FC Spartak Moscow

Spartak Moscow
FC Spartak Moscow logo.png
Full name Football Club Spartak Moscow
Nickname(s) Krasno-belye (The Red-Whites)
Myaso (The Meat)
Narodnaya komanda (The People's Team)
Founded 18 April 1922
Ground Luzhniki Stadium, Moscow
(Capacity: 78,360)
Owner Leonid Fedun
Manager Valery Karpin
League Russian Premier League
2009 Russian Premier League, 2nd
Home colours
Away colours

FC Spartak Moscow (Russian: Футбольный клуб «Спартак» Москва) is a football club from Moscow, Russia.

Spartak have won 12 Soviet championships (second only to Dynamo Kyiv) and 9 of 18 Russian championships. They have also won the Soviet Cup 10 times and the Russian Cup 3 times. Spartak have also reached the semi-finals of all three European club competitions.

They are nicknamed "Meat" (Russian: "мясо", "myaso") because in Soviet era the club was owned by the Collective Production Farms (the kolkhoz and the sovkhoz) .

The football club is a part of the Spartak Moscow sports society. Other teams in the society include ice hockey club Spartak Moscow.

Contents

History

Foundation

In the early days of Soviet football many government agencies such as the police, army, and railroads created their own clubs. So many statesmen saw in the wins of their teams the superiority over the opponents patronizing other teams. Almost all the teams had such kind of patrons: «Dinamo» – police, CSKA – army. «Spartak», created by trade union public organization considered to be «people’s team».

In 1921 the Moscow Sport Circle (Moscow sport club of Krasnopresnensky district) (Russian: МКС, Московский кружок спорта), later named Krasnaya Presnya was formed by Ivan Artemyev and involved Nikolai Starostin, especially in its football team. The team grew, building a stadium, supporting itself from ticket sales and playing matches across Russia. As part of a 1926 reorganisation of football in the USSR, Starostin arranged for the club to be sponsored by the food workers union and the club moved to the 13,000 seat Tomskii Stadium and was known as Pishcheviki . The team changed sponsors repeatedly over the following years as it competed with Dinamo Moscow, whose 35,000 seat Dinamo Stadium lay close by.

As a high-profile sportsman, Starostin came into close contact with Alexander Kosarev, secretary of the Komsomol (Communist Union of Youth) who already had a strong influence on sport and wanted to extend it. In November 1934, with funding from Promkooperatsiia, Kosarev employed Starostin and his brothers to develop his team to make it more powerful. Again the team changed its name, this time to Spartak Moscow.

Club founders, four Starostins brothers, played a big role in formation of the team. Starostins played for red-whites in thirties but right before the war they were subjected to repression as the leaders of the most hated team by the state authorities. Elder brother Nikolai Starostin wrote in his books that he had survived in the State Prison System due to his participation in football and «Spartak». After the political rehabilitation, in 1954, he returned to the team but to another position, the one of team's manager.

Soviet period

In 1935 Starostin proposed the name Spartak that was derived from Spartacus, a gladiator-slave who led a rebellion against Rome, and was inspired by eponymous book by Raffaello Giovagnoli. Starostin is also credited with the creation of the Spartak logo.[1] The same year the club became a part of newly created Spartak sports society.

Spartak's third logo

Czech manager Antonin Fivebr is credited as the first head coach of Spartak, though he worked as a consultant in several clubs simultaneously[2]. In 1936 the Soviet Top League was established. The first Championship was won by Dynamo Moscow, while in the second one held the same year Spartak came first. Before the World War II Spartak gained two more titles.[3]

During 1950-s Spartak together with Dynamo Moscow dominated in the Soviet Top League. When the USSR national football team won gold medals at the Melbourne Olympics, it consisted largely of Spartak players. Spartak captain Igor Netto was the captain of the national team from 1954 to 1963. In the 1960s, Spartak won two league titles, but by mid-60s Spartak was no more regarded as a leading Soviet club. The club was even less successful in the 1970s and in 1976 Spartak was relegated into the lower league.

During the following season, the stadium was still full as the club's fans stayed with the team during its time in the lower division. Konstantin Beskov, who became the head coach (ironically, as a footballer Beskov made his name playing for Spartak's main rivals, Dynamo Moscow), introduced several young players, including Rinat Dasayev and Georgi Yartsev. Spartak came back the next year and won the title in 1979, beating Dynamo Kyiv and thanks to Spartak supporters, the period is considered to be the start of the modern-style fans' movement in the Soviet Union.

