Qarabağ FK

Not to be confused with FC Qarabag Khankendi.
Qarabağ FK
Full name Qarabağ Futbol Klubu
Nickname(s) Atlılar (The Horsemen)
Founded 23 July 1951 (1951-07-23)
(as Məhsul)
Ground Azersun Arena,
Baku, Azerbaijan
Ground Capacity 5,800
President Tahir Gozal
Manager Gurban Gurbanov
League Azerbaijan Premier League
2014–15 1st
Website Club home page

Qarabağ Futbol Klubu, commonly known as Qarabağ, is an Azerbaijani football club from Agdam, but based in Baku since 1993 due to the Nagorno-Karabakh war, playing in the Azerbaijan Premier League.

Formed in 1951, Qarabağ were founding members of the Azerbaijan Premier League in 1992. A season later they won their first league championship, becoming the first non-Baku based club to win the Azerbaijan Premier League title. Qarabağ is one of the two teams in Azerbaijan, along with Neftchi Baku which has participated in all Azerbaijan Premier League championships so far.

Qarabağ plays its matches at the Tofiq Bahramov Stadium in Baku, which also serves as the venue for Azerbaijan national football team matches.

In 2014, the club won the Premier League, their first league title for 21 years.[1] Qarabağ have won the Premier league and Azerbaijan Cup three times.[2] In the same year, Qarabağ became the second Azerbaijani team to advance to the group stage of a European competition, beating Twente in the play-off round of the 2014–15 UEFA Europa League.

History

Early years (1951–1991)

The club was founded in 1951 as Qarabağ after the Aghdam city stadium was built; there then began a serious effort towards the creation of a professional football team. Consequently, FK Qarabağ, then playing under the name of Mehsul took part in the 1966 Azerbaijani championship.[3] In that year the club reached 4th place in the local championship.

Qarabağ participated in the local championship for four consecutive years during which second place was their best result (achieved in 1968). However, after 1968 owing to carelessness and lack of financial support the team withdrew from the championships for almost ten years.[3] In 1977, the team was reborn under name Shafaq. In 1982 Shafaq was the only representative of Aghdam in football. Between the periods of 1982–87 the squad used the name "Cooperative society". In 1988, Qarabağ won the champions title in the Azerbaijan SSR local championship under its current name.[3]

Effects of war and financial struggles (1991–2008)

In 1993, during the Nagorno-Karabakh war, the city of Aghdam came under Armenian control, and the team had to move from Imarat Stadium to Baku, while the head coach of the team, Allahverdi Bagirov, died in the war.[4][5][6] Financial problems plagued the club during the period from 1998 to 2001 and the club went through hard times although it became the first Azerbaijani team to win away from home in a European competition by defeating the Israeli side Maccabi Haifa 2–1 in the 1999 UEFA Intertoto Cup thanks to a double strike from club legend Mushfig Huseynov. Qarabağ has also represented Azerbaijan in the UEFA Cup Winners' Cup and UEFA cup many times.

These problems were alleviated in 2001, when one of the largest holding companies of Azerbaijan, Azersun Holding, starting sponsoring the team. The squad used the name of Qarabag-Azersun for two seasons, but then returned its original name in 2004.[7]

Gurban Gurbanov era (2008–present)

Gurban Gurbanov the most successful Azerbaijani manager in European competitions.

In 2008, former Azerbaijani football star Gurban Gurbanov was appointed as head coach after the unexpected departure of Rasim Kara to Khazar Lankaran one week before the start of the 2008–09 season. Led by Gurban Gurbanov, Qarabağ have ignored a common strategy in Azerbaijani football: eschewing foreign signings in favour of nurturing local talent.[8] Gurbanov brought with him a tiki-taka style of play, characterised by short passes, long periods of build-up and players interchanging positions.[9]

Under Gurbanov, Qarabağ has become one of the most successful Azerbaijani football clubs in Europe (with three consecutive wins) and one which reached the UEFA Europa League play off-round by beating Rosenborg in the UEFA Europa League, and also eliminated Honka of Finland.[10][11] The achievements in European competitions marked Gurban Gurbanov as among the most successful Azerbaijani managers ever.[12]

