FC SKA Rostov-on-Don

FC SKA Rostov-on-Don (Russian: ФК СКА Ростов-на-Дону)[1] is a Russian association football club based in Rostov-on-Don. The club's history includes becoming runners-up of the Soviet Top League in 1966 and winning the Soviet Cup in 1981.

SKA Rostov
Full nameFootball Club
Sports Club of the Army
Rostov-on-Don
Nickname(s)Armeytsy (Military men)
Founded1937 (1937)
GroundSKA SKVO Stadium,
Rostov-on-Don
Capacity27,300
OwnerBasta
ChairmanGennadi Smolyanov
ManagerAndrei Kozlov
LeagueRussian Professional Football League, Group 1
2019–20Zone South, 8th
WebsiteClub website

History

"SKA"

In final 1981.

The club was founded on 27 August 1937 and was known as RODKA (1937–1953), ODO (1954–1956) and SKVO (1957–1959 and 2013–2015). The team was given its most familiar name back in March 2015.[1]

SKVO entered the Class B of the Soviet league in 1958. Prior to that, the team only played in regional tournaments. SKVO became the champions of Class B in 1958 and were promoted to Class A. They stayed at the top level of Soviet football until 1973, winning silver medals in 1966 and finishing fourth in 1959, 1960, 1963, and 1964.

In the 1970s and 1980s SKA moved between Top and First leagues several times. After relegation 1973, they played in the First League in 1974, 1976–1978, 1982–1983, and 1986–1989, and in the Top League in 1975, 1979–1981, and 1984–1985. SKA spent two last years of the Soviet football (1990 and 1991) in the Second League.

SKA were also successful in the Soviet Cup. They won the trophy in 1981 and were the losing finalists in 1969 and 1971.

After entering the Russian Second Division, SKA have been playing there with a few exceptions: they played in the Third Division in 1994, in the Amateur Football League in 1998, and in the First Division in 2002. In 2002 SKA finished 17th in the First Division, going straight back down but recording the best result in Russian football. It finished 2nd South Zone of Second Division but returned First Division after relegations of Dynamo Makhachkala, FC Volgar-Gazprom Astrakhan and Lada Togliatti due to their licences were refused. It finished 17th in 2007 and 13th in 2008. Despite finishing outside of relegation zone in 2008, the club could not afford to play in the First Division for 2009 and volunteered to get relegated to the Second Division for 2009. After playing on that level from 2009 to 2013–14 seasons, the club failed professional licensing and began the 2014–15 season in the Russian Amateur Football League. It returned to the third-tier Russian Professional Football League for the 2015–16 season.

Awards

League history

Soviet Union

Russia

Russian Second DivisionRussian First DivisionRussian Second DivisionRussian First DivisionRussian Second DivisionAmateur Football LeagueRussian Second DivisionRussian Third DivisionRussian Second Division

European record

Cup Winners' Cup
Season Round Country Club Home Away Aggregate
1981–82 First Round Ankaragücü 3–0 2–0 5–0
Second Round Eintracht Frankfurt 1–0 0–2 1–2

Current squad

As of 22 February 2022, according to the official FNL 2 website.

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

No. Pos. Nation Player
GK  RUS Vyacheslav Grigoryan
GK  RUS Aleksey Lobzov
GK  RUS Aleksandr Sautin
DF  RUS Aleksandr Bezchasnyuk
DF  RUS Nikolai Bochko
DF  RUS Oleg Dzantiyev (on loan from Ufa)
DF  RUS Igor Gubanov
DF  RUS Kirill Ivashkin
DF  RUS Radik Khayrullov
DF  RUS Alan Lelyukayev
DF  RUS Aleksei Solovyov
DF  RUS Konstantin Yerokhin
MF  RUS Levon Bayramyan
MF  RUS Ruslan Bezrukov
MF  RUS Aslan Dyshekov (on loan from Kuban Krasnodar)
No. Pos. Nation Player
MF  RUS Daniil Ivankov
MF  RUS Dmitri Kayumov
MF  RUS Vladislav Konokotin
MF  RUS Dmitri Korobov
MF  RUS Nikita Kupriyanov (on loan from Rostov)
MF  RUS Ilya Mazurov (on loan from Fakel Voronezh)
MF  RUS Mikhail Petrusyov
MF  RUS Ivan Repyakh
MF  RUS Maksim Sedov
FW  RUS Artyom Fedchuk
FW  RUS Maksim Grigoryev
FW  RUS Dmitri Kamenshchikov
FW  RUS Dmitri Michurenkov
FW  RUS Danila Strelchuk
FW  RUS Tamaz Topuriya (on loan from Rostov)

References

This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.