First Division. First of all, rules. A
limit of 10 ties and no points for those ties above the limit. Five
teams lost points because of the rule – Kairat (Alma-Ata) most of
all, 3 points. However, most teams were 'wise' and lost points were
not only few, but did not affect final standings. Face-to-face
results determined positions in case of equal points and only if
teams were still equal goal-difference was applied – the last point
saved Dinamo (Moscow). The coming reduction of the league made the
battle for survival most important – and also justified the
reduction, for one round before the end of the championship, for 8
clubs were in danger of relegation at that point. The last two were
directly relegated; the 15th and 16th teams
were going to promotion/relegation play-off against the winners of
Second Division. At the top end of the table the battle ended a bit
earlier, when Dinamo (Kiev) secured the title. It was not
overwhelming victory, but it was a bit surprising one – Dinamo was
not playing very good in the recent years and was not expected to
improve suddenly. But they did, although not at their peak yet.
Spartak (Moscow) proved to be eternal loser – once again, the most
they could do was to finish 2nd. The recent provincial
champions proved to be just good – not great – and thus unable to
repeat their successes. The decline of Dinamo (Moscow), Ararat
(Erevan), and Dinamo (Tbilisi) continued and now it looked like
Shakhter (Donetzk) was joining the sorry bunch. One irritating point
was the artificial pitch used in Moscow to which visitors had no way
to adapt – the pitch gave enormous advantage to the Moscow teams
and was even decisive on some occasions, but complains fell on death
ears.
SKA (Rostov) was the hopeless outsider
of the championship – last with 21 points. If anything, they
confirmed the massive decline of Army clubs – there will be no such
team in the next championship.
Fakel (Voronezh) was 17th
with 27 points. They did what they could, but were generally expected
to be relegated and did not disappoint – they and SKA were directly
relegated.
The big drama was above the last two –
the dangerous spots had to be avoided and that was decided in the
last round, where sheer will seemingly helped, for direct opponents
met. Ararat and Shakhter ended in a 3-3 tie. The clash between
Neftchi and Dinamo (Moscow) ended scoreless. And Chernomoretz lost at
home to Kairat 0-1. After that...
Neftchi (Baku) was 16th with
28 points and going to promotion/relegation play-off.
Chernomoretz (Odessa) was 15th
with 29 points. What a plunge down... this is picture of the team
against Real (Madrid), playing for the UEFA Cup. The previous season
was great and now – going to promotion/relegation play-off.
Chernomoretz was a bit unlucky, for they were 15th only
because of worse goal-difference. Then again... who lost its most
important home game of the season?
Dinamo (Moscow) barely survived - 14th
with 29 points. Better goal-difference helped them, but, frankly, it
could have been just fine if they were relegated. The decline was
seemingly endless... perhaps a relegation would have shaken them from
the stupor.
Ararat (Erevan) - 13th with
30 points. Their last match may have been fixed – the 3-3 tie with
neighbours Shakhter gave neither team a point and it looked like a
gamble: keep the already earned 30 points and hope those below to
lose their own matches. It worked... Dinamo (Moscow) got 1 point and
Chernomoretz – 0. However, if those clubs won, Ararat was going
down. And if Ararat won, then Shakhter was in danger... so, suspect
tie. It kept Shakther safe and Ararat almost safe.
Shakther (Donetzk) - 12th
with 30 points, but, curiously, with positive goal-difference. It
looked like they gave up on the championship and concentrated on the
Cup, but such argument is lame: the Cup final was played at
mid-season. Rather, Shakhter betrayed signs of coming crisis.
Torpedo (Kutaisi) looked good in the
final table - 11th with 31 points. But that only thanks to
2-1 home victory in the last round – Dinamo (Kiev) had nothing to
play for and was generous. Torpedo survived, that was the reality.
However, if Dinamo still had to fight for the title... Torpedo could
have been down to promotion/relegation play-offs.
Metallist (Kharkov) - 10th
with 31 points. Nothing special this season, but managed to survive a
bit earlier than most and the last round did not matter to them.
Kairat (Alma-Ata) - 9th with
32 points. Thanks to their last minute victory in Odessa. Happy
survivors, but the only thing to say about them was that they lost
most points to 10-ties-limit rule.
Dinamo (Tbilisi) - 8th with
32 points. Decline was the word.
Zhalgiris (Kaunas) - 7th
with 32 points. Not that many points, but this was a bright team,
settling comfortably in the top league and gaining experience. One of
the noticeable teams, expected to climb higher in the future.
Zenit (Leningrad) - 6th with
35 points. Nobody expected them to win a second title, but the team
disappointed in the European Champions Cup and generally it was felt
they underperformed. First row from left: Vedeneev, Vorobyov,
Dolgopolov, Afanassyev, Chukhlov, Zakharikov, Kuznetzov.
Standing: Mikhaylichenko – masseur,
Melnikov, Gerassimov, Davydov, Barannik, Dmitriev, Stepanov,
Biryukov, Sadyrin – coach.
Torpedo (Moscow) - 5th with
36 points. The best of the 'lower' teams, for the 4 teams above were
in their own separate category. Crouching form left: A. Petrov –
masseur, Dozmorov, Prigoda, Gostenin, Redkous, Petrakov, Petrenko, A.