In 2010, the club set an Azerbaijani record for the most significant win in a European competition by beating Metalurg Skopje 4–1 in Baku and knocking out Wisła Kraków to reach the play-offs for the second year in succession.[13][14][15] In 2011, club duplicated the same record by beating Banga Gargždai 4–0 in Gargždai.[16] 2011–12 season ended in disappointing style for Qarabağ as they finished in fourth place, leaving the club without European competition.[17] In 2013, Qarabağ reached UEFA Europa League play off-round for third time in their history.[18][19]

In May 2014, Qarabağ earned its second league title after 21 years.[20] A month later, by beating Red Bull Salzburg, the club became first Azerbaijani side to win in the third round of UEFA Champions League.[21][22] In August 2014, the club reached Europa League play off round for the fourth time in last five seasons.[23] In 2014, Qarabağ qualified for the 2014–15 UEFA Europa League group stage, being the second Azerbaijani team to advance to this stage in a European competition.[24] On 23 October 2014, after defeating 1–0[25] Dnipro Dnipropetrovsk, the team became the first Azerbaijani club to win a Europa League's group stage game.[26][27]

Crest and colours

The crest on the club emblem is the symbol of the Karabakh. It is produced by English designers and based on the Karabakh horse.[28] The horse stems from the club's nickname The Horsemen; although it was included on club programmes and scarves earlier, the crest was not displayed on the shirt until 2004.[29] After Gurban Gurbanov's appointment, Qarabağ's attractive style of play led fans to call the team Qafqazın Barselonası (Barcelona of The Caucasus), which plays upon FC Barcelona's success in Europe.[9][30] The club is sometimes called Qaçqın Klub (The Refugee Club) after its conservative position on Nagorno-Karabakh conflict and refugee problem in Azerbaijan.[9][31]

Shirt sponsors and kit manufacturers

Qarabağ's traditional kit alludes to the club's location in Nagorno-Karabakh with the black and white representing light and darkness respectively. The club's kits are manufactured by Adidas and sponsored by Azersun, a food producing company from Baku.

Stadium

Qarabağ plays home matches at Tofiq Bahramov Stadium in Baku, which has a capacity of 31,200 fans. The stadium is also used for the Azerbaijan national football team's matches.

The club have previously used Guzanli Olympic Stadium, which is situated in Quzanlı, the most populous municipality in the Agdam Rayon of Nagorno-Karabakh, Azerbaijan. The Imarat Stadium which was club's original home stadium was destroyed as a result of artillery attacks from Armenian military forces during the Nagorno-Karabakh War.[32][33][34]

In 2012, the construction of a new football stadium was announced. The Karabakh Stadium stadium expected to be completed in 2015.[35]

The record attendance for Qarabağ occurred July 30, 2014, in a 2014–15 UEFA Champions League third qualifying round match attended by 32,000 fans against FC Red Bull Salzburg which ended with a 2–1 win for the Qarabağ.[36]

Supporters

Although a large part of Qarabağ's support is drawn from the local Aghdam population, they remain immensely well supported in the rest of Azerbaijan. This is mainly due to their being the only team to represent war-torn Nagorno-Karabakh region in the league.[37] The club is a sole remnant of the past and a living symbol of hope and pride for over half a million Azerbaijani internally displaced people. In recent years, thanks to achievements on the pitch, the club has been able to inspire and initiate special youth projects enforcing stability and development in the IDP-settlements near the border of Nagorno-Karabakh.[38][39]

The club have few supporting groups such as Imarat and UltraAslan.[40][41] These groups often receive free tickets to Qarabağ's games, which helps Karabakh to have more support from fans.