On October 20, 1982, disaster struck during the UEFA Cup match between Spartak and HFC Haarlem. Scores of people were trampled. The official number of deaths is 66 but many people believe this number to be significantly higher.

In 1989 Spartak won the its last USSR Championship defeating 2-1 the main rival Dynamo Kyiv in the closing round. Spartak's striker Valery Shmarov scored the "golden" free kick with almost no time left. The next season Spartak reached European Cup semifinal consequently eliminating Napoli (by penalties) and Real Madrid (with 3-1 away victory) but losing to Olympique de Marseille.

Modern period

A new page in the club’s history began when the USSR collapsed and its championship ceased to exist. In the newly created Russian league, Spartak, led by coach and president Oleg Romantsev dominated and won all but one title between 1992 and 2001. Year after year the team also represented Russia in the Champions League.

Problems began in the new century. Several charismatic players (Ilya Tsymbalar and Andrey Tikhonov among others) left the club as a result of conflict with Romantsev. Later Romantsev sold his stock to oil magnate Andrei Chervichenko, who in 2003 became the club president. The two were soon embroiled in a row that would continue until Romantsev was sacked in 2003 with the club suffering several sub-par seasons until Chervichenko finally sold his stock in 2004. The new ownership made a number of front office changes with the aim of returning the team to the top of the Russian Premier League.[4]

In the 2005 season, Spartak, led by Aleksandrs Starkovs, finished 2nd in the league following an impressive run to beat Lokomotiv, Zenit and Rubin to the last Champions League place.

Following a mixed start to the 2006 season and public criticism from Dmitry Alenichev, the team's captain and one of its most experienced players, Starkovs left his position to Vladimir Fedotov.

Spartak was entitled to place a golden star on its badge in 2003 in commemoration of having won five Russian championships (this having been achieved in 1997).

Achievements

Soviet Union Soviet Union

Russia Russia

Europe European

Notable European campaigns

Season Achievement Notes
European Cup / UEFA Champions League
1980-81 Quarter Final eliminated by Real Madrid 0-0 in Moscow, 0-2 in Madrid
1990-91 Semi Final eliminated by Marseille 1-3 in Moscow, 1-2 in Marseille
1993-94 Quarter Final finished third in a group with Barcelona, Monaco and Galatasaray
1995-96 Quarter Final eliminated by Nantes 2-2 in Moscow, 0-2 in Nantes
UEFA Cup Winners' Cup
1972-73 Quarter Final eliminated by Milan 0-1 in Moscow, 1-1 in Milan
1992-93 Semi Final eliminated by Antwerp 1-0 in Moscow, 1-3 in Antwerp
UEFA Cup
1983-84 Quarter Final eliminated by Anderlecht 2-4 in Brussels, 1-0 in Moscow
1997-98 Semi Final eliminated by Inter 1-2 in Moscow, 1-2 in Milan


UEFA Team Ranking 2011

Rank Country Team Points
45 Germany Wolfsburg 37.020
46 Netherlands AZ 36.959
47 England Fulham 36.828
48 Russia Spartak Moscow 36.024
49 Germany Schalke 04 36.020
50 Denmark Copenhagen 34.390
51 Spain Osasuna 34.165

