CSKA (football club, Moscow)
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PFC CSKA
Full name
the name of CJSC "Professional football club CSKA" Nicknames are Red and blue
Horses
The Army was founded on August 27, 1911 (104 years old) CSKA Stadium Capacity 30,000 President Evgeny Giner General Director Roman Babaev Coach Leonid Slutsky Captain Igor Akinfeev Rating 35th place UEFA
67th place IFFHS Budget $ 70 million Sponsored by ROSSETI PFC website cska.com RFPL Competition 2014/15 Season Vice Champion
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This term has other meanings, see CSKA (football club).
This term has other meanings, see CSKA (meanings).
PFC CSKA (Professional Football Club CSKA) is a Russian football club from Moscow, formerly part of the Central Sports Club of the Army.
One of the oldest and most titled[1] clubs in the post Soviet history of Russian football, leading its history from the OLS (Society of Ski Lovers) team, founded in 1911.
Seven time champion of the USSR[2], five time winner of the USSR Cup[2], five time champion of Russia[2], seven time winner of the Russian Cup[3] and six time winner of the Russian Super Cup.
The first Russian club to win the European club tournament (UEFA Cup 2004/05) [2].
In 2013, for the first time, he won the national championship held under the "autumn spring" system (2012/2013 season)[3].
In 2014, the club won the championship for the fifth time, and thus, CSKA became the first club in Russian history to collect the originals of all the trophies[4].
Content
1 Names 2 Club history 2.1 1911-1935 2.2 1936-1952 2.3 1953-1970 2.4 1971-1991 2.5 1992-2000 2.6 2001-2008 2.7 Since 2009
3 Club colors and uniforms 3.1 Equipment
4 Performance statistics 5 Fans 5.1 Famous fans
6 The origin of the nickname 7 Stadium 7.1 Laying the first stone 7.2 General information 7.3 Technical Characteristics
8 Budget 8.1 Sponsors
9 Players at major international tournaments 10 Achievements 10.1 National Championships 10.2 European Cups 10.3 Other tournaments 10.4 Regional and Early competitions 10.5 Achievements of players and coaches 10.6 Team prizes 10.7 State Awards
11 Head Coaches and Presidents 12 Club Management 12.1 Senior Staff 12.2 Coaching Staff
13 Current squad 13.1 Main squad 13.1.1 Assigned numbers
13.2 Youth team 13.2.1 Players on loan
14 Transfers 2015/2016 14.1 Summer 2015 14.1.1 Came 14.1.2 Left
14.2 Winter 2016 14.2.1 Came 14.2.2 Left
15 Guards of the Club 16 Affiliated clubs 17 See also 18 Notes 19 Sources 20 Literature 21 References
Titles[edit / edit wiki text]
1911-1923 year — the Society of skiing sports (OLLS).
1923-1928 — year Experienced exponential Playground vsevobuch (OPV).
1928-1951 year — the Central house of red army (CDKA).
1951-1957 year — the Central house of the Soviet army (CDSA).
1957-1960 year — the Central sports club of Ministry of defense (CSK MO).
1960-1994 year — the Central sports club of army (CSKA).
Since 1994 — Professional football club CSKA (PFC CSKA).
Club history[edit / edit wiki text]
1911-1935[edit / edit wiki text]
The ALLS logo
Group photo of the OLS football players
The history of the CSKA football club began in 1911, when a football section was organized in the Society of Ski Enthusiasts (OLS).
On the basis of this football section, three teams were formed, which in the same year for the first time took part in the Moscow championship in the "B"class.
On August 14 (27), 1911, the first official match of the OLS team with the Vega club was played.
The match ended with the victory of the OLS players with a score of 6: 2.[5]
In 1917, the team won first place in the Kazan League (the championship of teams located in suburban areas along the Kazan Railway) and entered the class "A" of the Moscow championship, where it played until 1922.[6]
After the 1917 season, part of the second team of the OLS moved to the first.
In 1921, in the autumn championship of Moscow (the Fulda Cup), the champion was determined in the "golden match", in which the teams of OLS and KFS took part.
In the 1922 season, the OLS football players won the Moscow spring championship[7] and took second place in the autumn.
In the same year, OLS won the "KFS Kolomyaga Cup", in the final of which, according to the rules, the winners of the first and second leagues of the Moscow championship met, and the" Cup of Capitals", in which the champions of Moscow and Petrograd met.
8]
The 1922 season was the last in which the team played under the name OLS.[8]
The logo of the OPPV
OPPV football players at the training camp in Batumi in 1928
In the 1923 season, changes came to Soviet sports.
They decided to put "bourgeois" sports on socialist rails.
All the old sports societies were closed or disbanded, and departmental teams were formed on their basis.
All members of the " old " teams were enrolled in the relevant departments, and property (including stadiums and sports grounds) were transferred to the new teams.[9]
ALLS athletes joined the newly created community of the Vsevobuch Experimental Demonstration Site (OPPV), created under the wing of the Red Army.
Among the main goals of the OPPV were the work on general and military training of pre conscripts and the physical recovery of pre conscripts and Red Army soldiers.[10]
The Moscow Football League was also dissolved.
Instead, a championship of 8 departmental teams was created, which was called in the newspapers of that time "the newly created league under the Dynamo society".
In the 1926 season, the army managed to win the championship of Moscow in the "A" class (this was the name of the new league).
Moreover, in fact, the championship was not completed — due to the expansion of the class to 14 teams and a bad calendar, all the matches were not played by November, but the winner was declared the leading at that time OPPV.
On February 23, 1928, the day of the decade of the Red Army, the Frunze Central House of the Red Army was opened in Moscow, where the sports department was organized.
In the same year, all the sports forces of the OPPV were transferred to the Central House of the Red Army.
That year, the championship of the capital was played between 6 clubs: "Trekhgorka", "Dynamo", CDKA, "Pishcheviki", RKIMA and COR.
CDKA was considered one of the favorites, but in the end it shared only 4-6 places.
Nevertheless, the army men performed quite successfully in long distance and international meetings.
For example, the Muscovites played with the best team of Azerbaijan — "Progress" — in Baku and won with a score of 5: 1, they drew 2: 2 with a working Finnish team that played at the Spartakiad in Moscow, and next year they beat the national team of Kiev (3: 2) and the national team of the Kiev garrison (4:1).
In the autumn of 1935, the CDKA won the Moscow championship.
However, Dynamo and Spartak played in weakened squads: the best players were at the disposal of the USSR national team.[12]
1936-1952[edit / edit wiki text]
In 1936, the USSR Football Championship was held for the first time.
CDKA played in class " A " together with the capital "Dynamo", "Spartak" and "Locomotive", the Leningrad "Dynamo" and "Krasnaya Zarya", as well as the Kiev "Dynamo".
The Army team won their first match in the championship against Krasnaya Zarya with a score of 6: 2, this victory was the first major win in the history of the USSR championships.
On May 29, 1936, the army team won, with a score of 3: 0, the first victory in the USSR championship over its principal rival Spartak Moscow.
However, further performances of the army men began to develop not so successfully, and as a result, the CDKA finished the spring championship in 4th place.
In the autumn championship of 1936, the club took the last (eighth) place at all and, according to the principle of rotation, for the next season it was supposed to go a league lower — to the "B"class.
But the highest military ranks intervened in the matter, and although the CDKA started the championship in the lower league, the class " A " was expanded, and the army men finished the championship in the strongest division.
This measure did not help — in the 1937 season, the CDKA again took the last (this time ninth) place.
However, that year another reform of the supreme union league took place, which has now been expanded to 26 teams.
Also, for the first time, a "draft" policy was used to strengthen the squad — promising and strong players from other teams were called up for military service and enlisted in the team.
One of the first in the ranks of the "called up" players was the right extreme of the Moscow "Metallurg" Grigory Fedotov.
In the first season with Fedotov, the Army team took second place in the championship, losing the first place to Spartak.
In the championships that remained before the war, the CDKA took 3rd and 4th places, and the team was replenished with right insider Valentin Nikolaev and forward Alexey Grinin.
On June 22, 1941, the army team had to play an away match in Kiev against Dynamo.
But the match did not take place: the city was bombed early in the morning.
The Great Patriotic War began.
During the war, many CDKA players sent reports with a request to send them to the front.
But the management wanted to preserve the best football personnel of the country, and the team continued to train, although during the bombing of Moscow, football players were involved in protecting the administrative buildings of the NGO and the General Staff.
In March 1942, the players of the CDKA, who had a secondary education, were sent for short term training to the military faculty of the Institute of Physical Education.
After its completion, 16 players received the rank of second lieutenant, as a result of which the post war CDKA was called the "team of lieutenants".
During the war, the city championship was played in the capital, and in 1943 the army men became the winners of this championship.
In 1944, the USSR Cup was resumed, and the CDKA reached the final, where in a stubborn struggle it lost to Zenit Leningrad with a score of 1: 2. The first post war season was marked by a confrontation between the CDKA and the capital Dynamo.
Dynamo won the championship, and the army team was stronger in the cup final.
That season, another CDKA player, Vsevolod Bobrov, clearly showed himself.
This year was the first for the "team of lieutenants".
The army team won the 1946 championship without any problems, and in 1947 the fight unfolded.
Almost the entire season, Dynamo Moscow was in the lead.
The blue and white team gave out a winning streak of 12 consecutive victories and came up to a face to face meeting with the Army pursuers in the rank of the favorite.
In a hard fight at the Dynamo stadium, the Army team snatched the victory.
The decisive blow was the midfielder of the CDKA Vyacheslav Solovyov.
However, this match, although it was important, was not the most decisive.
At the end of the championship, the "team of lieutenants" had to play in Tbilisi with the local "Dynamo".
The curator of the Dynamo sports club in those years was Lavrenty Beria, and there was no doubt that the Tbilisi football players would try to help the" departmental " Moscow team.
In that championship, there was a regulation that when points were equal, the ratio of goals scored to goals conceded was taken into account.
The CDKA really needed a victory.
A draw with a score of 0: 0 or 1: 1 would complicate the situation of the team.
A draw with a score of 2: 2 or more would make further struggle for the championship almost impossible.
Dinamo Tbilisi twice led in the score, but the CDKA by Bobrov's forces twice compared the score.
As a result, the match ended in a draw, and the chances of the army team for the championship became quite illusory: in the match of the last round, the CDKA had to beat the Stalingrad Tractor, and score 5 goals and not miss a single one.
As a result, the ratio of goals scored to conceded at the CDKA was 0.125 better than at Dynamo.
In 1948, the situation was almost completely repeated.
The entire championship was led by Dynamo, and the CDKA, having given out 11 winning matches in a row in the second round, came to the last round — a face — to face meeting with the leader having 1 point less.
Thus, only a victory could bring the CDKA the championship title.
Losing 1: 2 without their injured leader Grigory Fedotov, the Army team snatched the victory.
Bobrov's decisive goal, 3: 2 — and CDKA became the champion for the third time in a row.
This achievement will be submitted only in two decades to another team Dynamo Kyiv.[24]
In the same year, 1948, the army team made their first "golden double", winning the national cup.
In the semifinals, as a result of a replay, the CDKA snatched victory from the same Dynamo Moscow, and in the final it defeated the winner of the 1947 cup, Spartak Moscow.
The 1949 season was the last championship for Fedotov.
Having become the top scorer of the championship, the forward, who received a number of injuries, switched to coaching.
Bobrov, however, yielded to the insistent requests of the commander of the Air Force of the Moscow Military District, V. I. Stalin, and left for the Air Force team he was creating.
CDKA finished the championship in 2nd place.[24]
The logo of the CDSA
The ceremony of awarding gold medals to the players of the CDKA in 1950
In 1950, the army men were again the first, and in 1951, acting under the new name of the Central House of the Soviet Army, they made a "golden double", winning both the championship and the cup.[25]
In 1952, the USSR leadership decided for the first time to send a team to the Olympic Games.
For the first time since 1912, the delegation also included a football squad, assembled on the basis of the CDSA and headed by an army coach Boris Arkadiev.
The football tournament was not easy.
In the 1/16 final, the Soviet football players barely beat Bulgaria (2: 1) and went to Yugoslavia.
By that time, the two socialist states were on bad terms, since the leader of Yugoslavia, Tito, had withdrawn his country from the commonwealth of socialist states, and the game was more political than sporting.
By the middle of the 2nd half, the Soviet national team was losing with a crushing score of 1: 5, however, it managed to reduce the match to a draw, but in the replay, despite the fact that Bobrov opened the score, the USSR national team lost with a score of 1:3.[26]
The punishment from the political leadership of the country was not long in coming: after the first three rounds of the championship, in which the army team won, on the day of the game with Dynamo Kyiv, the bus did not come for the team, and the team chief Vasily Zaitsev was called to the Sports Committee, where order No. 793 on the disbandment of the team was read.
The results of the army team played in the 1952 championship were annulled, and the players were distributed to other teams.
So the "team of lieutenants" ended its existence.[27]
There is a conspiracy theory that Lavrenty Beria, who allegedly supervised Dynamo, had a hand in this case in order to eliminate the main competitors.[28]
1953-1970[edit / edit wiki text]
Yuri Nyrkov (left) and Viktor Chistokhvalov (right with the ball)
CDSA was absent from the best teams in the country for only two seasons.
In the spring of 1953, the Chairman of the Council of Ministers of the USSR, I. V. Stalin, died, after some time, the First Deputy Chairman of the Council of Ministers of the USSR, L. P. Beria, was shot.
In the autumn of the same year, the Minister of Defense N. A. Bulganin signed an order on the re establishment of football teams at the district houses of officers, including the CDSA.
Grigory Pinaichev was appointed the senior coach of the team, Konstantin Lyaskovsky and Grigory Fedotov were appointed assistants.
There were some problems with the recruitment of the squad — many of the stars of the "team of lieutenants" had already either finished their careers or were at a solid age for football players.
Nevertheless, the revived team included goalkeepers Vladimir Nikanorov, Boris Razinsky, defenders Anatoly Bashashkin, Yuri Nyrkov, Anatoly Porkhunov, Anatoly Krutikov (came from Khimik), midfielder Alexander Petrov, forwards Vladimir Demin, Valentin Emyshev, Vasily Buzunov (moved from the Sverdlovsk DO team), Viktor Fedorov, Sergey Korshunov (both from the disbanded Air Force team of the disgraced Vasily Stalin).[29][30]
The first match of the revived CDSA team was held on April 5, 1954 in Kiev with Torpedo from Gorky.