Domestic league and cup history

{|class="wikitable" style="text-align: center;"

|- style="background:#efefef;" ! Season ! Div. ! Pos. ! Pl. ! W ! D ! L ! GS ! GA ! P !Cup !colspan=2|Europe !Top Scorer (League goals) !Head Coach |- ||1992||rowspan=23|APL||4||36||24||7||5||76||26||55||FR||colspan=2|-||align="left"|Azerbaijan Mahir Aliyev (9)
Azerbaijan Mehman Alishanov (9)||align="left"|Azerbaijan Agaselim Mirjavadov |- ||1993|| style="background:gold;"|1||18||9||7||2||23||11||25|| style="background:gold;"|W||colspan=2|-||align="left"|Azerbaijan Mushfig Huseynov (6)||align="left"|Azerbaijan Agaselim Mirjavadov |- ||1993–94|| style="background:silver;"|2||30||21||7||2||52||12||49||SF||colspan=2|-||align="left"|Azerbaijan Mushfig Huseynov (17)||align="left"|Azerbaijan Agaselim Mirjavadov |- ||1994–95||4||24||13||6||5||42||31||32||FR||colspan=2|-||align="left"|Azerbaijan Mushfig Huseynov (14)||align="left"|Azerbaijan Agaselim Mirjavadov |- ||1995–96||5||20||4||9||7||25||26||21|| style="background:silver;"|RU||colspan=2|-||align="left"|Azerbaijan Mushfig Huseynov (9)
Azerbaijan Tarlan Ahmadov (9)||align="left"|Azerbaijan Agaselim Mirjavadov |- ||1996–97|| style="background:silver;"|2||30||23||2||5||61||25||71||SF||CWC||Qual.||align="left"|Azerbaijan Nazim Aliyev (17)||align="left"|Azerbaijan Elbrus Abbasov |- ||1997–98||4||26||14||7||5||43||22||49|| style="background:silver;"|RU||UC||Qual.||align="left"|Azerbaijan Mushfig Huseynov (10)
Azerbaijan Yalchin Baghirov (10)||align="left"|Azerbaijan Elbrus Abbasov |- ||1998–99|| style="background:bronze;"|4||36||20||6||10||50||29||66||FR||CWC||Qual.||align="left"|Azerbaijan Yalchin Baghirov (16)||align="left"|Azerbaijan Boyukagha Aghayev |- ||1999–2000||8||22||5||10||7||21||25||25|| style="background:silver;"|RU||IC||R2||align="left"|Azerbaijan Yalchin Baghirov (7)||align="left"|Azerbaijan Boyukagha Aghayev
Azerbaijan Shahin Shahuseyni |- ||2000–01||9||20||5||4||11||19||34||19||FR||colspan=2|-||align="left"|Azerbaijan Kanan Karimov (3)||align="left"|Azerbaijan Shahin Diniyev |- ||2001–02||3||32||16||3||13||50||44||51||FR||colspan=2|-||align="left"|Russia Dmitriy Kudinov (13)||align="left"|Azerbaijan Shahin Diniyev |- ||2003–04||3||26||19||3||4||63||17||60||SF||colspan=2|-||align="left"|Azerbaijan Samir Musayev (20)||align="left"|Azerbaijan Shahin Diniyev |- ||2004–05|||6||34||22||5||7||61||31||71||FR||UC||Qual.||align="left"|Azerbaijan Vadim Vasilyev (12)||align="left"|Azerbaijan Igor Ponomaryov |- ||2005–06||5||26||12||4||10||32||32||40|| style="background:gold;"|W||colspan=2|-||align="left"|Azerbaijan Samir Musayev (10)||align="left"|Azerbaijan Elkhan Abdullayev
Azerbaijan Boyukagha Aghayev |- ||2006–07|||8||24||6||9||9||20||27||27||FR||UC||Qual.||align="left"|Azerbaijan Vagif Javadov (4)
Azerbaijan Kanan Karimov (4)||align="left"|Turkey Rasim Kara |- ||2007–08||5||26||11||8||7||25||16||41||QF||colspan=2|-||align="left"|Azerbaijan Vagif Javadov (6)||align="left"|Turkey Rasim Kara |- ||2008–09||5||26||14||7||5||35||22||49|| style="background:gold;"|W||colspan=2|-||align="left"|Republic of Macedonia Artim Šakiri (7)
Bosnia and Herzegovina Nidal Ferhatovic (7)||align="left"|Azerbaijan Gurban Gurbanov |- ||2009–10||3||42||17||18||7||37||30||69||QF||EL||PO||align="left"|Azerbaijan Rauf Aliyev (5)
Azerbaijan Afran Ismayilov (5)||align="left"|Azerbaijan Gurban Gurbanov |- ||2010–11||3||32||17||7||8||41||22||58||FR||EL||PO||align="left"|Georgia (country) Georgi Adamia (18)||align="left"|Azerbaijan Gurban Gurbanov |- ||2011–12||4||32||15||8||9||37||28||53||SF||EL||Qual.||align="left"|Georgia (country) Georgi Adamia (7)||align="left"|Azerbaijan Gurban Gurbanov |- ||2012–13|| style="background:silver;"|2||32||16||11||5||43||26||59||SF||colspan=2|-||align="left"|Brazil Richard Almeida (13)||align="left"|Azerbaijan Gurban Gurbanov |- ||2013–14|| style="background:gold;"|1||36||21||9||6||65||21||72||QF||CL
EL||Qual.
GS||align="left"|Brazil Reynaldo (22)||align="left"|Azerbaijan Gurban Gurbanov |- ||2014–15|| style="background:gold;"|1||32||20||8||4||51||28||68||style="background:gold;"|W ||CL|| ||align="left"|Brazil Reynaldo (10)
Netherlands Leroy George (10)||align="left"|Azerbaijan Gurban Gurbanov

