- PFC CSKA Moscow
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"PFC CSKA" redirects here. For the Bulgarian football club, see PFC CSKA Sofia.
- For the whole sports club, see CSKA Moscow.
CSKA Full name Профессиональный футбольный клуб ЦСКА Москва
(Professional Football Club Central Sports Club of Army Moscow)Nickname(s) Koni (Horses)
Krasno-sinie (Red-blue)
Armeytsy (Army men)
Armeytsy Moskvy (Army men of Moscow)Founded 27 August 1911 Ground Arena Khimki
(Capacity: 18,636)Chairman Yevgeni Giner Manager Leonid Slutsky League Russian Premier League 2010 Russian Premier League, 2nd Home coloursAway coloursCurrent season CSKA (Russian: Профессиональный футбольный клуб – ЦСКА, or English: Professional Football Club — Central Sports Club of Army (Moscow)) is a Russian professional football club based in the Russian capital city of Moscow.
Contents
History
Officially, CSKA is a professional club and thus no longer a section of the Russian military's CSKA sports club. However, the Russian Ministry of Defense is a PFC CSKA shareholder, and the central club claims them as their own (see CSKA Moscow). The Moscow Army men won their 10th national title back in 2006 and they are one of the most successful clubs in the Russian football, having an extensive legacy in the Soviet football as well. CSKA won the Soviet championship seven times (1946, 1947, 1948, 1950, 1951, 1970, 1991), silver – 1938, 1945, 1949, 1990, bronze – 1939, 1955, 1956, 1958, 1964, 1965; the Soviet Cup five times (1945, 1948, 1951, 1955, 1991); the Russian Cup in 2002, 2005, 2006, 2008, 2009 and 2011; won the Russian Premier League champions title in 2003, 2005 and 2006, finishing second in 1998, 2002, 2004, 2008 and 2010, bronze 1999, 2007, and the Russian Super Cup in 2004, 2006, 2007 and 2009. Back in 2004, the club received a major financial infusion from a sponsorship deal with Sibneft, an oil company owned by Russian billionaire Roman Abramovich. Abramovich did not take an ownership interest in the club, as he was the 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. The partnership with Sibneft lasted until 2006, when VTB became the sponsor of the club. CSKA started 2009 without a shirt sponsor.
1945,1948,1951,1955 Soviet Cup final.
CSKA won the 2005 UEFA Cup by beating Sporting Clube de Portugal 3–1 in the Final at the Estádio José Alvalade 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 2013, the club is due to move into a new stadium.
On 16 March 2010, CSKA qualified for the quarterfinals of the UEFA Champions League after defeating Sevilla 3–2 on aggregate.
Nickname
Originally, CSKA was nicknamed Horses, 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 The Horses, and currently this nickname is used by players and fans as the name, along with other variants such as Army Men (Russian: армейцы) and Red-Blues (Russian: красно-синие ).
Previous names of the club
1911–1922 – Obshestvo Lyubiteley Lyzhnogo Sporta (OLLS) (Russian: Общество Любителей Лыжного Спорта) (Amateur Society of Skiing Sports)
1923 – Opytno-Pokazatel'naya Ploschadka Vseobucha (OPPV) (Russian: Опытно-Показательная Площадка Всеобуча) (Experimental & Demonstrational Playground of Military Education Association)
1924–1927 – Opytno-Pokazatel'naya Ploschadka Voenveda (OPPV) (Russian: Опытно-Показательная Площадка Военведа) (Experimental & Demonstrational Playground of Military Administration)
1928–1950 – Sportivnyi Klub Tsentral'nogo Doma Krasnoy Armii (CDKA) (Russian: Спортивный Клуб Центрального Дома Красной Армии) (Sports Club of Central House of the Red Army)
1951–1956 – Sportivnyi Klub Tsentral'nogo Doma Sovetskoy Armii (CDSA) (Russian: Спортивный Клуб Центрального Дома Советской Армии) (Sports Club of Central House of the Soviet Army)
1957–1959 – Tsentral'nyi Sportivnyi Klub Ministerstva Oborony (CSK MO) (Russian: Центральный Спортивный Клуб Министерства Обороны) (Central Sports Club of the Ministry of Defense)
1960–Present — Tsentral'nyi Sportivnyi Klub Armii (CSKA) (Russian: Центральный Спортивный Клуб Армии) (Central Sports Club of Army)Stadium
CSKA has its own stadium called "Light-Athletic Football Complex CSKA" and abbreviated as LFK CSKA. Its capacity is very small for a club of its stature; no more than 4,600 spectators. This is one of the primary reasons the club uses other venues in the city. Their new stadium broke ground in 2008 and is due to be completed in 2013. In the meantime, CSKA has been playing in Arena Khimki since 2010. They are currently sharing the stadium with rivals FC Dynamo Moscow, as they too are awaiting the completion of their own new stadium.