The match ended with the score 1: 1, Vasily Buzunov scored a goal for the army team.
A week later, the CDSA lost to the local Dynamo there.
The team, criticized in the press for an unimpressive game, finished the season in 6th place (out of 13) with 24 points.
Nevertheless, the team was sometimes able to fight on equal terms with the leaders.
So, with a score of 2:1 that season, Spartak Moscow was beaten (goals were scored by Korshunov and Buzunov).
oris Kuznetsov, Viktor Kolyadko, Alexander Tarkhanov and Valery Glushakov.
At the same time, Morozov accepted 13 young football players into the army team: midfielder Valdas Ivanauskas, forwards Valery Shmarov, Vladimir Tatarchuk, as well as some other players.
CSKA took the third place in the zone "West" of the preliminary tournament of the first league and in the final part, taking second place, went to the transitional tournament, in which the team could not win the right to play in the higher league.[67][68]
In the 1986 season, CSKA performed more successfully.
According to the results of the championship, the club shared the first place with the Georgian team "Guria".
The golden match, which took place in Uzhgorod, CSKA won with a score of 2:0. [69]
At the beginning of the 1987 season, CSKA striker Sergei Berezin suffered a severe traumatic brain injury in a match against Zalgiris.
He spent several months in a coma, six months later, thanks to the efforts of doctors, he recovered, but he was not destined to return to his club as a football player.
CSKA performed poorly in the championship, having won only six victories by the 29th round.
CSKA played the match of the 29th round with Zenit Leningrad, the game ended with a score of 1: 1. This draw turned out to be over the limit and did not allow the Army team to stay in the top league.
Morozov was removed from the post of head coach.
Sergey Shaposhnikov was appointed in his place.[70]
In 1988, CSKA started the season in the First League for the third time in its history.
In general, the composition of the army team has hardly changed compared to last season.
Goalkeeper Mikhail Eremin left for the Spartak reserve team, Sergey Savchenko moved to the Zarya club in Balti.
The team was replenished with defenders Andrey Mokh, who returned from SKA Lviv, and Valery Glushakov, who transferred from the SKA Rostov team.
The team spent the season successfully, but the defeat at the end of the championship from Rostselmash did not allow CSKA to advance to the top league.
As a result, CSKA took the 3rd place, 1 point behind the nearest rival "Rotor".
At the end of the season, Shaposhnikov resigned.
Pavel Sadyrin became the new head coach.[71]
Before the last season in the first league, the composition of CSKA practically did not change.
Mikhail Eremin has returned from Spartak Moscow, striker Oleg Sergeev has arrived from Rotor.
The Army team finished the championship in the first place, having won 27 victories, including 18 major ones and scoring 113 goals.
The best scorer of the championship was the forward of CSKA Valery Masalitin.[71]
In the off season of 1990, the team was left by striker Valery Popovich, who moved to Spartak Moscow, defender Dmitry Gradilenko, who joined the SKA Lviv squad, as well as several young players.
CSKA has been strengthened by several players, including goalkeepers Andrey Novosadov and Alexander Guteev, midfielder Yuri Bavykin, striker Ilshat Fayzulin, defenders Alexey Gushchin and Mikhail Sinev.
In the first round of the championship, Sergey Krutov and Valery Masalitin, who were interning at the Dutch club Vitesse, were absent from the team.[72]
In exchange for the lease of Krutov and Masalitin, Vitesse paid for a 12 day army training camp in the Netherlands and undertook to find a sponsor for CSKA.[72]
Before the trip to the Netherlands, CSKA played six test matches in the United States.[72]
The team started the season with a home defeat of Shakhtar Donetsk, the match ended with a score of 4: 0 in favor of the army.[72]
In the first round, CSKA scored 17 points out of 24 possible.
In the USSR Cup, things were also going well for CSKA: after beating Sokol Saratov, Dnipro Dnepropetrovsk and Rotor Volgograd, the Army team reached the semifinals, where they met Dynamo Kiev.
The semifinal match ended with a score of 4: 2 in favor of Kiev.
In the second round, Masalitin and Krutov returned from Vitesse.
In the second half of the championship, CSKA performed arrhythmically, victories alternated with defeats.
On September 1, 1990, CSKA lost heavily to Ararat Yerevan with a score of 4: 0, which allowed Dynamo Kiev to catch up with the Army team.[72]
However, five days later, in the match with "Rotor", the Army managed to rehabilitate themselves by scoring seven goals against Volgograd, five of them were scored by striker Valery Masalitin, thereby repeating the record for the number of goals scored by one player in a match.[72]
CSKA lost the second round match with Dynamo Kyiv with a score of 1: 4, this defeat did not allow the Army team to take the first place, the Army team finished the 1990 season on the second line of the standings.[73]
Mikhail Eremin
In the off season of 1991, striker Sergei Dmitriev left the team and moved to the Spanish club Jerez, the team was replenished with young football players, midfielders Vasily Ivanov and Dmitry Karsakov, as well as striker Lev Matveev.
The season for CSKA began with a match of the 1/4 USSR Cup against Dynamo Minsk, which ended with a score of 1: 4 in favor of the army team.
In the first round of the USSR championship, which took place on March 10, 1991, Metalist Kharkiv was beaten with a crushing score of 4:0.
In the next 5 rounds of the championship, CSKA won 5 victories, with a goal difference of 14-4.
In the semifinals of the USSR Cup, CSKA, with a score of 3:0, defeated Lokomotiv Moscow.
In the Final of the USSR Cup, which was held on June 23, 1991 at the Luzhniki Big sports arena, CSKA played against Torpedo.
The score in the match, at the 43rd minute, was opened by the forward of "Torpedo" Yuri Tishkov, at the 45th minute the army men were able to win back, Igor Korneev scored.
After the break, in the 67th minute, Korneev scored a double and put his team ahead.
In the 75th minute, Tishkov equalized the score.
However, after five minutes, the army team took the lead again, Korneev passed Sergei Dmitriev, who had recently returned from Spain, who, having broken through on the flank, made a shot into the penalty area of the Torpedo team, and Oleg Sergeev, who ran up, closed the transfer the score was 3:2.
CSKA won the national Cup for the fifth time.[74]
The next day, on June 24, 1991, on the Leningrad Highway, the goalkeeper of CSKA Moscow, Mikhail Eremin, was involved in a car accident.
On June 30, at the age of 23, he died from numerous injuries.
On July 2, he was buried at the Zelenograd cemetery.
At the funeral, the CSKA players vowed to win the national championship in memory of Mikhail.[75]
On September 18, 1991, as part of the Cup of Cups draw, CSKA met with the Italian club "Roma".
The match began with sharp attacks by the hosts, but the army team could not hit the visitors ' goal, the first half ended in a zero draw.
At the very beginning of the second half, in the 46th minute, CSKA defender Sergei Fokin played unsuccessfully in the penalty area and cut the ball into his own goal.
The Army team was able to equalize the score already in the 52nd minute of the match, after a strong blow from Vladimir Tatarchuk, the ball bounced to Sergeyev and he was able to send it to the Romans ' goal.
In the 73rd minute, taking advantage of a mistake by the army defenders, Roma striker Rizzitelli went one on one with CSKA goalkeeper Dmitry Harin and outplayed him and scored a goal, putting an end to the match.
The second leg took place in Rome on October 2, 1991.
Already on the 13th minute, the Army team took the lead, after an accurate pass from Mikhail Kolesnikov, the Moscow striker Dmitriev opened the score in the match with a head kick.
Later, the defender of the guests Fokin, after giving a corner, scored another goal, but the referee Forstinger canceled it, as he considered that Valery Massalitin had violated the rules before the strike.
As a result, CSKA, according to the sum of two matches, could not break into the 1/8 Cup of Cups.
On October 27, 1991, CSKA beat Dynamo Moscow with a score of 1: 0, ahead of schedule, for the round before the end of the national championship, won the gold medals of the championship, thereby completing the last "golden double" of the USSR championships.[76]
1992-2000[edit / edit wiki text]
Pavel Sadyrin
After the collapse of the USSR in 1991, the former republics that were part of the USSR began to hold their own independent football competitions.
The Highest league of the Russian championship was created almost from scratch.
To participate in the Top League, 20 clubs were gathered, including CSKA.[77]
Before the 1992 season, a number of experienced players left the team.
Among them were Igor Korneev, Dmitry Galyamin and Dmitry Kuznetsov, who moved to Espanyol ,Sergey Dmitriev, who signed a contract with the Spanish club "Jerez", Valery Broshin, who left for the Finnish club "Kuopion Palloseura", Vladimir Tatarchuk, who moved to Slavia Prague, as well as some other players.
Sadyrin made up for this loss with several young football players.
As a result, CSKA started the season with a rejuvenated squad of players.[78][79]
The Russian Championship in 1992 was played in two stages.
In the first stage, 20 clubs of the Top Division, divided into two groups, identified the 4 strongest teams in the group, and then in the second stage of the competition they fought for the championship title, the remaining teams played for places from 9th to 20th.[77][79]
The army team started the first Russian championship with a guest match against Spartak Vladikavkaz.
The match took place on March 29, 1992.
Already in the 9th minute of the game, midfielder Mirjalol Kassymov put Spartak ahead, and at the very end of the match, the home team's striker Igor Shkvyrin scored the second goal, thereby setting the final score in the match — 2: 0. Despite the defeat in the first match, CSKA managed to win three victories in a row — over Dynamo Stavropol ,over Tekstilshchik and over Fakel.
By the end of the first stage of the national championship, the army team scored 23 points and, taking 4th place, made their way to the final bullet.
In the second stage of the championship, CSKA scored 14 points and took only 5th place.[78][79]
In the Cup, CSKA performed with great success.
The tournament, which began as the USSR Cup, was completed under the auspices of the CIS after the collapse of the Union.
In the semifinals, the Army team defeated the Tajik club "Pamir" Dushanbe, and in the Cup final the army men were supposed to meet with Spartak Moscow.
The final was held on May 10, 1992, at the Luzhniki Stadium, in the presence of 42,000 spectators.
In the 20th minute of the game, Vladimir Beschastnykh opened the score in the match, he also doubled the score in the 35th minute.
At the end of the first half, the CSKA players had the opportunity to recoup after the penalty awarded by the referee, but CSKA goalkeeper Harin failed to beat his counterpart Cherchesov and sent the ball above the goal.
The match ended with a score of 2: 0, and the Cup remained with the red and white forever.[80][81]
During the season, the club changed the head coach, instead of Pavel Sadyrin, who was appointed head coach of the Russian national team, Gennady Kostylev took the helm of the team.[82]
In September 1992, CSKA started in the Champions League.
In the first match, the army team played against the Icelandic club Vikingur, the first match ended with a score of 1: 0, and the second 4: 2 in favor of the Muscovites.[80]
And in the next match, the Army team met with the current at that time winner of the Champions Cup — Barcelona.
The first match was held on October 21, 1992 in the presence of 40,000 spectators and ended with a score of 1:1.
Alexander Grishin distinguished himself among the army men, and Begiristain among the Spaniards.[83]
The second match was held on November 4, 1992, at the famous home stadium of Barcelona Camp Nou, in the presence of 80,000 fans.
The hosts opened the score in the match already in the 12th minute of the game, Nadal scored, and in the 31st minute Begiristain doubled the score in the match.
A few minutes before the end of the first half, Yevgeny Bushmanov managed to beat Barca goalkeeper Subisarreta and narrowed the gap in the score.
After the break, in the 57th minute, Denis Mashkarin equalized the score.
And 4 minutes later, Dmitry Karsakov, after a pass from Ilshat Fayzulin, set the final score in the match 2:3. [84]
After this victory, CSKA entered the group stage.
Despite the victory over Barcelona, CSKA took the last place in its group and finished its performance in European competitions.[85]
Before the 1993 season, the team's composition underwent a number of changes.
Goalkeeper Yevgeny Plotnikov came from Kuban, defender Sergey Mamchur came from Dnipro, midfielder Yuri Antonovich came from Dynamo Minsk, and the team was also replenished with other players.
During the season, defenders Sergey Kolotovkin and Oleg Malyukov left the team and moved to the Israeli clubs Beitar and Hapoel (Ironi Rishon), Sergey Krutov moved to Dynamo Moscow, and Valery Broshin signed a contract with the club Hapoel (Kfar Saba).[85]
In the championship, CSKA performed unevenly, victories were followed by defeats, as a result, only 30 points and 9th place out of 18 possible in the standings.
Things were going better in the cup, the Army team managed to make it to the final, where they had to meet with Torpedo Moscow.
Two days before the match with Torpedo, the team's coach, Gennady Kostylev, was fired, as a result, he went to the final match of the CSKA cup without a head coach.
The match, in regular and extra time, ended with a score of 1: 1, and the Torpedo players scored a better penalty, 5: 3. Boris Kopeikin was appointed to the post of head coach instead of Kostylev.[86]
Sergey Semak is one of the symbols of CSKA, he joined the team in 1994.
At the beginning of season 94, the following changes occurred in the club's composition: CSKA striker Valery Masalitin moved to Spartak Moscow, Dmitry Karsakov continued his career at Torpedo, Vladimir Tatarchuk returned from Slavia Prague, and in the summer a young Sergey Semak joined the team.
The start of the championship turned out to be unsuccessful, after seven rounds the team with six points occupied the tenth line of the standings, and by the end of the first round the army team scored only seven goals, and soon the head coach of CSKA Kopeikin resigned.
His place was taken by Alexander Tarkhanov, however, despite the change of coach, the army team took only 10th place in the championship.[87]
Things were going better in the cup, just like last season, the team managed to reach the final, where the army team had to play against the champion Spartak Moscow.
In the main and extra time, the match ended with a score of 2:2, and the red and white scored a better penalty 2:4. [88]
The following season, Tarkhanov continued to form a new team, refusing the services of many players: Broshin and Bystrov left for Zenit St. Petersburg, Ivanov left to play at Maccabi (Herzliya), Semenov, Grishin, Kolotovkin moved to Dynamo Moscow, and Sinev and Demchenko left to play in Europe: the first — to Ajax Amsterdam), and the second to Spain.
They were replaced by a new generation of football players, from which the trio that formed the backbone of the team in the center of the field stood out: Sergey Semak, Dmitry Khokhlov and Vladislav Radimov.[89]
The defense was made up of the team captain Bushmanov, Valery Minko, Mamchur, Mashkarin and Gradilenko.
