FK Atlantas
|  | |||
| Full name | Football Club Atlantas | ||
|---|---|---|---|
| Founded | 1962 | ||
| Dissolved | 2020 | ||
| Ground | Central Stadium of Klaipėda | ||
| Capacity | 4,428 | ||
| Chairman | Vidas Adomaitis | ||
| 2020 | 4th 2 Lyga (Western Zone) | ||
|  | |||
FK Atlantas was a Lithuanian professional football club based in the port city of Klaipėda.
The club's name has changed several times. It was established in 1962 as Granitas, and became PSK Aras in 1993. Since 1996, when FK Sirijus Klaipėda was absorbed into the club, it has had the name Atlantas, which in Lithuanian language means Atlantic Ocean.
Atlantas were the SSR Lithuanian champions in 1978, 1980, 1981, and 1984.
History
Modern Atlantas was founded in 1996. In Soviet occupation period in Klaipėda The team was known as Granitas and Atlantas from 1970 was a farm club of Granitas. The name Atlantas was used in Lithuanian championship and Granitas in Soviet Union Championship. In Lithuanian independence period from 1990 Granitas and Atlantas tradition was lost, but in 1996 the team was refounded team and named Atlantas. This team soon became the strongest football team in Klaipėda. They Played in the top division for a long time.
In summer 2018, the club had financial problems, because account's in banks were suspended. After that, some players ran away from the club.[1] Club owners thought about all chances to save club from dissvolvement.[2] In the first half of the 2018 A Lyga, the club was in 4th position and after the summer they didn't win any games in the championship and lost their position. But after 28 rounds, they were in 6th position and could play in final stage of the championship. 29th round was a loss to FC Stumbras 0–6.[3]
In January 2019, about the club situation known, that they lost sponsorship from business and Klaipėda city municipality and that means, that the club soon would defunct.[4]
In February 2019, the club changed owners. The new chief was Vidas Adomaitis.[5][6]
On 5 December 2019, the Lithuanian Football Federation announce that two A Lyga clubs, FK Atlantas and FK Palanga have been excluded from the A Lyga due to manipulation of the match results, fined 30,000 euros and relegated to II Lyga. Five players were punished with fines and a ban from all football activity ranging from 6 to 12 months.[7]
Atlantas was in 2020 Antra lyga (3rd level) and after first round was one of the top–6 teams. In final stage team had chances for the promotion to Pirma lyga.[8]
Name history
- 1962 – Granitas Klaipėda
- 1970 – Atlantas Klaipėda
- 1996 – FK Atlantas Klaipėda
Honours
Domestic
- Lithuanian Championship - Runners-up (3): 2001, 2002, 2013
- Third place (5): 1999, 2000, 2004, 2014, 2015
 
- Lithuanian Cup - Winners (2): 2001, 2003
- Runners-up (2): 2004, 2014–15
 
Soviet Championship
- Lithuanian SSR Championship - Champions (4): 1978, 1980, 1981, 1984
 
