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1993 Commonwealth of Independent States Cup
| Field | Value |
|---|---|
| tourney_name | Commonwealth of Independent States Cup |
| year | 1993 |
| other_titles | CIS Cup, Кубок Содружества 1993 |
| country | Russia |
| dates | 25–31 January 1993 |
| num_teams | 15 |
| venues | 3 |
| cities | 1 |
| champion_other | RUS Spartak Moscow |
| count | 1 |
| matches | 23 |
| goals | 103 |
| attendance | 29900 |
| top_scorer | GEO Shota Arveladze |
| (5 goals) | |
| nextseason | 1994 |
(5 goals)
The 1993 Commonwealth of Independent States Cup was the first edition of the competition between the champions of former republics of Soviet Union. It was won by Spartak Moscow who defeated Belarusian side Belarus Minsk in the final.
Participants
| Team | Qualification | Participation |
|---|---|---|
| RUS Spartak Moscow | 1992 Russian Top League champions | 1st |
| BLR Belarus Minsk | 1992–93 Belarusian Premier League 2nd team as of the winter break1 | 1st |
| LIT Ekranas Panevėžys | 1992–93 LFF Lyga 1st team as of the winter break | 1st |
| LVA Skonto Riga | 1992 Latvian Higher League champions | 1st |
| EST Norma Tallinn | 1992 Meistriliiga champions | 1st |
| MDA Zimbru Chișinău | 1992 Moldovan National Division champions | 1st |
| GEO Dinamo Tbilisi | 1991–92 Umaglesi Liga champions | 1st |
| AZE Neftchi Baku | 1992 Azerbaijan Top League champions | 1st |
| ARM Homenetmen Yerevan | 1992 Armenian Premier League champions2 | 1st |
| KAZ Kairat Almaty | 1992 Kazakhstan Premier League champions | 1st |
| UZB Pakhtakor Tashkent | 1992 Uzbek League champions3 | 1st |
| TJK Regar Tursunzoda | 1992 Tajik League runners-up4 | 1st |
| KGZ Alga Bishkek | 1992 Kyrgyzstan League champions | 1st |
| TKM Köpetdag Aşgabat | 1992 Ýokary Liga champions | 1st |
| RUS Russia U19 national team | Unofficial entry, not eligible to advance past group stage.5 | 1st |
1 Belarus Minsk (formerly a reserve team for Dinamo Minsk) replaced 1992 champions Dinamo Minsk, whose almost entire squad at the same time traveled to play friendly matches in South America as a part of Belarus national football team.
2 Homenetmen Yerevan were one of two teams equally declared 1992 Armenian champions along with Shirak.
3 Pakhtakor Tashkent were one of two teams equally declared 1992 Uzbekistan champions along with Neftchi Fergana.
4 Regar Tursunzoda replaced champions Pamir Dushanbe, who refused to participate.
5 Due to political situation in Crimea and Black Sea area,[https://www.un.org/en/sc/repertoire/93-95/Chapter%208/EUROPE/93-95_8-22-UKRAINE.pdf Complaint by Ukraine regarding the Decree of the Supreme Soviet of the Russian Federation concerning Sevastopol]. www.un.org UKR Tavriya Simferopol (1992 Ukrainian champions) were originally drawn into Group C. They were not allowed to compete by Football Federation of Ukraine and were replaced by unofficial participants Russia U19 national team.
Group stage
Group A
Results
Tsymbalar Radchenko Pisarev Cherenkov Tikhonov
Karpin Lediakhov Azimov Pyatnitsky Pisarev
Group B
Results
Kinkladze Kavelashvili Rekhviashvili Khodiyev
Mingazow Kirillov Nurmyradow Korzh
Kechinov
Inalishvili
Sh.Arveladze A.Meredow
Qosimov
Group C
-
Unofficial table
-
Official table
Results
Vainoras
Aubakirov Naidovsky Izrailov
Poderis
(awarded)
The match was awarded as 3–0 win for Russia as Kairat refused to play against unofficial participant.
Chudin Zazulin Zernov
Group D
Results
Kachura
Pushtov Bragin
A.Avetisyan
Shirokiy Shtanyuk Putilo Lukin Tolibov
Bragin
Tšmil
Oganesyan
A.Avetsyan
Final rounds
|RD1-seed1=RUS |RD1-team1=Spartak Moscow |RD1-score1=2 |RD1-seed2=GEO |RD1-team2=Dinamo Tbilisi |RD1-score2=1 |RD1-seed3=LTU |RD1-team3=Ekranas Panevėžys |RD1-score3=0 |RD1-seed4=BLR |RD1-team4=Belarus Minsk (p) |RD1-score4=0 |RD2-seed1=RUS |RD2-team1=Spartak Moscow |RD2-score1=8 |RD2-seed2=BLR |RD2-team2=Belarus Minsk |RD2-score2=0
Semi-finals
Onopko
Bubliauskas Mika Poderis Shiroky Shtanyuk Pavlyuchuk
Final
Pyatnitsky Onopko Beschastnykh Radchenko
Top scorers
| Rank | Player | Team | Goals |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | GEO Shota Arveladze | GEO Dinamo Tbilisi | 5 |
| 2 | RUS Valeri Karpin | RUS Spartak Moscow | 4 |
| LTU Eimantas Poderis | LTU Ekranas Panevėžys | 4 | |
| EST Aleksandr Pushtov | EST Norma Tallinn | 4 | |
| UZB Valery Kechinov | UZB Pakhtakor Tashkent | 4 |
References
References
- [https://www.nytimes.com/1993/07/10/world/russian-parliament-votes-a-claim-to-ukrainian-port-of-sevastopol.html Russian Parliament Votes a Claim to Ukrainian Port of Sevastopol]. www.nytimes.com. July 10, 1993
- [https://www.washingtonpost.com/archive/politics/1993/07/10/russian-deputies-claim-ukraines-naval-base/78095e40-b4e2-4652-9a35-06b1d96f7901/ RUSSIAN DEPUTIES CLAIM UKRAINE'S NAVAL BASE]. www.washingtonpost.com. July 10, 1993
- [https://www.refworld.org/docid/469f38ec2.html Chronology for Crimean Russians in Ukraine]. www.refworld.org
- «[[Sport Express]] Football» № 3 (43), 25 January 2000, page 9
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