The first goalkeeper at the beginning of the season was Andrey Novosadov, and from the second round — Plotnikov.
In the attack — Swan and Faizulin.
As a result, a fairly young front line doubled the team's performance compared to the previous season.
CSKA finished the 1995 championship in sixth place.
Young football players of the army club were actively involved in the national teams of the country: Semak, Radimov and Khokhlov played both for the youth and for the youth.
Mashkarin, Lebed, Faizulin and Gerasimov also played in the "youth team".
And in the main team in the qualifying games for the European Championship, Lebed and Radimov played one match each.
The latter, together with Bushmanov, entered the list of "33 best"at the end of the year.[90]
In 1996, active selection continued.
The team was joined by goalkeeper Tyapushkin, striker Movsesyan and defender A. Ivanov.
In the summer, the first foreign legionnaires appeared in CSKA, two Brazilians: defender Leandro Samaroni and attacking midfielder Leonidas, as well as Lithuanian striker Edgaras Jankauskas.[91]
As a result, the performance increased and from the 25th round the team gave out a seven match winning streak, consistently beating KAMAZ, Dynamo Moscow, Torpedo Luzhniki, Rostselmash, Zenit, Zhemchuzhina and Alania.
Three rounds before the finish, CSKA was in third place, but the Army team failed to finish, losing first away to Baltika 1: 2, and then in Selyatin near Moscow in a nominal home match (due to the reconstruction of Luzhniki, all Moscow teams that played that round at home did not have enough capital stadiums) to Novorossiysk Chernomorets 1:3.
The victory in the last round over the capital "Locomotive"did not brighten up the impression either.
As a result, the team took the fifth place.
The weak ending gave the big CSKA a reason to break the contract with Tarkhanov.
Nevertheless, the army team repeated their best achievement in the Russian championships.
Bushmanov, Minko and Khokhlov were included in the list of the "33 best", and Tyapushkin, having defended 14 matches to zero, set a new club achievement in this component.
As for the cup, the Army team lost to "Rotor" in 1/4 with a score of 0: 2 and were eliminated from further competition.[92]
In August, CSKA joined the fight for the UEFA Cup.
In the qualification, the Icelandic club "Akranes" was beaten twice" (2:0, 4:1), but then the army men went to Feyenoord.
In Moscow, the Army team lost with a minimum score, and in the return game they drew 1: 1. [93]
That year, the European Championship was held, and CSKA was represented by Bushmanov, Radimov and Khokhlov in the Russian national team.
Minko also played one friendly match for the national team.[92]
In the off season, the conflict between the leadership of the football club and the leadership of the CSKA sports society finally escalated.
As a result, the team was divided into two: the first was headed by Tarkhanov, and the second by Pavel Sadyrin, appointed by the leadership of the CSKA sports society.[94]
Tarkhanov was able to attract the main team of CSKA, and Sadyrin was forced to build his team mainly from understudies and players of youth teams.
In the off season, Tarkhanov agreed to lead Torpedo Luzhniki and took Mashkarin, Gashkin, Bushmanov, Samaroni, Leonidas, Yankauskas, Minko, Khokhlov with him.[94]
As a result, Minko still remained in CSKA.
The team's losses did not end there: A. Ivanov left for Austria, Tyapushkin signed a contract with Dynamo (Moscow), Lebed moved to Zenit St. Petersburg, Pestryakov left for Rostselmash Rostov.
The replenishment was not so strong: Sidelnikov from Ilva Chunma, Lobzhanidze from Dynamo (Tbilisi), Bokov, Kulik and Khomukha from Zenit, Ulyanov and Shustikov returned from Spain, A. Grishin moved from the capital Dynamo, and A. Nikolaev from Torpedo.
Most of the newcomers appeared in the team only before the first matches, so the team began to play and look for their optimal tactics only during the championship.
Yakovenko, Lobzhanidze and Sidelnikov soon left the club, after the first round Ulyanov left for Israel again, lost his place in the Nikolaev and Shutov team, Tsaplin moved to the Saratov Sokol, Demchenko moved to the Dutch Ajax.[94]
In December, the defender Sergei Mamchur died.[95]
In the summer off season, goalkeeper Kutepov moved to CSKA, Gaisumov, Kuznetsov, Karsakov, Petrosyants returned to the team.
After the first round, the team took the 13th place in the table and was on the verge of relegation.
But, having scored 11 points in the last five games, the Army team was able to move to 12th place.
The top scorer was Vladimir Kulik, who scored 9 goals.[96]
In 1998, Oleg Dolmatov led CSKA to the first silver medals of the Russian championship
In the 1998 season, the composition was greatly changed, 7 new players came to the team, among them were Oleg Kornaukhov, Evgeny Varlamov, Dmitry Sennikov, Sergey Filippenkov, at the same time a whole group of players left the army, including Alexey Gerasimov, Igor Semshov, Sergey Armishev, Dmitry Karsakov, Andrey Movsesyan.[97]
The beginning of the championship, the players of CSKA played poorly, by the end of the first round, the team took 14 places oh, having scored only 14 points.
The head coach of the army team Pavel Sadyrin was dismissed, and Oleg Dolmatov was invited to take his place.
There were also changes in the top management of the club, in July a Chechen businessman Shahrudi Dadakhanov took the position of general director, and in August he became the president of PFC CSKA.[98]
The team played its first match after the summer break against Chernomorets Novorossiysk, beating it with a score of 4: 1, two rounds later the team made a breakthrough — seven dry wins in a row, with a goal difference of 18: 0, [99] five matches before the final, CSKA came in second place in the standings.
On September 26, 1998, the army team met with Spartak Moscow, which occupies the first place.
The defending champion was defeated with a score of 4:1.
That season, CSKA took the second place 3 points behind Spartak, which took the first place.
In the second round, the Army team won 14 matches out of 15, six with a large score.
In the 1998 season, the team set a new record for the number of consecutive wins (12). [100]
At the end of the season, eight CSKA players entered the list of the "33 best": Semak, Varlamov, Bokov, Minko, Khomukha, Kulik, Kornaukhov, Novosadov.[101]
In the 1/4 draw of the 1997-1998 Russian Cup, the Army team lost to the Volgograd "Rotor" with a score of 3:5.
In the autumn stage of the Russian Cup 1998-1999, the team, having beaten Amur Energia 2: 0 and Tom 2: 1, reached the 1/4 finals.[101]
Before the start of the 1999 season, there were minor changes in the team, the team left players who did not have a solid place in the base, their place was taken by young players from the lower divisions of Russia.[102]
By the end of the first round, the Army team was in third place, 5 points behind the leader of Spartak Moscow, by the end of the championship the situation had not changed and CSKA won bronze.
In the 1998-1999 Russian Cup, the team lost to Zenit St. Petersburg in the semifinals, with a minimum score.
In the second qualifying round of the Champions League, CSKA met with the Norwegian club Molde.
In the home match, the Moscow club managed to win a confident victory 2:0, Shishkin and Khomukha scored goals, but they suffered a humiliating defeat in the second leg 4:0.[103][104]
At the beginning of the 2000 season, there was a massive rotation of players in the team, 9 players came to the team at once, among them were Yuri Okroshidze and Rustem Bulatov.
CSKA failed to start the championship, the first goal in the national championship was scored only in the seventh round.
After ten rounds, Oleg Dolmatov resigned, Pavel Sadyrin took his place.
The change of the head coach helped the team to improve its tournament position, as a result, CSKA took the eighth place.
In the Russian Cup 1999-2000 was doing more successfully 1/4 of the tournament CSKA beat on penalties Anji 5:3,[105] then, in the semifinals, beat Spartak Moscow 3:1.
In the final, CSKA met with the Moscow "Locomotive", in the opening match, on the 12th minute of the game for a professional foul was removed defender of CSKA's Maxim Bokov, despite this, the army opened the scoring in the match the goal was scored Sergei Semak, at the end of the first half Evseev to level the scores.
In the 66th minute, Loskov received the 2nd yellow card.
In extra time, Bulykin went one on one with CSKA goalkeeper Okroshidze, brought the ball into the net with a powerful blow, and in the 113th minute after Tsymbalar's strike, the score in the match becomes 3:1, despite all efforts, the CSKA players were able to win back only one ball, in the last, 120th minute, Oleg Kornaukhov scored a goal against Lokomotiv.[106]
In the UEFA Cup 2000-01, CSKA lost, on the sum of two meetings, to the Danish club Viborg" (0:0, 1:0) and was eliminated after the first round of the tournament.[107]
2001-2008[edit / edit wiki text]
On February 21, 2001, the change of ownership of the army club was announced.
The new shareholders were the company "AVO Capital" — 51 % of the shares[108][109], the Ministry of Defense of the Russian Federation and the English firm Blue Castle Enterprises Limited, and the Russian entrepreneur Evgeny Lennorovich Giner became the president of the club.
By this time, a number of players who were considered the main ones last season had left the team: Khomukha, Bychkov, Okroshidze and Shishkin.
Before the transfer window closed, the new management managed to acquire three players who really strengthened the army team [109]: first, striker Denis Popov was bought from Chornomorets Novorossiysk, then goalkeeper Sergei Perkhun was purchased from the Pridnestrovian club Sheriff, and the third newcomer was midfielder Juris Layzan, who transferred from the Riga club Skonto.
In the first two rounds, CSKA suffered two defeats, first in an away match with Chernomorets 2: 0, then in a home match against the Samara club Krylia Sovetov 3: 0. In the third round, CSKA met with Spartak Moscow, the match ended with a score of 1: 0 in favor of Spartak, but this match went down in the history of Russian football for other reasons.
A few hours before the derby, there were mass fights between fans of the teams.
Already at the very beginning of the match, smoke bombs flew from the army sectors to the treadmills, the field was covered with clouds of smoke[110], plastic chairs flew at the policemen, after a while a mass fight between red and white fans and riot police began in the Spartak sectors, the fights continued throughout the match.
According to the police department, 1,436 seats were torn out during the match, 660 people were detained, and another 27 were hospitalized.
Despite the unsuccessful start, the Army team finished the first round in fifth place, scoring 25 points.
During the summer season, the Army acquired eleven football players, among them were: Alexey Berezutsky, Igor Yanovsky, Andrey Solomatin, Elver Rakhimich, Predrag Rangelovich, Veniamin Mandrykin, Roman Monarev, Vladimir Kuzmichev, Alexander Berketov and Spartak Gogniev.[111]
The fatal collision with B. Budunov
Such a solid reinforcement allowed us to consider CSKA as one of the contenders for medals.
However, in the second round, the team was hit by a series of adversities.
On August 18, in an away match with Anzhi Makhachkala, Sergei Perkhun suffered a serious head injury when he collided with striker Budun Budunov.
At first, the injury seemed to be of moderate severity, Sergey was conscious until the end of the match.
But on the way to the airport, he fell into a coma, which resulted in clinical death.
Despite all the efforts of doctors, at 5 o'clock in the morning on August 28, the football player died.[112]
Later it became known about the fatal illness of Pavel Sadyrin.
In the last rounds of the 2001 championship, the team was led by Alexander Kuznetsov instead of him.
On December 1, Sadyrin died.[113]
As a result, the team finished the season only in seventh place, scoring 47 points.
After the end of the season, the club's management invited Valery Gazzaev to the coaching position.
109] On November 22, 2001, the names of newcomers who will join the team in the off season became known: Vasily Berezutsky, Deivydas Shemberas, Vyacheslav Daev, Dmitry Kirichenko and Roland Gusev.[109]
, two football players left the team Stanislav Lysenko and Oleg Kornaukhov.
In the 2002 season, the Army team lost their first points only in the sixth round, having drawn with the Elista "Ural" (3: 3).
The match with Spartak Moscow ended with a confident victory of CSKA 3:0, for the entire match the red and white could not get on target, Valery Gazzaev joked at the post match press conference:
Today, CSKA showed a very good level of football.
The only omission is that we allowed our opponents to approach our penalty area several times.[113]
Valery Gazzaev is the coach whose name is associated with the majority of CSKA's victories in the recent history of the club.
After the first round, the team took 2nd place, 3 points behind the championship leader, Lokomotiv Moscow, and having two games in front of it (the match of the army team of the 12th round was postponed to August, and Lokomotiv already played the match of the 25th round [114] on May 12).
In 2002, CSKA met Zenit St. Petersburg in the final of the Russian Cup, the first goal in the match was scored by Andrey Solomatin in the 27th minute of the match, and in the 52nd minute Igor Yanovsky set the final score 2: 0. [115] This was the first trophy in the recent history of the club.
In the autumn of 2002, the club began playing in the UEFA Cup, but failed to defeat the Italian club Parma in the first round.
By the end of the championship, CSKA scored the same number of points with the Moscow "Locomotive", is clearly ahead of its additional indicators: the number of victories — 21 vs 19; the difference of goals scored and conceded — 34 vs. 32; the number of goals is 60 to 46.[116]
nevertheless, in force at the time the system was designated a "Golden match", it took place on 21 November at the stadium "Dynamo".
7 minutes into the game, the midfielder of "Locomotive" Dmitry Loskov scored the only goal in the match.
Thus, CSKA won only silver in the 2002 season.
This season, the top scorers of the championship were Roland Gusev and Dmitry Kirichenko.[117]
In the winter off season, midfielder Jiri Yaroshik joined the team.
The team finished the first round of the 2003 championship, taking the first place, the closest pursuer Saturn near Moscow was 6 points behind.[118]
During the summer break, CSKA acquired Croatian striker Ivica Olic.
In August, in the Champions League qualification, CSKA suffered the most humiliating defeat in the history of Russian clubs ' performances in European competitions.[119]
The club lost to the Macedonian "Vardar", which occupied the 238th place in the UEFA club ranking.
Despite some decline in the fall, the army team was able to win the Russian championship for the first time in its history.
In November 2003, there were changes in the club management, instead of Valery Gazzaev, a Portuguese specialist Artur Jorge took the helm of the team, under the leadership of the new coach, the team won a convincing victory — 3:1 in the match for the Russian Super Cup against Spartak Moscow.
In the 2004 season, Sibneft became the main sponsor of CSKA.
Due to the financial contributions of the sponsor, several football players were acquired.