Honours
European
- UEFA Cup
- Winners: 2005
- UEFA Super Cup
- Runners-up: 2005
Russia
Soviet Union
- Soviet Cup
- Winners: 1945, 1948, 1951, 1955, 1991
- Runners-Up: 1944, 1967, 1992
Pre-Season Tournaments
- Channel One Cup
- Winners: 2007
- Copa del Sol
- Winners: 2010
Current squad
As of 19 August 2011, according to the Russian Premier League official site.
Note: Flags indicate national team as has been defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.No. Position Player 1 GK Sergei Chepchugov 2 DF Deividas Šemberas 4 DF Sergei Ignashevich 5 DF Viktor Vasin 6 DF Aleksei Berezutski 7 MF Keisuke Honda 8 FW Seydou Doumbia 9 FW Vágner Love 10 MF Alan Dzagoev 11 MF Mark González 14 DF Kirill Nababkin 15 DF Chidi Odiah No. Position Player 17 MF Pavel Mamayev 19 MF Aleksandrs Cauņa 21 MF Zoran Tošić 22 MF Evgeni Aldonin 24 DF Vasili Berezutski 25 MF Elvir Rahimić 26 MF Sekou Oliseh 30 GK Vladimir Gabulov (on loan from Anzhi) 35 GK Igor Akinfeev (captain) 42 DF Georgi Schennikov 89 FW Tomáš Necid Retired numbers
12 – Club Supporters (the 12th Man);
16 – Serhiy Perkhun, Goalkeeper, 2001.
For recent transfers, see List of Russian football transfers winter 2010–11.
Out on loan
Note: Flags indicate national team as has been defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.
No. Position Player GK Artur Nigmatullin (on loan to FC Mordovia) DF Anton Vlasov (on loan to FC Gazovik) DF Andrei Vasyanovich (on loan to FC Zhemchuzhina) DF Uroš Ćosić (on loan to Red Star Belgrade) MF Luboš Kalouda (on loan to PFC Oleksandria) No. Position Player FW Dmitri Ryzhov (on loan to FC Mordovia) FW Dawid Janczyk (on loan to PFC Oleksandria) FW Ouwo Moussa Maazou (on loan to Zulte Waregem) FW Ricardo Jesus (on loan to Ponte Preta) FW Anton Zabolotny (on loan to FC Ural) Technical staff
- As of 12 March 2011, according to the Official PFC CSKA Moscow website
Name Role Leonid Slutsky Head Coach Viktor Onopko Assistant Coach Sergey Shustikov Assistant Coach Vyacheslav Chanov Goalkeeping Coach Paulino Granero Physiotherapist Reserves squad
The following players are listed by club's website as reserve players. They are registered with the Russian Premier League and are eligible to play for the first team.
Note: Flags indicate national team as has been defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.
