FC Dobrudzha Dobrich
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| Full name | Football club Dobrudzha Dobrich | ||
|---|---|---|---|
| Founded | 1919 | ||
| Ground | Stadion Druzhba, Dobrich | ||
| Capacity | 12,000 | ||
| Chairman | Spiridon Spiridonov / Sergey Serafimov | ||
| Head coach | Atanas Atanasov | ||
| League | First League | ||
| 2024–25 | Second League, 1st (promoted) | ||
| Website | dobrudzha | ||
|  | |||
FC Dobrudzha (Bulgarian: ФК Добруджа) is a Bulgarian professional football club based in Dobrich, that competes in the First League, the first tier of Bulgarian football.
It plays its home matches at Stadion Druzhba with a capacity of 12,500 seats, and its team colours are green and yellow. The team is named after the Dobruja region, a prominent agricultural area in Northeast Bulgaria.
Honours
- Bulgarian Cup
- Second League - Winners (2): 1965–66, 2024–25
 
History

Dobrudzha was founded as a union of three clubs, Vihar, Orlov and Slavia, in 1916. The club assumed the names Cherveno zname, Spartak and Septemvri between 1949 and 1957, when it was renamed Dobrudzha after a few other local sport associations joined.
In 1962, Dobrudzha managed to gain promotion to the A Group for the first time in the club's history. The maiden season in the top level proved to be a challenge, however, and Dobrudzha was relegated, finishing 15th. Back into the B Group, Dobrudzha barely missed on promotion back to the A Group in 1964, finishing second. In 1966, however, Dobrudzha won the B Group and promoted back to A Group, after three years away. Two consecutive 12th-place finishes during the 1966–67 and 1967-68 seasons in the elite followed, where Dobrudzha narrowly avoided relegation twice. The fairytale ended in 1968–69, however, as Dobrudzha finished 15th and was relegated, ending a three-year stay in the A Group.
After the relegation in 1969, Dobrudzha spend the next two decades in the B Group, with a second-place finish in 1975 being the closest the team could get in terms of returning to the A Group. After 22 years in the B Group, Dobrudzha finished second during the 1990–91 season, and the long-awaited return to the top tier finally ended. Season 1991–92 marked what would be the golden era for Dobrudzha. After narrowly avoiding relegation and finishing 14th that season, Dobrudzha managed to stabilize in the top level and gradually improved its ranking the following years, with a 13th-place finish in 1993, followed by two 12th-place finishes the following years. Season 1995–96 is considered the most successful for the club in its entire history, as that is when a 7th-place finish was achieved. The next three seasons produced mid-table results, and in 2000, Dobrudzha was relegated back to the B Group, ending the club's nine consecutive years in the elite.
Dobrudzha managed to finish fifth the following season in the B Group, which was followed by a second-place finish in the 2001–02 season, marking a return to the A Group after two years. However, the team was relegated back after only one season. Season 2002–03 remains the last appearance for Dobrudzha in the top tier, as of 2023.
In 2018, Dobrudzha returned to the second tier by winning the 2017–18 Northeast Third League. The team, however, struggled in the second tier, finishing last. In the 2019–20 season, Dobrudzha once more finished first in the third tier, being promoted again to the second tier after the season was finished early in March, due to the COVID-19 epidemic in Bulgaria.
Dobrudzha had an impressive 2024–25 season in the Second League, almost consistently staying in the top two places throughout the season. On May 11, 2025, Dobrudzha mathematically secured a top two spot, meaning promotion to the First League. This ended the team’s twenty-two year absence from top-tier football.
Players
First-team squad
As of 2 August 2025
Note: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules; some limited exceptions apply. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.
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For recent transfers, see List of Bulgarian football transfers summer 2025.
Foreign players
Up to twenty foreign nationals can be registered and given a squad number for the first team in the Bulgarian First League, however only five non-EU nationals can be used during a match day. Those non-EU nationals with European ancestry can claim citizenship from the nation their ancestors came from. If a player does not have European ancestry he can claim Bulgarian citizenship after playing in Bulgaria for 5 years.
| EU Nationals | EU Nationals (Dual citizenship) | Non-EU Nationals 
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Notable players
- For all players with a Wikipedia article see Category:FC Dobrudzha Dobrich players.
Had international caps for their respective countries, held any club record, or had more than 100 league appearances. Players whose name is listed in bold represented their countries.
- Bulgaria
 Sasho Angelov Sasho Angelov
 Diyan Bozhilov Diyan Bozhilov
 Simeon Chilibonov Simeon Chilibonov
 Ivaylo Dimitrov Ivaylo Dimitrov
 Iliya Dyakov Iliya Dyakov
 Ivo Georgiev Ivo Georgiev
 Daniel Gramatikov Daniel Gramatikov
 Rumen Hristov Rumen Hristov
 Atanas Iliev Atanas Iliev
 Georgi Kichukov Georgi Kichukov
 Nikolay Kostov Nikolay Kostov
 Ivaylo Lazarov Ivaylo Lazarov
 Kristiyan Malinov Kristiyan Malinov
 Georgi Pashov Georgi Pashov
 Milen Petkov Milen Petkov
 Milen Gamakov Milen Gamakov
 Svetoslav Petrov Svetoslav Petrov
 Dimitar Pirgov Dimitar Pirgov
 Simeon Simeonov Simeon Simeonov
 Svilen Simeonov Svilen Simeonov
 Stoycho Stoilov Stoycho Stoilov
 Stanislav Stoyanov Stanislav Stoyanov
 Nikolay Todorov Nikolay Todorov
 Svetoslav Todorov Svetoslav Todorov
 Iliya Valov Iliya Valov
 Mihail Venkov Mihail Venkov
 Preslav Yordanov Preslav Yordanov
 Ventsislav Zhelev Ventsislav Zhelev
- Europe
- Africa
Statistics
League positions