Defender Sergey Ignashevich moved from Lokomotiv Moscow, Evgeny Aldonin joined the team from Rotor Volgograd, Osmar Ferreira came from the Argentine club River Plate, Daniel Carvalho, Yuri Zhirkov and Chidi Odia were also acquired.[121]
However, despite all the acquisitions, things were going badly in the championship, by the end of the first round the team was in fifth place with 20 points.
In this regard, George was dismissed, and Valery Gazzaev took his place again.
In the summer, Brazilian striker Wagner Love and Serbian Milos Krasic were acquired.
Gazzaev managed to improve the team's standings, and two rounds before the finish, CSKA took first place.
However, in the next round, the Army team stumbled, drawing with Dynamo, and passed ahead of Lokomotiv.
As a result, CSKA took second place, only one point behind the champion — Lokomotiv Moscow.
In their Champions League group, CSKA managed to take third place, which allowed the Army to take part in the UEFA Cup in the spring of 2005.[126]
CSKA football players winners of the UEFA Cup of the 2004/2005 season
In the 2005 off season, Sergey Semak, who moved to PSG, Dmitry Kirichenko, who ended up in Moscow, and Jiri Yaroshik, who moved to Chelsea, left the team, and the Brazilian midfielder Dudu joined the team.
The 2005 season for the Army team began with a home match with the Portuguese Benfica in the 1/16 UEFA Cup, which ended with a 2-0 victory for CSKA, in the away match the Army team played a 1-1 draw.
The next opponent of CSKA was the Serbian club Partizan, the guest match in Belgrade ended with a score of 1:1, and the home match in Krasnodar 2: 0 in favor of the red and blue.
In the next round, the Army team defeated the French Auxerre 4:0. [128]
Despite losing 2-0 away, CSKA was able to continue playing in the European Cup.
In the semifinals, CSKA faced the Italian "Parma", beating which (0:0, 3:0), Muscovites reached the final.
The opponent in the UEFA Cup final was the Portuguese club Sporting.
The final match was held in Lisbon at the Jose Alvalade Stadium, the home of the Portuguese team, on May 18, 2005.
The first goal of the match, in the 29th minute, was scored by Sporting midfielder Rogerio.
In the 56th minute of the game, Alexey Berezutsky leveled the score after Carvalho's submission, in the 65th minute, Armee Yuri Zhirkov put the Muscovites ahead, and in the 75th minute of the meeting, Wagner Love set the final score in the match— 3:1.[129][130]
For the first time in the history of the Russian club won the European Cup.[131]
On May 29, 2005, in the final of the Russian Cup, CSKA beat Khimki near Moscow with a score of 1: 0, Yuri Zhirkov scored the only goal.[132]
In the national championship, in the 29th round, ahead of schedule, having beaten Dynamo Moscow, the army team became champions for the second time in their history.[133]
The 2005 season is still considered the most successful in the history of the army club.
So, CSKA of the sample of 2005 was recognized by the jury of the competition "The Russian Football Championship 20 years" as the best team of the Russian championships of 1992-2012.
134]
In the 2006 off season, a number of young players left the team, the Brazilian striker Jo was acquired instead. [135]
On March 5, in the first official match — 1/8 of the Russian Cup — with Spartak from Kostroma, he opened the account by scoring the first goal for CSKA[136], and a week later, on March 11, in the match for the Super Cup with Spartak Moscow, Jo scored the winning goal.
In the Championship, the newcomer opened the scoring in the second round in the match against Yaroslavl "Shinnik", scoring four goals.[137]
The team suffered its first defeat in the 5th round of the championship, losing to Lokomotiv 3:2. [138]
After the first round, the Army team shared the first place with Spartak Moscow with 31 points scored.[139]
In the Russian Cup, the army men who beat Zenit St. Petersburg in the semifinals" (1:0, 3:0), there was a meeting with the Spartak Moscow club.
Having won a convincing victory with the score 3: 0, CSKA became the owner of the trophy for the third time.[140]
In the second round of the championship, CSKA did not lose its leading positions, and, in Vladivostok, a round before the end of the championship, defeating the local club "Luch Energia" with a score of 4:0, won gold medals,[141][142] thus making two "golden doubles" in a row, this achievement became an absolute record of the Russian championship.[143]
In the Champions League, the army club performed confidently, taking second place two rounds before the finish, but a home defeat from FC Porto (0:2), and a guest defeat from the outsider Hamburg, did not allow the army to leave the group.
Wagner Love — the best scorer of the Russian Championship of the 2008 season
Before the 2007 season, the Croatian striker Ivica Olic left the team, who moved to the German club Hamburg, as well as several young players, including Alexander Salugin, Kirill Kochubey and Vladimir Gabulov.
Instead, two young midfielders were acquired — the Turk Erkin Janer and the Brazilian Ramon. [144]
In January 2007, CSKA took part in the Channel One Cup draw.
In their group, CSKA, having beaten Hapoel Tel Aviv (4: 1) and Shakhtar Donetsk (0: 2), reached the final.
The cup final was held in Tel Aviv at the Blumfeld Stadium, [145] CSKA faced Spartak Moscow.
The score in the match, in the 52nd minute of the game, was opened by CSKA midfielder Dudu, after 6 minutes Roman Pavlyuchenko equalized the score, and in the 67th minute, Army rookie Ramon opened his goal account for CSKA.[145]
At the end of the second half, Spartak striker Pavlyuchenko closed the canopy from the flank and brought the ball into the net of Igor Akinfeev's goal with his chest.
In overtime, at the last, 120th minute of the game, the Armenian Jo brought his team forward with a head kick, Spartak could not win back. [145]
In February, within the framework of the UEFA Cup, CSKA met with the Israeli club Maccabi, in the first meeting, held in Vladikavkaz, the match ended with a score of 0:0,[146] and in the away match, the Army team was defeated with a minimum score.[147]
In the first seven matches of the 16th Russian championship, CSKA had four wins, two draws and one defeat with a goal difference of 13: 6,[148] but soon the Army team was expecting a serious loss: on May 6, 2007, in the match of the 8th round of the Russian championship against Rostov, CSKA goalkeeper Igor Akinfeev was injured.
Fighting for a riding ball in the penalty area, he landed unsuccessfully and tore the cruciate ligaments of his knee.
According to doctors, the goalkeeper could hardly return to big football before the end of the season.[149]
After the injury of the main goalkeeper of the team, a number of unsuccessful matches followed, this led to the fact that at the end of the first round, the team took 5th place.[150]
In the summer off season, new players joined the team: striker David Yanchik, defender Eduardo Ratino, midfielder Pavel Mamaev and goalkeeper Yevgeny Pomazan.[151]
In the second half of the season, the team was able to somewhat improve its position in the standings and finished the championship in third place.[152]
CSKA Players with the Russian Cup
On January 11, 2008, CSKA went to Dubai for the first training camp in the UAE.
The training camp was held until January 23, 23 players of the team participated in the first training camp.[153]
The first match in the new year was played by CSKA on January 20, 2008 at the training camp held in the UAE, against the local second division club Ajman, the match ended with a score of 5: 0 in favor of the army.[154]
On January 23, 2008, CSKA joined the Association of European Clubs, a football organization that replaced G 14.[155]
On January 27-30, the club participated in the Channel One Cup draw.
The first match against Shakhtar Donetsk ended with a score of 3: 1 in favor of the miners, Sergei Ignashevich scored the only goal for the Army team after a free kick. [156]
The match against the local Beitar also ended with a defeat of CSKA, this time with a score of 1: 0.[157]
On May 17, the team won the Russian Cup, beating Amkar Perm.
During the match, Amkar led 2-0, but CSKA was able to win back and win on penalties.[158]
Due to the EURO 2008, the Russian championship was interrupted after the 11th round.
Five CSKA players went to the European Championship as part of the national team: Akinfeev, V. Berezutsky, A. Berezutsky, Ignashevich, Zhirkov.
According to the results of the competition, the Russian national team won bronze medals, and Yuri Zhirkov entered the symbolic team of the tournament.
In the summer off season, the Brazilian striker Jo left the team, who moved to the English club Manchester City for 18 million pounds.
160] Jo spent a total of 77 matches in two and a half seasons at CSKA, in which he scored 44 goals.[161]
On July 8, CSKA president Yevgeny Giner announced the departure of the head coach of the army team Valery Gazzaev at the end of the season.
162]
CSKA fans before the derby with Spartak.
July 12, 2008.
On July 12, CSKA, in the framework of the 13th round of the Russian Championship, won a convincing victory with a score of 5:1 over Spartak Moscow in the most important match.
The score in the match was opened in the 15th minute of the game by the Army forward Wagner Love, who scored a goal after drawing a free kick.
In the 34th minute, after a cross from Alan Dzagoev, the Brazilian doubled the score in the match, and in the 44th minute, Wagner realized a one on one exit and scored a hat trick.
After the break, CSKA continued to attack the opponent's goal, in the 54th minute of the match Dzagoev made a pass to Milos Krasic, who irresistibly shot into the lower corner of the Pletikosa goal.
Spartak players were able to win back one goal in the 68th minute of the meeting — Nikita Bazhenov, who came on as a substitute, made the score of the match 4:1 with a shot to the nine, and in the 77th minute Erkin Janer set the final score in the match — 5:1 with a free kick.[163]
This defeat for Spartak was the largest in the Russian championships.[164]
According to the expert of the newspaper "Sport Express", the army also won the "banner war".[165]
At the end of the first round of the competition, the team took 7th place, which is the worst result in recent years.
After the victory over Spartak, a series of unsuccessful matches followed, in which the Army team suffered one defeat and drew four matches, with three matches ending with a score of 0:0.
The goalless streak was interrupted in the 1/16 of the 2008-2009 Russian Cup, in an away match against Torpedo Vladimir, which ended with a score of 1: 4.[166]
In the 22nd round of the championship, CSKA beat the reigning champion Zenit St. Petersburg in an away match with a score of 3: 1. The score, in the third minute of the match, was opened by the young midfielder of the army team Alan Dzagoev after an accurate pass by Wagner Love.
In the 57th minute of the match, Sebastian Puigrenier brought down Krasic in his penalty area.
The penalty was realized by Wagner.
And in the 65th minute, after a shot by Yuri Zhirkov, Dzagoev scored a double.
The Petersburgers were able to win back only in the 88th minute.
Pavel Pogrebnyak scored a goal against the Muscovites.
Already in added time, CSKA defender Anton Grigoriev received a second yellow card and was removed from the field.[167]
The victory over Zenit was the 250th for Muscovites in the Russian championships.[168]
In the 27th round of the Russian championship, the Army team hosted FC Spartak Moscow in Luzhniki.
In this match, the Army team lost to the red and white for the first time in seven and a half years — 0:1.
Nikita Bazhenov scored a goal against Igor Akinfeev in the 56th minute.
At the 86th minute, Yuri Zhirkov received a yellow card, and later, for arguing with the referee, a red card.
In the 29th round of the Russian championship, the army team hosted Rubin Kazan in Luzhniki, which prematurely registered its championship in 2008.
The game ended with a score of 4: 0 in favor of the red and blue.
After the first half, the teams went to the break with the score 0: 0. In the second half, Wagner Love scored a hat trick, and Yuri Zhirkov set the final score.
At the end of the season, PFC CSKA won the silver medals of the Russian championship and secured entry into the group stage of the Champions League, 4 points behind the champion — Rubin Kazan.
169]
The symbol of CSKA
The European Cup autumn for CSKA began on September 18, 2008 with a guest match of the first round of the UEFA Cup against the Croatian club Slaven, the game ended with a score of 1: 2 in favor of the army [170], in the return match, which was held on September 30 in Moscow, CSKA won with a score of 1: 0, the author of the only goal in the game was Alexey Berezutsky.[171]
According to the results of the draw, CSKA got into group "H" of the group round of the cup, along with the French club "Nancy", the Spanish "Deportivo", the Dutch "Feyenoord", as well as the Polish "Lech".[172]
In the first match of the group round against Deportivo, CSKA won 3-0, goals were scored by Alan Dzagoev (9', 12') and Wagner Love (61').[173]
The second match took place on November 6, 2008 in Rotterdam against Feyenoord.
Despite the dubious refereeing and rudeness of the opponent, CSKA won with a score of 1:3.[174]
In the next qualifying match of the UEFA Cup, which took place on November 27, 2008, the army team beat the Polish club "Lech" with a score of 2: 1, goals for the red and blue were scored by Dzagoev and Zhirkov, and for the Poles Stilich.
This victory guaranteed the Russians a way out of the group.[175]
In the final game of the group stage, which was held on December 5, 2008 in Nancy against the club of the same name, CSKA also won.
The match began with powerful attacks by the hosts, who were able to score a quick goal already in the 4th minute, but after 19 minutes CSKA striker Wagner Love managed to equalize the match, and ten minutes later army midfielder Ramon led his team ahead after a shot by Yuri Zhirkov.
At the 46th minute of the meeting, there was a scuffle between the players of both teams, which ended with yellow cards for Schemberas and Luis.
After the break, both teams, despite the pouring rain, continued to attack the opponent's goal.
In the 62nd minute, Wagner scored a double.
After 10 minutes, the French closed the gap in the score, and five minutes later they equalized it.
Two minutes before the end, Wagner, having beaten the defenders of Nancy, scored a hat trick, setting the final score of the game — 3: 4.[176]
Thus, CSKA won four matches in the group stage of the 2008-2009 UEFA Cup with a goal difference of 12-5. [172]
At the post match press conference, CSKA head coach Valery Gazzaev announced his resignation from the post of head coach of CSKA.[177]
According to the results of the 2008 season, seven army men entered the 33 best football players of the Russian championship: Akinfeev, Ignashevich, Zhirkov, Wagner and Krasich at No. 1, A. Berezutsky at No. 2, V. Berezutsky and Dzagoev at No. 3, in addition, Yuri Zhirkov was recognized as the best football player in Russia.[178]
"Moscow" —CSKA
At the end of December 2008, the team got an official symbol a horse.
Thus, CSKA became the first club in Russia to have its own character.
179][180]
Since 2009[edit / edit wiki text]
See also: History of PFC CSKA (2009-2011)
Ziko is the head coach of CSKA at the beginning of the 2009 season.