No. Position Player 23 MF Nika Piliyev 34 DF Aleksei Nikitin 36 MF Yegor Ivanov 37 GK Ivan Skripnik 38 GK Vyacheslav Isupov 39 DF Vyacheslav Karavayev 48 MF Artyom Popov 49 MF Aleksandr Vasilyev 50 FW Sergei Seredin 52 MF Ravil Netfullin 53 DF Andrei Semyonov 55 MF Batraz Khadartsev 56 MF Suleiman Abdullin 57 MF Aleksandr Vasyukov No. Position Player 58 FW Mukhommad Sultonov 59 DF Semyon Fedotov 61 FW Serder Serderov 70 MF Armen Ambartsumyan 71 FW Konstantin Bazelyuk 77 DF Pavel Drozdov 80 MF David Khurtsidze 88 MF Leonid Rodionov 90 DF Anton Polyutkin 92 DF Pyotr Ten 93 MF Gela Zaseyev 95 GK Sergei Revyakin 99 MF Yevgeni Kobzar The CSKA reserves squad or better known as CSKA's double played professionally as FC CSKA-d Moscow (Russian Second League in 1992–1993, Russian Third League in 1994–1997) after the dissolution of the Soviet Top League of doubles. Along with its doule the base CSKA also kept its second team FC CSKA-2 Moscow that also participated in the competitions of the lower leagues (Soviet Second League in 1986–1989, Soviet Second League B in 1990–1991, Russian Second League in 1992–1993 and Russian Third League in 1994). In 1989 that CSKA-2 was named as Chaika-CSKA. From 1998 the both reserve teams were united as CSKA-2 and with the recreation of the Russian Premier League double championship in 2001 entered the league.
Technical staff
- As of 11 March 2011
Name Role Aleksandr Grishin Senior Coach Valeri Minko Assistant Coach Andrey Samorukov Goalkeeping Coach Notable players
Had international caps for their respective countries. Players whose name is listed in bold represented their countries while playing for CSKA.
Club records
As of 22 June 2011[update]
Most league appearances for CSKA
- Vladimir Fedotov: 381
- Vladimir Polikarpov: 341
- Dmitri Bagrich: 312
- Dmitri Galiamin: 292
- Dmitri Kuznetsov: 291
- Vladimir Kaplichny: 288
- Sergei Semak: 282
- Albert Shesternyov: 278
- Yuri Chesnokov: 252
- Aleksandr Tarkhanov: 249
- Valeri Novikov: 245
- Mikhail Kolesnikov: 244
- Sergei Fokin / Valeri Minko: 242
- Deividas Semberas: 236
- Aleksei Grinin: 234
- Elvir Rahimić: 233
- Vladimir Astapovsky: 226
- Boris Kopeikin: 223
- Aleksei Berezutski: 228
- Igor Akinfeev: 208
Most league goals for CSKA
- Grigory Fedotov: 126
- Vladimir Fedotov: 93
- Vsevolod Bobrov: 82
- Vladimir Dyomin: 81
- Valentin Nikolayev: 79
- Aleksei Grinin: 76
- Vladimir Polikarpov: 74
- Vágner Love: 73
- Valeri Masalitin: 73
- Yuri Chesnokov: 72
- Boris Kopeikin: 71
- Sergei Semak: 68
- Aleksandr Tarkhanov: 61
- Yuri Belyayev: 52
- Dmitri Kuznetsov: 49
- Igor Korneev / Vladimir Kulik: 48
- Vladimir Tatarchuk: 44
