UEFA.com works better on other browsers
For the best possible experience, we recommend using Chrome, Firefox or Microsoft Edge.

BATE bid to get Minsk monkey off their back

Having taken the Belarussian title since their last UEFA Europa League outing, FC BATE Borisov hope they can finally get a first win in Minsk as AEK Athens FC look to put their away-day blues to bed.

BATE bid to get Minsk monkey off their back
BATE bid to get Minsk monkey off their back ©UEFA.com

Having taken the Belarussian title since their last UEFA Europa League outing, FC BATE Borisov hope they can finally get a first win at the Dinamo Stadium in Minsk – and their first points in Group I – as AEK Athens FC visit looking to put their away-day blues to bed.

Previous meetings
• The teams have never met, and this is also BATE's first game against Greek opponents as well as being AEK's maiden experience of Belarussian football.

Match background
• Playing big games at the Dinamo Stadium in Minsk has yet to pay off for BATE. Their seven European matches there have produced a draw and six defeats, during which they have scored three goals and conceded 14 – an average of two goals shipped per game.

• By contrast, they have lost only one of their last nine European encounters at their own Gorodskoi Stadium, which has a capacity of 5,402.

• AEK's 4-0 loss at Everton FC on Matchday 1 extended their run of poor away form in Europe to one win in their last 12 matches.

Team facts
• BATE, famously a team founded at a Borisov tractor factory, are led by Viktor Goncharenko, who last season became the youngest coach to hold the reins at a side in the UEFA Champions League, aged 31. A year older, he is now the youngest coach to lead a side into the UEFA Europa League group stage.

• Once a BATE defender, Goncharenko was forced to retire young through injury but stayed at the club as a coach, working his way up through the ranks before taking sole command in 2007.

• Dušan Bajević is in his third spell as AEK coach. The former Yugoslavia striker spent four years at the club as a player, winning Greek titles in 1978 and 1979, in between spells with FK Velež from his native Mostar.

• He won four Greek championships in his first stint as AEK coach (1988-96) before incensing many fans by moving to Olympiacos FC and winning titles there in three successive seasons. He rejoined AEK in 2002 but quit midway through a match against Iraklis FC in 2004. His current reign began in 2008.

• BATE claimed their fourth successive Belarussian title – and their sixth in total – with a 4-0 win over FC Naftan Novopolotsk on 5 October, which gave them an unassailable lead with five games to spare.

• Coach Goncharenko remained optimistic about his side's UEFA Europa League prospects afterwards, saying: "We are not in a good position now, but anything can happen in football. We will do our best in the next matches."

• The two sides meet again in Athens on 5 November for Matchday 4.