On January 9, instead of the retired Gazzaev, CSKA was headed by the Brazilian specialist Zico, [181] under whose leadership the team began preparing for the spring European Cup matches at the training camps in Israel[182] and Turkey.[183]
On February 18, CSKA drew 1-1 with Birmingham Aston Villa in the first match of the 1/16 UEFA Cup final.[184]
In the second leg, the army team was stronger, the result of the match was 2: 0 in favor of the Muscovites.[185]
CSKA held the next European Tour at home with the future winner of the tournament — Shakhtar Donetsk.
The match was held with an equal game between both teams, but CSKA won with a score of 1:0, due to a penalty shot by Wagner. [186]
In the second game, CSKA lost with a score of 0: 2 and was eliminated from the cup draw.
The army team started the 2009 season in Russia with a victory.
In the framework of the Russian Super Cup, Rubin Kazan was defeated with a score of 2:1.
CSKA spent the first half of the eighteenth Russian championship unevenly, in fifteen matches the team won seven victories and suffered five defeats, three more matches were drawn.
Of the seven victories, three were won with a large score, and most of the lost matches ended with a minimal difference.[187]
In the 2008/09 Russian Cup, CSKA performed more successfully.
In the quarterfinals, Lokomotiv Moscow was beaten, and in the semifinals, on penalties, Dynamo.
In the final of the tournament, the "red and blue" met with "Rubin", which they beat with a minimum score, the only goal in the meeting was scored by Evgeny Aldonin.
Thus, CSKA won its fifth cup in seven years, and the trophy remained with CSKA forever.[188]
In the summer off season, a number of leaders left the team.
Yuri Zhirkov's transfer to Chelsea[189] and the top scorer of last season — Wagner Love, who was loaned to the Brazilian club Palmeiras for a year, significantly weakened the team, which, having suffered three defeats in the next six matches, almost lost the chances of taking first place at the end of the season.
On September 10, 2009, Juande Ramos replaced Zico as the head coach of CSKA, [190] who worked in the team for only a month and a half.
Under his leadership, the club played very unstable, alternating major victories with defeats.
On October 26, the club terminated the contract with Ramos.
Leonid Slutsky was appointed the new head coach of CSKA.[191]
The first match with Leonid Slutsky was played by CSKA against Terek, the Army team won with a score of 1: 0. On November 21, CSKA met with Spartak.
For both teams, from the point of view of the tournament position, this game was extremely important.
The red and white, in case of their victory, kept the chances of winning the gold medals of the championship, and the red and blue needed points to get into the European Cup zone.
Already in the debut of the match, the Spartak players managed to open an account in the match.
At the 6th minute of the match, the referee Yuri Baskakov awarded a penalty to the army team, which Alex confidently realized.
Later, at a meeting of the expert judging commission, the penalty was found to be erroneous.[192]
CSKA managed to win back at the end of the first half — after Krasic's cross, Dzagoev equalized the score.
In the 49th minute of the second half, Netsid's strike put the Army team in the lead, but Wellington soon equalized the score.
A minute before the end of the regular time of the match, Tomas Netsid shot from outside the penalty area and brought his team a victory 2:3, thereby depriving the red and white of hope for the championship.[193]
Leonid Slutsky has been the head coach of CSKA since October 26, 2009.
In the final round, CSKA beat Saturn near Moscow with a score of 3: 0 and took the fifth place at the end of the season,[194] which is the worst performance of the team since 2001.
In the Champions League, where CSKA was tasked with reaching the 1/8 finals, things were also not the best - the Army team lost to Wolfsburg (1: 3) and Manchester United (0: 1), and even taking into account the victory over Besiktas (2:1), exit from the group became extremely unlikely.
Nevertheless, the subsequent games under the leadership of the new coach of CSKA — Leonid Slutsky: a draw with Manchester (3:3) and a victory over Wolfsburg 2:1 made the chances of reaching the playoffs more tangible, and, as a result, having won an away victory over Besiktas with a score of 1:2, CSKA reached the 1/8 finals of the Champions League, thanks to the victory of Manchester over Wolfsburg with a score of 3:1 (the Army needed to score more points with "Besiktas", than "Wolfsburg" will get with MU)[195] Thus, in the autumn of 2009, PFC CSKA withdrew from the group round of the Champions League for the first time in its history.[196]
According to the results of the draw for the 1/8 final of the 2009/10 Champions League, held in December 2009 in Nyon, Switzerland, the Spanish "Sevilla"became the opponent of the army at this stage.
During the winter off season, the team underwent changes, it was joined by goalkeeper Chepchugov, defenders Nababkin and Vasyanovich, as well as midfielder Honda, who became the first Japanese in the Russian Football League.
In addition, the changes affected some of the CSKA players who, for one reason or another, did not pass into the squad or had problems with adaptation, most of them were sent on loan, and Nikita Burmistrov and Ganyu Oseni were sold, respectively, to Amkar Perm and the Tunisian club Esperance.
Milos Krasic during his five seasons at CSKA, he played 229 matches, in which he scored 33 goals.
The first official match of the season was held on February 24 in Luzhniki.
As part of the 1/8 final of the Champions League, CSKA hosted the Spanish "Seville".
The match ended in a draw with the score 1: 1, Mark Gonzalez scored for CSKA in the 66th minute with a long range shot.[197]
On March 16, the club played the second leg of the 1/8 final of the Champions League draw against Sevilla .
The first goal was scored by Tomas Necid at the end of the first half in the 39th minute, and a few minutes later Perotti pushed the ball into the goal past Akinfeev.
However, in the 55th minute, Keisuke Honda scored the winning goal from a free kick.
Thus, for the first time in its history, CSKA got into the 1/4 finals of the Champions League draw.
Before that, only one Russian club — Spartak Moscow managed to achieve a similar result in the 1995/96 season.
It is worth noting that the red and white directly got into the quarterfinals, since at that time there was no stage of the 1/8 finals, which the army team overcame.[198]
CSKA's opponent in the 1/4 final of the Champions League was the Italian Inter.
Both matches ended with the score 1: 0 in favor of Inter.
In the match for the Russian Super Cup, CSKA met with Rubin Kazan for the second year in a row.
Despite the game advantage, the Army team lost, the only goal was scored by Alexander Bukharov.[199]
Before the break for the World Cup, the Army team played eleven matches, in which they won seven victories and suffered two defeats from Rostov and Zenit, two more matches, against Dynamo and Lokomotiv, the team played a draw.
The team showed the most meaningful game in the match of the eleventh round against Rubin Kazan, which it beat with a score of 1:0.[200]
In the summer off season, CSKA was strengthened by three players: strikers Seydou Doumbia, whose contract was signed in the winter, Wagner, who returned from a one year lease, and midfielder Zoran Tosic[201] Seven players left the team, including Brazilian Guilherme, who returned to Dynamo Kiev, and Serbian Milos Krasic, who moved to Juventus in Turin for 15 million euros. [202]
On July 10, the Russian championship started again.
In the first match of CSKA met with Moscow "Saturn", which played a draw (1:1).
July 14, CSKA played the match of the 1/16 finals of the Cup of Russia with the Moscow club torpedo and defeated it with the score 2:0.[203]
the First round of the army made a guest victory in the capital Derby against Spartak Moscow.
In the starting line up of CSKA, two newcomers Seydou Doumbia and Zoran Tosic, as well as Wagner Love, who returned from a loan, entered the field.
The match ended with the victory of the red and blue with the score 1: 2.[204]
Seydou Doumbya.
The Ivorian striker's game was one of the main openings of the Russian Championship 2010.
The team spent the second round of the championship very confidently, having suffered only one defeat, and had a good chance to overtake Zenit in the championship race, but draws with Rubin, Saturn, Dynamo and Spartak Nalchik deprived the army team of chances for gold medals.
On November 20, 2010, CSKA prematurely became the silver medalist of the Russian championship, outplaying Spartak Moscow with a score of 3:1 in the minority on its own field.[205]
During the championship, in the match against "Tom", Wagner Love scored his 100th goal for the army, thereby setting an absolute record for performance among foreign players in Russia.
CSKA started its way in the Europa League with a victory in the playoff round over Anorthosis Cyprus (4: 0 at home and 2: 1 away).[206]
After the draw, CSKA was in the "group F", and its opponents in the group tournament were the Italian "Palermo", the Czech "Sparta" and the Swiss "Lausanne".
The first three matches of the tournament ended with the same score 3: 0 in favor of CSKA.
For the first time, the Army team conceded a goal in a home match against Palermo, but in the second half they were able to tip the scales in their favor, the final score in the match was 3:1.
In the home game with Lausanne, which ended with a score of 5:1, the Army team made an early exit from the first place to the spring stage of the tournament. [207]
In the last match of the group tournament, which no longer meant anything for both teams, CSKA drew 1-1 with Sparta.[208]
In the off season, there were no serious changes in CSKA: the team was replenished with defender Viktor Vasin (who was soon out of action for 6 months), Stepan Ryabokon and Latvian Alexander Tsaunya.
Seven second team players were loaned out, and Anton Grigoriev was sold to Alania .
On February 18, 2011, the Army team played their first official match in the Europa League, playing away from the Greek PAOK (1: 0).
At home, the team achieved a draw 1:1.
In the 1/8 finals with Porto, CSKA lost twice 0: 1 and 1: 2.
Winners of the Russian Cup 2010-2014
In the resumed Cup of Russia, Shinnik was beaten (1:0).
In the 1/4 final, Zenit was defeated with a score of 2:0.
Sergey Ignashevich scored in both matches.
On May 22, CSKA won the 6th Russian Cup in its history, becoming the sole leader in this indicator.
In the final, the Army team beat Alania Vladikavkaz (2: 1).
The double was made by Seydou Doumbia.
Thus, CSKA won the only remaining trophy, played in the year of the club's centenary.
In the match for the 2011 Super Cup against Zenit, the Army team did not realize many chances, and in the 73rd minute Alexey Ionov hit Akinfeev's goal, so the Army team could not win the Super Cup again.
The army team started the 2011/2012 Russian Championship with a confident victory over Amkar (2: 0) and after the first round of the championship they took the first place in the standings, having suffered only one defeat from Spartak Moscow.
By the beginning of the second round, CSKA was a clear favorite in the fight for the championship, but defeats from Zenit (0:2) and Dynamo (0:4), as well as regular injuries (Tomas Netsid, Mark Gonzalez, Georgy Schennikov, Keisuke Honda, Sekou Olise, Kirill Nababkin, Zoran Tosic visited the club's infirmary) complicated the team's task.
On August 28, in the "derby" with Spartak, the main goalkeeper of CSKA Igor Akinfeev was seriously injured, his place in the goal was taken by the leased Vladimir Gabulov, who had previously played for CSKA.
In the new cup season, CSKA were eliminated from the tournament already in the 1/16 finals, where the Army team was opposed by Volgar Gazprom: 0: 1.
At the beginning of the group stage of the Champions League, the army faced the French "Lille".
In general, the game was dictated by the French and during the meeting, Lille led with the score 2: 0, but at the end of the second half, CSKA managed to take the advantage and equalize the score thanks to Doumbia's double.
In the second round match against Inter, the Army team, having the advantage, was defeated 2:3.
The Army team won the first victory in the tournament over the Turkish "Trabzonspor" (3: 0), which allowed them to continue the fight for the playoffs.
In this match, Alexander Tsaunya scored his first goal for CSKA.
However, the second leg ended with a score of 0: 0, and Seydou Doumbia received a red card.
In the return match with Lille, the Army team suffered 0:2 defeats and almost lost their chances to get into the playoffs.
However, a 2-1 away win over Inter, as well as a draw between Lille and Trabzonspor (0:0), took CSKA to 1/8 of the Champions League.
In the playoffs, the Army team drew lots with Real Madrid .
In the winter transfer window, CSKA was strengthened by the Nigerian striker Ahmed Musa, midfielders Pontus Wernbloom of Sweden and Kim In Son of Korea.
At the same time, striker Wagner Love was sold to Flamengo, and the contract with defender Chidi Odia was terminated.
On February 21, 2012, the first match of the 1/8 Champions League against Real Madrid ended with a score of 1:1.
In the second leg, CSKA lost with a score of 1: 4, without realizing several chances, and left the tournament.
In the spring part of the championship, CSKA performed poorly, winning only three matches (two against Spartak and one against Lokomotiv) out of twelve, taking third place at the end of the championship and not getting into the Champions League.
The striker of the "army" Seydou Doumbia became the top scorer of the championship, scoring 28 goals.
In the summer off season, Serder Serderov and veteran Deivydas Schemberas left the team, and another veteran Evgeny Aldonin was loaned to Mordovia .
The team was also replenished with defender Mario Fernandez and midfielder Rasmus Elm.
On August 19, 2012, in a match with Mordovia, after Zoran Tosic's goal, NTV Plus commentator Roman Gutzeit uttered a phrase that became a famous football meme: "We can recall one interesting statistical detail: the fact is that this season CSKA, if it scores and does not concede, then it certainly wins."
On August 23, 2012, the Army team won the first match against the AIK club with a score of 1:0[209], but in the next match they sensationally lost 0: 2, having an advantage throughout the match[210].
In the first round of the championship, the Army team suffered only four defeats[211].
In the winter transfer window, due to the financial difficulties of Flamengo, striker Wagner Love, who played for the army club from 2004 to 2011, returned to the team.
On January 16, 2013, he signed a 3.5 year contract[212].
Also, the midfielder Sekou Olise was loaned to PAOK[213].
Ahmed Musa is one of the leading players of CSKA in the 2012/2013 championship season
On May 18, 2013, CSKA hosted Krasnodar Kuban on its field.
The match ended with a score of 0: 0, and CSKA ahead of schedule took the fourth championship in the Russian championship[214].
On June 1, 2013, CSKA made a golden double in Grozny, beating Anzhi in the final match for the Russian Cup.
After the main and extra time, the score was 1: 1, the victory came after a penalty shootout.
This is the seventh cup trophy of the team for the Russian period of history[215].
In July 2013, CSKA bought the best Bulgarian football player of 2012 — Georgi Milanov for 2.7 million euros from Litex[216][217].
Also, a five year contract was signed by the Swiss football player Steven Zuber, a former player of the Grasshopper club.
The Swiss cost the army 3.2 million euros[218][219].
And on the last day of the transfer window, the Army acquired the Brazilian striker "Botafogo" Vitinho, who spent a good period in Brazil.
During this time, a number of football players left the club who could not prove themselves or get into the main cage — mostly they became leases or transfers to clubs that are significantly inferior to the army men in the class.
Wagner Love also left the club, moving to the Chinese "Shandong Luneng" [220].
