Klasychne derby

Klasychne derby (Ukrainian: Класичне, as Classico), or the Ukrainian football rivalry is the football match between the two top Ukrainian clubs Dynamo Kyiv and Shakhtar Donetsk. The game between those two clubs is a focal point of each football season in Ukraine. Due to war, at least three of their scheduled fixtures were scratched in 1941 and 2014. Since 2014, Shakhtar sometimes plays in Kyiv due to the Russian aggression which technically turned the rivalry into a city derby.

Dynamo and Shakhtar were the top Ukrainian clubs since introduction of the Soviet professional football competitions in 1936. They played against each other as early as 1931 when Donetsk was represented by the Shakhtar's direct predecessor Dynamo Stalino. Participating in competition dominated with the Russian teams, matchups between both teams was not too important within the Soviet Union. Following independence, the rivalry between them two grew into a national-level rivalry sometime after 1996 since the teams were two main contenders for the national title.

In 1970 and 1980s, rivalries between Dynamo Kyiv against FC Zorya Luhansk and FC Dnipro were somewhat notable eclipsing for short while the Donetsk-Kyiv stand-off. Dnipro, that returned to the Soviet Top League in 1981, won two Soviet titles in the 1980s and almost became a Ukrainian champion in the 1992–93 season.

During the times of the Soviet Union, the Ukrainian rivalry was overshadowed by the rivalry between Dynamo Kyiv and Spartak Moscow (see Spartak Moscow–Dynamo Kyiv rivalry) that has developed sometime in the 1960s.

Soviet Union
The two clubs first met back in 1938 in Kyiv in the Soviet Top League with Dynamo winning it 2–0. At the time, Dynamo Kyiv was the main representative of Ukraine in the Soviet League, while Shakhtar initially had some difficulties to secure their place there. The Donetsk team, however, was considered to be the main representative of the Ukrainian SSR other than Dynamo, representing the most industrialized and heavily urbanized Donbas region in the eastern part of Ukraine. In a few occasions Shakhtar even managed to place higher than the Dynamo's "Capitals" in League, but for the most of the time Dynamo had more success head-to-head. Their meetings were not as popular in the Soviet League outside of Ukraine as the Moscow – Kyiv face off particularly between Dynamo and Spartak.

The 1990s: Dynamo's dominance
The trend of Dynamo's total dominance continued well after the establishment of the Ukrainian Vyshcha Liha (which eventually became the Ukrainian Premier League). For several seasons Shakhtar was not even among the main contenders for the league title, which was often contested by either FC Dnipro or Chornomorets Odesa. Dynamo won every single league title in the 1990s except one, when SC Tavriya Simferopol managed to pull off an upset, winning the inaugural Ukrainian league season, with Dynamo taking the silver medals, and Shakhtar finishing fourth.

In 1996, Rinat Akhmetov became Shakhtar's president and started investing heavily into the club. Shakhtar became relevant again, placing 2nd in 1996–97, and not finishing below 2nd place in the league ever since. In an interview to Vatsko Live (Вацко Live), former Shakhtar player Andriy Vorobey said that at least since 1997 it was cultivated at Shakhtar that Dynamo is not just an opponent, but rather the enemy.

The 2000s: rise of Shakhtar
It was not until the early 2000s when this fixture obtained the status of a true "derby". In the first years of the decade, Dynamo were still riding the wave of their late 1990s success, when they reached the UEFA Champions League quarterfinals and semi-finals in consecutive seasons. After the death of their legendary manager Valeriy Lobanovskyi in 2002, Dynamo's success in the European and Ukrainian competitions began to decline. This coincided with the continued rise of Shakhtar, who won their first Ukrainian league title in 2001–02, which took the rivalry between the two clubs to a whole new level. In the 2008–09 season, the Ukrainian derby was contested in European competition for the first time. Shakhtar defeated Dynamo in a 2008–09 UEFA Cup semi-final and then became the first side in the sovereign Ukraine era to win a European competition.

The 2010s
During the 2015–16 Ukrainian Premier League, on 16 October, Shakhtar Donetsk beat FC Dynamo Kyiv 0–3 in Kyiv and set two new records. One record was that for the first time during a Ukrainian derby game in Kyiv a team scored three goals. The other record was that for the first time Shakhtar had more Ukrainian derby victories, 26, than Dynamo. On 1 May 2016, in the second Premier League match between them at Arena Lviv, Shakhtar won 3–0 again, making it the first time when Dynamo loses two derby matches one after another with a margin of at least 3 goals. Despite all that, Dynamo became the champions that season.

Venues
As of recently, both Dynamo and Shakhtar play at the Olympiyskiy National Sports Complex in Kyiv. Olympiskyi NSC has been one of Dynamo's two home stadiums since 1951 (the other one being the much smaller Valeriy Lobanovskyi Dynamo Stadium). Shakhtar, on the other hand, for the longest time (1938–2001) played at their older Central Stadium "Shakhtar" in Donetsk. In 2008 Shakhtar built new modern stadium Donbas Arena of UEFA elite class, but was forced to leave Donetsk in 2014 due to War in Donbas. Since then, Shakhtar has been based in Kyiv, but until early 2020 played their home matches primarily at Metalist Oblast Sports Complex in Kharkiv.