- Oleg Sergeyev: 43
- German Apukhtin: 41
Bold Active
League and Cup history
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Season Div. Pos. Pl. W D L GS GA P Domestic Cup Europe Notes Top Scorer Head Coach 1936(s) 1st 4 6 2 1 3 13 18 11 - Shelagin – 3 Khalkiopov 1936(a) 1st 8 7 2 0 5 9 20 11 Round of 32 Mitronov/Isaev – 2 Khalkiopov 1937 1st 9 16 3 1 12 18 43 23 Semifinals Kireev – 5 Rutshinsky 1938 1st 2 25 17 3 5 52 24 37 Round of 64 G.Fedotov – 20 Zhiboedov 1939 1st 3 26 14 4 8 68 43 32 Quarterfinals G.Fedotov – 21 Zhiboedov 1940 1st 4 24 10 9 5 46 35 29 - G.Fedotov – 21 Bukhteev 1941 - - - - - - - - - - Bukhteev 1942 - - - - - - - - - - 1943 - - - - - - - - - - 1944 - - - - - - - - - Runner-Up Nikishin/Arkadyev 1945 1st 2 22 18 3 1 69 23 39 Winner Bobrov – 24 Arkadyev 1946 1st 1 22 17 3 2 55 13 37 Quarterfinals Nikolayev – 16 Arkadyev 1947 1st 1 24 17 6 1 61 16 40 Semifinals Nikolayev/Bobrov – 14 Arkadyev 1948 1st 1 26 19 3 4 82 30 41 Winner Bobrov – 23 Arkadyev 1949 1st 2 34 22 7 5 86 30 51 Semifinals G.Fedotov – 18 Arkadyev 1950 1st 1 36 20 13 3 91 31 53 Semifinals Koverznev – 21 Arkadyev 1951 1st 1 28 18 7 3 53 19 43 Winner Grinin/Solovyov – 10 Arkadyev 1952 - - - - - - - - - - Arkadyev 1953 - - - - - - - - - - 1954 1st 6 24 8 8 8 30 29 24 Quarterfinals Fyodorov – 6 Pinaichev 1955 1st 3 22 12 7 3 35 20 31 Winner Yemyshev/Belyaev – 8 Pinaichev 1956 1st 3 22 10 5 7 40 32 25 - Belyaev – 15 Pinaichev 1957 1st 5 22 12 2 8 51 31 27 Semifinals Buzunov – 16 Pinaichev 1958 1st 3 22 9 9 4 40 25 27 Round of 16 Apukhtin – 10 Arkadyev 1959 1st 9 22 8 3 11 29 27 19 - Apukhtin – 9 Arkadyev 1960 1st 6 30 15 2 13 45 35 32 Round of 16 Streshniy – 12 Pinaichev 1961 1st 4 30 16 6 8 61 43 38 Round of 64 Mamykin – 18 Beskov 1962 1st 4 32 14 12 6 39 22 40 Round of 32 V.Fedotov – 6 Beskov 1963 1st 7 38 14 17 7 39 27 45 Round of 32 V.Fedotov – 8 Solovyov 1964 1st 3 32 16 11 5 49 23 43 Quarterfinals V.Fedotov – 16 Solovyov/Nikolayev 1965 1st 3 32 14 10 8 38 24 38 Round of 16 Kazakov – 15 Nikolayev 1966 1st 5 36 16 9 11 60 45 41 Round of 32 Kazakov – 15 Shaposhnikov 1967 1st 9 36 12 12 12 35 35 36 Runner-Up Shulyatitsky – 6 Shaposhnikov/Kalinin/Bobrov 1968 1st 4 38 20 10 8 50 30 50 Round of 16 Polikarpov – 10 Bobrov 1969 1st 6 32 13 11 8 25 18 37 Semifinals Abduraimov – 7 Bobrov 1970 1st 1 32 20 5 7 46 17 45 Round of 16 Kopeikin – 15 Nikolayev 1971 1st 12 30 7 12 11 34 36 26 Round of 16 EC R2 Kopeikin – 8 Nikolayev 1972 1st 5 30 15 4 11 37 33 34 Semifinals Polikarpov/Dorofeev/Tellinger – 6 Nikolayev 1973 1st 10 30 10 9 11 33 36 25 Quarterfinals Dorofeev – 9 Nikolayev 1974 1st 13 30 7 12 11 