FK Sibir Novosibirsk
FK Sibir Novosibirsk | |||
Full name | Futbolny Club "Sibir" (Футбольный Клуб "Сибирь") |
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place | Novosibirsk | ||
Founded | 1936 | ||
Dissolved | 2019 | ||
Club colors | |||
Stadion | Spartak Stadium , Novosibirsk | ||
Top league | Premjer League | ||
successes | Participation in the Premjer-Liga 2010 Cup finalist 2010 |
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The FK Sibir ( Russian Футбольный Клуб "Сибирь" , scientific transliteration Futbol'nyj Klub "Sibir" ), known in German-speaking countries as Sibir Novosibirsk , was a Russian football club from Novosibirsk .
history
Name changes
The club experienced - like many clubs in the former Soviet Union - some name changes.
- Burewestnik (1936–1937, " Sturmvogel ")
- Krylja Sowetow (1938–1956, "Wing of the Soviets ")
- Sibselmasch (1957–1965, "Siberian Agricultural Machinery Plant")
- SETM (1970, Sibelektrotjaschmasch, "Siberian electrical heavy machinery factory")
- Dzerzhinez (1971, named after Felix Dzerzhinsky )
- Chkalovets (1972–1991, named after Valery Chkalov )
- Chkalovets-FoKuMiS (1992)
- Chkalovets (1993–1999)
- Chkalovets-1936 (2000-2005)
- Sibir (2006–2019, " Siberia ")
Soviet Union
The association was founded in 1936. Novosibirsk played in Group E of the Soviet league in 1937, in the second and third groups from 1946 to 1947, and in the second and third Soviet leagues from 1964 to 1991.
Russia
After the collapse of the Soviet Union , the club started in 1992 under the then name Tschkalowez-FoKuMiS in the newly founded First League (second highest league). Due to a reduction in the number of teams, the club rose two years later to the second division (third highest division), but managed to rise again immediately. After another two years, Novosibirsk rose again to the third highest division.
In 2000, the club merged with Olimpik Novosibirsk and started under the new name Chkalovets-1936 in the amateur league . After one season, he was promoted to the second division and in 2004 even moved back to the first division.
Since the 2006 season, the club was called FK Sibir . In the 2007 season, FK Sibir narrowly missed promotion to the Premjer League with third place . The 2009 season ended the team in second place in the table and thus made their first promotion to the Russian elite class. By reaching the final in the Russian Cup in the 2009/10 season, Sibir qualified for the UEFA Europa League for the first time in the club's history , as the winner of the final Zenit St. Petersburg had qualified for the UEFA Champions League . In the 2010 season, the team occupied the last place in the table and thus rose to the second-class Perwenstwo FNL . After relegation from the second highest league in the 2018/19 season , FK Sibir stopped playing.
Stadion
The club played its home games in the 12,567-seat Spartak Stadium , which opened in 1927.
European Cup balance sheet
season | competition | round | opponent | total | To | Back |
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2010/11 | UEFA Europa League | 3rd qualifying round | Apollon Limassol | ( a ) 2: 2 | 1: 0 (H) | 1: 2 (A) |
Play-offs | PSV Eindhoven | 1: 5 | 1: 0 (H) | 0: 5 (A) |
Overall record: 4 games, 2 wins, 2 defeats, 3: 7 goals (goal difference −4)
Well-known former players
Russia |
CIS and former Soviet Union |
Europe |
America |
Well-known former coaches
Web links
- Official website of the association (Russian)
Individual evidence
- ↑ gazeta.ru: "Анжи" и "Сибирь" вышли в премьер-лигу Article of November 4, 2009 (Russian)
- ↑ sport-express.ru: "Сибирь" сыграла вничью с "Локомотивом" и покидает премьер-лигу Article of November 14, 2010 (Russian)