Match tallies
The table shows number of wins for both clubs per competition as well as totals.


 * Notes:
 * 1) The Soviet Super Cup was not an official competition. It was organized by an editorial department of the Soviet newspaper Komsomolskaya Pravda.
 * 2) While in the Soviet Union the Football Cup of the Ukrainian SSR competitions had official status, since gaining Ukrainian independence the status of the Football Cup of the Ukrainian SSR is not determined by the independent Ukrainian Association of Football (Football Federation of Ukraine).

Titles
Number of titles for both clubs
 * Notes:
 * 1) The Soviet Super Cup was not an official competition. It was organized by an editorial department of the Soviet newspaper Komsomolskaya Pravda.
 * 2) While in the Soviet Union the Football Cup of the Ukrainian SSR competitions had official status, since gaining Ukrainian independence the status of the Football Cup of the Ukrainian SSR is not determined by the independent Ukrainian Association of Football (Football Federation of Ukraine).

Year-by-year league's standings
The table lists the place each team took in each of the seasons.

Soviet League
Notes:
 * In Soviet league competitions both teams met 82 times, all in the Soviet Top League.
 * 41 wins of Dinamo, 15 wins of Shakhter, 26 draws
 * 128 goals of Dinamo, 79 goals of Shakhter

Ukrainian League
Notes:
 * In Ukrainian league competitions both teams met 72 times, all in the Ukrainian Premier League.
 * 28 wins of Shakhtar, 25 wins of Dynamo, 19 draws

Soviet Season's Cup
The match did not have an official status

Ukrainian Super Cup
Note:

Football cup of the Ukrainian SSR
Since 1949 the competition was included within the Soviet Cup as its preliminary stage.

Top goalscorers

 * Players in bold are still active
 * In parentheses are goals scored from penalty kicks
 * Included players who scored at least six goals in games between Dynamo–Shakhtar


 * Own goals – Mykola Krasyuk (Shakhtar), Abram Lerman (Dynamo), Oleksandr Pollak (Shakhtar), Oleksiy Drozdenko (Shakhtar), Anatoliy Konkov (Dynamo), Dmytro Chyhrynskyi (Shakhtar), Serhiy Fedorov (Dynamo), Goran Gavrančić (Dynamo), Adrian Pukanych (Shakhtar), Yevhen Khacheridi (Dynamo, 2), Davit Khocholava (Shakhtar), Oleksandr Kucher (Shakhtar)
 * Hat-tricks – Volodymyr Bohdanovych (Dynamo), Valeriy Yaremchenko (Shakhtar), Ihor Petrov (Shakhtar), Ihor Belanov (Dynamo)
 * Both teams – Viktor Fomin, Vitaliy Khmelnytskyi, Oleh Bazylevych, Serhii Rebrov

Soviet Union
In bold are players who transferred directly from one club to the other.
 * Shakhtar then Dynamo
 * 1934: Viktor Shylovskyi (from Dynamo Stalino to Dynamo Kyiv)
 * 1953: Viktor Fomin
 * 1965: Vitaliy Khmelnytskyi
 * 1975: Anatoliy Konkov
 * 1976: Viktor Zvyahintsev
 * 1982: Viktor Chanov


 * Dynamo then Shakhtar
 * 1967: Valeriy Lobanovskyi
 * 1977: Viktor Zvyahintsev
 * 1990: Andriy Kovtun (have not played a single game in Dynamo)

Ukraine
Since Ukrainian independence, there had been only three direct transfer moves in each direction (Dynamo to Shakhtar, Shakhtar to Dynamo). Most of the direct transfers, however, took place in the 1990s, when the rivalry between the clubs was virtually non-existent.

In bold are players who transferred directly from one club to the other.
 * Shakhtar then Dynamo
 * 1992: 🇺🇦 Serhii Rebrov
 * 1992: 🇺🇦 Andriy Kovtun
 * 2008: Emmanuel Okoduwa (have not played a single game for Dynamo)
 * 2016: 🇺🇦 Oleksandr Hladkyi
 * 2019: 🇺🇦 Oleksandr Karavayev (have not played a single game for Shakhtar)


 * Dynamo then Shakhtar
 * 1992: 🇺🇦 Oleh Matvyeyev
 * 1998: 🇺🇦 Volodymyr Kovalyuk
 * 2007: 🇺🇦 Volodymyr Yezerskiy
 * 2011: 🇺🇦 Oleksandr Rybka
 * 2014: 🇺🇦 Rustam Khudzhamov (have not played a single game for Dynamo)
 * 2018: 🇺🇦 Oleksiy Shevchenko (have not played a single game for Dynamo)
 * 2018: 🇺🇦 Júnior Moraes