FC Dila Gori

Football club From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

FC Dila (Georgian: საფეხბურთო კლუბი დილა) is a Georgian professional football club based in Gori. The club takes part in the Erovnuli Liga, the first tier of Georgian football, and plays their home games at the Tengiz Burjanadze Stadium.

Full nameFootball Club Dila Gori
NicknameGuardians
Founded1949; 77 years ago (1949)
Quick facts Full name, Nickname ...
Dila Gori
Full nameFootball Club Dila Gori
NicknameGuardians
Founded1949; 77 years ago (1949)
GroundTengiz Burjanadze Stadium
Gori, Georgia
Capacity5,000
ChairmanDavit Koziashvili
CoachDiego Longo
LeagueErovnuli Liga
20252nd
Websitefcdila.ge
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Dila have won all three domestic competitions.

History

In the Soviet leagues

Founded in 1949, the club was named after poem "Dila" (literally - morning) written by Joseph Stalin, who was born in the city and spent his youth there.[1]

Until 1961, they played under the name Dinamo Gori in Group A of Georgian republican championship. Following the second place in 1965, the next year Dila took part in the Soviet third league and despite an unbeaten run at home, finished 11th among 20 clubs in zone 4, Group B.[2]

In 1969, Dila won the competition among the Caucasian teams.[3] The club played several seasons in zone 4 of the Soviet Second League and after 1979 moved to zone 9 where Transcaucasia was represented. In 1967, 1974, and 1986, Dila reached the 3rd place which was their best result in the Soviet third division.

In Georgian leagues

In 1990, Georgia formed an independent league, which included all clubs from the first three Soviet football divisions. Before 2000, Dila were an average team sitting in mid-table, but in the second decade their performance deteriorated. Although most of the seasons Dila participated in the top league, twice they were relegated to Liga 2 and once to Liga 3.

In 2010, the rise started with Dila gaining two consecutive promotions within two years. In 2012 the club clinched their first title after winning the Georgian Cup[4] and during the next five seasons four times represented Georgia in qualifying rounds of UEFA club competitions, including the Champions League. Also, twice in a row Dila participated in Europa League play-offs. During this period, they were reinforced by national team members Nukri Revishvili, Giorgi Navalovski, Otar Martsvaladze and Mate Vatsadze.

Dila won their first top-tier medals in 2013. With a single point in the starting four matches the club seemed an unlikely candidate for trophies, but later they produced an eleven-game winning run, beating all league opponents one after another, and ended up in the second place.[5]

The club achieved their biggest success in the 2014/15 season under 25-year-old head coach Ucha Sosiashvili.[6] Dila, whose squad included experienced players Aleksandre Kvakhadze, Irakli Modebadze and Nika Kvekveskiri, entered the title race in an early stage and concluded the season with six points clear from their two immediate rivals.[7] Forward Irakli Modebadze became a league topscorer with 16 goals.

Facing some financial difficulties, FC Dila as a municipal property was sold at a public auction the next year.[8] As a result, Israeli business group Starsportinvest took charge of the club in October 2016.[9]

For three consecutive seasons starting from 2020 Dila emerged victorious from long tight contests over the league bronze medals. In 2023, they finished on equal points with Torpedo but missed out on the 3rd place due to disadvantage in head-to-head statistics only. A year later, the team sitting on top of the table at half season closed in on achieving their best result in ten years.[10] However, they first squandered the lead and eventually, after suffering a narrow home defeat on the final day of the season, slumped to 3rd.

In 2025, Dila secured their first title in ten years after convincing victories over the league champions and cup holders in a four-team Super cup tournament.[11] They also claimed the national cup for the second time in history. Dila nearly missed out on the top league spot, but still concluded the season on a positive mood with two trophies in a single year.[12]