- Soviet Second League - Winners (2): 1964, 1985
 
- Lithuanian SSR Cup - Winners (4): 1977, 1981, 1983, 1986
 
Other tournaments
- Turkmenistan President's Cup - Third place (1): 2003
 
Supporters
FK Atlantas supporters were called Vakarų Frontas. They maintained friendly relations with fans of Žalgiris Vilnius and Rangers FC.
Crest and colours
The crest features a yellow seahorse with a football on the background. In the middle of the crest there is a white text saying Atlantas at the top and Klaipėda in smaller text under it. The logo contained some white.
Since the beginning, the club has used the colors yellow and blue on their kits.
|           Traditional kit  Home |           Traditional kit  Away |         Traditional kit  Away |           2007/2008; 2015 (Away) |         Puma  2017 (Home) |         Puma  2017 (Away) |         Goalkeeper`s kit 2018 | 
Kit manufacturers
Season-by-season
- Season - Div. - Pos. - Pl. - W - D - L - Goals - Top Scorer - Cup - Europe - 1999 - 1st - 3 - 18 - 9 - 6 - 3 - 34–24 - 2000 - 1st - 3 - 36 - 21 - 4 - 11 - 70–45 - 2001 - 1st - 2 - 36 - 19 - 12 - 5 - 66–29 - 2002 - 1st - 2 - 32 - 20 - 7 - 5 - 58–23 - 2003 - 1st - 5 - 28 - 9 - 6 - 13 - 27–30 - 2004 - 1st - 3 - 28 - 15 - 5 - 8 - 36–29 - 2005 - 1st - 7 - 36 - 11 - 8 - 17 - 40–52 - 2006 - 1st - 6 - 36 - 14 - 10 - 12 - 46–41 - 2007 - 1st - 6 - 36 - 13 - 6 - 17 - 54–45 - 2008 - 1st - 6 - 28 - 7 - 7 - 14 - 31–44 - 2009 - 3rd - 1 - 20 - 18 - 2 - 0 - 101–11 - Gintas Podelis - 2010 - 2nd - 7 - 27 - 9 - 6 - 12 - 35–33 - Žilvinas Kymantas - 2011 - 1st - 11 - 33 - 3 - 2 - 28 - 28–121 - Karolis Laukžemis - 2012 - 1st - 8 - 36 - 7 - 6 - 23 - 33–92 - Tino Lagator - 2013 - 1st - 2 - 32 - 22 - 5 - 5 - 64–23 - Evaldas Razulis - 2014 - 1st - 3 - 36 - 19 - 8 - 9 - 76–36 - Evaldas Razulis - 2015 - 1st - 3 - 36 - 21 - 7 - 8 - 65–34 - Andrey Panyukov - 2016 - 1st - 4 - 33 - 16 - 8 - 9 - 42–32 - Maksim Maksimov - 2017 - 1st - 5 - 33 - 8 - 12 - 13 - 39–43 - Andrey Panyukov - 2018 - 1st - 6 - 33 - 6 - 6 - 21 - 28–75 - 2019 - 1st - 6 - 33 - 7 - 5 - 21 - 30–78 
2020 squad
- As of 20 April 2020[10]
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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Notable and famous players
FK Atlantas players who have either appeared for their respective national team at any time or received an individual award while at the club.
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European cups history
| Season | Competition | Round | Club | 1st Leg | 2nd Leg | Aggregate | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 2000 | UEFA Intertoto Cup | 1R |  Kocaelispor | 1–0 | 0–1 | 1–1 (5–3 p) |   | 
| 2R |  Bradford City | 1–4 | 1–3 | 2–7 |   | ||
| 2001–02 | UEFA Cup | QR |  Rapid București | 0–4 | 0–8 | 0–12 |   | 
| 2002–03 | UEFA Cup | QR |  Litex Lovech | 0–5 | 1–3 | 1–8 |   | 
| 2003–04 | UEFA Cup | QR |  Dyskobolia Grodzisk | 0–2 | 1–4 | 1–6 |   | 
| 2004 | UEFA Intertoto Cup | 1R |  Spartak Moscow | 1–0 | 0–2 | 1–2 |   | 
| 2005–06 | UEFA Cup | 1Q |  Rhyl | 3–2 | 1–2 | 4–4 (a) |   | 
| 2014–15 | UEFA Europa League | 1Q |  FC Differdange 03 | 0–1 | 3–1 | 3–2 |   | 
| 2Q |  Shakhter Karagandy | 0–0 | 0–3 | 0–3 |   | ||
| 2015–16 | UEFA Europa League | 1Q |  Beroe Stara Zagora | 0–2 | 1–3 | 1–5 |   | 
| 2016–17 | UEFA Europa League | 1Q |  HJK | 0–2 | 1–1 | 1–3 |   | 
| 2017–18 | UEFA Europa League | 1Q |  Kairat | 0–6 | 1–2 | 1–8 |   | 
2020 staff
| Position | Name | 
|---|---|
| President |  Vidas Adomaitis | 
| Director of football |  Arnas Lekevičius | 
| Head coach |  Viktors Dobrecovs | 
