FC Moscow

Moscow
logo
Full name Football Club Moscow
Nickname(s) The Citizens, The Caps
Founded 2004
Dissolved 2010
Ground E. Streltsov Stadium, Moscow
(Capacity: 13,200)
League Amateur Football League,
Zone Moscow, Division A
2009 Russian Premier League, 6th
Home colours
Away colours

This article refers to the Moscow government team formed in 2004. For the predecessors in the Russian Premier League, see FC Torpedo-ZIL and FC Torpedo-Metallurg.

FC Moscow (Russian: Футбольный клуб Москва), is a Russian football club, based in Moscow, formerly of the Russian Premier League. Moscow's best result in Russian Premier League was a 4th position in 2007. In February 2010 the club withdrew from the Premier League after their owner and main sponsor, MMC Norilsk Nickel, withdrew funding.[1][2] Their place in the league was taken by Alania Vladikavkaz.[3] Subsequently FC Moscow folded, ceasing to exist as a professional football club.[3][4]

Contents

History

The creation of the team was firstly announced by the Moscow government on 1 March 2004.[5] FC Moscow was formed on the base of FC Torpedo-Metallurg. The team played in the Russian Cup final in 2007.

League and cup history

As Torpedo-ZIL (1997–2002), Torpedo-Metallurg (2003).

Russia Russia
Season Div. Pos. Pl. W D L GS GA P Domestic Cup Europe Top scorer (league) Head coach
1997 4th, Zone 3 3 40 23 8 9 77 29 77 Russia Lavrentyev - 17 Russia Petrenko
1998 3rd, "Center" 1 40 28 6 6 90 30 90 Round of 128 Russia Snigiryov - 32 Russia Petrenko
Russia Ignatyev
1999 2nd 4 42 23 13 6 67 27 82 Round of 32 Russia Al. Smirnov - 11 Russia Ignatyev
2000 2 38 24 8 6 62 28 80 Round of 64 Russia Lebed' - 10 Russia Ignatyev
2001 1st 14 30 7 10 13 22 35 31 Round of 32 Russia Piyuk - 6 Ukraine Kucherevsky
2002 14 30 6 10 14 20 39 28 Quarterfinals Russia D. A. Smirnov - 7 Russia Nikonov
2003 14 30 8 5 17 25 39 29 Round of 32 Ukraine Monaryov - 8 Belarus Aleinikov
Russia Ivanov
Russia Ignatenko
2004 9 30 10 10 10 38 39 40 Round of 32 Argentina Bracamonte - 11 Russia Petrakov
2005 5 30 14 8 8 36 26 50 Round of 16 Russia Kirichenko - 14 Russia Petrakov
Russia Slutsky
2006 6 30 10 13 7 41 37 43 Round of 16 IC 3rd Round Russia Kirichenko - 12 Russia Slutsky
2007 4 30 15 7 8 40 32 52 Runner-Up Russia Adamov - 14 Russia Slutsky
2008 9 30 9 11 10 34 36 38 Quarterfinals Argentina Bracamonte - 8 Ukraine Blokhin
2009 6 30 13 9 8 39 28 48 Semifinals UC 1st Round Slovakia Jakubko - 8 Montenegro Božović

Nicknames

Fans and journalists call FC Moskva The Citizens (Russian: Горожане). The colloquial nickname for the club is The Caps (Russian: Кепки), which refers to Moscow government ownership (Moscow mayor Yuriy Luzhkov usually wears a cap).

FC Moscow players in 2008.

FC Moscow in Europe

FC Moscow in its first appearance on the European arena reached the third round of 2006 Intertoto Cup and was eliminated by Hertha BSC Berlin. FC Moscow is now making their second appearance in Europe in the 2008-09 UEFA Cup, beating Legia Warsaw in the qualifying round.

Season Competition Round Club Score
2006 Intertoto Cup 2R Belarus FC MTZ-RIPO 2-0 1-0
3R Germany Hertha Berlin 0-0 0-2
2008/09 UEFA Cup 2Q Poland Legia Warsaw 2-1 2-0
1R Denmark F.C. Copenhagen 1-2 1-1

Current squad

For recent transfers, see List of Russian football transfers summer 2009 and List of Russian football transfers winter 2009–10.'

Notable players

Had international caps for their respective countries. Players whose name is listed in bold represented their countries while playing for FC Moscow/Torpedo-ZIL/Torpedo-Metallurg.