|}

European record

Qarabağ against Eintracht Frankfurt, at Tofiq Bahramov Stadium (UEFA Europa League 2013–14 – Play-off round)
As of 10 December 2015
Competition Matches W D L GF GA
UEFA Champions League 8 4 2 2 8 4
UEFA Cup / UEFA Europa League 50 19 14 17 51 56
UEFA Cup Winners' Cup 4 0 1 3 1 12
UEFA Intertoto Cup 4 1 0 3 2 11
Total 66 24 17 25 62 83

Matches

Players

Azerbaijani teams are limited to nine players without Azerbaijani citizenship. The squad list includes only the principal nationality of each player; several non-European players on the squad have dual citizenship with an EU country.

Current squad

As of 22 January 2016

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

No. Position Player
1 Azerbaijan GK Farhad Valiyev
2 Azerbaijan DF Gara Garayev
4 Azerbaijan DF Eltun Yagublu
5 Azerbaijan DF Maksim Medvedev
7 Azerbaijan MF Namiq Yusifov (vice-captain)
8 Spain MF Míchel
9 Brazil FW Reynaldo
10 Spain MF Dani Quintana
13 Bosnia and Herzegovina GK Ibrahim Šehić
14 Azerbaijan DF Rashad Sadygov (captain)
15 Azerbaijan MF Rahid Amirguliyev
18 Azerbaijan MF Ilgar Gurbanov
19 Azerbaijan DF Azer Salahli
20 Brazil MF Richard Almeida
No. Position Player
22 Azerbaijan MF Afran Ismayilov
23 Azerbaijan DF Elgun Ulukhanov
25 Albania DF Ansi Agolli
32 Azerbaijan DF Elvin Yunuszade
33 Azerbaijan MF Eltun Turabov
55 Azerbaijan DF Badavi Guseynov
63 Azerbaijan GK Shahruddin Mahammadaliyev
67 Morocco MF Alharbi El Jadeyaoui
77 Azerbaijan MF Javid Tagiyev
90 Sweden FW Samuel Armenteros
91 Azerbaijan MF Joshgun Diniyev
94 Turkey GK Halit Oghuzhan
97 Azerbaijan MF Mahir Madatov
99 Republic of Macedonia MF Muarem Muarem

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
Azerbaijan DF Tarlan Guliyev (at Azerbaijan Kapaz)
Azerbaijan DF Shahriyar Aliyev (at Azerbaijan Kapaz)
No. Position Player
Azerbaijan MF Vugar Mustafayev (at Azerbaijan Zira)
Azerbaijan MF Namig Alasgarov (at Azerbaijan Kapaz)

Reserve team squad

As of 12 August 2015.
Note: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.

