PFC CSKA Moscow

"PFC CSKA" redirects here. For the Bulgarian football club, see PFC CSKA Sofia. For other uses, see CSKA.
CSKA Khimki
Full name Профессиональный футбольный клуб ЦСКА Химки
(Professional Football Club, Central Sport Club of the Army, Khimki)
Nickname(s)
Koni (Horses)
Krasno-sinie (Red-blues)
Armeitsy (Militarians)
Founded 27 August 1911
Ground Arena Khimki
Capacity 18,636
Owner Russian Ministry of Defence
Chairman Yevgeni Giner
Manager Leonid Viktorovich Slutsky
League Russian Premier League
2013–14 1st
Website Club home page
Departments of CSKA Moscow
Football (Men's) Basketball (Men's) Basketball (Women's)
Futsal (Men's) Volleyball Volleyball (Women's)
Ice Hockey Handball Beach soccer
Bandy Water polo

PFC Central Sport Club of the Army, Khimki (Russian: Профессиональный футбольный клуб – ЦСКА) is a Russian professional football club. It is based in the Khimki, playing its home matches at the 18,630-capacity Arena Khimki. The club is the most known division of the CSKA Moscow sports club.

Founded in 1911, CSKA had its most successful period after World War II with five titles in six seasons. It won a total of 7 Soviet Top League championships, including the last-ever season in 1991. The club has also won 5 Russian Premier League titles, and the 2004-05 UEFA Cup.

CSKA was the official team of the Soviet Army during the communist era. Since the dissolution of the Soviet Union it has become privately owned, with the Ministry of Defence as a shareholder. Russian businessman Roman Abramovich's Sibneft corporation was a leading sponsor of the club from 2004 to 2006.

History

Officially, CSKA is a professional club and thus no longer a section of the Russian military's CSKA sports club. The Russian Ministry of Defense is a PFC CSKA shareholder, however, 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 Russian football, having an extensive legacy in 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, 2011, 2013; won the Russian Premier League champions title in 2003, 2005, 2006,2012–13,2013-14 finishing second in 1998, 2002, 2004, 2008 and 2010, bronze 1999, 2007, 2012 and the Russian Super Cup in 2004, 2006, 2007, 2009,2012–13. After winning the Soviet championship in 1951, the club started the 1952 championship with 3 wins, but were forced to withdraw from the league as punishment for a disappointing showing of the Soviet Union football team at the Helsinki Olympics.[1] 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 Premier League club 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.

СDKA,СDSA

1945,1948,1951,1955 Soviet Cup final.

CSKA won the 2005 UEFA Cup by beating Sporting CP 3–1 in the Final at Sporting's own 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. They were later eliminated from competition by Internazionale, losing by 1–0 scorelines in both Milan and Moscow.

Nickname

CSKA was nicknamed Horses because the first stadium was built on the old racecourse/hippodromo in Moscow.[2] 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 ).

CSKA Moscow team in 2011 against PAOK at a UEFA Europa League match

Previous names of the club

Previous CSKA logo

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 2007 in place of the former Army's stadium the Grigory Fedotov Stadium and is due to be completed in 2015. In the meantime, CSKA has been playing in Arena Khimki since 2010. They are currently sharing the stadium with Dynamo Moscow, as they too are awaiting the completion of their own new stadium.

Achievements

CSKA Moscow fans

Domestic competitions

1946, 1947, 1948, 1950, 1951, 1970, 1991, 2003, 2005, 2006, 2012–13, 2013–14
1986, 1989
1945, 1948, 1951, 1955, 1991, 2002, 2005, 2006, 2008, 2009, 2011, 2013
2004, 2006, 2007, 2009, 2013, 2014
1990

International competitions

2005
  • Runners-up (1): 2005

Non-official

2007
  • Runners-up: none
2010
  • Runners-up: none
2013
  • Runners-up: none

Players

Current squad (to 2015 April)

Note: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.