As of 15 July 2010. Source

League history

Soviet Union Soviet Union

Season Div. Pos. Pl. W D L GS GA P Cup Europe Top Scorer (League) Head Coach
1936 (s) 1st 3 6 3 1 2 12 7 13 - - Soviet Union Glazkov - 4 Soviet Union Kozlov
1936 (a) 1 7 4 2 1 19 10 17 QF - Soviet Union Glazkov - 7 Soviet Union Kozlov
1937 2 16 8 5 3 24 16 37 R16 - Soviet Union Rumyantsev - 8 Soviet Union Kvashnin
1938 1 25 18 3 4 74 19 39 W - Soviet Union Sokolov - 18 Soviet Union Kvashnin
Soviet Union P.Popov
1939 1 26 14 9 3 58 23 37 W - Soviet Union Semyonov - 18 Soviet Union P.Popov
1940 3 24 13 5 6 54 35 31 - - Soviet Union Semyonov - 13
Soviet Union Kornilov - 13
Soviet Union Gorokhov
1944 no league competition SF - - Soviet Union Kvashnin
1945 10 22 6 3 13 22 44 15 R16 - Soviet Union Timakov - 7 Soviet Union Isakov
Soviet UnionEstonia Wohlrat
1946 6 22 8 5 9 38 40 21 W - Soviet Union Salnikov - 9 Soviet UnionEstonia Wohlrat
1947 8 24 6 9 9 34 26 21 W - Soviet Union Dementyev - 9 Soviet UnionEstonia Wohlrat
1948 3 26 18 1 7 64 34 37 RU - Soviet Union Konov - 15 Soviet Union Kvashnin
1949 3 34 21 7 6 93 43 49 SF - Soviet Union Simonyan - 26 Soviet Union Dangulov
1950 5 36 17 10 9 77 40 44 W - Soviet Union Simonyan - 34 Soviet Union Dangulov
1951 6 28 13 5 10 50 35 31 QF - Soviet Union Simonyan - 10 Soviet Union Dangulov
Soviet Union Gorokhov
Soviet Union Glazkov
1952 1 13 9 2 2 26 12 20 RU - Soviet Union Paramonov - 8 Soviet Union Sokolov
1953 1 20 11 7 2 47 15 29 QF - Soviet Union Simonyan - 14 Soviet Union Sokolov
1954 2 24 14 3 7 49 26 31 R16 - Soviet Union Ilyin - 11 Soviet Union Sokolov
1955 2 22 15 3 4 55 27 33 SF - Soviet Union Parshin - 13 Soviet Union Gulyaev
1956 1 22 15 4 3 68 28 34 - - Soviet Union Simonyan - 16 Soviet Union Gulyaev
1957 3 22 11 6 5 43 28 28 RU - Soviet Union Simonyan - 12 Soviet Union Gulyaev
1958 1 22 13 6 3 55 28 32 W - Soviet Union Ilyin - 19 Soviet Union Gulyaev
1959 6 22 8 8 6 32 28 24 - - Soviet Union Isaev - 8 Soviet Union Gulyaev
1960 7 30 15 7 8 52 32 37 R16 - Soviet Union Ilyin - 13 Soviet Union Simonyan
1961 3 30 16 8 6 57 34 40 R16 - Soviet Union Khusainov - 14 Soviet Union Simonyan
1962 1 32 21 5 6 61 25 47 R16 - Soviet Union Sevidov - 16 Soviet Union Simonyan
1963 2 38 22 8 8 65 33 52 W - Soviet Union Sevidov - 15 Soviet Union Simonyan
1964 8 32 12 8 12 34 32 32 SF - Soviet Union Sevidov - 6 Soviet Union Simonyan
1965 8 32 10 12 10 28 26 32 W - Soviet Union Khusainov - 5
Soviet Union Reingold - 5
Soviet Union Simonyan
1966 4 36 15 12 9 45 41 42 QF - Soviet Union Osyanin - 15 Soviet Union Gulyaev
1967 7 36 13 14 9 38 30 40 R32 CWC R16 Soviet Union Khusainov - 8 Soviet Union Salnikov
Soviet Union Simonyan
1968 2 38 21 10 7 64 43 52 R32 - Soviet Union Khusainov - 14 Soviet Union Simonyan
1969 1 32 24 6 2 51 15 54 R32 - Soviet Union Osyanin - 16 Soviet Union Simonyan
1970 3 32 12 14 6 43 25 38 QF - Soviet Union Khusainov - 12 Soviet Union Simonyan
1971 6 30 9 13 8 35 31 31 W ECC R32 Soviet Union Kiselyov - 5
Soviet Union Silagadze - 5
Soviet Union Piskarev - 5
Soviet Union Simonyan
1972 11 30 8 10 12 29 30 26 RU UC R32 Soviet Union Papaev - 4
Soviet Union Andreev - 4
Soviet Union Piskarev - 4
Soviet Union Simonyan
1973 4 30 14 8 8 37 28 31 QF CWC QF Soviet Union Piskarev - 12 Soviet Union Gulyaev
1974 2 30 15 9 6 41 23 39 QF - Soviet Union Piskarev - 10 Soviet Union Gulyaev
1975 10 30 9 10 11 27 30 28 R16 UC R64 Soviet Union Lovchev - 8 Soviet Union Gulyaev
1976 (s) 14 15 4 2 9 10 18 10 - UC R16 Soviet Union Pilipko - 2
Soviet Union Lovchev - 2
Soviet Union Bulgakov - 2
Soviet Union Krutikov
1976 (a) 15 15 5 3 7 15 18 13 R32 - Soviet Union Bulgakov - 6 Soviet Union Krutikov
1977 2nd 1 38 22 10 6 83 42 54 R16 - Soviet Union Yartsev - 17 Soviet Union Beskov
1978 1st 5 30 14 5 11 42 33 33 R16 - Soviet Union Yartsev - 19 Soviet Union Beskov
1979 1 34 21 10 3 66 25 50 Qual. - Soviet Union Yartsev - 14 Soviet Union Beskov
1980 2 34 18 9 7 49 26 45 SF - Soviet Union Rodionov - 7 Soviet Union Beskov
1981 2 34 19 8 7 70 40 46 RU ECC QF Soviet Union Gavrilov - 21 Soviet Union Beskov
1982 3 34 16 9 9 59 35 41 Qual. UC R32 Soviet Union Shavlo - 11 Soviet Union Beskov
1983 2 34 18 9 7 60 25 45 R16 UC R16 Soviet Union Gavrilov - 18 Soviet Union Beskov
1984 2 34 18 9 7 53 29 45 QF UC QF Soviet Union Rodionov - 13 Soviet Union Beskov
1985 2 34 18 10 6 72 28 46 R16 UC R16 Soviet Union Rodionov - 14 Soviet Union Beskov
1986 3 30 14 9 7 52 21 37 SF UC R16 Soviet Union Rodionov - 17 Soviet Union Beskov
1987 1 30 16 11 3 49 26 42 R16 UC R16 Soviet Union Rodionov - 12
Soviet Union Cherenkov - 12
Soviet Union Beskov
1988 4 30 14 11 5 40 26 39 QF UC R32 Soviet Union Rodionov - 12 Soviet Union Beskov
1989 1 30 17 10 3 49 19 44 QF ECC R16 Soviet Union Rodionov - 16 Soviet Union Romantsev
1990 5 24 12 5 7 39 26 29 R16 UC R32 Soviet Union Shmarov - 12 Soviet Union Romantsev
1991 2 30 17 7 6 57 30 41 QF ECC SF Soviet UnionRussia Mostovoi - 13
Soviet UnionRussia Radchenko - 13
Soviet Union Romantsev
1992 - - W UC R32 - Soviet UnionRussia Romantsev