No. Position Player
15 Azerbaijan MF Togrul Bilallı
16 Azerbaijan MF İbrahim Aslanlı
21 Azerbaijan MF Fuad Karimli
24 Azerbaijan MF Mahammad Mammadov
27 Azerbaijan MF Nijat Abbasov
28 Azerbaijan DF Kamran Hasanzade
30 Azerbaijan MF Nazim Karimli
31 Azerbaijan MF Salman Jafarov
35 Azerbaijan DF Kamran Nasirov
36 Azerbaijan MF İlham Mirzayev
37 Azerbaijan DF Kanan Zulfugarov
38 Azerbaijan MF Famin Aliyev
No. Position Player
39 Azerbaijan MF Zaur Farzaliyev
40 Azerbaijan GK Mammad Huseynov
41 Azerbaijan MF Turan Manafov
44 Azerbaijan DF Tahir Aliyev
50 Azerbaijan DF Elton Khudadatov
66 Azerbaijan FW Mahammad Aghayev
78 Azerbaijan MF Elmir Namazov
85 Azerbaijan GK İlkin Pashayev
88 Azerbaijan MF Elchin Rahimli
95 Azerbaijan GK Namaz Ismayilov
98 Azerbaijan MF Ruslan Hajiyev

Individual records

Lists of the players with the most caps and top goalscorers for the club, as of 21 November 2014 (players in bold signifies current Qarabağ player). Mushfig Huseynov is the club's all-time most capped player and top scorer with 125 goals in 320 games.[43]

Reynaldo is one of the most goalscoring players for the club.
Top Ten Highest Goalscorers
Player Period Appearances Goals
1 Soviet Union Azerbaijan Mushfig Huseynov 1989–99; 2003–04; 2005–07 320 125
2 Brazil Reynaldo 2012–present 93 46
3 Azerbaijan Samir Musayev 2002–06 85 44
4 Georgia (country) Georgi Adamia 2010–12 72 29
5 Azerbaijan Tarlan Ahmadov 1993–97; 2004 102 28
6 Azerbaijan Vugar Nadirov 2001–05; 2009–2015 193 27
7 Azerbaijan Vagif Javadov 2007–10; 2012–13 110 25
8 Azerbaijan Nazim Aliyev 1996–97 44 23
9 Azerbaijan Rauf Aliyev 2006–13 131 23
10 Brazil Richard Almeida 2012–present 69 20
Maksim Medvedev is one of the most capped players for the club.
Top Ten Players With Most Appearances
Player Period Caps Goals
1 Soviet Union Azerbaijan Mushfig Huseynov 1989–99; 2003–04; 2005–07 320 125
2 Azerbaijan Vugar Nadirov 2001–05; 2009–2015 211 28
3 Azerbaijan Maksim Medvedev 2006–present 197 6
4 Azerbaijan Namiq Yusifov 2006–07; 2008–present 186 1
5 Albania Admir Teli 2009–2015 170 6
6 Azerbaijan Aslan Kerimov 1993–97; 2003–11 168 12
7 Azerbaijan Rashad Sadygov 2009–10; 2011–present 147 8
8 Albania Ansi Agolli 2010–present 140 3
9 Azerbaijan Rauf Aliyev 2006–13 131 23
10 Azerbaijan Vagif Javadov 2007–10; 2012–13 110 25

Club officials

The Board of Directors

Position Name
Vice-President Turkey Tahir Gozal
Managing Director Turkey Emrah Çelikel
Financial Director Turkey Murat Karaman
Facilities Director Azerbaijan Asif Asgarov
Press and Operations Officer Azerbaijan Nurlan Ibrahimov

Coaching staff

Position Name
Manager Azerbaijan Gurban Gurbanov
Assistant manager Azerbaijan Zaur Tagizade
Assistant manager Spain Ruben Selles
Goalkeeper coach Azerbaijan Elkhan Hasanov
Doctor Azerbaijan Sadraddin Mammadov

Notable managers

Information correct as of match played 2 November 2014. Only competitive matches are counted.