No. Position Player
35 Russia GK Igor Akinfeev (Сaptain)
1 Russia GK Sergei Chepchugov
42 Russia DF Georgi Schennikov
6 Russia DF Aleksei Berezutski
24 Russia DF Vasili Berezutski
4 Russia DF Sergei Ignashevich (Vice-captain)
14 Russia DF Kirill Nababkin
91 Russia DF Nikita Chernov
2 Brazil DF Mário Fernandes
19 Latvia MF Aleksandrs Cauņa
25 Finland MF Roman Eremenko
3 Sweden MF Pontus Wernbloom
No. Position Player
7 Serbia MF Zoran Tošić
23 Bulgaria MF Georgi Milanov
66 Israel MF Bibras Natkho
10 Russia MF Alan Dzagoev
15 Russia MF Dmitri Yefremov
60 Russia MF Aleksandr Golovin
8 Russia FW Kirill Panchenko
17 Sweden FW Alibek Aliev
97 Sweden FW Carlos Strandberg
18 Nigeria FW Ahmed Musa

Out on loan

Note: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.

No. Position Player
Russia DF Pyotr Ten (at Anzhi Makhachkala)
Russia DF Vyacheslav Karavayev (at Dukla Prague)
Russia DF Viktor Vasin (at Mordovia Saransk)
No. Position Player
Liberia MF Sekou Oliseh (at Kuban Krasnodar)
Brazil MF Vitinho (at Internacional)
Russia FW Konstantin Bazelyuk (at Torpedo Moscow)
Russia FW Nikolai Dergachyov (at Dukla Prague)

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 defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.

No. Position Player
37 Russia DF Denis Masyutin
38 Russia GK Ivan Zlobin
41 Russia GK Pavel Maiorov
43 Russia FW Aleksandr Makarov
45 Russia GK Ilya Pomazun
47 Russia DF Pavel Kotov
49 Russia MF Nikita Titov
65 Russia FW Mikhail Solovyov
68 Russia FW Nikita Kasatkin
No. Position Player
73 Russia MF Dmitriy Sokolov
75 Russia FW Timur Zhamaletdinov
77 Russia MF Dmitri Zhuravlyov
84 Russia GK Pavel Ovchinnikov
85 Cameroon MF Gael Bella Ondua
86 Azerbaijan MF Elgyun Ulukhanov
98 Russia MF Svyatoslav Georgievskiy
99 Russia MF Maksim Martusevich

The reserves team played on the professional level as FC CSKA-d Moscow (Russian Second League in 1992–93, Russian Third League in 1994–97, Russian Second Division in 1998–00). A separate farm club called FC CSKA-2 Moscow played in the Soviet Second League in 1986–89, Soviet Second League B in 1990–91, Russian Second League in 1992–93 and Russian Third League in 1994. That latter team was called FC Chaika-CSKA-2 Moscow for one season in 1989.

Retired numbers

Technical staff

As of 12 March 2011, according to the Official PFC CSKA Moscow website
Name Role
Russia Leonid Slutsky Head Coach
Russia Viktor Onopko Assistant Coach
Russia Sergey Shustikov Assistant Coach
Russia Vyacheslav Chanov Goalkeeping Coach
Spain Paulino Granero Physiotherapist

Technical staff

As of 11 March 2011
Name Role
Russia Aleksandr Grishin Senior Coach
Russia Valeri Minko Assistant Coach
Russia 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.