Russia Russia

Season Div. Pos. Pl. W D L GS GA P Cup Europe Top Scorer (League) Head Coach
1992 1st 1 26 18 7 1 62 19 43 - - Russia Radchenko - 12 Russia Romantsev
1993 1 34 21 11 2 81 18 53 R32 CWC SF Russia Beschastnykh - 18 Russia Romantsev
1994 1 30 21 8 1 73 21 50 W UCL GS Russia Beschastnykh - 10 Russia Romantsev
1995 3 30 19 7 5 76 26 63 SF UCL GS Russia Shmarov - 16 Russia Romantsev
1996 1 35 22 9 4 72 35 75 RU UCL QF Russia Tikhonov - 16 Russia Yartsev
1997 1 34 22 7 5 67 30 73 QF UC R32 Russia Kechinov - 11 Russia Romantsev
1998 1 30 17 8 5 58 27 59 W UCL
UC
Qual.
SF
RussiaUkraine Tsymbalar - 10 Russia Romantsev
1999 1 30 22 6 2 75 24 72 R32 UCL GS Russia Tikhonov - 19 Russia Romantsev
2000 1 30 23 1 6 69 30 70 SF UCL
UC
GS
R32
Russia Titov - 13 Russia Romantsev
2001 1 30 17 9 4 56 30 60 QF UCL 2nd GS Russia Titov - 11
Brazil Robson - 11
Russia Romantsev
2002 3 30 16 7 7 49 36 55 R32 UCL GS Russia Beschastnykh - 12 Russia Romantsev
2003 10 30 10 6 14 38 48 36 W UCL GS Russia Pavlyuchenko - 10 Russia Romantsev
Russia Chernyshov
Russia Fedotov
2004 8 30 11 7 12 43 44 40 R32 UC
UIC
R16
QF
Russia Pavlyuchenko - 10 Italy Scala
Latvia Starkov
2005 2 30 16 8 6 47 26 56 R32 - Russia Pavlyuchenko - 11 Latvia Starkov
2006 2 30 15 13 2 60 36 58 RU - Russia Pavlyuchenko - 18 Latvia Starkov
Russia Fedotov
2007 2 30 17 8 5 50 30 59 SF UCL
UC
GS
R32
Russia Pavlyuchenko - 14 Russia Fedotov
Russia Cherchesov
2008 8 30 11 11 8 43 39 44 R32 UCL
UC
Qual.
R32
Russia Bazhenov - 6
Russia Pavlyuchenko - 6
Russia Pavlenko - 6
Brazil Welliton - 6
Russia Cherchesov
Denmark M.Laudrup
2009 2 30 17 4 9 61 33 55 QF UCL
UC
Qual.
GS
Brazil Welliton - 21 Denmark M.Laudrup
RussiaEstonia Karpin
2010 TBD R16 - TBD RussiaEstonia Karpin

