2009 Russian Premier League

Russian Premier League
Season 2009
Champions FC Rubin Kazan
Relegated FC Kuban Krasnodar
FC Khimki
FC Moscow
Champions League FC Rubin Kazan
FC Spartak Moscow
FC Zenit Saint Petersburg
Europa League FC Lokomotiv Moscow
PFC CSKA Moscow
Matches played 240
Goals scored 600 (2.5 per match)
Top goalscorer Welliton (21)
Biggest home win Spartak Moscow 5–0 Tom
Biggest away win Saturn 0–5 Rubin
Highest scoring 10 matches with 6 goals in each
2008
2010

The 2009 Russian Premier League was the 18th season of the Russian football championship since the dissolution of the Soviet Union and 8th under the current Russian Premier League name. The season started on 14 March 2009 with a goalless draw between Amkar Perm and Rostov.[1] The last matches were played on 29 November 2009.[1] On 21 November 2009 Rubin Kazan successfully retained their champion's title.[2][3]

Teams

14 clubs placed 1–14 in Russian Premier League 2008 and 2 top clubs from Russian First Division 2008 take part in the league.

Location of teams in Russian Premier League 2009
Team Location Head Coach Team Captain Venue Capacity Position in 2008
Amkar Perm Russia Rashid Rakhimov Bulgaria Martin Kushev Zvezda 19,500 4th
CSKA Moscow Russia Leonid Slutsky Russia Igor Akinfeev Luzhniki 78,304 2nd
Dynamo Moscow Russia Andrei Kobelev Russia Dmitri Khokhlov Arena Khimki 18,840 3rd
Khimki Khimki Russia Igor Chugainov (caretaker) Bosnia and Herzegovina Dragan Blatnjak Arena Khimki 18,840 14th
Krylia Sovetov Samara Russia Yuri Gazzaev Russia Ruslan Adzhindzhal Metallurg 33,001 6th
Kuban Krasnodar Armenia Poghos Galstyan (caretaker) Russia Andrei Topchu Kuban 34,640 D1, 2nd
Lokomotiv Moscow Russia Yuri Semin Brazil Rodolfo Lokomotiv 28,810 7th
Moscow Moscow Montenegro Miodrag Božović Belarus Yuri Zhevnov Eduard Streltsov 13,422 9th
Rostov Rostov-on-Don Russia Oleg Dolmatov Russia Mikhail Osinov Olimp-2 15,842 D1, 1st
Rubin Kazan Turkmenistan Gurban Berdiýew Russia Sergei Semak Centralny 28,856 1st
Saturn Ramenskoye Russia Andrei Gordeev (caretaker) Russia Aleksei Igonin Saturn 16,726 11th
Spartak Moscow Russia Valeri Karpin (executive director) Czech Republic Martin Jiránek Luzhniki 78,304 8th
Spartak Nalchik Russia Yuri Krasnozhan Montenegro Miodrag Džudović Spartak 14,194 12th
Terek Grozny Azerbaijan Shahin Diniyev (caretaker) Russia Timur Dzhabrailov Sultan Bilimkhanov 10,400 10th
Tom Tomsk Russia Valeri Nepomniachi Estonia Sergei Pareiko Trud 14,950 13th
Zenit St. Petersburg Russia Anatoli Davydov Russia Aleksandr Anyukov Petrovskiy 21,358 5th

Managerial changes

Team Outgoing Manner Date Table Incoming Date Table
Spartak Moscow Denmark Michael Laudrup Sacked 15 April 2009[5] 10th Russia Valeri Karpin (executive director)
Lokomotiv Russia Rashid Rakhimov Sacked 28 April 2009[6] 13th Uzbekistan Vladimir Maminov (caretaker) 1 June 2009 8th
Saturn Germany Jürgen Röber Sacked 15 May 2009[7] 15th Russia Andrei Gordeyev (caretaker)[8]
Lokomotiv Uzbekistan Vladimir Maminov (caretaker) Finished 1 June 2009 8th Russia Yuri Semin
Kuban Russia Sergei Ovchinnikov (caretaker) Sacked 9 August 2009 14th Armenia Poghos Galstyan (caretaker)
Zenit Netherlands Dick Advocaat Sacked 10 August 2009 8th Russia Anatoli Davydov
Amkar Bulgaria Dimitar Dimitrov Sacked 1 September 2009 13th Russia Rashid Rakhimov
CSKA Brazil Zico Sacked 10 September 2009 4th Spain Juande Ramos 26 October 2009 5th
Khimki Russia Konstantin Sarsania Resigned 19 September 2009 16th Russia Igor Chugainov (caretaker)
Krylia Sovetov Russia Leonid Slutsky Resigned 9 October 2009 10th Russia Yuri Gazzaev
Terek Ukraine Vyacheslav Hrozny Resigned 20 October 2009 9th Azerbaijan Shahin Diniyev (caretaker)
CSKA Spain Juande Ramos Sacked 26 October 2009 5th Russia Leonid Slutsky