Name Nat. From To P W D L GS GA %W Honours Notes
Allahverdi Bagirov  Soviet Union 19?? 198? N/A N/A N/A N/A N/A N/A N/A [44]
Agaselim Mirjavadov  Azerbaijan 1992 1996 N/A N/A N/A N/A N/A N/A N/A Azerbaijan Premier League
Azerbaijan Cup
Azerbaijan Supercup
[45]
Elbrus Abbasov  Azerbaijan 1996 1998 N/A N/A N/A N/A N/A N/A N/A
Boyukagha Aghayev  Azerbaijan 1998 1999 N/A N/A N/A N/A N/A N/A N/A
Elbrus Abbasov  Azerbaijan 1999 2000 N/A N/A N/A N/A N/A N/A N/A
Shahin Shahuseyni  Azerbaijan 2000 2000 N/A N/A N/A N/A N/A N/A N/A
Shahin Diniyev  Azerbaijan 2001 2004 N/A N/A N/A N/A N/A N/A N/A
Igor Ponomaryov  Azerbaijan 2004 2005 N/A N/A N/A N/A N/A N/A N/A
Elkhan Abdullayev  Azerbaijan 2005 2006 N/A N/A N/A N/A N/A N/A N/A Azerbaijan Cup
Boyukagha Aghayev  Azerbaijan 2006 2006 N/A N/A N/A N/A N/A N/A N/A
Rasim Kara  Turkey Dec 2006 Jun 2008 38 14 12 12 35 32 36.84 [46]
Gurban Gurbanov  Azerbaijan Jul 2008 Present 261 131 78 52 342 197 50.19 Azerbaijan Premier League (2), Azerbaijan Cup (2) [47]

Notes: P – Total of played matches W – Won matches D – Drawn matches L – Lost matches GS – Goal scored GA – Goals against
%W – Percentage of matches won

Nationality is indicated by the corresponding FIFA country code(s).

Honours

As of 22 May 2015, Qarabağ has won three Azerbaijan Premier League titles, the Azerbaijan Cup once and one Azerbaijan Supercup trophy. The club is the first non-Baku based club to have won the Azerbaijan Premier League title.[48] Qarabağ is one of the two teams in Azerbaijan, along with Neftchi Baku which has participated in all Azerbaijan Premier League championships so far.[48]

Winners (3): 1993, 2013–14, 2014–15
Winners (4): 1993, 2005–06, 2008–09, 2014–15
Winners (1): 1994

In popular culture

Qarabağ featured on football simulation game Pro Evolution Soccer 2015.[49]

