Phoenix (Ukrainian: «Фенікс») — a children’s futsal club from Kharkiv, Ukraine, founded in 2015. The team began as an experimental project for children classed as having little sporting talent, who were never selected for the starting squads of the teams that represented their sport schools. In 2019 Phoenix qualified for the final part of the Futsal Championship of Ukraine, where it took fourth place, and earned a name for itself in the national sporting community. In 2020 Phoenix won the Under 14s Cup of Ukraine.
Founded | 2015 | |
---|---|---|
Coach | Serhii Hrytsenko, Yurii Vashchenko | |
League | Cup of Ukraine U-14 | |
Website | fc-phoenix.team | |
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Creation of the team
editThe Phoenix experiment began on 8 November 2015 in Kharkiv. It took a different approach from the one normally taken in schools, where players are chosen on the basis of a thorough selection process, because Phoenix was created by parents whose children didn’t make the starting squads of their teams.[1] Using a new methodology, and with the support of the company Plarium Ukraine, the children were offered training from professional coaches who were experts in track-and-field athletics, gymnastics, and swimming. The former futsal players Serhii Hrytsenko and Yurii Vashchenko (Monolith FC ) became lead coaches — their work with Phoenix was the first time either of them had taken on a coaching role. The project was unique in Ukraine. It aimed to find out what children from the subs bench could actually achieve if they were given proper training and development opportunities.[2]
The ‘unpromising children’ of Phoenix suffered big defeats in their first few games. Despite this, the coaches were tasked with training them to get good results, and they were told they couldn’t bringing in reinforcements from anywhere else. A psychologist was also brought in to work with the young players, separately from the coaches. The people behind the Phoenix project were trying to model it on a professional sports club, but building it around children who had dropped out of normal children’s sport. They came up with the motto ‘Anyone can be a Hero’.[3]
Just a year and a half later, Phoenix gained its first prize at regional level — the Kharkiv Cup. Two weeks before that game, the team won a tournament dedicated to the memory of the famous sports journalist Boris Lanevskyi. The following season, the children won the ‘Plarium League’ futsal tournament in Kharkiv. Meanwhile their coaches, Serhii Hrytsenko and Yurii Vashchenko, who had had no coaching experience before their work with Phoenix, qualified as category ‘C’ futsal coaches, and received diplomas from the Football Federation of Ukraine — Ukrainian Association of Football.[1][4] In 2018, Phoenix took part in local matches, and also in a friendly tournament in Nuremberg in Germany, where they finished in third place. With this result, the team was invited to take part in the international Raiffeisen Cup in Nuremberg.[5]
Championship and the Cup of Ukraine
edit2018/19
editPhoenix qualified for the final stage of the Futsal Championship of Ukraine in futsal, in the U-13 category, in the 2018/19 season. The team took first place in the regional qualifier and in the play-offs, and despite losing its first game, it won against Olimpiya-Dnipro, led by Olexander Yuzik, on aggregate for both games.[6]
Deciding matches, played by the eight best teams, took place in Kherson in March 2019. Phoenix met squads from Ternopil, Odesa and Cherkasy at the group stage. Thanks to a goal scored four seconds before the end of the match against Chorne More, Phoenix qualified for the semi-finals. It lost the semi-final game, and the play-off for third place, but it was a major success for Phoenix to be one of the four best teams in the country.[7] It had performed so well that six of its players were invited to join the combined East Ukraine U-13 squad for the Conference Cup, which took place in the ‘Yunist’ (Zaporizhzhia) Palace of Sport in April 2019.[8]
2019/20
editPhoenix … is one of those teams that’s in with a great chance of winning the title “Discovery of the season.”
