FC Sibir Novosibirsk

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FC Sibir Novosibirsk
Full nameFootball Club Sibir Novosibirsk
Nickname(s)Orly (The Eagles)
Founded1936; 88 years ago (1936)
Dissolved2019; 5 years ago (2019)
GroundSpartak Stadium, Novosibirsk
Capacity12,500
LeagueN/A
2018–19FNL, 18th (relegated)

FC Sibir Novosibirsk (Russian: ФК «Сибирь» Новосибирск) was a Russian association football club based in Novosibirsk, playing at the Spartak Stadium. They played their first-ever season in the Russian Premier League in 2010, and ended with relegation to the Russian First Division.

History

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The club was founded in 1936 and has been known as:

  • Krylya Sovetov (Soviet Wings) in 1936–1956
  • Sibselmash (Siberian Agricultural Machinery) in 1957–1965
  • SETM (Siberian Electrical Heavy Engineering) in 1969–1970
  • Dzerzhinets (after Felix Dzerzhinsky) in 1971
  • Chkalovets (after Valery Chkalov) in 1972–1991 and 1993–1999
  • Chkalovets-FoKuMiS in 1992
  • Chkalovets-1936 in 2000–2005
  • Sibir (Siberia) 2006–2019

The team played in the Soviet leagues in 1937 (Group E), 1946–1947 (Third Group and Second Group), in 1957–1962 (Class B), 1963–1968 (Class A), 1969–1984 (Class B and Second League), and in 1987–1991 (Second League and Second League B).

In 1992 Chkalovets entered the newly formed Russian First League and in 1994 was moved to the Russian Second League after the reduction of the First League. In 1994 Chkalovets were promoted to the First League, where they played in 1995 and 1996. In 1996 Chkalovets finished last among 22 teams and were relegated to the Second League.

In 2000 Chkalovets merged with Olimpik Novosibirsk, keeping their place in the Second League, and the team named Chkalovets-1936 entered the amateur league (KFK). According to Sibir [1] and independent sources [2], it is Chkalovets-1936 that inherits the history of the Soviet club.

Chkalovets-1936 were promoted to the Second League after the 2000 season, and in 2004 they won promotion to the First Division. They changed their name as Sibir in 2006 and promoted to Russian Premier League once after finishing First League as 2nd in 2009.

On 16 May 2010, Sibir lost in the Russian Cup 2009–10 final against Zenit 0–1, but as Zenit qualified for the Champions League, Sibir gained the right to compete in the Europa League in 2010–11, for the first time in their history, making them the easternmost team to compete in a European competition.

On 19 August 2010, Sibir unexpectedly beat PSV Eindhoven in a home game of Europa League play-off round, 1–0, with a goal in stoppage time. However, the team was eliminated a week later following a 0–5 defeat in Eindhoven.

At the end of the 2018–19 season, the club was relegated to the third-tier Russian Professional Football League. Following the relegation, the club did not apply for the professional license and another club called FC Novosibirsk was organized to represent the city.[1] On 27 June 2024, FC Novosibirsk announced the club is renamed to FC Sibir Novosibirsk.[2]

Club honours

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  • Russian Cup
    • Runners-up (1): 2009–10