League table

Pos
Team
Pld
W
D
L
GF
GA
GD
Pts
Qualification or relegation
Head-to-head
1 Rubin Kazan (C) 30 19 6 5 62 21+41 63 2010–11 UEFA Champions League Group stage
2 Spartak Moscow 30 17 4 9 61 33+28 55
3 Zenit St. Petersburg 30 15 9 6 48 27+21 54 2010–11 UEFA Champions League Third qualifying round LOK 1–1 ZEN
ZEN 1–1 LOK
4 Lokomotiv Moscow 30 15 9 6 43 30+13 54 2010–11 UEFA Europa League Play-off round
5 CSKA Moscow 30 16 4 10 48 30+18 52
6 FC Moscow (R) 30 13 9 8 39 28+11 48 Club expelled after season 2
7 Saturn 30 13 6 11 38 413 45
8 Dynamo Moscow 30 12 6 12 31 376 42
9 Tom Tomsk 30 11 8 11 31 398 41
10 Krylia Sovetov Samara 30 10 6 14 32 4210 36
11 Spartak Nalchik 30 8 11 11 36 33+3 35
12 Terek Grozny 30 9 6 15 33 4815 33
13 Amkar Perm 30 8 9 13 27 3710 33
14 Rostov 30 7 11 12 28 3911 32
15 Kuban Krasnodar (R) 30 6 10 14 23 5128 28 Relegation to First Division
16 Khimki (R) 30 2 4 24 20 6444 10

Source: RFPL (Russian)
Rules for classification: 1st points; 2nd matches won; 3rd head-to-head (points, matches won, goal difference, goals scored, away goals scored); 4th goal difference; 5th goals scored; 6th away goals scored; 7th position in previous season or decision game
1Winners of Russian Cup 2009–10, Zenit, qualified for the Champions League, that means the loser finalists Sibir Novosibirsk will play in third qualifying round of the UEFA Europa League.
2FC Moscow announced on 5 February 2010 that they will not participate in next season's Russian Premier League. On 17 February, they were officially excluded from the 2010 Russian Premier League.[11][12][13]
(C) = Champion; (R) = Relegated; (P) = Promoted; (E) = Eliminated; (O) = Play-off winner; (A) = Advances to a further round.
Only applicable when the season is not finished:
(Q) = Qualified to the phase of tournament indicated; (TQ) = Qualified to tournament, but not yet to the particular phase indicated; (RQ) = Qualified to the relegation tournament indicated; (DQ) = Disqualified from tournament.

Results

Home ╲ Away AMK CSK DYNKHIKRYKUBLOKMOSROSRUBSATSPASPNTERTOMZEN
Amkar Perm 00 31 20 20 10 11 01 00 22 02 12 12 10 00 24
CSKA Moscow 10 30 21 30 40 41 13 12 02 30 12 00 10 01 21
Dynamo Moscow 00 12 32 01 11 02 10 10 03 10 11 21 01 01 10
Khimki 20 03 02 13 22 13 11 01 23 10 03 02 12 13 04
Krylia Sovetov Samara 10 13 31 30 10 13 11 22 12 02 21 00 20 13 01
Kuban Krasnodar 10 10 11 21 00 10 33 00 03 02 10 22 11 00 02
Lokomotiv Moscow 10 21 11 11 21 41 10 20 21 22 21 10 40 00 11
FC Moscow 02 20 12 30 21 41 00 20 13 31 31 02 00 21 10
Rostov 11 10 01 20 00 33 11 22 12 12 01 11 11 00 21
Rubin Kazan 12 12 30 21 41 30 20 00 02 51 02 20 40 40 00
Saturn 20 03 00 10 31 21 20 01 40 05 21 10 30 00 22
Spartak Moscow 51 23 02 10 11 40 30 21 51 03 40 20 20 50 11
Spartak Nalchik 41 11 24 00 01 40 01 00 10 00 11 24 42 30 22
Terek Grozny 22 11 10 20 32 01 21 12 13 12 11 23 10 40 32
Tom Tomsk 12 23 23 40 01 10 13 00 21 00 31 11 10 21 03
Zenit St. Petersburg 00 20 21 42 20 20 11 10 20 00 21 21 22 20 02

Source: RFPL (Russian)
1 ^ The home team is listed in the left-hand column.
Colours: Blue = home team win; Yellow = draw; Red = away team win.

Top scorers

Source: RFPL (Russian).