— The futsal journalist and reporter Artem Terentiev, summing up the results of the 2019/20 season[9]
In the 2019/20 season Phoenix won two friendly tournaments, and received gold medals from the Top League of the Futsal Fair in Lutsk. It also won the international friendly tournament in Hamburg. This team of children born in 2006 finished in third place in the qualifying tournament for the Championship of Ukraine, and fought its way to the final stages of the U-15 Championship that took place in Kherson, where it was placed just seventh in the overall ranking.[10]
Phoenix took part in the futsal Cup of Ukraine for children born in 2006, which took place from 9 to 12 March 2020 in Slobozhanske in the Dnipropetrovsk region. The team finished in first place in the group stage after scoring 10 points in 5 games. In the final, Phoenix met their peers from the Olimpiya-Dnipro team. The score at full time was 1:1, but Phoenix won the penalty shootout 3:1. The Phoenix player Ivan Konkov was named best player of the tournament.[11][12]
Public organisation
editThere’s been much interest in Kharkiv and beyond in the Phoenix phenomenon - the successful futsal team made up of "unpromising" children. Channel 9 in Dnipro produced a story on the history of the project.[13] Phoenix players, coaches and parents were also interviewed in the studios of the "UA:Kharkiv" TV channel.[1] The Ukrainian football newspaper "Goal!" reviewed the team’s performance at the Championship of Ukraine.[2] Soon after that the Ukraine-wide TV channel STB aired the story "Never Give Up", about Phoenix.[14]
In just five years since its creation, Phoenix has gone from a team of total amateurs to a futsal club good enough to win the Cup of Ukraine. As well as the team of children born in 2006, Phoenix now has a separate group of young players born in 2013.[12] The public company "Phoenix Centre for Social Youth Innovation" was registered in March 2020.[15]
Achievements
edit- 2021/22
- 2020/21
- Futsal Championship of Ukraine (U-15)[19]
- 2019/20
- 2018/19
- Futsal Championship of Ukraine (U-13) — 4th place
Notes
edit- ^ a b c ""Tviy Ranok": Phoenix club — from the bench to TOP-4" (in Ukrainian). UA: Kharkiv. 24 April 2019. Retrieved 31 May 2020.
- ^ a b Gurdzhyan, Bagrat (25 March 2019). "Anyone can be a hero" [Героем может стать каждый]. Ukrainian football newspaper Goal (in Ukrainian) (22 (1181)).
- ^ Artem Terentiev (17 March 2020). "Oleksii Soldatenko: "The history of Phoenix started with a dream"" (in Ukrainian). Futsal portal «5х5». Retrieved 31 May 2020.
- ^ Anatoliy Podvoyskiy (6 March 2017). "Fifth graduation of futsal specialist took place in Kharkiv for the first time" (in Russian). sport.ua. Retrieved 31 May 2020.
- ^ Kunze, Melanie (2018). "Verständigung zur Not mit Händen und Füßen". Nurnberger Zeitung (in German) (216).
- ^ "News at D1. 19:00 dated 7th March 2019" (in Ukrainian). D1. 7 March 2019. Retrieved 31 May 2020.
- ^ "Championship of Ukraine U-13. Results of the tournament. Children, Championship of Ukraine" (in Ukrainian). Futsal Association of Ukraine. 21 March 2019. Archived from the original on 5 June 2020. Retrieved 31 May 2020.
- ^ "Combined teams of the South and the West triumphed at the Conference Cup 2019" (in Ukrainian). Futsal Association of Ukraine. 10 April 2019. Archived from the original on 5 June 2020. Retrieved 1 June 2020.
- ^ Artem Terentiev (30 May 2020). "Phoenix: a formula of progress through personalities" (in Ukrainian). Futsal Association of Ukraine. Retrieved 30 May 2020.
- ^ Alexander Grigorov (4 December 2019). "Sport Interest 04-12-19" (in Russian). «Simon» TV channel. Retrieved 31 May 2020.
- ^ "Futsal Club Phoenix, Kharkiv - winner of the Cup of Ukraine U-14!" (in Ukrainian). Futsal Association of Ukraine. 13 March 2020. Retrieved 30 May 2020.
- ^ a b Sofia Krasnikova (14 March 2020). "Phoenix brought one of the most desirable trophies in children's futsal to Kharkiv" (in Russian). Kharkiv news feed. Retrieved 6 June 2020.
- ^ Georgiy Markov, Taras Ivanov (12 March 2019). "How "unpromising" children became winners: history of the football team Phoenix" (in Ukrainian). Channel 9. Dnipro. Retrieved 31 May 2020.
- ^ Maria Malevska, Olexandr Brinza (15 April 2019). "Never give up! — Vikna Novyny" (in Ukrainian). STB. Retrieved 31 May 2020.
- ^ "Phoenix — the centre of youth innovation" (in Ukrainian). Futsal club Phoenix. 29 February 2020. Retrieved 31 May 2020.
- ^ "Чемпіонат України U-16". duf-futsal.com.ua (in Russian). Retrieved 5 June 2022.
- ^ "КУБОК УКРАЇНИ U-16". duf-futsal.com.ua (in Russian). Retrieved 5 June 2022.
- ^ "КУБОК УКРАЇНИ U-17". duf-futsal.com.ua (in Russian). Retrieved 5 June 2022.
- ^ "Чемпіонат України U-15 Вища Ліга". duf-futsal.com.ua (in Russian). Retrieved 5 June 2022.
Video materials
edit- "Phoenix: a history of one team". youtube.com. Retrieved 1 June 2020.
- "Phoenix - winner of Futsal Cup of Ukraine U14!". youtube.com. Retrieved 1 June 2020.