USSR/Russia

Former USSR countries

Europe
South America
Africa


Asia

Club records

As of 2 December 2014

League appearances

  1. Soviet Union Vladimir Fedotov: 381
  2. Soviet Union Vladimir Polikarpov: 341
  3. Soviet Union Dmitri Bagrich: 312
  4. Russia Igor Akinfeev: 300
  5. Russia Sergei Ignashevich: 297
  6. Russia Vasili Berezutski: 295
  7. Soviet Union Commonwealth of Independent States Russia Dmitri Galiamin: 292
  8. Soviet Union Commonwealth of Independent States Russia Dmitri Kuznetsov: 291
  9. Russia Sergei Semak: 289
  10. Soviet Union Vladimir Kaplichny: 288
  11. Russia Aleksei Berezutski: 280
  12. Soviet Union Albert Shesternyov: 278
  13. Lithuania Deividas Semberas: 254
  14. Soviet Union Yuri Chesnokov: 252
  15. Soviet Union Aleksandr Tarkhanov: 249
  16. Soviet Union Valeri Novikov: 245
  17. Russia Mikhail Kolesnikov: 244
  18. Soviet Union Sergei Fokin: 242
  19. Russia Valeri Minko: 242
  20. Bosnia and Herzegovina Elvir Rahimić: 240

League goals

  1. Soviet Union Grigory Fedotov: 126
  2. Soviet Union Vladimir Fedotov: 93
  3. Brazil Vágner Love: 85
  4. Soviet Union Vsevolod Bobrov: 82
  5. Soviet Union Vladimir Dyomin: 81
  6. Soviet Union Valentin Nikolayev: 79
  7. Soviet Union Aleksei Grinin: 76
  8. Soviet Union Vladimir Polikarpov: 74
  9. Russia Valeri Masalitin: 73
  10. Soviet Union Yuri Chesnokov: 72
  11. Soviet Union Boris Kopeikin: 71
  12. Russia Sergei Semak: 68
  13. Ivory Coast Seydou Doumbia: 61
  14. Soviet Union Aleksandr Tarkhanov: 61
  15. Soviet Union Yuri Belyayev: 52
  16. Soviet Union Commonwealth of Independent States Russia Dmitri Kuznetsov: 49
  17. Russia Vladimir Kulik: 48
  18. Soviet Union Commonwealth of Independent States Russia Igor Korneev: 48
  19. Soviet Union Russia Vladimir Tatarchuk: 44
  20. Soviet Union Commonwealth of Independent States Russia Oleg Sergeyev: 43

Players highlighted in bold are still playing professionally.

Managers

Name Nationality From To
Pavel Khalkiopov  Soviet Union 1936 1936
Mikhail Rushchinsky  Soviet Union 1937 1939
Sergei Bukhteev  Soviet Union 1940 1941
Pyotr Yezhov  Soviet Union 1941 1941
Yevgeni Nikishin  Soviet Union 1942 1944
Boris Arkadyev  Soviet Union 1944 1952
Grigory Pinaichev  Soviet Union 1954 1957
Boris Arkadyev  Soviet Union 1958 1959
Grigory Pinaichev  Soviet Union 1959 1960
Konstantin Beskov  Soviet Union 1961 1962
Vyacheslav Solovyov  Soviet Union 1963 1964
Valentin Nikolayev  Soviet Union 1964 1965
Sergei Shaposhnikov  Soviet Union 1966 1967
Vsevolod Bobrov  Soviet Union 1967 1969
Valentin Nikolayev  Soviet Union 1970 1973
Vladimir Agapov  Soviet Union 1973 1974
Anatoli Tarasov  Soviet Union 1975 1975
Aleksei Mamykin  Soviet Union 1976 1977
Vsevolod Bobrov  Soviet Union 1977 1978
Sergei Shaposhnikov  Soviet Union 1979 1979

Name Nationality From To
Oleh Bazylevych  Soviet Union 1980 1982
Albert Shesternyov  Soviet Union 1982 1983
Sergei Shaposhnikov  Soviet Union 1983 1983
Yury Morozov  Soviet Union 1984 1987
Sergei Shaposhnikov  Soviet Union 1987 1988
Pavel Sadyrin  Soviet Union
 Russia
1989 1992
Gennadi Kostylev  Russia 1992 1993
Boris Kopeikin  Russia 1993 1994
Aleksandr Tarkhanov  Russia July 5, 1994 Jan 23, 1997
Pavel Sadyrin  Russia Jan 23, 1997 July 2, 1998
Oleg Dolmatov  Russia July 2, 1998 May 29, 2000
Pavel Sadyrin  Russia July 1, 2000 Oct 2, 2001
Valery Gazzaev  Russia Oct 2, 2001 Nov 24, 2003
Artur Jorge  Portugal Nov 24, 2003 July 12, 2004
Valery Gazzaev  Russia July 12, 2004 Nov 22, 2008
Zico  Brazil Jan 9, 2009 Sept 10, 2009
Juande Ramos  Spain Sept 10, 2009 Oct 26, 2009
Leonid Slutsky  Russia Oct 26, 2009 present