Most league goals for Spartak

As of July 4 2010 (Min. 50)

  1. Nikita Simonyan: 133
  2. Sergey Rodionov: 119
  3. Galimzyan Khusainov: 102
  4. Fyodor Cherenkov: 95
  5. Roman Pavlyuchenko: 89
  6. Yuri Gavrilov: 89
  7. Yegor Titov: 87
  8. Anatoli Ilyin: 83
  9. Yuri Sevidov: 71
  10. Andrey Tikhonov: 68
  11. Sergei Salnikov: 64
  12. Aleksei Paramonov: 63
  13. Vladimir Beschastnykh: 56
  14. Georgi Yartsev: 55
  15. Anatoli Isayev: 54
  16. Valeri Shmarov: 54
  17. Nikolai Osyanin: 50

Nickname

The team is usually called "red-and-whites", but among the fans "The Meat" is a very popular nickname. The origins of the nickname belong to the days of the foundation of the club; in the 1920s the team was renamed several times, from "Moscow Sports Club" to "Red Presnya" (after the name of one of the districts of Moscow) to "Pishcheviki" ("Food industry workers") to "Promkooperatsiya" ("Industrial cooperation") and finally to "Spartak Moscow" in 1935, and for many years the team was under patronage of one of the Moscow food factories which dealt with meat products.

One of the most favourite slogans of both the fans and players is "Who are we? We're The Meat!" The other nickname is "Svin'i" ("Pigs"), although, unsurprisingly, this is considered offensive by the team's fans.

Rival teams

At present, Spartak's arch rival is CSKA Moscow; although this is a relatively recent rivalry having only emerged in the last twenty years. Seven of ten matches with the largest audience in Russian Premier League (including top three) were Spartak-CSKA derbies.[5] One of the most celebrated rivalries is "Spartak-Dinamo", with neighbours Dinamo Moscow. However, this has faded somewhat due to Dinamo's poor performances. Matches against Lokomotiv Moscow and Zenit St.Petersburg attract thousands of people as well, almost always resulting in packed stadiums. Another rivalry was lost with the collapse of the Soviet Union. This was with Dynamo Kyiv, one of the leaders of the USSR championship; since they are now playing in the Ukrainian championship, they must qualify for UEFA tournaments to meet each other.

Stadium

Spartak has never had its own stadium and the team has played in various Moscow stadiums throughout its history and even once an exhibition match on Red Square. Currently, the club's home ground is the 5-star Luzhniki Stadium.

However, the club's new board has recently declared that "Spartak will soon play on their own stadium". The federal government has agreed to give land for the stadium near the Tushino air field. The construction will begin in 2007 and is expected to end in 2009.[6]

Players

As of August 31 2010, according to the Russian Premier League official website.

Current squad

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

No. Position Player
2 Argentina MF Cristian Maidana
3 Austria DF Martin Stranzl
5 Russia MF Aleksandr Sheshukov
6 Russia MF Renat Sabitov
7 Brazil MF Ibson
8 Montenegro MF Nikola Drinčić
9 Brazil FW Ari
10 Russia MF Ivan Saenko
11 Brazil FW Welliton
12 Brazil MF Alex
15 Russia DF Sergei Parshivlyuk
16 Russia MF Yevgeni Makeev
17 Czech Republic DF Marek Suchý
No. Position Player
18 Russia DF Andrei Ivanov
19 Argentina DF Nicolás Pareja
20 Russia MF Aleksandr Zotov
21 Russia FW Nikita Bazhenov
27 Georgia (country) MF Jano Ananidze
30 Russia GK Sergei Pesyakov
49 Russia FW Aleksandr Kozlov
56 Russia GK Aleksandr Belenov
64 Republic of Ireland MF Aiden McGeady
77 Russia MF Kirill Kombarov
81 Ukraine GK Andriy Dikan
89 Russia FW Aleksandr Prudnikov
99 Russia MF Dmitri Kombarov

For recent transfers, see List of Russian football transfers summer 2010 and List of Russian football transfers winter 2009–10.