Seasons
15 seasons in First League:
| Season | Place | 
|---|---|
| 1962–63 | 15th | 
| 1966–67 | 12th | 
| 1967–68 | 12th | 
| 1968–69 | 15th | 
| 1991–92 | 14th | 
| 1992–93 | 13th | 
| 1993–94 | 12th | 
| 1994–95 | 12th | 
| 1995–96 | 7th | 
| 1996–97 | 12th | 
| 1997–98 | 11th | 
| 1998–99 | 9th | 
| 1999–00 | 12th | 
| 2002–03 | 13th | 
| 2025–26 | – | 
Best wins:
| Home team | Away team | Result | Competition | Season | 
|---|---|---|---|---|
| PFC Dobrudja (Dobrich) | FC Haskovo (Haskovo) | 10–0 | Bulgarian Cup | 2000–01 | 
| PFC Rakovski (Ruse) | PFC Dobrudja (Dobrich) | 1–7 | A PFG | 1996–97 | 
| PFC Dobrudja (Dobrich) | PFC Beroe (Stara Zagora) | 5–1 | A PFG | 1994–95 | 
| PFC Dobrudja (Dobrich) | PFC Septemvri (Sofia) | 5–1 | A PFG | 1998–99 | 
Notable persons
Players Players with most matches played for the team in A PFG:
| Nationality | Player | Number of matches | 
|---|---|---|
|   | Rumen Boev | 212 | 
|   | Diyan Bozhilov | 200 | 
|   | Rumen Slavov | over 180 | 
|   | Svetoslav Krastev | over 160 | 
|   | Atanas Georgiev | over 140 | 
Players with most goals, scored in A PFG:
| Nationality | Player | Goals | 
|---|---|---|
|   | Diyan Bozhilov | 25 | 
|   | Georgi Manolov | 23 | 
|   | Rumen Boev | 18 | 
|   | Serge Yoffou | 15 | 
|   | Risto Milosavov | 14 | 
Former managers
 Iliya Iliev Iliya Iliev
 Petar Kirov Petar Kirov
 Eduard Eranosyan Eduard Eranosyan
 Asen Milushev Asen Milushev
 Petar Zhekov Petar Zhekov
 Hristo Milanov Hristo Milanov
 Kolyo Markov Kolyo Markov
 Yanko Dinkov Yanko Dinkov
 Dimitar Aleksiev Dimitar Aleksiev
 Vasil Velikov Vasil Velikov
 Ivan Manolov Ivan Manolov
 Boris Nikolov Boris Nikolov
 Stoyan Kotsev Stoyan Kotsev
 Ljubomir Veljković Ljubomir Veljković
 Dimcho Nenov Dimcho Nenov
 Emil Velev Emil Velev
 Svetoslav Petrov Svetoslav Petrov
 Atanas Atanasov-Orela Atanas Atanasov-Orela
 Sasho Angelov Sasho Angelov
 Stefan Slavov Stefan Slavov
 Diyan Bozhilov Diyan Bozhilov
 Radomir Todorov Radomir Todorov
 Todor Kiselichkov Todor Kiselichkov
 Atanas Atanasov-Orela Atanas Atanasov-Orela
External links
- Official website (archived 7 October 2014)
- DOBRUDJA1919.COM – Fansite (archived 20 March 2007)
- Dobrudja1919.com/Gallery – Photo Gallery (archived 2 February 2015)
- Facebook Fanpage
- DDFC1919 YouTube Channel



















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