League and cup history

Soviet Union Soviet Union
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 Soviet Union Khalkiopov
1936(a) 1st 8 7 2 0 5 9 20 11 Round of 32 Mitronov / Isaev – 2 Soviet Union Khalkiopov
1937 1st 9 16 3 1 12 18 43 23 Semi-finals Kireev – 5 Soviet Union Rutshinsky
1938 1st 2 25 17 3 5 52 24 37 Round of 64 Soviet Union G.Fedotov – 20 Soviet Union Zhiboedov
1939 1st 3 26 14 4 8 68 43 32 Quarter-finals Soviet Union G.Fedotov – 21 Soviet Union Zhiboedov
1940 1st 4 24 10 9 5 46 35 29 - Soviet Union G.Fedotov – 21 Soviet Union Bukhteev
1941 - - - - - - - - - - Soviet Union Bukhteev
1942 - - - - - - - - - -
1943 - - - - - - - - - -
1944 - - - - - - - - - Runner-Up Soviet Union Nikishin / Soviet Union Arkadyev
1945 1st 2 22 18 3 1 69 23 39 Winner Soviet Union Bobrov – 24 Soviet Union Arkadyev
1946 1st 1 22 17 3 2 55 13 37 Quarter-finals Soviet Union Nikolayev – 16 Soviet Union Arkadyev
1947 1st 1 24 17 6 1 61 16 40 Semi-finals Soviet Union Nikolayev / Soviet Union Bobrov – 14 Soviet Union Arkadyev
1948 1st 1 26 19 3 4 82 30 41 Winner Soviet Union Bobrov – 23 Soviet Union Arkadyev
1949 1st 2 34 22 7 5 86 30 51 Semi-finals Soviet Union G.Fedotov – 18 Soviet Union Arkadyev
1950 1st 1 36 20 13 3 91 31 53 Semi-finals Koverznev – 21 Soviet Union Arkadyev
1951 1st 1 28 18 7 3 53 19 43 Winner Soviet Union Grinin / Soviet Union Solovyov – 10 Soviet Union Arkadyev
1952 - - - - - - - - - - Soviet Union Arkadyev
1953 - - - - - - - - - -
1954 1st 6 24 8 8 8 30 29 24 Quarter-finals Fyodorov – 6 Soviet Union Pinaichev
1955 1st 3 22 12 7 3 35 20 31 Winner Yemyshev / Belyaev – 8 Soviet Union Pinaichev
1956 1st 3 22 10 5 7 40 32 25 - Belyaev – 15 Soviet Union Pinaichev
1957 1st 5 22 12 2 8 51 31 27 Semi-finals Soviet Union Buzunov – 16 Soviet Union Pinaichev
1958 1st 3 22 9 9 4 40 25 27 Round of 16 Soviet Union Apukhtin – 10 Soviet Union Arkadyev
1959 1st 9 22 8 3 11 29 27 19 - Soviet Union Apukhtin – 9 Soviet Union Arkadyev
1960 1st 6 30 15 2 13 45 35 32 Round of 16 Streshniy – 12 Soviet Union Pinaichev
1961 1st 4 30 16 6 8 61 43 38 Round of 64 Soviet Union Mamykin – 18 Soviet Union Beskov
1962 1st 4 32 14 12 6 39 22 40 Round of 32 Soviet Union V.Fedotov – 6 Soviet Union Beskov
1963 1st 7 38 14 17 7 39 27 45 Round of 32 Soviet Union V.Fedotov – 8 Soviet Union Solovyov
1964 1st 3 32 16 11 5 49 23 43 Quarter-finals Soviet Union V.Fedotov – 16 Soviet Union Solovyov / Soviet Union Nikolayev
1965 1st 3 32 14 10 8 38 24 38 Round of 16 Kazakov – 15 Soviet Union Nikolayev
1966 1st 5 36 16 9 11 60 45 41 Round of 32 Kazakov – 15 Soviet Union Shaposhnikov