Managers
.svg.png) Algirdas Klimkevičius (19??–66) Algirdas Klimkevičius (19??–66)
.svg.png) Algirdas Vosylius (1967–??) Algirdas Vosylius (1967–??)
.svg.png) Romualdas Dambrauskas (19??–70) Romualdas Dambrauskas (19??–70)
.svg.png) Henrikas Markevičius (1976–78) Henrikas Markevičius (1976–78)
.svg.png) Fiodoras Finkelis (1978) Fiodoras Finkelis (1978)
.svg.png) Vladas Ulinauskas (1980) Vladas Ulinauskas (1980)
.svg.png) Romas Lavrinavičius (1981) Romas Lavrinavičius (1981)
.svg.png) Algirdas Mitigaila (1982–83) Algirdas Mitigaila (1982–83)
.svg.png) Česlovas Urbonavičius (1984–86) Česlovas Urbonavičius (1984–86)
.svg.png) Vytautas Gedgaudas (1986–89) Vytautas Gedgaudas (1986–89)
.svg.png) Česlovas Urbonavičius (1984) Česlovas Urbonavičius (1984)
 Vytautas Gedgaudas (1992 – March 95) Vytautas Gedgaudas (1992 – March 95)
 Algirdas Mitigaila (March 1995–00) Algirdas Mitigaila (March 1995–00)
 Arūnas Šuika (2000) Arūnas Šuika (2000)
 Vacys Lekevičius (2001–04) Vacys Lekevičius (2001–04)
 Šenderis Giršovičius (2002) Šenderis Giršovičius (2002)
 Igoris Pankratjevas (2003–05) Igoris Pankratjevas (2003–05)
 Vacys Lekevičius (2005) Vacys Lekevičius (2005)
 Igoris Pankratjevas (2006) Igoris Pankratjevas (2006)
 Arminas Narbekovas (2006–07) Arminas Narbekovas (2006–07)
 Mindaugas Čepas (2008–09) Mindaugas Čepas (2008–09)
 Šenderis Giršovičius (2009–10) Šenderis Giršovičius (2009–10)
 Saulius Mikalajūnas (23 Dec 2009 – 20 May 2010) Saulius Mikalajūnas (23 Dec 2009 – 20 May 2010)
 Igoris Pankratjevas (2010) Igoris Pankratjevas (2010)
 Vitalijus Stankevičius (2011) Vitalijus Stankevičius (2011)
 Romualdas Norkus (1 March 2012 – 30 June 2012) Romualdas Norkus (1 March 2012 – 30 June 2012)
 Sébastien Roques (July 2012 – Nov 2012) Sébastien Roques (July 2012 – Nov 2012)
 Konstantin Sarsania (1 Jan 2013 – 27 May 2017) Konstantin Sarsania (1 Jan 2013 – 27 May 2017)
 Sergej Savchenkov (28 May 2017 – 13 June 2017) Sergej Savchenkov (28 May 2017 – 13 June 2017)
 Rimantas Žvingilas (13 Jun 2017 – 23 July 2017) Rimantas Žvingilas (13 Jun 2017 – 23 July 2017)
 Igoris Pankratjevas (23 Jul 2017–end of 2017) Igoris Pankratjevas (23 Jul 2017–end of 2017)
 Algimantas Briaunys (January 2018– 30 August 2018) Algimantas Briaunys (January 2018– 30 August 2018)
 Anatoli Shelest (September 2018 – November 2018) Anatoli Shelest (September 2018 – November 2018)
 Viktors Dobrecovs (February 2019 – November 2019) Viktors Dobrecovs (February 2019 – November 2019)
 Donatas Navikas (in November 2019; temporary) Donatas Navikas (in November 2019; temporary)
References
- ^ "A lyga siekia padėti "Atlantui" | A Lyga | Aukščiausia Lietuvos futbolo lyga".
- ^ "V. Lekevičius: "Buvo minčių uždaryti klubą, bet kas tuomet?" | A Lyga | Aukščiausia Lietuvos futbolo lyga".
- ^ "Stumbras - Atlantas | A Lyga | Aukščiausia Lietuvos futbolo lyga".
- ^ ""Atlantas" pasiekė aklavietę: Nuo klubo nusisuka ir rėmėjai, ir savivaldybė". 22 January 2019.
- ^ ""Atlanto" gelbėtojas purtosi ir Pukelio, ir Buzo, o Lekevičiui paliktų nebent garbės regalijas".
- ^ "Klaipėdos "Atlantas" turės jaunąją pamainą". 7 February 2019.
- ^ "FK "Atlantas" ir FK "Palanga" dėl manipuliavimo rezultatais yra šalinami iš A lygos". LFF. 5 December 2019. Retrieved 19 February 2020.
- ^ "II lyga Vakarų zona 2020 1-6 vietos - Lietuvos Futbolas".
- ^ ""Atlantas" stiprina vartininkų pozicijas" (in Lithuanian). FK Atlantas. 22 February 2017. Retrieved 22 February 2017.
- ^ "Komanda" (in Lithuanian). FK Atlantas. Retrieved 4 March 2017.








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