Seasons

More information Season, Div. ...
Season Div. Pos. Pl. W D L GF GA P Cup Europe
1990 1st 10 3412616 525842 Round of 8
1991 11 19739 293224 Round of 8
1991–92 10 3814816 646450 Round of 16
1992–93 13 3211516 394938 Round of 8
1993–94 9 184212 123514 Round of 8
1994–95 8 3010713 253537 Round of 8
1995–96 8 3012414 535540 Quarter-finals
1996–97 8 3010713 303937
1997–98 9 3011415 313637 Semi-finals
1998–99 10 3010515 375435 Round of 8
1999–00 8 14626 192420 Quarter-finals
2000–01 10[a] 225314 144418 Quarter-finals
2001–02 2nd 2 221543 511449 Round of 8
2002–03 1st 7 226313 172921 Quarter-finals
2003–04 6 221048 282034 Semi-finals Inter-Toto Cup
2004–05 10 362430 208810 Round of 8
2005–06 11 309417 354431 Round of 16
2006–07 13 263617 215615 Round of 16
2007–08 14 261520 12538 Quarter-finals
2008–09 1st, East 5 301299 483145
2009–10 3rd, East 1
2010–11 2nd 3[b] 322093 582169 Round of 16
2011–12 1st 5 2810711 383237 Winner
2012–13 2 322228 602648 Quarter-finals Europa League Play-off
2013–14 9 3211813 443641 Semi-finals Europa League Play-off
2014–15 1 301974 502164 Quarter-finals
2015–16 3 301956 512562 Second Round Champions League 2Q
2016 5[c] 12525 131217 Second Round Europa League 1Q
2017 7 3611817 415141 Quarter-finals
2018 5 3617127 604063 Round of 16
2019 7 36111015 404443 Round of 16
2020 3 18864 291730 Quarter-finals
2021 3 3617109 483561 Round of 16 Conference League 1Q
2022 3 3617811 483559 Quarter-finals Conference League 1Q
2023 4 3617910 563960 Quarter-finals Conference League 3Q
2024 3 3619116 583068 Third round
2025 2 362538 633578 Winners Conference League 2Q
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Notes

  1. Lost 0–2 to Samgurali in playoffs
  2. Defeated Samtredia 2–0 in playoffs
  3. Beat Guria 2–0 in playoffs

European competitions

Dila debuted in UEFA competitions in 2004. Although the club did not obtain an Intertoto Cup slot based on their league position, they replaced a higher placed team, which abstained from the participation. After being held to a goalless draw at home, Marek Dupnitsa beat Dila in the return leg.[13] Later the next decade there were three more cases when the Georgian side achieved relatively better results in away games than back home.

As the cup winners, the team reached Europe League play-offs in 2012. During this campaign Dila eliminated two opponents, including Anorthosis Famagusta, which was further subjected to UEFA sanctions for crowd disturbances occurred during their home game.[14]

Dila similarly prevailed in two rounds of the competition the next year, before their road to the group stage was blocked by Rapid Vienna. The team's performance against Igor Tudor's Hajduk Split was widely hailed this season.[15]

In next four cases the club wrapped up their European seasons after the first round.

More information Season, Competition ...
Season Competition Round Club Home Away Aggregate
2004 UEFA Intertoto Cup 1Q Bulgaria Marek Dupnitsa 0–2 0–0 0–2
2012–13 UEFA Europa League 2Q Denmark AGF Aarhus 3–1 2–1 5–2
3Q Cyprus Anorthosis Famagusta 0–1 3–0 3–1
PO Portugal Marítimo 0–2 0–1 0–3
2013–14 UEFA Europa League 2Q Denmark AaB 3–0 0–0 3–0
3Q Croatia Hajduk Split 1–0 1–0 2–0
PO Austria Rapid Wien 0–3 0–1 0–4
2015–16 UEFA Champions League 1Q Serbia Partizan 0–2 0–1 0–3
2016–17 UEFA Europa League 1Q Armenia Shirak 1–0 0–1 1–1[a]
2021–22 UEFA Europa Conference League 1Q Slovakia Žilina 2–1 1–5 3–6
2022–23 UEFA Europa Conference League 1Q Finland KuPS 0–0 0–2 0–2
2023–24 UEFA Europa Conference League 1Q Slovakia DAC Dunajská Streda 2–0 1–2 3–2
2Q Ukraine Vorskla Poltava 3–1 1–2 4–3
3Q Cyprus APOEL 0–2 0–1 0–3
2025–26 UEFA Conference League 1Q Luxembourg Racing Union 1−0 2–1 3–1
2Q Latvia Riga 3–3 1–2 4–5
2026–27 UEFA Conference League 1Q
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Notes
  • 1Q: First qualifying round
  • 2Q: Second qualifying round
  • 3Q: Third qualifying round
  • PO: Play-off round