21 goals
16 goals
13 goals
12 goals
11 goals
10 goals
9 goals

Awards

On 24 November 2009 Russian Football Union named its list of 33 top players:[14]

Goalkeepers
  1. Russia Igor Akinfeev (CSKA)
  2. Russia Sergei Ryzhikov (Rubin)
  3. Russia Vladimir Gabulov (Dynamo)
Right backs
  1. Russia Aleksandr Anyukov (Zenit)
  2. Russia Sergei Parshivlyuk (Spartak M.)
  3. Russia Kirill Nababkin (Moscow)
Right-centre backs
  1. Russia Roman Sharonov (Rubin)
  2. Russia Vasili Berezutskiy (CSKA)
  3. Czech Republic Martin Jiránek (Spartak M.)
Left-centre backs
  1. Russia Sergei Ignashevich (CSKA)
  2. Spain César Navas (Rubin)
  3. Russia Denis Kolodin (Dynamo)
Left backs
  1. Argentina Cristian Ansaldi (Rubin)
  2. Russia Renat Yanbaev (Lokomotiv)
  3. Russia Georgi Schennikov (CSKA)

Defensive midfielders
  1. Russia Sergei Semak (Rubin)
  2. Russia Igor Denisov (Zenit)
  3. Russia Dmitri Khokhlov (Dynamo)
Right wingers
  1. Russia Vladimir Bystrov (Spartak M. / Zenit)
  2. Serbia Miloš Krasić (CSKA)
  3. Russia Aleksandr Samedov (Moscow)
Central midfielders
  1. Brazil Alex (Spartak M.)
  2. Russia Alan Dzagoev (CSKA)
  3. Russia Igor Semshov (Zenit)
Left wingers
  1. Russia Konstantin Zyryanov (Zenit)
  2. Lithuania Edgaras Česnauskis (Moscow)
  3. Russia Aleksandr Ryazantsev (Rubin)

Right forwards
  1. Brazil Welliton (Spartak M.)
  2. Russia Aleksandr Bukharov (Rubin)
  3. Turkey Fatih Tekke (Zenit)
Left forwards
  1. Argentina Alejandro Domínguez (Rubin)
  2. Russia Aleksandr Kerzhakov (Dynamo)
  3. Russia Dmitri Sychev (Lokomotiv)

Medal squads

1. FC Rubin Kazan

Goalkeepers: Sergei Ryzhikov (29), Nukri Revishvili Georgia (country) (1).
Defenders: César Navas Spain (28), Cristian Ansaldi Argentina (25 / 1), Roman Sharonov (25 / 2), Vitali Kaleshin (18), Lasha Salukvadze Georgia (country) (10 / 1), Aleksei Popov (10), Dato Kvirkvelia Georgia (country) (7), Aleksandr Orekhov (2), Stjepan Tomas Croatia (1).
Midfielders: Sergei Semak (26 / 6), Gökdeniz Karadeniz Turkey (25 / 6), MacBeth Sibaya South Africa (23 / 1), Christian Noboa Ecuador (22 / 2), Aleksandr Ryazantsev (18 / 3), Yevgeni Balyaikin (17), Andrei Gorbanets (11), Pyotr Bystrov (11), Alan Kasaev (10 / 1), Rafał Murawski Poland (7 / 1), Serhiy Rebrov Ukraine (7), Makhach Gadzhiyev (1), Aleksei Kotlyarov (1).
Forwards: Alejandro Domínguez Argentina (23 / 19), Aleksandr Bukharov (23 / 16), Hasan Kabze Turkey (14 / 2), Roman Adamov (13 / 2), Igor Portnyagin (2 / 1), Davron Mirzayev Uzbekistan (1).
(league appearances and goals listed in brackets)

Manager: Kurban Berdyev.

Transferred out during the season: Roman Adamov (on loan to FC Krylia Sovetov Samara), Serhiy Rebrov Ukraine (retired), Makhach Gadzhiyev (end of loan from FC Saturn Moscow Oblast).

2. FC Spartak Moscow

Goalkeepers: Soslan Dzhanayev (26), Stipe Pletikosa Croatia (4).
Defenders: Martin Jiránek Czech Republic (29 / 1), Sergei Parshivlyuk (21 / 1), Martin Stranzl Austria (19 / 1), Malik Fathi Germany (16 / 3), Fyodor Kudryashov (7), Clemente Rodríguez Argentina (7), Egor Filipenko Belarus (5 / 1), Ignas Dedura Lithuania (4).
Midfielders: Alex Brazil (29 / 12), Rafael Carioca Brazil (23), Yevgeni Makeyev (20 / 2), Vladimir Bystrov (18 / 4), Denis Boyarintsev (18), Renat Sabitov (17), Serghei Covalciuc Moldova (16), Ivan Saenko (13 / 1), Aleksandr Pavlenko (10), Zhano Ananidze Georgia (country) (8 / 2), Quincy Ghana (8 / 2), Ibson Brazil (6), Vladislav Ryzhkov (4), Maksim Grigoryev (3), Artur Maloyan (3), Igor Gorbatenko (2).
Forwards: Welliton Brazil (28 / 21), Nikita Bazhenov (22 / 2), Pavel Yakovlev (14 / 4), Artyom Dzyuba (8 / 2), Eldar Nizamutdinov (5 / 1).

