FC Merani Martvili

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Merani Martvili
FC Merani Martvili logo.png
Full nameFootball Club Merani Martvili
Founded2006
Ground
Martvili
Capacity1,850
ManagerTsotne Moniava
LeagueErovnuli Liga 2
20213rd of 10

FC Merani Martvili is a Georgian association football club based in Martvili, which currently takes part in Liga 2, the second division of Georgian league system.

Being one of the youngest clubs, Merani has spent five seasons in the top division and once reached the final of David Kipiani Cup.

History[]

Football clubs from Martvili have previously been called Salkhino Gegechkori (Soviet times), Chkondidi Martvili and Salkhino Martvili.

FC Merani was founded by Georgian ex-minister of communications Pridon Injia in 2006.[1]

In their first season in Pirveli liga under head coach Malkhaz Zhvania Merani came 3rd and until the promotion to Umaglesi Liga in 2011/12 they stayed among the top five clubs.

In 2010 Merani became a first II league club to play in David Kipiani Cup semifinals where they lost 1-2 on aggregate to WIT Georgia, the Cup winners of the season.[2] The next year Merani successfully completed their season and as a second-placed team gained promotion to the top flight.

During the next five seasons in Umaglesi Liga Merani achieved the best result in their first year when they came 5th during the regular season and earned a place in the championship round. In other cases the club was mostly involved in relegation battles.

In 2015/16 Merani were relegated. In the same year they managed to reach the Cup final after having eliminated Dila, Kolkheti-1913 and Chikhura in previous rounds, but in the title-deciding game held in Zestafoni the team was beaten by Torpedo Kutaisi.[3]

Merani came close back to Erovnuli Liga in 2017, although they were unable to beat Kolkheti Poti in promotion play-offs.

At the end of the next season Merani lost the last two league games and surprisingly finished at the bottom of the table, which implied an automatic relegation.[4] After one year spent in Liga 3 though they returned to the second division.

In early 2021 Pridon Injia quit the club and Jesi Surmava, the head of Martvili Football School, took over the management, which resulted in major changes among both staff and squad members.[5] 27 year-old head coach Tsotne Moniava in his first year in charge of a professional club was named the Manager of Round IV (October-December) after guiding Merani to the bronze medals and promotion playoffs. Besides, Merani's two players were included in the symbolic team.[6] Despite a two-goal advantage achieved at home after the first game against Torpedo Kutaisi, the club suffered a heart-breaking extra-time defeat during a dramatic and action-packed return leg.[7]

Seasons[]

Season Div. Pos. Pl. W D L GF GA P Cup Notes
2007/08 2nd 3 27 13 5 9 36 25 44
2008/09 2nd 3 30 18 6 6 45 24 60 Quarter-finals
2009/10 2nd 3 28 17 2 9 44 31 53 Semi-finals
2010/11 2nd 2 32 22 7 3 60 15 73 Round of 16 Promoted
2011/12 1st 8 28 6 3 19 31 55 21 Quarter-finals
2012/13 1st 8 22 7 2 13 23 36 23 Round of 32 Relegation group
2013/14 1st 12 22 4 3 15 16 41 15 Round of 8 Relegation group
2014/15 1st 11 30 9 9 12 29 33 36 Round of 16
2015/16 1st 15 30 5 8 17 28 62 23 Round of 32 Relegated
2016 2nd 4 16 9 5 2 31 11 26 Runner-up Relegation play-off, won
2017 2nd 2 36 24 8 4 67 16 80 Round of 8 Promotion play-off, lost
2018 2nd 10 36 8 12 16 36 47 36 Round of 16 Relegated
2019 3rd 1 36 26 4 6 78 24 82 Round of 8 Promoted
2020 2nd 8 18 6 6 6 23 20 30 Round of 32 Relegation play-off, won
2021 2nd 3 36 19 7 10 65 44 64 Round of 16 Promotion play-off, lost

Current squad[]

As of 7 August 2021[8]

Note: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.

No. Pos. Nation Player
1 GK Georgia (country) GEO
2 DF Georgia (country) GEO
3 DF Georgia (country) GEO
4 DF Georgia (country) GEO
5 DF Georgia (country) GEO
6 MF Georgia (country) GEO
7 DF Georgia (country) GEO
8 MF Georgia (country) GEO
9 FW Mali MLI
10 MF Georgia (country) GEO
11 FW Georgia (country) GEO
13 MF Georgia (country) GEO
14 MF Georgia (country) GEO
No. Pos. Nation Player
15 DF Georgia (country) GEO
17 MF Georgia (country) GEO
19 MF Georgia (country) GEO
20 MF Georgia (country) GEO
21 GK Georgia (country) GEO
22 FW Georgia (country) GEO
23 DF Georgia (country) GEO
28 DF Georgia (country) GEO
30 FW Lesotho LES Masoabi Nkoto
31 MF Georgia (country) GEO Tsotne Meskhi
33 MF Georgia (country) GEO
39 GK Georgia (country) GEO

Other teams[]

Merani also have a reserve team, which as Merani-2 competes in Liga 4.[9]

Manager[]

Tsotne Moniava was appointed as head coach in February 2021. He had trained Merani U19 team for six previous years.[10]

Stadium[]

Merani plays home matches at Murtaz Khurtsilava stadium, which has the capacity of 1,850 seats.

In February 2017 this arena hosted the Georgian Super Cup game.[11]

Honours[]

  • Pirveli Liga
    • Silver Medal winner: 2010-2011 and 2017
    • Bronze Medal winner: 2007-08, 2008-09, 2009-10, 2021
  • David Kipiani Cup
    • Runners-up 2016

Name[]

Merani is a Georgian word for pegasus.

External links[]

References[]

  1. ^ "საფეხბურთო კლუბი მარტვილის „მერანი"". fcmerani.ge (in Georgian).
  2. ^ "Georgian Cup 2009-10". soccerway.com.
  3. ^ "ტორპედო საქართველოს თასის მფლობელია". kutaisipost.ge (in Georgian).
  4. ^ "Pirveli liga 2018". soccerway.com.
  5. ^ "ჯესი სურმავა: "მერანის" გადმოცემის პროცესი ნამდვილად მიმდინარეობს". 1tv.ge (in Georgian).
  6. ^ "ეროვნული ლიგა 2-ის მეოთხე წრის საუკეთესო ფეხბურთელი, მწვრთნელი და სიმბოლური გუნდი". vbetnews.com (in Georgian).
  7. ^ "დრამა და ქამბექი ქუთაისში – ტორპედო ეროვნულ ლიგაში დარჩა". leadersport.ge (in Georgian).
  8. ^ "Merani players". gff.ge.
  9. ^ "Liga 4, 2021". gff.ge.
  10. ^ "მერანს ცოტნე მონიავა გაწვრთნის". fcmerani.ge (in Georgian). Retrieved 21 June 2021.
  11. ^ "სად ჩატარდება საქართველოს სუპერთასის მატჩი". goal.ge (in Georgian).


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