Fully up to date as of match played 31 July 2025

  1. Shirak won 4–1 on penalties.
More information Competition, Pld ...
Competition Pld W D L GF GA
UEFA Champions League 2 0 0 2 0 3
UEFA Europa League 14 7 1 6 14 11
UEFA Europa Conference League 14 5 2 7 17 22
UEFA Intertoto Cup 2 0 1 1 0 2
Total 32 12 4 16 31 38
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Stadium

Tengiz Burjanadze Stadium

The club play their home matches at the Tengiz Burjanadze Stadium, a 5,000 seater football stadium situated in Gori.

Crest and colours

The club's colors are Red and light blue.

Shirt sponsors and kit manufacturers

More information Period, Kit Supplier ...
Period Kit Supplier Kit Sponsor
2010–2011 Saller HeidelbergCement
2011–2012 Jako
2012–2013 Nike
2013–2014 Saller AGP
2014–2015 Saller Lider-Bet
2021–2022 Adidas Marsbet
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Current squad

As of 11 March, 2026[16]

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

More information No., Pos. ...
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Out on loan

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

More information No., Pos. ...
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Management

More information Position, Name ...
Position Name
ChairmanDavit Koziashvili
Executive directorGiorgi Jokhadze
Sporting directorVano Khorguashvili
Head coachDiego Longo
Assistant head coachLuca Cavallo
Goalkeeper coachRamaz Sogolashvili
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Source

Honours

Managers

More information Name, From ...
Name From To
Georgia (country) Giorgi Tsetsadze February 2010 October 2011
Georgia (country) Temur Makharadze November 2011 March 2012
Georgia (country) Temur Shalamberidze March 2012 September 2012
Georgia (country) Israel Giorgi Daraselia July 2012 December 2012
Lithuania Valdas Ivanauskas January 2013 May 2013
Georgia (country) Giorgi Devdariani June 2013 October 2013
Georgia (country) Ramaz Sogolashvili October 2013 May 2014
Georgia (country) Ucha Sosiashvili May 2014 Jan 2017
Israel Ziv Avraham Arie January 2017 June 2017
Georgia (country) Giorgi Dekanosidze June 2017 July 2017
Georgia (country) Israel Giorgi Daraselia (2) July 2017 August 2018
Georgia (country) Giorgi Shashiashvili August 2018 December 2018
Georgia (country) Giorgi Dekanosidze (2) January 2019 July 2019
Georgia (country) Georgi Nemsadze August 2019 December 2020
Ukraine Andriy Demchenko December 2020 August 2023
Georgia (country) Irakli Modebadze (interim) August 2023 October 2023
Argentina Ever Demaldé October 2023 December 2023
Portugal Rui Mota January 2024 June 2024
Portugal Francisco Castro July 2024 December 2024
Portugal Nuno Costa January 2025 June 2025
Italy Diego Longo June 2025
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Top goalscorers

More information Season, Name ...
SeasonNameGoals
2011–12Georgia (country) Davit Chagelishvili5
2012–13Georgia (country) Roman Akhalkatsi
Georgia (country) Irakli Modebadze
4
2013–14Georgia (country) Irakli Modebadze9
2014–15Georgia (country) Irakli Modebadze16
2015–16Georgia (country) Otar Martsvaladze19
2016Georgia (country) Aleko Gamtsemlidze3
2017Georgia (country) Giorgi Pantsulaia8
2018Ukraine Mykola Kovtalyuk21
2019Cape Verde Alvin Fortes8
2020Ukraine Mykola Kovtalyuk10
2021Georgia (country) Tornike Kapanadze10
2022Georgia (country) Tornike Kapanadze9
2023Barbados Thierry Gale
Ukraine Mykola Kovtalyuk
10
2024Netherlands Tayrell Wouter19
2025Georgia (country) Shota Shekiladze10
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References

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