On July 13, in the match for the Russian Super Cup, the Army team confidently won against Zenit with a score of 3: 0. Keisuke Honda (double) and Sergey Ignashevich scored goals[221].
CSKA started the new championship actively and led in 6-8 rounds, but then the results worsened.
Before the winter break, CSKA took 5th place with a solid gap from the leaders and was eliminated from the Champions League draw, taking the last place in Group D after games with Bayern, Manchester City and Victoria[222].
During the winter transfer window, not a single player was acquired and Keisuke Honda left for Milan in Italy on a free transfer.
The club started the spring stage of the 2013/14 championship with a 2:4 defeat against Dynamo, although the Army team scored two goals first.
This was followed by a 10 match winning streak [223], which ended with a match with Lokomotiv Moscow, in which the fate of the championship was decided.
The match ended with a score of 1: 0 and CSKA became the champion of Russia for the fifth time[224], and for the 12th time the champion of the country (taking into account victories in the USSR championships), surpassing Dynamo (Moscow) in this indicator and second only to Spartak.
Seydou Doumbia became the best scorer of the team (20 goals in all competitions) and the tournament (18 goals scored), was recognized as the player of the season according to the coaches of the RFPL teams[225], and Igor Akinfeev surpassed the legendary Lev Yashin in the number of "dry matches" — there were 204 [226]
The 2014/15 season began for CSKA with a victory in the Russian Super Cup — the winner of the Russian Cup "Rostov" was beaten with a score (3:1)[227].
CSKA won the first three games of the new championship - against Torpedo (4: 1), Mordovia (1: 0) and Terek (1: 0 — - and thereby set a new record for the Russian championships, having won 13 consecutive victories (taking into account last season)[228], improving their own record of the 1998 season, when the team won 12 consecutive games[229].
In the summer transfer window, the team was joined by striker Kirill Panchenko, who transferred from Tomi, as well as midfielders Bibras Natkho and Roman Eremenko, who transferred from PAOK and Rubin, respectively.
In the next Champions League draw, CSKA got into the "group of death" and again played with Bayern Munich and Manchester City, as well as with Roma[230] — the club again finished the tournament at the group stage, but was able to draw at home (2:2) and win away (1:2) against Manchester City.
During the winter transfer window, Seydou Doumbia left the team (he moved to Roma), contracts with Tomas Necid, Rasmus Elm and Marc Gonzalez were terminated, and Vitinho and Bazelyuk were loaned to Internacional and Torpedo, respectively.
The team was joined by young players of Swedish origin — Alibek Aliyev from Elfsborg and Carlos Strandberg from Hecken.
March 2015 turned out to be successful for the team — 3 wins in the championship and reaching the semifinals of the Russian Cup, but already in April there was a failure — 3 losses in a row (including opponents for a place in the top three — Zenit and Dynamo), a draw with Krasnodar in the competition for second place in the championship and a loss to Kuban for a place in the final of the Cup of the country.
The club started the 2015/16 season with four consecutive wins without conceding goals in the Russian Championship.
In the third round of the Champions League qualification, CSKA passed Sparta Prague" (2:2; 3:2).
7 In August 2015, CSKA coach Leonid Slutsky took over the post of coach of the Russian national team, continuing to work with the club.
Slutsky became the sixth coach of the army, who headed the national team of the country[231].
Having returned Seydou Doumbia to the club on loan, CSKA was able to advance to the group stage of the Champions League[232], beating Sporting by the results of two masts (1: 2; 3: 1) and won 7 consecutive victories at the start of the season in the RFPL (including beating Spartak (2:1) on someone else's field)[233], the total series without defeats in the new season was 14 matches.
The draw for the Champions League again brought CSKA together with Manchester United and Wolfsburg, as in the Champions League in the 2009/10 season, and PSV became the fourth team of the group[234].
November and December turned out to be a failure for the team — not a single victory in 4 games in the Russian championship and in three in the Champions League: as a result, before the winter break, the team had only 3 points advantage over the second placed Rostov and was eliminated from the Champions League draw.
Club colors and uniforms[edit / edit wiki text]
The form of CSKA in 2011
In the first official match, which was held on August 14 (27), 1911 against the Vega team, the OLS players played in dark blue T shirts and white underpants.[235]
From that time until 1938, this color scheme was the official color of the team.
In the 1939 season, the club's official colors changed to red and blue, which have not changed since.
The red color denoted that the football club belonged to the Soviet army.[235]
Nothing is known about the appearance of blue on the uniform of the army, however, this color was widely distributed in the football and near — football attributes of the army on football uniforms, on emblems, flags.
So on the emblem of the OPPV, a red star is located in the center of a blue background.
Since that time, the classic version of the uniform of the army club football players has become a red T shirt with the logo at the heart and blue underpants.[235]
In the future, the team did not always adhere to the basic colors.
Under Beskov (1961-1962), the team often played in white colors, and in the mid 1960s it played several matches in black uniforms.
After the club was headed by Vsevolod Bobrov in 1977, the uniform again became red and blue.[235]
From the late 1970s to the early 1990s, CSKA players played mainly in red and white colors.[235]
Since the late 1980s, due to lack of money, the team did not have a standard uniform.
This situation lasted for a whole decade.
At one time, the players borrowed a set of uniforms from their handball teammates.[235]
At the end of the millennium, the team began to play in a uniform with red and blue vertical stripes and blue underpants.
The guest uniform became completely white, later with a single red and blue vertical stripe in the center or on the left side of the T shirt.
The army men performed in this form up to and including 2003.
The following season, the club introduced a new uniform — a red T shirt and dark blue underpants, which has been preserved to this day.
As a guest uniform, CSKA players use white, gold and black uniforms, however, the last two were used a few times.
In the 2007-2008 seasons, the team played home matches in red T shirts and dark blue underpants, and as a reserve uniform, it mainly used a combination of gold leggings and a T shirt with dark blue underpants.
In the 2009 season, CSKA played in a new uniform from Reebok — traditional blue shorts and red T shirts, and the guest and reserve uniforms were added by a red and blue stripe from the left shoulder back to the right front.[236]
In the 2010 season, the team played in a Reebok uniform with five red and blue vertical stripes and blue underpants.
The guest uniform was made in white, also with five vertical stripes, light gray.
The backup set is in black, with five dark gray vertical stripes.[237]
In June 2012, CSKA announced the signing of a contract with a new technical sponsor, Adidas.
Equipment[edit / edit wiki text]
Years of sponsorship Equipment supplier 1980-1990 Adidas 1991-1994 Umbro 1995-1996 Nike 1997-1999 Adidas 2000-2008 Umbro 2009-2012 Reebok 2012 present Adidas
Performance statistics[edit / edit wiki text]
Main article: List of seasons of PFC CSKA Moscow
Fans[edit / edit wiki text]
Performance of CSKA fans during the final match of the Russian Cup 2007-2008
According to VTsIOM data for 2006, CSKA ranked second in Russia in terms of the number of fans after Spartak Moscow[238].
According to the estimates of the German agency "Sport+Markt", in the spring of 2008, CSKA took the 15th place in popularity in Europe, losing, in particular, to two Russian clubs: Zenit (10th place) and Spartak (11th place).[239]
According to a new study by the agency "Sport+Markt" , as of February 2009, CSKA with 11.1 million fans ranks eleventh in popularity in Europe[240].
In September 2010, the agency "Sport+Markt" conducted a new study, according to which 10.5 million people support CSKA, thus, in terms of the number of fans, CSKA ranks 12th in Europe and second in Russia[241].
CSKA fans are united in various organizations.
The official fan club is the "CSKA Sports Lovers Club" (KLS), organized in the late 1980s.
The KLS organizes and conducts various competitions, sports tournaments, meetings with players and coaches of the team, provides financial assistance to members of the KLS — disabled people of the 1st and 2nd groups.
Membership in the KLS gives various discounts[242].
In the 2000s, bright performances began to be organized: fire shows, flash mobs, giant canvases, choral singing of charges.
The sworn enemy of the army fans are the Spartacists, and the allies are the fans of Dynamo Moscow and SKA Rostov.
Foreign friends of CSKA fans include fans of Partizan Belgrade, as well as fans of Polish Vidzev from the city of Lodz.
The traditional nickname of the army is "horses", once it was offensive, now it does not cause negative emotions among the carriers.[243]
At the end of 2008, the club presented an official image of the horse, which became one of the main elements of the attributes.
At the end of each season, CSKA fans award their idols with the Golden Horseshoe Award[244].
In 2010, the club's management officially assigned number 12 to the fans.
Now, at all home matches, the announcer announces the fans on a par with the team.
Famous fans[edit / edit wiki text]
Alexander Babakov[246] Matvey Blunter[247] Alexey Buldakov[248] Igor Butman[249] Vladimir Vysotsky[250] Oleg Gazmanov[251] Andrey Grechko[252] Mikhail Grushevsky[253] Vladimir Zeldin[254] Sergey Ivanov[255] Andrey Kaikov[256] Konstantin Kinchev[257] Leonid Kuravlev[258] Otar Kushanashvili[259] Denis Lebedev[260] Egor Letov[261] Andrey Malyukov[262] Alexander Maslyakov Jr.[263] Alexey Merinov[264] Maya Plisetskaya[265] Maxim Potashev[266] Alexander Porokhovshchikov[267] Natalia Selezneva[268] Mikhail Tanich[269] Semyon Farada[270] Maxim Shevchenko[271][272] [273] Olga Shelest[274] Mikhail Yuzhny[275] Sergey Yastrzhembsky[255] Oleg Menshikov[276]
The origin of the nickname[edit / edit wiki text]
There are several versions about the origin of the team's nickname, according to one of them, the team owes its nickname, "horses", to the fact that earlier the stables of the Moscow hippodrome were located on the site of the Sandy stadium.[277]
According to another version, the nickname appeared due to the fact that the team's base was located on the site of the former stable of the Princes Yusupovs.[278]
Stadium[edit / edit wiki text]
Main article: Stadium on the Third Sandy Street
Laying the first stone[edit / edit wiki text]
On May 19, 2007, the groundbreaking ceremony of the new PFC CSKA stadium took place.
The first stone was laid on the site of the old CSKA stadium.
The ceremony of laying the stone was attended by the Mayor of Moscow Yuri Luzhkov and the president of the club Evgeny Giner.
Construction of the stadium began on December 9, 2007.
Initially, the completion date was set for 2008, [279] however, due to the fact that it took a lot of time to prepare the construction documentation, the deadline for the completion of the stadium was postponed to May 2010.[280]
Later, due to problems with the documentation for the land, the construction of the stadium was temporarily suspended.[281]
In September 2010, the club's president, Yevgeny Giner, said that all problems had been resolved and the stadium was scheduled to open in 2015.
282]
General information[edit / edit wiki text]
Stadium layout
An elite football stadium of a modern level will be built on the site of the laid stone, which will meet all the requirements of modern football.
The rectangular shape of the sports arena will practically eliminate the "dead" spectator zones.
A children's and youth sports school will be built near the stadium, as well as a hotel, a museum of PFC CSKA and a business center.
The arena will be similar to the UEFA Cup won in 2005.
The construction is planned to be completed in 2015.
The amount of investment for the construction of the stadium is about 200 million euros. [283][284]
Stadium address: Moscow, 3 ya Peschanaya str., possession 2.
Technical specifications[edit / edit wiki text]
The area of the allocated plots is 8.7 hectares The area of the additional plots is 1.12323 hectares The stadium capacity is 30,000 seats The total area of the complex is 174100 square meters meters The total area of the stadium is 78,000 sq.
m.
The total area of hotels and administrative premises is 70,000 square meters.
meters The total area of multi level parking is 26,100 sq.
m. meters Parking capacity 1400 parking spaces
Budget[edit / edit wiki text]
The budget of PFC CSKA for 2007 amounted to 51.4 million US dollars.
At the same time, the share of self sufficiency is 97 %.
A little less than half of the budget is spent on wages (24.7 million).[285] [286]
The 2007 financial year of CJSC PFC CSKA ended with a positive balance, the net profit of the club amounted to 82.5 million rubles.[287]
The Army's budget for 2008 was $ 49,596,000, the expenses were $ 49,982,000, excluding the costs associated with the construction of the stadium.[288]
In 2009, the budget of CSKA amounted to $ 49,976,000, expenses were estimated at 61,348,000, thus, a budget deficit was formed, which was covered at the expense of the club's shareholders. [289]
In 2010, the budget of CSKA compared to the previous year was increased and amounted to $ 64 million, and the club's shareholders expected to receive a surplus at the end of the season, which was supposed to be $ 168 thousand.[290]
In 2011, the budget of CSKA was again increased compared to 2010 and amounted to $ 75,652,000.
The surplus at the end of the season was $ 1,964,000.[291]
Sponsors[edit / edit wiki text]
In the entire history of CSKA, the team had five general sponsors, the first in early 2004 was the company "Konti" [292], but later the contract was terminated.
In March 2004, CSKA signed a sponsorship contract with Sibneft, under which the company pledged to pay the club $ 54 million.
The contract term was calculated until the end of 2006[293] At the end of 2005, the contract was terminated on the initiative of Sibneft.[294]
From 2006 to the end of 2008, VTB Bank was the general sponsor of the team. [295]
In the winter of 2008, VTB Bank refused to renew the contract.
On July 24, 2009, CSKA had a new title sponsor.
It became the largest Russian airline — Aeroflot.
In T shirts with the symbols of the new sponsor, the Army team played for the first time in Sunday's derby with Spartak.[296]
On February 18, 2010, PFC CSKA signed an agreement with a new general sponsor — the Bashneft oil company.
The agreement was signed for one season with the possibility of further prolongation.
For the first time in T shirts with the symbols of Bashneft, the team played in a home match with Sevilla.[297][298]
On July 11, 2012, Aeroflot became the title sponsor of CSKA.
The airline replaced Bashneft, whose contract expired at the end of last season.
The sponsorship will cost Aeroflot $ 9 million a year and should help with the promotion of the airline in Europe.
Aeroflot will become the general sponsor of CSKA until the end of July.
This is confirmed by the friendly meeting of the army team with Bursaspor on Monday, to which the players came out in T shirts with the inscription "Aeroflot" as the title sponsor.[299]
As part of the sponsorship, the symbolism of the football club was added to one of the Aeroflot Sukhoi Superjet 100 (RA 89010) aircraft[300].