Manager: Michael Laudrup Denmark (until April), Valery Karpin (from April).

Transferred out during the season: Vladimir Bystrov (to FC Zenit St. Petersburg), Aleksandr Pavlenko (on loan to FC Rostov), Artyom Dzyuba (on loan to FC Tom Tomsk), Clemente Rodríguez Argentina (to Argentina Estudiantes de La Plata), Artur Maloyan (on loan to FC Anzhi Makhachkala).

3. FC Zenit St. Petersburg

Goalkeepers: Vyacheslav Malafeev (28), Kamil Čontofalský Slovakia (2).
Defenders: Aleksandr Anyukov (27 / 1), Fernando Meira Portugal (22 / 1), Ivica Križanac Croatia (18 / 2), Kim Dong-Jin South Korea (17 / 1), Nicolas Lombaerts Belgium (15 / 2), Tomáš Hubočan Slovakia (10).
Midfielders: Konstantin Zyryanov (30 / 4), Igor Denisov (28 / 1), Igor Semshov (26 / 6), Roman Shirokov (21 / 1), Szabolcs Huszti Hungary (19 / 2), Radek Šírl Czech Republic (17), Viktor Fayzulin (16), Anatoliy Tymoshchuk Ukraine (11), Vladimir Bystrov (10 / 6), Aleksei Ionov (10), Alessandro Rosina Italy (9 / 2), Danny Portugal (8).
Forwards: Fatih Tekke Turkey (20 / 8), Pavel Pogrebnyak (15 / 5), Sergei Kornilenko Belarus (11 / 1), Mateja Kežman Serbia (10 / 2), Maksim Kanunnikov (1).
Manager: Dick Advocaat Netherlands (until August), Anatoli Davydov (from August).

Transferred out during the season: Pavel Pogrebnyak (to Germany VfB Stuttgart), Anatoliy Tymoshchuk Ukraine (to Germany FC Bayern Munich).

See also

References

  1. 1 2 Расписание чемпионата России по футболу 2009 (in Russian). Retrieved 4 December 2010.
  2. "Jubilant Rubin reclaim Russian title". uefa.com. 2009-11-21. Archived from the original on 25 November 2009. Retrieved 2009-11-21.
  3. "Rubin Kazan claim title". ESPN. 2009-11-21. Retrieved 2009-11-21.
  4. "Dynamo on Arena Khimki". Sport Express. 11 November 2008. Retrieved 15 March 2009.
  5. "Laudrup Dismissed as FC Spartak Moscow Coach". FC Spartak Moscow. 15 April 2009. Archived from the original on 28 April 2009. Retrieved 16 April 2009.
  6. Рашид Рахимов отстранен от работы с командой (in Russian). FC Lokomotiv Moscow. 28 April 2009. Archived from the original on 1 May 2009. Retrieved 28 April 2009.
  7. Ребер отправлен в отставку (in Russian). FC Saturn Moscow Oblast. 15 May 2009. Retrieved 15 May 2009.
  8. Командой будет руководить Гордеев (in Russian). FC Saturn Moscow Oblast. 20 May 2009. Retrieved 20 May 2009.
  9. "Administrative staff (Административный штаб)" (in Russian). FC Kuban official website. Archived from the original on 24 March 2009. Retrieved 15 March 2009.
  10. "Sergei Ovchinnikov: "Must have their views on life and football" (СЕРГЕЙ ОВЧИННИКОВ: "НАДО ИМЕТЬ СВОИ ВЗГЛЯДЫ НА ЖИЗНЬ И ФУТБОЛ")" (in Russian). FC Kuban official site. 17 December 2008. Retrieved 15 March 2009.
  11. http://www.sports.ru/football/68883430.html «Москва» не будет играть в премьер-лиге
  12. Плотников уведомил РФПЛ о снятии "Москвы" с чемпионата России
  13. ФК "Москва" прекращает членство в Премьер-Лиге
  14. Список 33-х лучших игроков Премьер-Лиги сезона-2009 (in Russian). Russian Football Union. 2009-11-24. Archived from the original on 28 November 2009. Retrieved 2009-11-24.

External links

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