Reserve squad

The following players are listed by Spartak's website as reserve players and are registered with the Premier League. They are eligible to play for the first team.

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

No. Position Player
23 Russia MF Igor Kireyev
26 Russia MF Anton Khodyrev
28 Russia GK Nikolai Zabolotny
31 Russia FW Nikolai Ivannikov
32 Russia MF Artemi Maleev
33 Russia MF Dmitri Malyaka
34 Russia DF Artyom Filatov
36 Russia GK Azamat Dzhioev
37 Russia MF Dmitri Kayumov
39 Russia MF Maksim Grigoryev
40 Russia DF Konstantin Ryabov
41 Russia FW Vladimir Obukhov
42 Russia GK Sergei Chernyshuk
No. Position Player
43 Russia DF Irakli Chezhiya
44 Russia MF Maksim Terentyev
46 Russia MF Konstantin Sovetkin
47 Russia DF Anton Ukolov
48 Croatia MF Filip Ozobić
51 Russia MF Pavel Solomatin
54 Russia DF Ivan Khomukha
55 Belarus FW Dmitri Khlebosolov
57 Russia DF Nikolai Fadeyev
58 Russia DF Aleksandr Putsko
59 Russia MF Aleksandr Ilyin
61 Russia MF Vladimir Zubarev
67 Russia MF Dmitri Tumenko

Spartak's reserve squad played professionally as FC Spartak-d Moscow (Russian Second League in 1992-1993, Russian Third Division in 1994-1997) and as FC Spartak-2 Moscow (Russian Second Division in 1998-2000).

Out on loan

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

No. Position Player
24 Russia FW Artem Dzyuba (at Tom Tomsk until January 2011)
Brazil MF Rafael Carioca (at Vasco da Gama until January 2011)
Russia MF Aleksandr Pavlenko (at Rostov until January 2011)
Russia FW Artur Maloyan (at Ural until January 2011)
Russia MF Igor Gorbatenko (at Ural until January 2011)
Belarus DF Egor Filipenko (at Sibir until January 2011)
Russia GK Ivan Komissarov (at Tom Tomsk until January 2012)
No. Position Player
29 Russia MF Pavel Golyshev (at Alania Vladikavkaz until January 2011)
14 Russia FW Pavel Yakovlev (at Krylia Sovetov until January 2011)
1 Russia GK Soslan Dzhanayev (at Terek Grozny until January 2013)
22 Croatia GK Stipe Pletikosa (at Tottenham Hotspur until July 2011)
38 Ukraine MF Yegor Lugachyov (at Arsenal Kyiv)
74 Germany DF Malik Fathi (at Mainz 05 until July 2011)

Notable players

Had international caps for their respective countries, or held any club record. Players whose name is listed in bold represented their countries while playing for Spartak. For further list, see List of FC Spartak Moscow players.