1967 1st 9 36 12 12 12 35 35 36 Runner-Up Shulyatitsky – 6 Soviet Union Shaposhnikov / Soviet Union Kalinin / Soviet Union Bobrov
1968 1st 4 38 20 10 8 50 30 50 Round of 16 Soviet Union Polikarpov – 10 Soviet Union Bobrov
1969 1st 6 32 13 11 8 25 18 37 Semi-finals Abduraimov – 7 Soviet Union Bobrov
1970 1st 1 32 20 5 7 46 17 45 Round of 16 Soviet Union Kopeikin – 15 Soviet Union Nikolayev
1971 1st 12 30 7 12 11 34 36 26 Round of 16 EC R2 Soviet Union Kopeikin – 8 Soviet Union Nikolayev
1972 1st 5 30 15 4 11 37 33 34 Semi-finals Soviet Union Polikarpov / Dorofeev / Tellinger – 6 Soviet Union Nikolayev
1973 1st 10 30 10 9 11 33 36 25 Quarter-finals Dorofeev – 9 Soviet Union Nikolayev
1974 1st 13 30 7 12 11 28 33 26 Round of 16 Soviet Union V.Fedotov / Smirnov – 5 Soviet Union Agapov
1975 1st 13 30 6 13 11 29 36 25 Semi-finals Soviet Union Kopeikin – 13 Soviet Union Tarasov
1976(s) 1st 7 15 5 5 5 20 16 15 - Soviet Union Kopeikin – 6 Soviet Union Mamykin
1976(a) 1st 7 15 5 5 5 21 16 15 Quarter-finals Soviet Union Kopeikin – 8 Soviet Union Mamykin
1977 1st 14 30 5 17 8 28 39 27 Round of 16 Soviet Union Chesnokov – 12 Soviet Union Mamykin / Soviet Union Bobrov
1978 1st 6 30 14 4 12 36 40 32 Round of 16 Belenkov – 8 Soviet Union Bobrov
1979 1st 8 34 12 8 14 46 46 32 Semi-finals Soviet Union Chesnokov – 16 Soviet Union Shaposhnikov
1980 1st 5 34 13 12 9 36 32 36 Round of 16 Soviet Union Tarkhanov – 14 Soviet Union Bazilevich
1981 1st 6 34 14 9 11 39 33 37 Round of 16 UC R1 Soviet Union Chesnokov – 9 Soviet Union Bazilevich
1982 1st 15 34 10 9 15 41 46 29 Qualifying Soviet Union Tarkhanov – 16 Soviet Union Bazilevich / Soviet Union Shesternev
1983 1st 12 34 11 12 11 37 33 32 Semi-finals Kolyadko – 13 Soviet Union Shesternev
1984 1st 18 34 5 9 20 24 55 19 Quarter-finals Relegated Shtromberger – 4 Soviet Union Morozov
1985 2nd 2 42 21 14 7 81 37 56 Quarter-finals Soviet Union Shmarov – 29 Soviet Union Morozov
1986 2nd 1 47 27 9 11 65 35 63 Round of 32 Promoted Berezin – 19 Soviet Union Morozov
1987 1st 15 30 7 11 12 26 35 24 Winner Relegated Soviet Union Tatarchuk – 6 Soviet Union Morozov
1988 2nd 3 42 23 10 9 69 35 56 Winner Soviet Union Masalitin – 16 Soviet Union Shaposhnikov
1989 2nd 1 42 27 10 5 113 28 64 Round of 128 Promoted Soviet Union Masalitin – 32 Soviet Union Sadyrin
1990 1st 2 24 13 5 6 43 26 31 Semi-finals Soviet Union Masalitin / Soviet Union Korneev – 8 Soviet Union Sadyrin
1991 1st 1 30 17 9 4 57 32 43 Winner CWC R1 Soviet Union Kuznetsov – 12 Soviet Union Sadyrin