In June 2013, the Russian Networks company signed a sponsorship contract with CSKA in the amount of 4,185 billion rubles (about $130 million) for "advertising services and the provision of non exclusive rights to use the results of intellectual activity and means of individualization"[301].
Years of sponsorship Title sponsor 1911-2003 Without sponsor 2004 Konti 2004-2005 Sibneft 2006-2008 VTB 2009 Aeroflot 2010-2012 Bashneft 2012-2013 Aeroflot 2013 present Russian Networks
Players at major international tournaments[edit / edit wiki text]
Tournament Participants Olympic Games 1952 Anatoly Bashashkin
Vladimir Nikanorov
Valentin Nikolaev
Yuri Nyrkov
Alexander Petrov Olympic Games 1956 Anatoly Bashashkin
Yuri Belyaev
Jozef Betsa
Anatoly Porkhunov
Boris Razinsky World Championship 1958 German Apukhtin European Championship 1960 German Apukhtin World Championship 1962 Eduard Dubinsky
Alexey Mamykin
Albert Shesternev European Championship 1964 Albert Shesternev World Championship 1966 Eduard Dubinsky
Vladimir Ponomarev
Albert Shesternev European Championship 1968 Valentin Afonin
Yuri Istomin
Vladimir Kaplichny
Yuri Pshenichnikov
Albert Shesternev World Championship 1970 Valentin Afonin
Vladimir Kaplichny
Albert Shesternev
Leonid Shmuts European Championship 1972 Yuri Istomin
Vladimir Kaplichny Olympic Games 1972 Yuri Istomin
Vladimir Kaplichny Olympic Games 1976 Vladimir Astapovsky
Leonid Nazarenko World Championship 1982 Vagiz Hidiyatullin Olympic Games 1988 Vladimir Tatarchuk
Sergey Fokin World Championship 1990 Valery Broshin
Sergey Fokin European Championship 1992 Dmitry Kharin European Championship 1996 Evgeny Bushmanov
Vladislav Radimov
Dmitry Khokhlov World Cup 2002 Vyacheslav Daev
Sergey Semak
Andrey Solomatin European Championship 2004 Igor Akinfeev
Evgeny Aldonin
Rolan Gusev
Dmitry Kirichenko
Juris Layzan
Ivica Olic Asian Cup 2004 Alexander Heinrich Olympic Games 2004 Milos Krasic African Cup of Nations 2006 Chidi Odia World Cup 2006 Ivica Olic America's Cup 2007 Wagner Love European Championship 2008 Igor Akinfeev
Alexey Berezutsky
Vasily Berezutsky
Yuri Zhirkov
Sergey Ignashevich Africa Cup of Nations 2010 Chidi Odia World Cup 2010 Mark Gonzalez
Seydou Doumbia
Milos Krasic
Chidi Odia
Keisuke Honda Asian Cup 2011 Keisuke Honda African Cup of Nations 2012 Seydou Doumbia
Ouvo Moussa Maazou European Championship 2012 Igor Akinfeev
Alexey Berezutsky
Pontus Wernbloom
Alan Dzagoev
Sergey Ignashevich
Kirill Nababkin
Tomas Netsid Africa Cup of Nations 2013 Ahmed Musa Confederations Cup 2013 Ahmed Musa
Keisuke Honda World Championship 2014 Igor Akinfeev
Vasily Berezutsky
Alan Dzagoev
Sergey Ignashevich
Georgy Schennikov
Ahmed Musa Africa Cup of Nations 2015 Seydou Doumbia
Achievements[edit / edit wiki text]
Main article: List of achievements of PFC CSKA Moscow and its players
National championships[edit / edit wiki text]
USSR Football Championship / Russian Football Championship
Champion (12): 1946, 1947, 1948, 1950, 1951 1970, 1991, / 2003, 2005, 2006 2013, 2014.
Silver medalist (10): 1938, 1945, 1949, 1990, / 1998, 2002, 2004, 2008, 2010, 2015.
Bronze medalist (9): 1939, 1955, 1956, 1958, 1964, 1965, / 1999, 2007, 2012.
USSR Cup / Russian Cup
The owner (12): 1945, 1948, 1951, 1955, 1991, / 2002, 2005, 2006, 2008, 2009, 2011, 2013.
Finalist (6): 1944, 1967, 1992, / 1993, 1994, 2000.
Super Cup of the USSR / Super Cup of Russia
Winner (6, record): 2004, 2006, 2007, 2009, 2013, 2014.
Finalist (3): 2003, 2010, 2011.
Prize of the All Union Committee
Winner (1): 1952.
The First League of the USSR
Champion (2): 1986, 1989.
Silver medalist (1): 1985.
Bronze medalist (1): 1988.
Tournament of reserve players of the USSR championship / Tournament of reserve players of the RFPL / Youth Championship of the RFPL
Champion (8): 1947, 1948, 1950, 1951, 1960, 1976, 1979, / 2005.
Silver medalist (10): 1949, 1954, 1959, 1963, 1978, 1983, / 2004, 2006, 2007, / 2014.
Bronze medalist (11): 1955, 1957, 1964, 1965, 1970, 1971, 1973, / 2003, / 2008, 2012, 2013.
European Cups[edit / edit wiki text]
Main article: PFC CSKA Moscow in the draws of international tournaments
UEFA Cup
Winner (1): 2005.
UEFA Super Cup
Finalist (1): 2005.
UEFA Champions League
Quarterfinalist (2): 1993, 2010.
Other tournaments[edit / edit wiki text]
Trofeo Villa de Gijon
Winner (1): 1994.
Channel One Cup
Winner (1): 2007.
Copa del Sol
Winner (1): 2010.
La Manga Cup
Winner (1): 2013.
Regional and early competitions[edit / edit wiki text]
Moscow Championship
Winner (4): 1922 (spring), 1926, 1935 (Autumn), 1943.
Second prize winner (6): 1921 (autumn), 1922 (autumn), 1924, 1927 (spring), 1930, 1944.
Second prize winner among clubs (2): 1927 (autumn), 1930 (autumn).
Third prize winner (2): 1918 (autumn), 1920 (autumn).
Third prize winner among clubs (3): 1926, 1927 (spring), 1929 (autumn).
The Cup of "KFS Kolomyagi"
Owner (1): 1922.
Tosman Cup
Owner (1): 1922.
Achievements of players and coaches[edit / edit wiki text]
Footballer of the Year:
1970 Albert Shesternev (according to the weekly "Football").
1976 Vladimir Astapovsky (according to the weekly "Football").
1991 Igor Korneev (according to the newspaper "Sport Express").
2005 Daniel Carvalho (according to the versions of the weekly "Football" and the newspaper "Sport Express").
2008 Yuri Zhirkov (according to the weekly "Football").
2008 Wagner Love (according to the newspaper "Sport Express").
2010 Wagner Love (according to Radio Sport).
2011 Seydou Doumbia (according to the versions of the weekly "Football", the newspaper "Sport Express" and the ASN "R Sport").
2013 Igor Akinfeev (according to the RFU version).
2014 Seydou Doumbia (according to the versions of the RFU and the weekly "Football").
Legionnaire of the Year:
2014 Seydou Doumbia (according to the newspaper "Sport Express").
Top scorers of the season:
1938 Grigory Fedotov (19).
1939 Grigory Fedotov (21).
1945 Vsevolod Bobrov (24).
1947 Vsevolod Bobrov, Valentin Nikolaev (14).
1957 Vasily Buzunov (16).
1964 Vladimir Fedotov (16).
2002 Roland Gusev, Dmitry Kirichenko (15).
2008 Wagner Love (20).
2011/12 Seydou Doumbia (28).
2013/14 Seydou Doumbia (18).
Top scorers of the UEFA Cup:
2008/09 Wagner Love (11).
Top scorers of the Russian Cup:
2006 Jo (5).
2011 Seydou Doumbia (4).
2013 Ahmed Musa (4).
The best goalkeepers of the season (The "Goalkeeper of the Year" award of the Ogonyok magazine):
1968 Yuri Pshenichnikov.
1976 Vladimir Astapovsky.
2004-2006, 2008-2010, 2012/2013, 2013/2014 Igor Akinfeev.
Best Young Player ("Top Five"prize):
2005 Igor Akinfeev.
2008 Alan Dzagoev.
2009 Georgy Schennikov.
2013 Konstantin Bazelyuk.
The best football player of the CIS and Baltic countries (The "Star" prize):
2006 Igor Akinfeev.
Gentleman of the Year Award:
2002 Sergey Semak.
UEFA Coach of the Year:
2005 Valery Gazzaev.
The best coach of the year according to the RFU:
2005 Valery Gazzaev.
2006 Valery Gazzaev.
2013 — Leonid Slutsky.
2014 — Leonid Slutsky.
Coach of the Year in all sports according to the newspaper "Sport Express":
2014 — Leonid Slutsky.
Top scorers of the European Championship:
2012 Alan Dzagoev (3).
The best player of the Asian Cup:
2011 Keisuke Honda
Footballer of the Year in Latvia:
2002 Juris Lizans.
2011 Alexander Tsaunya.
2012 Alexander Tsaunya.
Footballer of the Year in Lithuania:
2005 Deivydas Schemberas.
Footballer of the Year in Serbia:
2009 Milos Krasic.
2014 Zoran Tosic.
Footballer of the Year in Japan:
2010 Keisuke Honda.
Team prizes[edit / edit wiki text]
"The first height": 1991.
"Big score": 1998.
"The ball without spots": 2009.
State awards[edit / edit wiki text]
Order of Lenin: 1973 (awarded to the CSKA Sports Society in honor of the 50th anniversary).
A letter of thanks from the President of Russia Dmitry Medvedev and awarding state awards to players and coaches in honor of the 100th anniversary of the club.
Head coaches and Presidents[edit / edit wiki text]
Coach Citizenship Beginning End Pavel Khalkiopov USSR 1936 1936 Mikhail Ruschinsky USSR 1937 1939 Sergey Bukhteev USSR 1940 1941 Peter Yezhov USSR 1941 1941 Evgeny Nikishin USSR 1942 1944 Boris Arkadiev USSR 1944 1952 Grigory Pinachiev USSR 1954 1957 Boris Arkadiev USSR 1958 1959 Grigory Pinachiev USSR 1959 1960 Konstantin Beskov USSR 1961 1962 Vyacheslav Solovyov USSR 1963 1964 Valentin Nikolaev USSR 1964 1965 Sergey Shaposhnikov USSR 1966 1967 Vsevolod Bobrov USSR 1967 1969 Valentin Nikolaev USSR 1969 1973 Vladimir Agapov USSR 1974 1974 Anatoly Tarasov USSR 1975 1975 Alexey Mamykin USSR 1976 1977 Vsevolod Bobrov USSR 1977 1978 Sergey Shaposhnikov USSR 1979 1979 Oleg Basilevich USSR 1980 1982 Albert Shesternev USSR 1982 1983 Sergey Shaposhnikov USSR 1983 1983 Yuri Morozov USSR 1984 1987 Sergey Shaposhnikov USSR 1987 1988 Pavel Sadyrin USSR
Russia 1989 1992 Gennady Kostylev Russia 1992 August 1993 Boris Kopeikin Russia August 1993 May 1994 Alexander Tarkhanov Russia June 1994 January 1997 Pavel Sadyrin Russia December 1996 July 2, 1998 Oleg Dolmatov Russia July 4, 1998 May 29, 2000 Pavel Sadyrin Russia June 4, 2000 October 2, 2001 Alexander Kuznetsov (acting) Russia October 2, 2001 November 8, 2001 Valery Gazzaev Russia November 10, 2001 November 13, 2003 Artur Jorge Portugal November 23, 2003 July 12, 2004 Valery Gazzaev Russia July 14, 2004 December 4, 2008 Zico Brazil January 9, 2009 September 10, 2009 Juande Ramos Spain September 10, 2009 October 26, 2009 Leonid Slutsky Russia since October 26, 2009
President Citizenship Period Alexander Tarkhanov Russia 1996 Shakhrudi Dadakhanov Russia August 1998 February 2001 Evgeny Giner Russia since February 2001 present
Roo kovodstvo club[edit / edit wiki text]
Management team[edit / edit wiki text]
Evgeny Giner — President Roman Babaev — General Director Andrey Zarubyan Commercial Director Dmitry Egorov Executive Director Sergey Aksenov Director of Public Relations and Information Policy Irina Yakovleva — Financial Director Ilya Kedrin Deputy General Director for Legal Affairs Oleg Yarovinsky - Head of the Breeding Department
Coaching staff[edit / edit wiki text]
The main structure
Leonid Slutsky — head coach Viktor Goncharenko senior coach Sergey Ovchinnikov goalkeeping coach Sergey Yakunchikov — team chief Viktor Onopko coach Paulino Granero — physical training coach
Youth team
Alexander Grishin senior coach Vyacheslav Chanov goalkeeping coach Valery Minko coach Andrey Shiryaev coach Igor Aksenov — physical training coach
DYuSSh
Maxim Bokov coach Elvir Rakhimich coach Yuri Adjem coach Evgeny Varlamov coach Oleg Kornaukhov coach
Current team composition[edit / edit wiki text]
Akinfeev
Nababkin
Berezutsky
Ignashevich
Fernandez
Wernbloom
Dzagoev
Eremenko
Tosic
Milanov
Musa
Starting line up for the 2015/2016 season
Main article: PFC CSKA Moscow in the 2015/2016 season
The main composition[edit / edit wiki text]
As of January 13, 2016.
No Position Name Year of birth 1 Vr Sergey Chepchugov 1985 35 Vr Igor Akinfeev 1986
2 Defenses Mario Fernandez 1990 4 Defenses Sergey Ignashevich 1979 5 Defenses Viktor Vasin 1988 6 Defenses Alexey Berezutsky 1982 14 Defenses Kirill Nababkin 1986 24 Defenses Vasily Berezutsky 1982 42 Defenses Georgy Schennikov 1991 91 Defenses Nikita Chernov 1996
3 PZ Pontus Wernbloom 1986
Position Name Year of Birth 7 PZ Zoran Tosic 1987 10 PZ Alan Dzagoev 1990 17 PZ Sergey Tkachev 1989 19 PZ Alexander Tsaunya 1988 20 PZ Amir Natkho 1996 23 PZ Georgy Milanov 1992 25 PZ Roman Eremenko 1987 60 PZ Alexander Golovin 1996 66 PZ Bibras Natkho 1988
8 Nap Kirill Panchenko 1989 18 Nap Ahmed Musa 1992
Pinned numbers[edit / edit wiki text]
No. 12 is assigned to the fans of the club.