Russia/USSR
  • Soviet Union Nikolay Abramov
  • Russia Dmitri Alenichev
  • Russia Dmitri Ananko
  • Russia Nikita Bazhenov
  • Russia Vladimir Beschastnykh
  • Russia Artyom Bezrodny
  • Russia Denis Boyarintsev
  • Soviet Union Aleksandr Bubnov
  • Russia Viktor Bulatov
  • Russia Yevgeni Bushmanov
  • Russia Maksim Buznikin
  • Russia Vladimir Bystrov
  • Soviet Union Fyodor Cherenkov
  • RussiaCommonwealth of Independent StatesSoviet Union Stanislav Cherchesov
  • RussiaSoviet Union Andrey Chernyshov
  • Russia Valery Chizhov
  • Soviet Union Yuri Gavrilov
  • RussiaSoviet Union Sergei Gorlukovich
  • Soviet Union Rinat Dasayev
  • Russia Maksim Demenko
  • Russia Vadim Evseev
  • Russia Aleksandr Filimonov
  • Soviet Union Anatoli Ilyin
  • Soviet Union Anatoli Isayev
  • RussiaCommonwealth of Independent States Valery Karpin
  • Russia Valery Kechinov
  • Soviet Union Vagiz Khidiyatullin
  • Soviet Union Galimzyan Khusainov
  • RussiaCommonwealth of Independent States Dmitri Khlestov
  • Russia Aleksey Kosolapov
  • Russia Yuri Kovtun
  • Soviet Union Anatoly Krutikov
  • RussiaCommonwealth of Independent StatesSoviet Union Vasili Kulkov
  • RussiaCommonwealth of Independent States Igor Lediakhov
  • Soviet Union Evgenii Lovchev
  • Soviet Union Gennady Logofet
  • Russia Ramiz Mamedov
  • Soviet Union Vladimir Maslachenko
  • Soviet Union Anatoli Maslyonkin
  • Soviet Union Alexander Mirzoyan
  • Soviet Union Gennady Morozov
  • Russia Aleksandr Mostovoi
  • RussiaTajikistan Mukhsin Mukhamadiev
  • Soviet Union Igor Netto
  • Russia Ruslan Nigmatullin
  • RussiaUkraineCommonwealth of Independent States Yuri Nikiforov
  • RussiaCommonwealth of Independent States Viktor Onopko
  • Soviet Union Aleksei Paramonov
  • Soviet Union Viktor Pasulko
  • Russia Aleksandr Pavlenko
  • Russia Roman Pavlyuchenko
  • Soviet Union Gennady Perepadenko
  • RussiaCommonwealth of Independent States Andrei Piatnitski
  • Russia Nikolai Pisarev
  • Russia Pavel Pogrebnyak
  • Russia Dmitri Popov
  • RussiaSoviet Union Dmitri Radchenko
  • RussiaTajikistan Rashid Rakhimov
  • Russia Aleksei Rebko
  • Soviet Union Sergey Rodionov
  • Soviet Union Oleg Romantsev
  • Russia Ivan Saenko
  • Soviet Union Yuri Sevidov
  • Soviet Union Nikita Simonyan
  • Soviet Union Aleksandr Starostin
  • Soviet Union Andrei Starostin
  • Soviet Union Nikolay Starostin
  • Soviet Union Petr Starostin
  • Soviet Union Yuri Susloparov
  • Soviet Union Sergey Shavlo
  • RussiaCommonwealth of Independent StatesSoviet Union Igor Shalimov
  • Russia Aleksandr Shirko
  • Russia Roman Shishkin
  • Soviet Union Valeri Shmarov
  • Russia Dmitri Sychev
  • Russia Vladislav Ternavsky
  • Russia Yegor Titov
  • Russia Andrey Tikhonov
  • Russia Dmitri Torbinski
  • RussiaUkraine Ilia Tsymbalar
  • Soviet Union Georgi Yartsev
  • RussiaCommonwealth of Independent StatesSoviet Union Sergei Yuran
Former USSR countries
  • Azerbaijan Veli Kasumov
  • Belarus Artem Kontsevoy
  • Belarus Yegor Filipenko
  • Belarus Raman Vasilyuk
  • Estonia Tarmo Kink
  • Georgia (country) Valeri Abramidze
  • Georgia (country) Jano Ananidze
  • Georgia (country) Otar Khizaneishvili
  • Georgia (country) Giorgi Lomaia
  • Georgia (country)Commonwealth of Independent States Kakhaber Tskhadadze
  • Latvia Andrejs Rubins
  • Latvia Andrejs Štolcers
  • Lithuania Gintaras Staučė
  • Lithuania Ignas Dedura
  • Moldova Serghei Covalciuc
  • Ukraine Andriy Dikan
  • Ukraine Oleksandr Hranovskyi
  • Ukraine Maksym Kalynychenko
  • Ukraine Maksym Levytskyi
  • Ukraine Dmytro Parfenov
  • Ukraine Serhiy Pohodin
  • Ukraine Oleksandr Pomazun
  • Ukraine Eduard Tsykhmeystruk
  • Ukraine Dmytro Tyapushkin
  • Ukraine Vladyslav Vashchuk
  • Uzbekistan Jafar Irismetov
Europe
  • Austria Emanuel Pogatetz
  • Austria Martin Stranzl
  • Croatia Danijel Hrman
  • Croatia Stipe Pletikosa
  • Czech Republic Martin Jiránek
  • Czech Republic Radoslav Kováč
  • Germany Malik Fathi
  • Hungary Szabolcs Sáfár
  • Republic of Ireland Aiden McGeady
  • Republic of Macedonia Goran Maznov
  • Republic of Macedonia Igor Mitreski
  • Montenegro Nikola Drinčić
  • Poland Wojciech Kowalewski
  • Romania Adrian Iencsi
  • Romania Florin Şoavă
  • Romania Gabriel Tamaş
  • Serbia and Montenegro Dušan Petković
  • Serbia and Montenegro Mihajlo Pjanović
  • Serbia and Montenegro Predrag Ristović
  • Serbia and Montenegro Goran Trobok
  • Serbia and Montenegro Nemanja Vidić
South and Central America
  • Argentina Fernando Cavenaghi
  • Argentina Nicolás Pareja
  • Argentina Clemente Rodríguez
  • Brazil Alex
  • Brazil Robson a
  • Brazil Welliton b
  • Jamaica Robert Scarlett
  • Uruguay Marcelo Sosa
Africa
  • Cameroon Jerry-Christian Tchuissé
  • Ghana Lawrence Adjei-Okyere
  • Ghana Quincy Owusu-Abeyie
  • Morocco Abdelillah Bagui
  • Senegal Ali Ibra Kebe