1992 - - - - - - - - - Runner-Up Soviet Union Sadyrin
Russia Russia
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 Russia Grishin – 10 Russia Sadyrin / Russia Kostylev
1993 1st 9 34 12 6 16 43 45 42 Runner-Up Russia Fayzulin / Russia Sergeev – 8 Russia Kostylev / Russia Kopeikin
1994 1st 10 30 8 10 12 30 32 26 Round of 16 CWC Qualifying Russia Fayzulin / Russia Sergeev – 5 Russia Kopeikin / Russia Tarkhanov
1995 1st 6 30 16 5 9 56 34 53 Quarter-finals Russia Karsakov – 10 Russia Tarkhanov
1996 1st 5 34 20 6 8 58 35 66 Round of 16 UC Round of 64 Russia Khokhlov / Russia Gerasimov – 10 Russia Tarkhanov
1997 1st 12 34 11 9 14 31 42 42 Quarter-finals Russia Kulik – 9 Russia Sadyrin
1998 1st 2 30 17 5 8 50 22 56 Semi-finals Russia Kulik – 14 Russia Sadyrin / Russia Dolmatov
1999 1st 3 30 15 10 5 56 29 55 Runner-Up ECL Qualifying Russia Kulik – 14 Russia Dolmatov
2000 1st 8 30 12 5 13 45 39 41 Round of 16 UC 1st round Russia Kulik – 10 Russia Dolmatov / Russia Sadyrin
2001 1st 7 30 12 11 7 39 30 47 Winner Serbia Ranđelović – 8 Russia Sadyrin / Russia Kuznetsov
2002 1st 2 30 21 3 6 60 27 66 Round of 32 UC 2nd round Russia Gusev / Russia Kirichenko – 15 Russia Gazzaev
2003 1st 1 30 17 8 5 56 32 59 Winner ECL Qualifying Russia Gusev – 9 Russia Gazzaev
2004 1st 2 30 17 9 4 53 22 60 Winner UC Winner ECL – Group Stage Croatia Olić / Brazil Vagner / Russia Kirichenko – 9 Portugal Artur Jorge / Russia Gazzaev
2005 1st 1 30 18 8 4 48 20 62 Winner UC Group Stage Croatia Olić – 10 Russia Gazzaev
2006 1st 1 30 17 7 6 47 28 58 Winner UC Round of 32 ECL – Group Stage Brazil – 14 Russia Gazzaev
2007 1st 3 30 14 11 5 43 24 53 Winner ECL Group Stage Brazil / Brazil Vagner – 13 Russia Gazzaev
2008 1st 2 30 16 8 6 53 24 56 Winner UC Round of 16 Brazil Vagner – 20 Russia Gazzaev
2009 1st 5 30 16 4 10 48 30 52 Winner ECL Quarter-finals Serbia Krasić, Czech Republic Necid – 9 Brazil Zico / Spain Juande Ramos / Russia Leonid Slutsky
2010 1st 2 30 18 8 4 51 22 59 Round of 16 EL Round of 16 Brazil Vagner – 9 Russia Leonid Slutsky
2011–12 1st 3 44 19 9 16 72 47 73 Round of 16 CL Round of 16 Ivory Coast Doumbia - 28 Russia Leonid Slutsky
2012–13 1st 1 30 20 4 6 49 25 64 Winner EL Qualifying Nigeria Musa - 11 Russia Leonid Slutsky
2013–14 1st 1 30 20 4 6 49 26 64 Semi-finals CL Group Stage Ivory Coast Doumbia - 18 Russia Leonid Slutsky

Affiliated clubs

References

  1. "Nordic Nonsense". www.rsssf.com. Retrieved 26 May 2012.
  2. http://lenta.ru/lib/14165187/

Bibliography

External links

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