Ertis Pavlodar

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Ertis Pavlodar
Club crest
Basic data
Surname Ertis Pavlodar Football Club
Seat Pavlodar
founding 1965
president KazakhstanKazakhstan Igor Yelashchuk
Website fcirtysh.kz
First soccer team
Head coach SerbiaSerbia Milan Milanović
Venue Pavlodar Central Stadium
Places 15,000
league Premjer League
2019 8th place
home
Away

The FK Ertis Pavlodar ( Kazakh Ертіс Футбол Клубы / Ertis Futbol Kluby ; Russian Иртыш футбольный клуб / Irtysh futbolny club ) is a Kazakh football club from Pavlodar , in the Premjer league play. The club is Kazakhstan's record champions with five titles; in addition, there is a win of the Kazakh Cup. The club ranks first in the all-time table of the Kazakh league by a wide margin. The football division is part of the Ertis Pawlodar sports club (Kazakh. Ертіс Спорт Клубы / Ertis Sport Kluby ; Russian Иртыш спортивный клуб / Irtysch sportiwny klub ).

history

Name development

The association was founded in 1964 as Ertis Pawlodar (Kazakh) or Irtysch Pawlodar (Russian). In 1968 the name was changed to Traktor Pavlodar (Трактор Павлодар). After the end of the Soviet era , the association was renamed Ansat Pavlodar (Ансат Павлодар) in 1993 and in 1996 again in the original name, which is derived from the Kazakh name of the Irtysh River (Ertis).

Soviet championship

The team took part in the Soviet championship a total of 26 times from 1965 to 1971 and from 1973 to 1991. Most of the seasons were spent in the third highest league in the Soviet Union. In the seasons 1969, 1973, 1978, 1980, 1988 and 1989 the team from Pavlodar won the zone championship and fought against other zone champions for promotion to the second highest Soviet league . The ascent was successful twice. In the 1979 and 1981 seasons, the team took part in the game operations of the second Soviet league, but had to take the bitter step into the third division. With two seasons in the second-highest league of the Soviet Union, Irtysh Pavlodar is the third-best team in Kazakhstan after Kairat Almaty and Shakhtar Karagandy .

Kazakh championship

After Kazakhstan's independence, the club was a founding member of the Kazakh Super League . In 1992, the bronze medal was won in the very first edition of the competition. In 1993 the first championship title was won and in the following year the runner-up behind the FK Jelimai Semipalatinsk . The 1995 season ended Ertis in seventh place. In 1997, when FK Taras, who were tied on points, was defeated 1-0 in the play-off at the Almaty central stadium in front of 7,500 spectators on October 13 , 1999 four points ahead of Access-Jessil Petropavlovsk , in 2002 eight points ahead of second-placed FK Atyrau and in 2003 in front of runner-up Tobyl Qostanai were followed by further championship titles, making the club the record champions of Kazakhstan with five championship titles. In 2009 the team reached a disappointing ninth place, which is the worst placement of the team from Pavlodar. In 2010 the team improved and reached third place.

In 1998 they won their first cup when Qaisar Hurricane Qysylorda was beaten 2-1 after extra time. In addition, the team was twice in the final of the Kazakh Cup. In 2001, Schenis Astana proved too strong on penalties , and in 2002 the Astana club scored 1-0.

Ertis is one of only two teams, besides Shakhtar Karagandy , that took part in all events of the Kazakh elite class.

Participation in AFC competitions

For the first time the club from Pavlodar appeared in the AFC Champions League in the 1994/95 season. In the Central Asian group, the club had to be content with third place behind FK Neftchi Fargʻona from Uzbekistan and Köpetdag Ashgabat from Turkmenistan with only three points from four games.

In the 1998/99 edition, after Köpetdag Aşgabat was beaten, the team was disqualified for unauthorized use of unauthorized players.

In the following tournament in 1999/2000 the Uzbek representative Paxtakor Tashkent was eliminated in the first round with a total score of 9: 5. In the second round, Varzob Dushanbe from Tajikistan had no chance after 4-0 and 1-0 against Irtysh. In the quarterfinals, however, all three group games were lost and the team was eliminated.

In the 2000/01 season Ertis Pavlodar reached the semi-finals of the AFC Champions League, but failed to Júbilo Iwata from Japan. In the game for third place, the team lost 2-0 against Iranian representatives Pirouzi Tehran .

European Cup balance sheet

The team failed to qualify for the 2003/04 UEFA Champions League against Cypriot representatives Omonia Nicosia after a 0-0 draw and a 2-1 home defeat. In the first qualifying round for the 2009/10 UEFA Europa League , the club faced Hungarian club Haladás Szombathely and were eliminated from the competition after 1-0 and 2-1 on the away goals rule .