USSR/Russia
  • Soviet Union Commonwealth of Independent States Russia Dmitri Kuznetsov
  • Soviet Union Commonwealth of Independent States Russia Oleg Sergeyev
  • Soviet Union Russia Aleksandr Borodyuk
  • Soviet Union Russia Sergei Gorlukovich
  • Commonwealth of Independent States Sergey Shustikov
  • Commonwealth of Independent States Russia Dmitri Khlestov
  • Russia Roman Adamov
  • Russia Dimitri Ananko
  • Russia Aleksei Arifullin
  • Russia Aleksei Berezutski
  • Russia Vasili Berezutski
  • Russia Pyotr Bystrov
  • Russia Aleksandr Filimonov
  • Russia Dmitri Kirichenko
  • Russia Oleg Kornaukhov
  • Russia Vladimir Lebed
  • Russia Andrei Novosadov
  • Russia Nikolai Pisarev
  • Russia Sergei Podpaly
  • Russia Aleksei Rebko
  • Russia Sergei Semak
  • Russia Roman Shirokov
Former USSR countries
  • Armenia Sargis Hovsepyan
  • Armenia Yervand Krbachyan
  • Armenia Andrey Movsisyan
  • Azerbaijan Emin Agaev
  • Azerbaijan Vyaçeslav Lıçkin
  • Azerbaijan Narvik Sirkhayev
  • Belarus Anton Amelchenko
  • Belarus Barys Haravoy
  • Belarus Vladimir Korytko
  • Belarus Andrei Ostrovskiy
  • Belarus Syarhey Yaskovich
  • Belarus Yuri Zhevnov
  • Georgia (country) Mikheil Jishkariani
  • Georgia (country) Alexander Rekhviashvili
  • Kazakhstan Ruslan Baltiev
  • Kazakhstan Evgeniy Lovchev
  • Latvia Vladimirs Koļesņičenko
  • Lithuania Edgaras Česnauskis
  • Lithuania Ignas Dedura
  • Lithuania Rolandas Džiaukštas
  • Lithuania Tadas Gražiūnas
  • Lithuania Saulius Mikalajūnas
  • Lithuania Irmantas Stumbrys
  • Lithuania Giedrius Žutautas
  • Moldova Alexandru Curtianu
  • Moldova Alexandru Epureanu
  • Moldova Stanislav Ivanov
  • Moldova Alexandru Popovici
  • Moldova Radu Rebeja
  • Tajikistan Oleg Shirinbekov
  • Ukraine Yuri Moroz
  • Ukraine Oleksandr Pomazun
  • Uzbekistan Bakhtiyor Ashurmatov
  • Uzbekistan Ulugbek Bakayev
Europe
  • Bosnia and Herzegovina Ricardo Baiano
  • Bosnia and Herzegovina Miro Katić
  • Bosnia and Herzegovina Branislav Krunić
  • Bosnia and Herzegovina Munever Rizvić
  • Czech Republic Roman Hubník
  • Republic of Macedonia Goran Maznov
  • Poland Damian Gorawski
  • Poland Mariusz Jop
  • Romania Pompiliu Stoica
  • Serbia Zvonimir Vukić
  • Slovakia Martin Jakubko
  • Slovenia Amir Karič
  • Slovenia Branko Ilič
  • Sweden Jonas Wallerstedt
South America
  • Argentina Pablo Barrientos
  • Argentina Héctor Bracamonte
  • Argentina Maximiliano Moralez
Africa
  • Cameroon Jerry-Christian Tchuissé
  • Ghana Baba Adamu
  • Nigeria Isaac Okoronkwo
  • South Africa Stanton Fredericks

Former coaches

Club records

As of January 1, 2009. Including FC Torpedo-ZIL and FC Torpedo-Metallurg seasons.

Most league games for the club

  1. Héctor Bracamonte: 132
  2. Konstantin Veselovskiy / Oleg Kuzmin: 115
  3. Stanislav Ivanov: 112
  4. Radu Rebeja: 110
  5. Dmitri Godunok: 100
  6. Maksim Beletskiy: 96
  7. Yuri Zhevnov: 95
  8. Mikhail Sinyov: 94
  9. Munever Rizvić: 92
  10. Pompiliu Stoica: 88
  11. Mariusz Jop: 83
  12. Valeri Leonov: 81
  13. Aleksei Melyoshin: 78
  14. Aleksandr Borodkin / Maksim Mishatkin: 76
  15. Sergei Lavrentyev: 74
  16. Sergey Shustikov: 73
  17. Nikolai Barkalov: 72
  18. Emin Agaev / Pyotr Bystrov / Aleksei Snigiryov: 70

Most league goals for the club

  1. Aleksei Snigiryov: 52
  2. Héctor Bracamonte: 35
  3. Gleb Panfyorov: 27
  4. Dmitri Kirichenko: 26
  5. Roman Adamov: 24
  6. Sergei Lavrentyev: 21
  7. Aleksandr Smirnov: 20
  8. Yuri Yakovenko: 15
  9. Konstantin Veselovskiy / Valeri Klimov: 13

References

  1. FC Moscow pull out of Russian league - CNN, 5 Feb 2010
  2. Russian Premier League confirm FC Moscow withdrawal - ESPN, Feb 16 2010
  3. 3.0 3.1 Russian Premier League Review - Goal.com, Mar 12 2010
  4. FC Moscow go out of business after owners pull plug on funding - The Guardian, 7 March 2010
  5. http://www.sport-express.ru/art.shtml?82366

External links