Personnel

Managers

Name Period Trophies
Czech Republic Antonin Fivebr 1936
Soviet Union Mikhail Kozlov August 1936-37
Soviet Union Konstantin Kvashnin 1937-September 38, 1944, 1948
Soviet Union Pyotr Popov September 1938-39, 1941
Soviet Union Vladimir Gorokhov 1940, 1942-43
Soviet Union Pyotr Isakov 1945 (January-August), caretaker
Soviet Union Alber Wolrat September 1945-47
Soviet Union Abram Dangulov 1949-May 51
Soviet Union Pyotr Isakov 1945 (January-August), caretaker
Soviet Union Georgi Glazkov June-December 51
Soviet Union Vasily Sokolov 1952-54
Soviet Union Nikolay Gulyaev 1955-59, 1966, 1973-75
Soviet Union Nikita Simonyan 1960-September 65, July 1967-72
Soviet Union Sergei Salnikov January-July 67
Soviet Union Anatoly Krutikov 1976
Soviet Union Konstantin Beskov 1978-88
Russia Oleg Romantsev 1989-95, 1997-May 03
Russia Georgi Yartsev 1996
Russia Vladimir Fedotov May-June 03 (caretaker), September-December 03 (caretaker), April 2006-19 June 07
Russia Andrei Chernyshov June-September 03
Italy Nevio Scala January-September 04
Latvia Aleksandrs Starkovs September 2004-April 06
Russia Stanislav Cherchesov 19? June 2007-15 August 08
Russia Igor Lediakhov 15 August 2008-9 September 08 (caretaker)
Denmark Michael Laudrup 9 September 2008-15 April 09
RussiaEstonia Valery Karpin 15 April 2009-

References

  1. History of Spartak, fcspartak.ru (Russian)
  2. "History of Spartak 1936". http://www.redwhite.ru/1936.html. Retrieved 2007-11-28. (Russian)
  3. Robert Edelman, Spartak Moscow: A History of the People's Team in the Worker's State. Cornell University Press, 2009.
  4. All-star Spartak rise again, Eduard Nisenboim, uefa.com
  5. Samye poseschaemye matchi v istorii chempionatov Rossii(Russian)
  6. Kommersant. "Characteristics of the Spartak Stadium". http://www.kommersant.ru/doc.html?DocID=718474&IssueId=30240. Retrieved 2007-03-31.  (Russian)
  7. "ИРАНЕК УСТАНОВИЛ РЕКОРД" (in Russian). FC Spartak Moscow. 27 September 2009. http://rus.spartak.com/usr/news/item.asp?id=61945. Retrieved 24 August 2010. 
  8. "ВЕЛЛИТОН ПОБИЛ РЕКОРД ТИХОНОВА" (in Russian). FC Spartak Moscow. 1 November 2009. http://rus.spartak.com/usr/news/item.asp?id=62249. Retrieved 24 August 2010. 
  9. "ВЕЛЛИТОН СОТВОРИЛ САМЫЙ БЫСТРЫЙ ХЕТ-ТРИК В ИСТОРИИ «СПАРТАКА»" (in Russian). FC Spartak Moscow. 21 August 2010. http://spartak.com/main/13/5084/. Retrieved 24 August 2010. 

Further reading

External links