
Dynamo Kyiv
DYN
UkraineDynamo Kyiv Stadium
Stadion Dynamo im. Valery Lobanovsky (Kyjiv (Kiev))
FC Dynamo Kyiv, Ukraine's most decorated and internationally celebrated football club, plays its home matches at NSC Olimpiyskiy (the Olympic National Sports Complex) in Kyiv, Ukraine's capital. The massive stadium was built for the 1980 Moscow Olympics (specifically for the football tournament events held in Kyiv) and has a capacity of 70,050 spectators, making it by far the largest stadium in Ukraine. The ground has hosted some of the most significant sporting and cultural events in Ukrainian history, including multiple Ukraine national team matches, European competition fixtures for Dynamo, and major concerts. The club's original home, the Valeriy Lobanovskyi Dynamo Stadium, is a smaller ground in the city centre with a capacity of around 16,873, also used for some domestic matches.
FC Dynamo Kyiv's history is one of the most distinguished in European football. The club won the Soviet Top League thirteen times and has been Ukrainian champion over 16 times. Their greatest European achievements came under the legendary coach Valeriy Lobanovskyi: Dynamo won the UEFA Cup Winners' Cup in 1975 and 1986, and reached the UEFA Champions League semi-finals in 1999, defeating Real Madrid along the way. Players such as Oleg Blokhin, Andriy Shevchenko, Serhiy Rebrov, and Oleksandr Shovkovskyi are celebrated as legends of both the club and Ukrainian football. Dynamo's European nights at both the Olympic Stadium and the Dynamo Stadium are cherished memories of Ukrainian football supporters.
Following Russia's full-scale invasion of Ukraine in February 2022, football in Ukraine was suspended and then resumed under extraordinary wartime conditions, with matches played without spectators or with limited attendance, and with air-raid shelter protocols in place. Dynamo Kyiv have continued to participate in both the Ukrainian Premier League and European competition — including Champions League qualifying — as a symbol of Ukrainian resilience and national pride. The NSC Olimpiyskiy has hosted some of these wartime fixtures, and Dynamo's continued presence in European football has been widely recognised as an important act of cultural and national resistance during one of the most difficult periods in Ukraine's history.