In the 2011/12 season, the first hurdle on the European football stage was overcome in the third attempt when the Polish club Jagiellonia Białystok was beaten in the first qualifying round for the UEFA Europa League. The next opponent Olimpi Rustavi from Georgia turned out to be too strong for the team from Pavlodar.

season competition round opponent total To Back
2003/04 UEFA Champions League 1st qualifying round Cyprus RepublicRepublic of Cyprus Omonia Nicosia 1: 2 0: 0 (A) 1: 2 (H)
2009/10 UEFA Europa League 1st qualifying round HungaryHungary Haladás Szombathely (a)2: 2 ( a ) 0: 1 (A) 2: 1 (H)
2011/12 UEFA Europa League 1st qualifying round PolandPoland Jagiellonia Białystok 2: 1 0: 1 (A) 2: 0 (H)
2nd qualifying round GeorgiaGeorgia Olimpi Rustavi 1: 3 1: 1 (A) 0: 2 (H)
2013/14 UEFA Europa League 1st qualifying round BulgariaBulgaria Levski Sofia 2-0 0: 0 (A) 2: 0 (H)
2nd qualifying round Bosnia and HerzegovinaBosnia and Herzegovina NK Široki Brijeg 3: 4 3: 2 (H) 0: 2 (A)
2017/18 UEFA Europa League 1st qualifying round BulgariaBulgaria Dunaw Russian FC 3-0 1: 0 (H) 2: 0 (A)
2nd qualifying round SerbiaSerbia FK Red Star Belgrade 1: 3 1: 1 (H) 0: 2 (A)
2018/19 UEFA Europa League 1st qualifying round LithuaniaLithuania FK Trakai 0: 1 0: 0 (A) 0: 1 (H)
Legend: (H) - home game, (A) - away game, (N) - neutral place, (a) - away goal rule , (i. E.) - on penalties , (n. V.) - after extra time

Overall record: 18 games, 6 wins, 5 draws, 7 defeats, 15:16 goals (goal difference −1)

Achievements and Statistics

Championship successes

Cup successes

Top scorer

player season Gates
Viktor Antonov 1996 21st
Nilton Mendes 2000 21st
Murat Tleshev 2005 20th
Murat Tleshev 2008 13
Ulugbek Baqoyev 2012 14th

Historical league results

Stadion

Ertis Pavlodar plays his home games in the central stadium built in 1947 . It can seat 15,000 spectators and was modernized in 2001 and 2007. In the 2005 season , the Central Stadium in Pavlodar was the most visited stadium in the Kazakh Premier League .

Current squad for the 2020 season

number player nationality Date of birth With Irtysh since
goalkeeper
1 Alexander Saruzki KazakhstanKazakhstan 1998 2019
12 Syarhej Chernik BelarusBelarus 202 July 1988 2020
- Andrei Passechenko KazakhstanKazakhstan August 9, 1987 2019
Defense
2 Rafkat Aslan KazakhstanKazakhstan February 2, 1994 2018
15th Dmitri Schmidt KazakhstanKazakhstan 17th November 1993 2018
25th Ruslan Yessimov KazakhstanKazakhstan April 28, 1990 2015
26th Miloš Stamenković SerbiaSerbia June 1, 1990 2019
44 Grigory Sartakov KazakhstanKazakhstan August 19, 1994 2020
- Bauyrschan Tanibergenow KazakhstanKazakhstan February 11, 1995 2019
midfield
7th Ruslan Mingatsov TurkmenistanTurkmenistan November 23, 1991 2019
18th Bojan Sanković MontenegroMontenegro November 21, 1992 2020
23 Timur Baischanow KazakhstanKazakhstan March 30, 1990 2018
40 Carlos Fonseca PortugalPortugal 23rd August 1987 2015
77 Kristijan Dobras AustriaAustria October 9, 1992 2020
- Artyom Popov KazakhstanKazakhstan January 17, 1998 2016
Storm
- Timur Muldinov KazakhstanKazakhstan September 19, 1993 2019
- Arman Smailow KazakhstanKazakhstan May 4, 1998 2017

Status: March 2020

Well-known former players

Kazakhstan

CIS and former Soviet Union

Europe

Africa

South America

Trainer

(since 1992)

Web links

Individual evidence

  1. 1979 season
  2. 1981 season
  3. Audience numbers (Russian)

Coordinates: 52 ° 16 ′ 34.7 ″  N , 76 ° 56 ′ 58.6 ″  E