Solovyev, N. Sarychev, Yu. Sarychev, Filatov – assistant coach.
Second row: Ivanov – coach, Zhendarev
– administrator, Susloparov, Buryak, Sarychev, Pivtzov, Polukarov,
Kobzev, Zhupikov, N. Vassilyev, V. Kruglov, Proyaev – doctor,
Zolotov – team chief.
Torpedo was criticized – along with
Dnepr and Dinamo (Kiev) – for passive play and disrespect for the
game and the public and the accusations were true, but so what? There
was almost nothing to play for near the end of the season – Torpedo
was safe and up in the table, but the very top was unreachable.
Nothing new, in their case, for the club maintained good squad, but
generally of second-stringers, some of them aging.
Dinamo (Minsk) – considered one of
the candidates for the title, as all recent champions, but not an
outstanding leader. Dinamo had limited options, like most provincial
club, and it was almost a miracle they were able to keep their stars.
But it was pretty much the same team which won the title a bit back –
may be no worse, but certainly no better. No great new recruits. 4th
with 41 points – mostly because of weak finish, but their most
important losses came against direct opponents playing home games on
artificial pitch. This was too much Dinamo, used to grass.
Top row from left: Aleksandr Chernukho
– masseur, Aleksandr Gorbylev, Sergey Gorlukovich, Lyudas Rumbutis,
Aleksandr Metlitzky, Andrey Sosnitzky, Viktor Sokol, Vassily
Dmitrakov – doctor, Mikhail Tzeytin – assistant coach.
3rd row: Ivan Savostikov –
assistant coach, Yury Trukhan, Aleksandr Kisten, Mikhail Vergeenko –
assistant coach, Ivan Zhekyu, Andrey Zygmantovich, Andrey Shalimo,
Leonid Vassilevsky – administrator.
2nd row: Yury Kurnenin,
Viktor Yanushevsky, Leonid Garay – team chief, Veniamin Arzamastzev
– coach, Igor Gurinovich, Viktor Shishkin.
Front row: Georgy Kondratyev, Sergey
Gotzmanov, Sergey Aleynikov, Sergey Borovsky.
Dnepr (Dnepropetrovsk) – 3rd
with 42 points. Perhaps the most promising team at the time, but
hardly stronger than the other leading teams. One of the teams
accused of disrespecting the sport and the fans this season. What
Dnepr was not accused of was their super-physical way of playing –
very often they were dangerous, but somehow the truly ugly side of
their football never came under criticism in USSR.
Spartak - 2nd with
46 points. This was painfully familiar trend: every year Spartak was
considered prime favorite for the title and every year they failed.
The most consistent Soviet team, but second-best. Their coach
Konstantin Beskov blamed recruitment difficulties and perhaps he was
right – at best, Spartak was able to match the quality of exiting
players with those of newcomers. No more than that, so there was good
regular team – good, but almost always with a weak post or two –
and rather insignificant group of reserves. Why Spartak, considered
not only leading team, but the one playing the most exciting football
in the country, was unable to attract top-level talent could be asked
of the coaching staff – were they blind? After the end of the
season 3 leading players left and none similar to them arrived.
Dinamo (Kiev) was the championship with
20 wins, 8 ties, and 6 losses. 64-26 and 48 points. Easy to shrug
shoulders today and say 'who else', but it was surprise victory in
1985. Dinamo had tough spell in recent years, so they were not seen
as top favorite. Further, the squad was unusually short for
Lobanovsky's team – strong regulars, but nobody worth mentioning
behind them. Further: frictions between coach and players were no
longer just dark rumors, but public knowledge – Leonid Buryak, for
instance, was not shy at all and did not hide why he went Torpedo
(Moscow) from journalist. Tremors of this period can still be heard
today – recently a player, who left Dinamo, spoke of 1983 in this
way: 'talent sat on the bench and Lobanovky's pets were on the
pitch'. Tense relations were seen as part of Dinamo's recent
failures. And finally Chanov broke his arm and missed a considerable
chunk of the season – just as Dinamo finally got decent goalkeeper.
So, Dinamo was seen as one of leaders, but no stronger than Spartak,
Dnepr, Dinamo (Minsk), and Zenit. Unlikely winner. And it was not an
easy victory, perhaps helped a bit by inconsistent performance and
various weaknesses of the rivals. It was essentially the work of tied
short team – a cluster of 12-13 regulars, supported by typical
Dinamo group of reliable second-stringers, 3 or 4, who would never be
regulars, but just support for a few years and then dismissed. 14
players really played this season – V. Khlus, the author of the
accusation mentioned above, appeared only twice! As a whole, Dinamo
was not exactly an impressive team, but they stepped up a bit near
the end of the season – especially in their European games, and at
least the foundation of the great football they played in 1986 was
laid. Well, 11th title. Difficult one, yes, but compared
to the rivals, Dinamo had superior team – well-rounded, slightly
deeper than what others had, and the top players of USSR were really
here. Dinamo was also the only club having no problems of recruitment
– they took anybody they wanted, which was mainly robbing the other
Ukrainian clubs of their stars – Dnepr was already on the list:
they had goalscoring machine, Oleg Protassov, and Dinamo was not
going to leave him there.