League history

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Russian National Football LeagueRussian Premier LeagueRussian First DivisionRussian Second DivisionAmateur football leagueRussian Second DivisionRussian First DivisionRussian Second DivisionRussian First Division
Season Div. Pos. Pl. W D L GS GA P Cup Europe Top Scorer (League) Head Coach
1992 2nd, "East" 4 30 15 6 9 48 38 36 Russia Kovalyov – 11 Russia Yerkovich
1993 2nd, "East" 14 30 8 7 15 39 43 23 R256 Russia Nikulin – 9 Russia Yerkovich
1994 3rd, "Siberia" 1 22 16 3 3 51 12 35 R256 Russia Nikulin – 12 Russia Shevchenko
1995 2nd 11 42 19 4 19 58 65 61 R32 Russia Galkin – 14 Russia Shevchenko
1996 2nd 22 42 7 6 29 44 102 27 R64 Russia Pimenov – 10 Russia Shevchenko / Russia Zaburdaev
1997 3rd, "East" 6 34 16 8 10 46 32 56 R64 Russia Obgolts – 9 Russia Yerkovich
1998 3rd, "East" 2 30 16 12 2 41 17 60 R512 Russia Nikulin – 9 Russia Iromashvili
1999 3rd, "East" 5 30 16 6 8 60 42 54 R32 Russia Lidrik – 17 Russia Iromashvili
2000 LFL(4th), "Siberia" 1 16 15 1 0 65 6 46 R1024 Russia Iromashvili
2001 3rd, "East" 5 28 12 11 5 36 21 47 Russia Lidrik – 11 Russia Iromashvili
2002 3rd, "East" 2 30 19 6 5 61 28 63 R256 Russia Ragoza – 17 Russia Iromashvili / Russia Yerkovich
2003 3rd, "East" 6 24 11 7 6 38 27 40 R32 Russia Shtyn – 8 Russia Yerkovich / Russia Shmarov
2004 3rd, "East" 1 27 19 5 3 53 19 62 R256 Russia Akimov – 24 Russia Puzanov
2005 2nd 10 42 15 11 16 51 53 56 R512 Russia Akimov – 18 Russia Puzanov / Russia Davydov
2006 2nd 7 42 19 8 15 67 45 65 R64 Russia Akimov – 23 Russia Davydov / Russia Radyukin
2007 2nd 3 42 25 11 6 80 39 86 R16 Russia Akimov – 34 Russia Fayzulin
2008 2nd 14 42 14 16 12 51 41 58 R4 Russia Akimov – 12 Russia Oborin
2009 2nd 2 38 22 7 9 60 21 73 F Russia Medvedev – 18 Belarus Kriushenko
2010 1st 16 30 4 8 18 34 58 20 R8 EU PO Russia Medvedev – 6 Belarus Kriushenko
2011–12 2nd 7 52 19 19 14 76 57 76 R32 RussiaAkimov – 20 Belarus Kriushenko / Russia Radyukin /

Scotland Miller / Poland Kubicki

2012–13 2nd 8 32 12 9 11 34 38 45 R32 RussiaMedvedev – 6 Russia Yuran / Poland Kubicki
2013–14 2nd 11 36 13 12 11 38 39 51 R32 RussiaMarkosov – 5 Poland Kubicki / Russia Balakhnin
2014–15 2nd 11 34 11 9 14 35 46 42 R16 RussiaSvezhov – 7 Russia Balakhnin / Russia Gordeyev
2015–16 2nd 11 38 14 9 15 47 50 51 R32 RussiaZhitnev – 16 Russia Stukalov
2016–17 2nd 15 38 9 15 14 31 46 42 R4 MoldovaCebotaru – 9 Russia Perevertailo / Russia Kirsanov
2017–18 2nd 7 38 14 11 13 38 31 53 R32
2018–19 2nd 18 38 8 13 17 28 45 37 R32

European campaigns

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Season Competition Round Opponent Home Away Aggregate
2010–11 UEFA Europa League 3Q Cyprus Apollon Limassol 1–0 1–2 2–2
PO Netherlands PSV Eindhoven 1–0 0–5 1–5

Reserve squad

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FC Sibir reserve team, FC Sibir-2 Novosibirsk, played in Russian Second Division (East Zone) in 2008, and then once again from 2011 until 2015–16, and yet again from the 2018–19 season.

References

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  1. ^ "РФС: ФК "Новосибирск" не является клубом-двойником команды "Сибирь"" [Russian Football Union: FC Novosibirsk is not a doppelganger of FC Sibir] (in Russian). RIA Novosti. 26 June 2019.
  2. ^ "ФК "НОВОСИБИРСК" ОФИЦИАЛЬНО СМЕНИЛ НАЗВАНИЕ НА "СИБИРЬ"" (in Russian). FC Sibir Novosibirsk. 27 June 2024.
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