28 33 26 Round of 16 V.Fedotov/Smirnov – 5 Agapov 1975 1st 13 30 6 13 11 29 36 25 Semifinals Kopeikin – 13 Tarasov 1976(s) 1st 7 15 5 5 5 20 16 15 - Kopeikin – 6 Mamykin 1976(a) 1st 7 15 5 5 5 21 16 15 Quarterfinals Kopeikin – 8 Mamykin 1977 1st 14 30 5 17 8 28 39 27 Round of 16 Chesnokov – 12 Mamykin/Bobrov 1978 1st 6 30 14 4 12 36 40 32 Round of 16 Belenkov – 8 Bobrov 1979 1st 8 34 12 8 14 46 46 32 Semifinals Chesnokov – 16 Shaposhnikov 1980 1st 5 34 13 12 9 36 32 36 Round of 16 Tarkhanov – 14 Bazilevich 1981 1st 6 34 14 9 11 39 33 37 Round of 16 UC R1 Chesnokov – 9 Bazilevich 1982 1st 15 34 10 9 15 41 46 29 Qualifying Tarkhanov – 16 Bazilevich/Shesternev 1983 1st 12 34 11 12 11 37 33 32 Semifinals Kolyadko – 13 Shesternev 1984 1st 18 34 5 9 20 24 55 19 Quarterfinals Relegated Shtromberger – 4 Morozov 1985 2nd 2 42 21 14 7 81 37 56 Quarterfinals Shmarov – 29 Morozov 1986 2nd 1 47 27 9 11 65 35 63 Round of 32 Promoted Berezin – 19 Morozov 1987 1st 15 30 7 11 12 26 35 24 Round of 32 Relegated Tatarchuk – 6 Morozov 1988 2nd 3 42 23 10 9 69 35 56 Round of 16 Masalitin – 16 Shaposhnikov 1989 2nd 1 42 27 10 5 113 28 64 Round of 128 Promoted Masalitin – 32 Sadyrin 1990 1st 2 24 13 5 6 43 26 31 Semifinals Masalitin/Korneev – 8 Sadyrin 1991 1st 1 30 17 9 4 57 32 43 Winner CWC R1 Kuznetsov – 12 Sadyrin 1992 - - - - - - - - - Runner-Up Sadyrin
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Season Div. Pos. Pl. W D L GS GA P Domestic Cup Europe Notes Top Scorer Head Coach 1992 1st 5 26 13 7 6 46 29 33 Runner-Up ECL Group stage Grishin – 10 Sadyrin/Kostylev 1993 1st 9 34 12 6 16 43 45 42 Runner-Up Fayzulin/Sergeev – 8 Kostylev/Kopeikin 1994 1st 10 30 8 10 12 30 32 26 Round of 16 CWC Qualifying Fayzulin/Sergeev – 5 Kopeikin/Tarkhanov 1995 1st 6 30 16 5 9 56 34 53 Quarterfinals Karsakov – 10 Tarkhanov 1996 1st 5 34 20 6 8 58 35 66 Round of 16 UC Round of 64 Khokhlov/Gerasimov – 10 Tarkhanov 1997 1st 12 34 11 9 14 31 42 42 Quarterfinals Kulik – 9 Sadyrin 1998 1st 2 30 17 5 8 50 22 56 Semifinals Kulik – 14 Sadyrin/Dolmatov 1999 1st 3 30 15 10 5 56 29 55 Runner-Up ECL Qualifying Kulik – 14 Dolmatov 2000 1st 8 30 12 5 13 45 39 41 Round of 16 UC 1st Round Kulik – 10 Dolmatov/Sadyrin 2001 1st 7 30 12 11 7 39 30 47 Winner Ranđelović – 8 Sadyrin/Kuznetsov 2002 1st 2 30 21 3 6 60 27 66 Round of 32 UC 2nd Round Gusev/Kirichenko – 15 Gazzaev 2003 1st 1 30 17 8 5 56 32 59 Quarterfinals ECL Qualifying Gusev – 9 Gazzaev 2004 1st 2 30 17 9 4 53 22 60 Winner UC Winner ECL — Group Stage Olić/Vagner/Kirichenko – 9 Artur Jorge/Gazzaev 2005 1st 1 30 18 8 4 48 20 62 Winner UC Group Stage Olić – 10 Gazzaev 2006 1st 