No. 16 is assigned to Sergey Perkhun.
Youth composition[edit / edit wiki text]
Position Name Year of birth 45 Bp Ilya Pomazun 1996 84 Bp Pavel Ovchinnikov 1998
37 Zashch Denis Masyutin 1995 64 Zashch Mutalip Alibekov 1997
49 PZ Nikita Titov 1996 52 PZ Igor Drykov 1997
Position Name Year of birth 72 PZ Astemir Gordyushenko 1997 73 PZ Dmitry Sokolov 1997 85 PZ Gael Bella Ondua 1995 99 PZ Maxim Martusevich 1995
43 Nap Alexander Makarov 1996 75 Nap Timur Zhamaletdinov 1997
Players on loan[edit / edit wiki text]
No.
Position Name Year of birth 11 Nap Vitinho (in Internacional until 31.12.2016) 1993 15 PZ Dmitry Efremov (in Slovan until 1.07.2016) 1995 17 Nap Alibek Aliyev (in Yaro until 1.07.2016) 1996 39 Zap Vyacheslav Karavaev (in Baumit until 1.07.2016) 1995 71 Zap Konstantin Bazelyuk (in SKA Energiya until 1.07.2016) 1993 92 Zap Peter Ten (in Tomi until 1.07.2016) 1992
Transfers 2015/2016[edit / edit wiki text]
Summer 2015[edit / edit wiki text]
Came[edit / edit wiki text]
Pos.
Player Former club: Viktor Vasin** Mordovia Pz Amir Natho Barcelona Nap Seydou Doumbia* Roma
Gone[edit / edit wiki text]
Position Player New Club Vr Sergey Revyakin Torpedo (Armavir) Zach Vyacheslav Karavaev* Baumit Zach Peter Ten* Tom Pz Sekou Olise*** Al Garafa Pz Dmitry Efremov* Slovan Nap Konstantin Bazelyuk* SKA Energia Nap Carlos Strandberg* Ural Nap Alibek Aliev* Yaro
Winter 2016[edit / edit wiki text]
Came[edit / edit wiki text]
Pos.
Player Former club Nap Carlos Strandberg** Ural PZ Sergey Tkachev** * Kuban
Gone[edit / edit wiki text]
Position Player New Club Nap Seydou Doumbia* * Roma
* For rent
** From the rental
*** Free Agent
The Guards of the club[edit / edit wiki text]
Main article: List of the most important players of PFC CSKA Moscow
See also: Category:Players of FC CSKA Moscow
A list of players who have played 100 or more matches for the club.
Only matches of official tournaments are counted (USSR Championship, USSR Cup, Russian Championship, Russian Cup, USSR Football Federation Cup, All Union Committee Prize, Premier League Cup, Russian Super Cup, UEFA Champions Cup, UEFA Champions League, UEFA Cup, UEFA Europa League, UEFA Cup Winners ' Cup, Intertoto Cup).
Yuri Adjem Igor Akinfeev Evgeny Aldonin Vladimir Astapovsky Dmitry Bagrich Anatoly Bashashkin Yuri Belyaev Alexey Berezutsky Vasily Berezutsky Vsevolod Bobrov Maxim Bokov Valery Broshin Vasily Buzunov Evgeny Bushmanov Dmitry Bystrov Evgeny Varlamov Pontus Vernbloom Alexander Vinogradov Alexey Vodyagin Dmitry Galyamin Alexey Grinin Roland Gusev Vladimir Demin Alan Dzagoev Viktor Dorodnykh Vladimir Dorofeev
Eduard Dubinsky Vladimir Dudarenko Dudu Seydou Doumbia Evgeny Dulyk Denis Evsikov Mikhail Eremin Konstantin Zhiboyedov Yuri Zhirkov Sergey Ignashevich Yuri Istomin Vladimir Kaplichny Daniel Carvalho Mikhail Kolesnikov Sergey Kolotovkin Viktor Kolyadko Boris Kopeikin Oleg Kornaukhov Igor Korneev Ivan Kochetkov Milos Krasich Vladimir Kulik Dmitry Kuznetsov Wagner Love Juris Liz Nikolai Linyaev
Konstantin Lyaskovsky Oleg Malyukov Pavel Mamaev Sergey Mamchur Alexey Mamykin Valery Masalitin Anatoly Maslyaev Valery Minko Sergey Morozov Ahmed Musa Kirill Nababkin Tomash Netsid Valentin Nikolaev Leonid Nikolaenko Vladimir Nikanorov Evgeny Nikishin Valery Novikov Andrey Novosadov Yuri Nyrkov Chidi Odia Ivitsa Olich Sergey Olshansky Alexander Petrov Maryan Plakhetko Vladimir Polikarpov Vladimir Ponomarev
Yuri Pshenichnikov Boris Razinsky Elver Rakhimich Sergey Savchenko Viktor Samokhin Sergey Semak Vyacheslav Solovyov Alexander Tarkhanov Vladimir Tatarchuk Zoran Tosic Valentin Utkin Ilshat Faizulin Vladimir Fedotov Mario Fernandez Sergey Filippenkov Sergey Fokin Keisuke Honda Yuri Chesnokov Viktor Chistokhvalov Vasily Shvetsov Deivydas Shemberas Albert Shesternev Yuri Shishkin Gennady Shromberger Georgy Schennikov Peter Shcherbatenko
Affiliated clubs[edit / edit wiki text]
This section lacks links to information sources.
The information must be verifiable, otherwise it may be questioned and deleted.
You can edit this article by adding links to authoritative sources.
This mark was set on August 31, 2014.
Partizan, Belgrade
CSKA, Sofia
PAOK, Thessaloniki
Vidzev, Lodz
See also[edit / edit wiki text]
CSKA 2
Notes[edit / edit wiki text]
↑ CSKA: The 13th Title!.
Sport express.ru.
Checked on December 9, 2011.
Archived from the original source on January 22, 2012.
↑ 1 2 3 4 CSKA (Moscow)(unavailable link history, copy) ↑ 1 2 CSKA won its second trophy of the season — the Cup of Russia.
runews24.ru (June 1, 2013).
Checked on June 6, 2013.
Archived from the original source on June 6, 2013.
Чемпион The Championship Cup was handed over to CSKA for eternal storage — Football — Sports.ru ↑ 1 2 3 Football players, p.
2. Pfc cska.com.
Checked on December 9, 2011.
Archived from the original source on January 22, 2012.
Футболи Football players, p.
6. Pfc cska.com.
Checked on December 9, 2011.
Archived from the original source on January 22, 2012.
↑ Among the Strongest, p.
3. Pfc cska.com.
Checked on December 9, 2011.
Archived from the original source on January 22, 2012.
↑ 1 2 3 Among the Strongest, p.
4. Pfc cska.com.
Checked on December 9, 2011.
Archived from the original source on January 22, 2012.
↑ Magazine "Great clubs". "
CSKA ch. 1 " No. 12 (12) 2006, p. 7 ↑ "Under the flag of Vsevobuch", p.
4. Pfc cska.com.
Checked on December 9, 2011.
Archived from the original source on January 22, 2012.
↑ "Under the flag of Vsevobuch", p.
10. Pfc cska.com.
Checked on December 9, 2011.
Archived from the original source on January 22, 2012.
↑ 1 2 Magazine "Great Clubs". "
CSKA ch. 1 " No. 12 (12) 2006, p. 8 ↑ CDKA, p.
1. Pfc cska.com.
Checked on December 9, 2011.
Archived from the original source on January 22, 2012.
Лет The Chronicle of Axel Vartanyan.
The year is 1936.
Part three.
All for the first time.
Sport express.ru.
Checked on December 9, 2011.
Archived from the original source on January 22, 2012.
Лет The Chronicle of Axel Vartanyan.
The year is 1936.
Part three.
All for the first time (ending).
Sport express.ru.
Checked on December 9, 2011.
Archived from the original source on January 22, 2012.
↑ 1 2 Magazine "Great Clubs". "
CSKA ch. 1 " No. 12 (12) 2006, p. 9 ↑ "The first All Union", p.
1. Pfc cska.com.
Checked on December 9, 2011.
Archived from the original source on January 22, 2012.
↑ "The First All Union", p.
4. Pfc cska.com.
Checked on December 9, 2011.
Archived from the original source on January 22, 2012.
↑ "The First All Union", p.
5. Pfc cska.com.
Checked on December 9, 2011.
Archived from the original source on January 22, 2012.
↑ 1 2 3 4 5 Nikolaev V. A. Ya from the CDKA!
— ISBN 5-86502-031-5.
↑ "War", p.
1. Pfc cska.com.
Checked on December 9, 2011.
Archived from the original source on January 22, 2012.
↑ The Great confrontation against the background of the Great War, "Sport Express, 07.05.2011" ↑ "The Golden Age", p.
15. Pfc cska.com.
Checked on December 9, 2011.
Archived from the original source on January 22, 2012.
↑ 1 2 "The Golden Age", p.
18. Pfc cska.com.
Checked on December 9, 2011.
Archived from the original source on January 22, 2012.
↑ "The Golden Age", p.
19. Pfc cska.com.
Checked on December 9, 2011.
Archived from the original source on January 22, 2012.
↑ "Rout", p.
2. Pfc cska.com.
Checked on December 9, 2011.
Archived from the original source on January 22, 2012.
↑ "Rout", p.
3. Pfc cska.com.
Checked on December 9, 2011.
Archived from the original source on January 22, 2012.
↑ Magazine "Great clubs". "
CSKA ch. 1 " No. 12 (12) 2006, p. 20 ↑ " Vozrozhdeni e", p.
2. Pfc cska.com.
Checked on December 9, 2011.
Archived from the original source on January 22, 2012.
↑ 1 2 Magazine "Great Clubs". "
CSKA ch. 1 " No. 12 (12) 2006, p. 21 ↑ "Rebirth", p.
7. Pfc cska.com.
Checked on December 9, 2011.
Archived from the original source on January 22, 2012.
Возрожд "Rebirth", p.
8. Pfc cska.com.
Checked on December 9, 2011.
Archived from the original source on January 22, 2012.
↑ Statistics of PFC CSKA Moscow(link unavailable) ↑ "Vozrozhdenie", p.
14. Pfc cska.com.
Checked on December 9, 2011.
Archived from the original source on January 22, 2012.
↑ 1 2 3 Magazine "Great Clubs". "
CSKA ch. 1 " No. 12 (12) 2006, p. 22 ↑ "Rebirth", p.
19. Pfc cska.com.
Checked on December 9, 2011.
Archived from the original source on January 22, 2012.
Возрожд "Rebirth", p.
22. Pfc cska.com.
Checked on December 9, 2011.
Archived from the original source on January 22, 2012.
↑ "Beskov", p.
1. Pfc cska.com.
Checked on December 9, 2011.
Archived from the original source on January 22, 2012.
↑ 1 2 Magazine "Great Clubs". "
CSKA ch. 1 " No. 12 (12) 2006, p. 24 ↑ "Beskov", p.
2. Pfc cska.com.
Checked on December 9, 2011.
Archived from the original source on January 22, 2012.
Лейтен ""Lieutenants" and generals", p.
2. Pfc cska.com.
Checked on December 9, 2011.
Archived from the original source on January 22, 2012.
Лейтен ""Lieutenants" and generals", p.
7. Pfc cska.com.
Checked on December 9, 2011.
Archived from the original source on January 22, 2012.
Лейтен ""Lieutenants" and generals", p.
9. Pfc cska.com.
Checked on December 9, 2011.
Archived from the original source on January 22, 2012.
Лейтен ""Lieutenants" and generals", p.
12. Pfc cska.com.
Checked on December 9, 2011.
Archived from the original source on January 22, 2012.
↑ The first group "A" of the USSR in 1968(unavailable link) ↑ ""Lieutenants" and generals", p.
15. Pfc cska.com.
Checked on December 9, 2011.
Archived from the original source on January 22, 2012.
↑ Magazine "Great clubs". "
CSKA ch. 1 " No. 12 (12) 2006, p. 26-27 ↑ "Gold of Tashkent", p.
1. Pfc cska.com.
Checked on December 9, 2011.
Archived from the original source on January 22, 2012.
↑ "Gold of Tashkent", p.
2. Pfc cska.com.
Checked on December 9, 2011.
Archived from the original source on January 22, 2012.
↑ "Gold of Tashkent", p.
4. Pfc cska.com.
Checked on December 9, 2011.
Archived from the original source on January 22, 2012.
↑ USSR Championship 1970.
Cska games.ru.
Checked on December 9, 2011.
Archived from the original source on January 22, 2012.
↑ "Gold of Tashkent", p.
13. Pfc cska.com.
Checked on December 9, 2011.
Archived from the original source on January 22, 2012.
↑ "Gold of Tashkent", p.
11. Pfc cska.com.
Checked on December 9, 2011.
Archived from the original source on January 22, 2012.
↑ "Gold of Tashkent", p.
12. Pfc cska.com.
Checked on December 9, 2011.
Archived from the original source on January 22, 2012.
↑ "Gold of Tashkent", p.
15. Pfc cska.com.
Checked on December 9, 2011.
Archived from the original source on January 22, 2012.
↑ "Years of fruitless efforts", p.
2. Pfc cska.com.
Checked on December 9, 2011.
Archived from the original source on January 22, 2012.
↑ 1 2 Magazine "Great Clubs". "
CSKA ch. 1 " No. 12 (12) 2006, p. 29 ↑ "Years of fruitless efforts", p.
3. Pfc cska.com.
Checked on December 9, 2011.
Archived from the original source on January 22, 2012.
↑ 1 2 "Years of fruitless efforts", p.
4. Pfc cska.com.
Checked on December 9, 2011.
Archived from the original source on January 22, 2012.
↑ "Years of fruitless efforts", p.
5. Pfc cska.com.
Checked on December 9, 2011.
Archived from the original source on January 22, 2012.
↑ 1 2 "Years of fruitless efforts", p.
10. Pfc cska.com.
Checked on December 9, 2011.
Archived from the original source on January 22, 2012.
↑ "Years of fruitless efforts", p.
12. Pfc cska.com.
Checked on December 9, 2011.
Archived from the original source
