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1975 Soviet Top League

(redirected from Soviet Top League 1975)

The 1975 season of the Soviet Top League proved that Dynamo Kyiv was at the moment unbeatable for other Soviet clubs. Besides that, the Ukrainian club was one of the strongest on the international arena, winning the UEFA Cup Winners Cup the same year. Another Ukrainian club, Shakhtar from Donetsk, took the second place.

Final league table

Pos Team Pld W D L GF GA GD Pts Qualification or relegation
1 Ukrainian Soviet Socialist Republic Dynamo Kyiv (C) 30 17 9 4 53 30 +23 43 Qualification for European Cup first round
2 Ukrainian Soviet Socialist Republic Shakhtar Donetsk 30 15 8 7 45 23 +22 38 Qualification for UEFA Cup first round
3 Russian Soviet Federative Socialist Republic Dynamo Moscow 30 13 12 5 39 23 +16 38
4 Russian Soviet Federative Socialist Republic Torpedo Moscow 30 13 8 9 42 33 +9 34
5 Armenian Soviet Socialist Republic Ararat Yerevan 30 15 4 11 40 38 +2 34
6 Ukrainian Soviet Socialist Republic Karpaty Lviv 30 11 10 9 36 28 +8 32
7 Ukrainian Soviet Socialist Republic Dnipro Dnipropetrovsk 30 10 11 9 33 30 +3 31
8 Georgian Soviet Socialist Republic Dinamo Tbilisi 30 11 9 10 32 32 0 31 Qualification for Cup Winners' Cup first round
9 Ukrainian Soviet Socialist Republic Zarya Voroshilovgrad 30 10 11 9 32 37 −5 31
10 Russian Soviet Federative Socialist Republic Spartak Moscow 30 9 10 11 27 30 −3 28
11 Russian Soviet Federative Socialist Republic Lokomotiv Moscow 30 7 12 11 28 33 −5 26
12 Ukrainian Soviet Socialist Republic Chornomorets Odessa 30 8 10 12 27 35 −8 26
13 Russian Soviet Federative Socialist Republic CSKA Moscow 30 6 13 11 29 36 −7 25
14 Russian Soviet Federative Socialist Republic Zenit Leningrad 30 7 10 13 27 42 −15 24
15 Uzbek Soviet Socialist Republic Pakhtakor Tashkent (R) 30 8 7 15 31 44 −13 23 Relegation to First League
16 Russian Soviet Federative Socialist Republic SKA Rostov-on-Don (R) 30 4 8 18 23 50 −27 16
Source: rsssf.com
(C) Champion; (R) Relegated.

Top scorers

18 goals
13 goals
  • Boris Kopeikin (CSKA Moscow)
12 goals
  • Vladimir Danilyuk (Karpaty)
  • David Kipiani (Dinamo Tbilisi)
  • Viktor Kolotov (Dynamo Kyiv)
11 goals
  • Mykhaylo Sokolovsky (Shakhtar)
10 goals
  • Arkady Andreasyan (Ararat)
  • Roman Khizhak (Karpaty)
  • Eduard Markarov (Ararat)
9 goals
  • Vitali Starukhin (Shakhtar)

References

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