number of railway troops, unlike any other country in the world. Also, "the Russian clubs' bloc" was deeply fragmented into three separate conditional sub-blocs, per se, such as Muscovite clubs, Leningrad clubs, and the RSFSR clubs. At the Spartakiad of the Peoples of the USSR, the Russian SFSR was always represented by three teams with Muscovite and Leningrad teams participating along with the "main" team, although the main team was always the Muscovite.Ukrainian clubs. Ukraine's capital Kyiv, by contrast, was the exclusive province of Dynamo Kyiv, who became an unofficial feeder for the Soviet national team beginning in the 1960s, replacing Dynamo Moscow. Several clubs vied to be Ukraine's "second" team over the years including Shakhtar Donetsk, Metalist Kharkiv, Chernomorets Odesa, Zorya Voroshilovgrad and Dnipro Dnipropetrovsk, the last two managing to win three titles combined. Many Ukrainian clubs were also associated with the Soviet Dynamo sports society. The Soviet football authorities tried to curb or even out the Ukrainian clubs with the other clubs from the "union republics", yet there consistently existed a "separate" competition among the Ukrainian clubs among "teams of masters".Other republics clubs. Lavrentiy Beria's vision of one representative club per republic was partly realised from the 1950s onwards, as in every republic except for Russia and Ukraine, fan interest and government support became concentrated into a single club based in the republic's capital city, which became "the republic's team". Most of those clubs were created as Spartak or Dynamo, supported either by the local party committee or the local KGB office. Thus Lithuania became represented by Zalgiris Vilnius, Latvia by Daugava Riga, Estonia by Kalev Tallinn, Byelorussia by Dinamo Minsk, Moldavia by Nistru Kishinev, Armenia by Ararat Yerevan, Azerbaijan by Neftchi Baku, Georgia by Dinamo Tbilisi, Kazakhstan by Kairat Alma-Ata, Uzbekistan by Pakhtakor Tashkent and Tajikistan by Pamir Dushanbe. A typical Top League season would feature 4-6 of these eleven, and Yerevan, Minsk and Tbilisi all managed to win the title at least once. Only Georgia, with Torpedo Kutaisi and later Guria Lanchkhuti, and Azerbaijan, with Dinamo Kirovabad, was ever able to have a second representative survive in the Top League in addition to their capital city club.

Documentation

Documentation about the league is scarce. Among well-known researchers are Aksel Vartanyan for Sport Express, Andrei Moroz and Georgiy Ibragimov for, Alexandru G.Paloşanu,, Mike Dryomin, Almantas Lauzadis, and Hans Schöggl for . Another extensive databases are composed at and .

Names

Since its creation, the Soviet Top League's name changed a quite few times:
;1936 – 1941 Group A
Prior to World War II the championship was split into several groups usually of eight teams and named by the letters of the Cyrillic script.
;1945 – 1949 The First Group of USSR
Upon the reestablishment of the league after the war for several years it was numbered sequentially with the top league being the First.
;1950 – 1962 Class "A" of USSR
Since 1950, the alphabetical classification of the Soviet league hierarchy has resumed. In 1960 through 1962 the league consisted of two groups with the better clubs qualified for the championship pool and less fortunate – the relegation pool.
;1963 – 1969 The First Group "A" of USSR

European representation

The first time the Soviet League was represented in Europe in the 1965–66 European Cup Winners' Cup by Dynamo Kyiv. In its first year, the club reached the quarterfinals, eliminating on its way Coleraine and Rosenborg and winning all four matches against those clubs. The Ukrainians also knocked out reigning champions Celtic in the first round in the 1967–68 European Cup. In the 1968–69 season, the Soviet clubs withdrew from continental competitions after the Soviet invasion of Czechoslovakia. In 1972 came the first success of the Soviet club football when Dynamo Moscow reached the finals, but were defeated by Glasgow Rangers at Camp Nou in Barcelona.
From 1974 to 1984, the league was among the best 10 national competitions in the UEFA rankings, reaching the 4th place in 1976 and 1977. From 1985, the Soviet Top League was among the best four in Europe, until the collapse of the Soviet Union in 1991.
In 1987 and 1988, the Soviet Top League was the second-best in Europe; however, close to the collapse of the Soviet Union, the results of its football clubs that it represented worsened as top players could now leave and play for foreign leagues in the West. The very last coefficient position that the Soviet League placed was No. 9 in 1992. In the 1992/93 season, all the results of the Soviet League were transferred to the Russian Premier League. Throughout its history, the representatives of the league on four occasions made it to the finals of the three primary European competitions and were victorious in three. Once, a Soviet club was able to win the UEFA Super Cup.

