PFC CSKA Moscow: Difference between revisions
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clubname = CSKA Moscow | |
clubname = CSKA Moscow | |
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image = [[Image:CSKA.png|150px|logo]] | |
image = [[Image:CSKA.png|150px|logo]] | |
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fullname = Professional Football Club<br>Central Sports Club of Army<br> Moscow | |
fullname = Professional Football Club ''PFC Tsentralnyi Sportivnyi Klub Armii Moskva''<br>Central Sports Club of Army<br> Moscow | |
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nickname = Koni (Horses), red-blue, army-men, red-army-men| |
nickname = Koni (Horses), red-blue, army-men, red-army-men| |
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founded = 1911 | |
founded = 1911 | |
Revision as of 10:50, 10 October 2008
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Full name | Professional Football Club PFC Tsentralnyi Sportivnyi Klub Armii Moskva Central Sports Club of Army Moscow | ||
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Nickname(s) | Koni (Horses), red-blue, army-men, red-army-men | ||
Founded | 1911 | ||
Ground | Luzhniki Stadium, Moscow | ||
Capacity | 84,745 | ||
Chairman | Evgeny Giner | ||
Manager | Valery Gazzaev | ||
League | Russian Premier League | ||
2007 | RPL, 3rd | ||
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PFC CSKA Moskva (Russian: Профессиональный футбольный клуб ЦСКА Москва or Professional Football Club — Central Sports Club of Army (Moscow)) is the football section of the CSKA sports club of Moscow, Russia.
It won the Soviet championship seven times (1946, 1947, 1948, 1950, 1951, 1970, 1991), the Soviet Cup five times (1945, 1948, 1951, 1955, 1991), the Russian Cup in 2002, 2005, 2006 and 2008, won the Russian Premier League champions title in 2003, 2005 and 2006, finishing second in 1998, 2002 and 2004, and the Russian Super Cup in 2004, 2006 and 2007.
Recently, the club received a major financial infusion from a sponsorship deal with Sibneft, an oil company owned by Russian billionaire Roman Abramovich. Abramovich will not take an ownership interest in the club as he is the current owner of English Premiership power Chelsea and UEFA rules allow only one club controlled by any one entity (person or corporation) to participate in European club competition in a given season.
In the season 2006 the club is sponsored by VTB.
CSKA Moscow won the 2005 UEFA Cup by beating Sporting CP 3–1 in the Final on Sporting's home field in Lisbon. It became the first Russian club to win a major European title, as well as the first one to complete a treble.
In 2009, the club is due to move into a new stadium.
Nickname
Originally CSKA was nicknamed "Stables" (Russian: конюшня), presumably because their first training facilities were located in the building that previously was Prince Yusupov's stable.[1] It was considered offensive, but later it was transformed into its consonant "Horses" (Russian: кони), and currently this nick used by players and fans as self-name, along with other variants such as "Army Men" (Russian: армейцы) and "Red-Blues" (Russian: красно-синие).
Previous club names
1911-1922 - Obshestvo Lyubiteley Lyzhnogo Sporta (OLLS) (Amateur Society of Skiing Sports)
1923 - Opytno-Pokazatel'naya Ploschadka Vseobucha (OPPV) (Experimental & Demonstrational Playground of Military Education Association)
1924-1927 - Opytno-Pokazatel'naya Ploschadka Voenveda (OPPV) (Experimental & Demonstrational Playground of Military Administration)
1928-1950 - Sportivnyi Klub Tsentral'nogo Doma Krasnoy Armii (CDKA) (Sports Club of Central House of the Red Army)
1951-1956 - Sportivnyi Klub Tsentral'nogo Doma Sovetskoy Armii (CDSA) (Sports Club of Central House of the Soviet Army)
1957-1959 - Tsentral'nyi Sportivnyi Klub Ministerstva Oborony (CSK MO) (Central Sports Club of the Ministry of Defense)
1960-Present — Tsentral'nyi Sportivnyi Klub Armii (CSKA) (Central Sports Club of Army)
Honours
Winners
- UEFA Cup: 1
- 2005
- 2003, 2005, 2006
- Russian Cup: 4
- 2002, 2005, 2006, 2008
- Russian Super Cup: 3 (record)
- 2004, 2006, 2007
- 1946, 1947, 1948, 1950, 1951, 1970, 1991
- USSR Cup: 5
- 1945, 1948, 1951, 1955, 1991
- 2007
Runners-Up
- 1998, 2002, 2004
- Russian Cup: 3
- 1993, 1994, 2000
- 2003
- 1938, 1945, 1949, 1990
- USSR Cup: 3
- 1944, 1967, 1992
Current squad
As of 29 August 2008, according to the Russian Premier League official site. Note: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.
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Staff
Coaching Staff
Head Coach
Assistant Coach
Goalkeeping Coach
Fitness Coach
Manager
Team Administrator
Doctor
Masseur
Masseur
Masseur
Camerman
Interpeter
Reserves squad
The following players are listed by club's website as reserve players. They are eligible to play for the first team. Note: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.
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Staff
Head Coach
Assistant Coach
Team Chef
Goalkeeping Coach
Out on loan
Note: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.