References

  1. Atayev, Oktay. "Qarabağ end 21-year wait for Azerbaijani title". www.uefa.com. UEFA. Retrieved 7 May 2014.
  2. "Azerbaycan'da şampiyon Karabağ". www.fanatik.com.tr (in Turkish).
  3. 1 2 3 Official Qarabagh website: Club's Creation(Azerbaijani)
  4. Gault, Matt. "Qarabag are exiled from their home but could shock the Champions League". www.theguardian.com. The Guardian. Retrieved 6 August 2014.
  5. Müşfiqin "Qarabağ"dan böyük sevgisi yoxdur (Azerbaijani)
  6. "QARABAĞ"A SADİQ YAŞAR HÜSEYNOV (Azerbaijani)
  7. "QARABAĞ" AĞDAMIN – "QARABAĞ" AĞDAMA NƏ QƏDƏR DƏXLİ VAR?! (Azerbaijani)
  8. Ibrahimov, Erkin. "Qarabağ back and hoping for more". UEFA. Retrieved 27 July 2011.
  9. 1 2 3 Atayev, Oqtay. "Who are Qarabağ FK?". www.uefa.com. UEFA. Retrieved 31 July 2014.
  10. В Баку в футбольном матче Лиги Европы «Карабах» обыграл «Русенборг» (Russian)
  11. "Qarabağ" "Rusenborq"u diz çökdürdü (Azerbaijani)
  12. Suleymanov, Mehman. "Qurban Qurbanov 1-ci, komandası 2-ci" (in Azerbaijani). APASPORT News Agency. Retrieved 6 August 2010.
  13. Карабах громит Металлург! (Russian)
  14. "Villa and Rapid to meet again". uefa.com. Retrieved 6 August 2010.
  15. Aliyev, Elmir. ""Карабах" победил "Вислу" в Лиге Европы". 1news.az. Retrieved 5 August 2010.
  16. Kheyrullaev, Vugar. "Azərbaycan futbolunda görünməmiş hadisə Litvada gerçəkləşdi". Retrieved 30 June 2011.
  17. "Не попадание Карабаха в еврокубки является трагедией". Azerisport.com. Retrieved 11 May 2012.
  18. "Mörk svensk kväll i Europa League". www.svd.se (in Swedish). Retrieved 8 August 2013.
  19. "Karabağ, play-off turuna yükseldi". spor.haber7.com (in Turkish). Retrieved 8 August 2013.
  20. ""Karabakh" FC becomes Azerbaijani Champion after 21 years". en.apa.az. Retrieved 7 May 2014.
  21. Три красных и победа "Карабаха". ru.uefa.com (in Russian). UEFA. Retrieved 31 July 2014.
  22. "Red Bull Salzburg verliert Hinspiel gegen Karabach". www.salzburg.com (in German). Salzburger Nachrichten. Retrieved 31 July 2014.
  23. Еще один шанс, еще одна жеребьевка. www.azerisport.com (in Russian). Azerisport.com. Retrieved 7 August 2014.
  24. Карабах стал вторым азербайджанским клубом, прошедшим в групповой этап Лиги Европы. www.azerisport.com (in Russian). Retrieved 28 August 2014.
  25. Dnipro Dnipropetrovsk – Qarabağ FK : 0–1 (Match report) ScoresPro.com
  26. "Карабах установил историческое достижение для азербайджанских клубов". www.azerisport.com. Azerisport.com. Retrieved 23 October 2014.
  27. "Qarabağ make history as Muarem stuns Dnipro". www.uefa.com. UEFA. Retrieved 23 October 2014.
  28. Karabakh: История (Russian)
  29. Azimo, Rustam. ""Карабахские скакуны" покоряют Европу, или Пара слов о матче "Карабах" – "Висла"". 1news.az. Retrieved 24 August 2010.
  30. "Qafqazın "Barselona"sı: axı niyə məhz o?". news.milli.az (in Azerbaijani). Day.az. Retrieved 31 July 2014.
  31. "UEFA "Qarabağ"dan yazdı". futbolinfo.az (in Azerbaijani). Retrieved 31 July 2014.
  32. Vaxt olmayan yer (Azerbaijani)
  33. Ermənilərin xarabaya çevirdiyi Ağdamın «İmarət» stadionu (Azerbaijani)
  34. "Caqa" ikinci dəfə lotereyada uddu (Azerbaijani)
  35. ""Tofiq Bəhramov" futbolsuz qalacaq". fanat.az (in Azerbaijani). Retrieved 26 August 2013.
  36. "Qarabağ–Salzburg". Soccerway. 30 July 2014. Retrieved 8 January 2015.
  37. Rza, Kamal. "Üç günə dəyişən Azərbaycan futbolu" (in Azerbaijani). 90plus.info. Retrieved 24 August 2010.
  38. OFF SIDE by Dirk-Jan Visser
  39. Нефтяной фонд Азербайджана выделит около 100 млн. долларов на обустройство беженцев (Russian)
  40. "Azarkeşlər bu dəfə də "Qarabağ"ı tək qoymadılar". Sportal.az (in Azerbaijani). Retrieved 21 August 2013.
  41. "Qarabağ" fanklubunun rəhbəri: "İmarət"in səsini bütün Avropa eşidəcək" (Azerbaijani)
  42. "Qarabağ FK – History". UEFA.com. Union of European Football Associations. Retrieved 7 December 2014.
  43. "Azerbaijan Premier League Stats". PFL.az. Retrieved 14 June 2014.
  44. "Horses of the Lost Black Garden". inbedwithmaradona.com. Retrieved 9 January 2014.
  45. Или «Карабах», или Мирджавадов!. apasport.az (in Russian). Retrieved 9 January 2014.
  46. "Rasim Kara, Karabağ takımı ile anlaştı". zaman.com.tr (in Turkish). Retrieved 9 January 2014.
  47. "Qurban Qurbanov bunu bilirmi?". apasport.az (in Azerbaijani). Retrieved 2 November 2014.
  48. 1 2 ИСТОРИЯ И ДОСТИЖЕНИЯ. footballtop.ru (in Russian). Retrieved 24 January 2014.
  49. ""Qarabağ" PES-2015-də!". sportinfo.az (in Azerbaijani). Retrieved 9 November 2014.

Further reading

External links

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