Football championship among city teams (1923–1935)

Before the establishment of professional competitions among clubs, in the Soviet Union existed another competition that was conducted among collective teams of various cities or republics. In 1923 and 1924, competitions were part of the All-Union Festival of Physical Culture. In 1928 and 1931, competitions were part of the All-Union qualification for the "Workers' Spartakiad" that was organized by the Red Sport International. In 1935, competitions were organized in two tiers.

Champions and top goalscorers

Group A

;Performance by club
ClubWinnersRunners-up3rd PositionYears won
Spartak Moscow3121936a, 1938, 1939
Dynamo Moscow311936s, 1937, 1940
Dinamo Tbilisi21
CSKA Moscow11
Dynamo Kyiv11
Metallurg Moscow1

First group

;Performance by club
ClubWinnersRunners-up3rd PositionYears won
CSKA Moscow321946, 1947, 1948
Dynamo Moscow231945, 1949
Dinamo Tbilisi2
Spartak Moscow2
Torpedo Moscow1

Class A

;Performance by club
ClubWinnersRunners-up3rd PositionYears won
Spartak Moscow5221952, 1953, 1956, 1958, 1962
Dynamo Moscow4421954, 1955, 1957, 1959
CSKA Moscow231950, 1951
Torpedo Moscow1211960
Dynamo Kyiv121961
Dinamo Tbilisi23
Lokomotiv Moscow1
Shakhtar Stalino1
Spartak Minsk1

Overall statistics

Performance by republic

The republics that were never represented at the top level were the Turkmen SSR and the Kyrgyz SSR. Also, in Soviet football Russian SFSR teams were technically represented by three different entities with Moscow and Leningrad as the Union federal cities teams considered separately from the rest of Russian teams.

All-time table

1Two points for a win. In 1973, a point for a draw was awarded only to a team that won the subsequent penalty shootout. In 1978–1988, the number of draws for which points were awarded was limited.

Best coaches

Notes:
  • Clubs are shown those with which the listed coaches made the top-3, i.e. Beskov won two Top league titles and all with Spartak, but he also managed Dynamo with which he was a league runner-up.

Awards and prizes

Starting since 1958 beside medals of the regular Soviet championship, participants were awarded number of prizes that were established by various sports and public organizations, editorial offices of newspapers and magazines.
PrizeCreatorYears
The best footballer of the Year"Futbol" weekly1964—1991
The best goalie of the Year"Ogonyok" magazine1960—1991
The best topscorer"Trud" newspaper1958—1991
The Knight of the Attack"Sovetskiy voin" magazine1984—1991
Loyalty to the club"Prapor kommunizma" Kyiv newspaper1986—1989
The best debutant of the season"Smena" magazine1964—1975
The best newcomer"Sportivnye igry" magazine1986—1991
To the attack setter"Stroitelnaya gazeta"1988—1989
With both squadsFootball Federation (Section) of the USSR1958—1991
Commemorative Prize of Grigoriy FedotovCSKA1958—1991
For the fair play"Sovetskiy sport" newspaper1958—1969
Fair Play"Chelovek i zakon" magazine1974—1991
The big score"Futbol" weekly1961—1991
For the will to victory"Sovetskaya Rossiya" newspaper1962—1991
For the best difference in goals"Start" Ukrainian magazine1966—1991
The challenging guest"Komsomolskoye znamya" Kyiv newspaper1966—1991
The trouble for the elites"Sportivnaya Moskva" weekly1976—1991
Honor to the flagAlma-Ata newspaper "Leninskaya smena"1969—1978
Cup of the progressKyiv "Rabochaya gazeta"1971—1991
Together with a teamPresidium of the Football Federation of sport societies trade unions1978—1990
The First heightNewspaper "Sotsialisticheskaya industriya"1983—1991
For nobility and courageLeningrad magazine "Avrora"1987—1989
For the most beautiful goal of the seasonNewspaper "Moskovskiy komsomolets"
television program "Futbolnoye obozreniye"
1964—1991