1 30 17 7 6 47 28 58 Round of 16 UC Round of 32 ECL — Group Stage Jô – 14 Gazzaev 2007 1st 3 30 14 11 5 43 24 53 Winner ECL Group Stage Jô/Vagner – 13 Gazzaev 2008 1st 2 30 16 8 6 53 24 56 Winner UC Round of 16 Vagner – 20 Gazzaev 2009 1st 5 30 16 4 10 48 30 52 Round of 32 ECL Round of 8 Krasić, Necid – 9 Zico / Juande Ramos / Leonid Slutsky 2010 1st 2 30 18 8 4 51 22 62 Round of 16 EL Round of 32 Vagner – 9 Leonid Slutsky
References
- ^ Interview with Vladimir Fedotov in Soviet Sport, 2007-04-24
Bibliography
- Marc Bennetts, 'Football Dynamo – Modern Russia and the People's Game,' Virgin Books, (March 2009), 0753513196
External links
2011–12 UEFA Champions League Currently playing in the
group stageGroup A: Bayern Munich · Manchester City · Napoli · Villarreal
Group B: CSKA Moscow · Internazionale · Lille · Trabzonspor
Group C: Basel · Benfica · Manchester United · Oțelul Galați
Group D: Ajax · Dinamo Zagreb · Lyon · Real Madrid
Group E: Bayer Leverkusen · Chelsea · Genk · Valencia
Group F: Arsenal · Borussia Dortmund · Marseille · Olympiacos
Group G: APOEL · Porto · Shakhtar Donetsk · Zenit St. Petersburg
Group H: BATE Borisov · Barcelona · Milan · Viktoria PlzeňEliminated in the
play-off roundChampions: Copenhagen · Maccabi Haifa · Malmö FF · Sturm Graz · Wisła Kraków
Non-champions: Odense · Rubin Kazan · Twente · Udinese · ZürichEliminated in the
third qualifying roundChampions: Ekranas · HJK Helsinki · Litex Lovech · Maribor · Partizan · Rangers · Rosenborg · Shamrock Rovers · Slovan Bratislava · Zestafoni
Non-champions: Dynamo Kyiv · Panathinaikos · Standard Liège · VasluiEliminated in the
second qualifying roundBangor City · Breiðablik · Borac Banja Luka · Dacia Chişinău · F91 Dudelange · HB Tórshavn · Linfield · Mogren · Neftchi Baku · Pyunik · Skënderbeu Korçë · Škendija · Skonto · Tobol Kostanay · Valletta · VideotonEliminated in the
first qualifying roundFC Santa Coloma · Tre FioriRound and draw dates · Qualifying phase and play-off round · Group stage · Knockout phase · FinalRussian Premier League · 2011–12 teams Amkar Perm · Anzhi Makhachkala · CSKA Moscow · Dynamo Moscow · Krasnodar · Krylia Sovetov Samara · Kuban Krasnodar · Lokomotiv Moscow · Rostov · Rubin Kazan · Spartak Moscow · Spartak Nalchik · Terek Grozny · Tom Tomsk · Volga Nizhny Novgorod · Zenit Saint PetersburgWinter 2010-11 transfers · Summer 2011 transfers · Winter 2011-12 transfers · Summer 2012 transfers · Foreign playersCategories:- Association football clubs established in 1911
- PFC CSKA Moscow
- Russian football clubs
- 1911 establishments in Russia
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