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Transfers 2007-2008
In:
- Nikolay Zajtsev - Kuban
- Evgeny Pomazan - Kuban
- Dmitri Protopopov - Ryazan
- Sergey Grichenkov - Sodovik Sterlitamak - Returned from loan
- Aleksandr Salugin - Tekstilshchik-Telekom - Returned from loan
- Ricardo Jesus - Spartak Nalchik
- Dmitri Ryzhov - Krylia Sovetov
- Anton Vlasov - Krylia Sovetov
- Alan Dzagoev - Krylia Sovetov
- Luboš Kalouda - 1. FC Brno
- Anton Zabolotny - Promoted youth player
- Artur Nigmatullin - Promoted youth player
- Aleksandr Chuchalov - Promoted youth player
- Georgi Stchennikov - Promoted youth player
- Dmitri Arslanov - Promoted youth player
- Ganiyu Oseni - Prime F.C. on loan
Out:
- Dudu Cearense - Olympiacos FC
- Kirill Kochubei - PFC Spartak Nalchik
- Igor Kuzmin - FC Saturn Moscow Oblast
- Andrei Utitskikh - FC KamAZ Naberezhnye Chelny
- Nikita Andreev - Levadia Tallinn
- Vyacheslav Semashkin - FK Dmitrov
- Nikita Burmistrov - FC Luch-Energiya Vladivostok
- Alexey Vasiliev - FC Nosta Novotroitsk
- Sergey Grichenkov - Dinaburg FC
- Aleksei Blokha - released
- Sergei Zhideev - FC Dynamo Stavropol
- Ivan Taranov - FC Krylia Sovetov Samara
- Renat Miftakhov - released
- Osmar Ferreyra - Dnipro Dnipropetrovsk
- Valeriy Safonov - FK Istra
- Aleksandr Salugin - FC Krylia Sovetov Samara
- Rolan Gusev - Dnipro Dnipropetrovsk
- Ivan Malyukov - released
- Vladimir Tatarchuk - FK Krasnodar
- Pavel Stepanets - FC Lviv II
- Jô - Manchester City
- Pavel Figon - released
- Alan Alborov - FC KAMAZ Naberezhnye Chelny
Notable past players
Head coaches
USSR
- 1936 Pavel Khalkiopov
- 1937-1939 Mikhail Rushchinsky
- 1940 Sergei Bukhteyev
- 1941 Pyotr Yezhov
- 1943-1944 Yevgeni Nikishin
- 1944-1951 Boris Arkadyev
- 1954-1957 Grigori Pinaichev
- 1958-1959 Boris Arkadyev
- 1960 Grigori Pinaichev
- 1961-1962 Konstantin Beskov
- 1963-1964 Vyacheslav Solovyov
- 1964-1965 Valentin Nikolayev
- 1966-1967 Sergei Shaposhnikov
- 1967-1969 Vsevolod Bobrov
- 1970-1973 Valentin Nikolayev
- 1973-1974 Vladimir Agapov
- 1975 Anatoli Tarasov
- 1976-1977 Aleksei Mamykin
- 1977-1978 Vsevolod Bobrov
- 1979 Sergei Shaposhnikov
- 1980-1982 Oleh Bazilevich
- 1982-1983 Albert Shesternyov
- 1983 Sergei Shaposhnikov
- 1984-1987 Yuri Morozov
- 1987-1988 Sergei Shaposhnikov
- 1989-1991 Pavel Sadyrin
Russia
- 1992 Pavel Sadyrin
- 1992-1993 Gennadi Kostylev
- 1993-1994 Boris Kopeikin
- 1994-1996 Aleksandr Tarkhanov
- 1997-1998 Pavel Sadyrin
- 1998-2000 Oleg Dolmatov
- 2000-2001 Pavel Sadyrin
- 2001 Aleksandr Kuznetsov
- 2002-2003 Valery Gazzaev
- 2004 Artur Jorge
- 2004-present Valeri Gazzaev
League and Cup history
Season Div. Pos. Pl. W D L GS GA P Domestic Cup Europe Notes 1992 1st 5 26 13 7 6 46 29 33 Runner-Up ECL Group stage 1993 1st 9 34 12 6 16 43 45 42 Runner-Up 1994 1st 10 30 8 10 12 30 32 26 Round of 16 CWC Qualifying 1995 1st 6 30 16 5 9 56 34 53 Quarterfinals 1996 1st 5 34 20 6 8 58 35 66 Round of 16 UC Round of 64 1997 1st 12 34 11 9 14 31 42 42 Quarterfinals 1998 1st 2 30 17 5 8 50 22 56 Semifinals 1999 1st 3 30 15 10 5 56 29 55 Runner-Up ECL Qualifying 2000 1st 8 30 12 5 13 45 39 41 Round of 16 UC 1st Round 2001 1st 7 30 12 11 7 39 30 47 Winner 2002 1st 2 30 21 3 6 60 27 66 Round of 32 UC 2nd Round 2003 1st 1 30 17 8 5 56 32 59 Quarterfinals ECL Group Stage 2004 1st 2 30 17 9 4 53 22 60 Winner UC Winner ECL — Group Stage 2005 1st 1 30 18 8 4 48 20 62 Winner UC Group Stage 2006 1st 1 30 17 7 6 47 28 58 Round of 16 UC Round of 32 ECL — Group Stage 2007 1st 3 30 14 11 5 43 24 53 Winner ECL Group Stage
References
- ^ Interview with Vladimir Fedotov in Soviet Sport, 2007-04-24