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FC Krasnodar

Russian professional football club

FC Krasnodar

Russian professional football club

FieldValue
clubnameKrasnodar
imageFC Krasnodar logo.svg
upright0.8
fullnameФутбольный клуб Краснодар
(Futbolnyy Klub Krasnodar)
nicknameByki (The Bulls)
Cherno-Zelenie (The Black-Greens)
founded
groundKrasnodar Stadium
capacity35,179
owntitleOwner
ownerSergey Galitsky
chairmanVladimir Khashig
managerMurad Musayev
leagueRussian Premier League
season2024–25
website
positionRussian Premier League, 1st of 16 (champions)
pattern_la1_americamg21h
pattern_b1_americamg21h
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pattern_sh1_krasnodar2425h
pattern_so1_CSC 91
leftarm1000000
body1000000
rightarm1000000
shorts10000FF
socks1000000
pattern_la2_shorta1516a
pattern_b2_collargreen
pattern_ra2_shorta1516a
pattern_sh2_altos18h
pattern_so2_betis0708tl
leftarm2FFFFFF
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current2024–25 FC Krasnodar season

(Futbolnyy Klub Krasnodar) Cherno-Zelenie (The Black-Greens)

FC Krasnodar is a Russian professional football club based in Krasnodar that plays in the Russian Premier League. They are the league's reigning champions.

The club was founded in 2008. In 2009, the club was promoted to the Russian First Division, the second highest division of the Russian football league system, despite finishing Zone South of Second Division in third. At the end of the 2010 season, they were promoted to the Russian Premier League for the 2011 season, despite finishing fifth in the first division.

In 2013, FC Krasnodar began the construction of the 35,074-seat Krasnodar Stadium which was opened on 9 October 2016. Until the stadium was completed, FC Krasnodar continued playing their home matches in the Kuban Stadium.

After the 2022 Russian invasion of Ukraine, the European Club Association suspended the team, along with all other Russian clubs and national teams, from competing in European competitions.

History

The club owner and founder is Sergey Galitsky, a Russian businessman who has been rewarded by the Russian Football Union for his dedication to development of football in Russia.

Early years

In February 2008, FC Krasnodar had been granted professional status which allowed them enter Second Division (the third tier of Russian professional football). Its first official match was a 0–0 draw against FC Nika Krasny Sulin. The team was at that time managed by Vladimir Volchek.

FC Krasnodar finished third in the 2008 Second Division season. Although the third place does not grant promotion to the upper tier of Russian football league, FC Krasnodar had been invited by PFL to take part in the 2009 First Division tournament. This happened because SKA Rostov and Sportakademklub refused to take part in the tournament despite finishing high enough to avoid relegation.

After being promoted, the club appointed Nurbiy Khakunov as manager. Krasnodar finished its debut First Division campaign tenth in the league table.

In the next season, FC Krasnodar was managed by Sergei Tashuyev. In this year, the team faced another club from Krasnodar city, FC Kuban. The first match between the rival clubs took place on 12 June 2010, where FC Kuban won 3–0. The second match also granted no points to FC Krasnodar as they lost the game 0–1. However the team's overall performance in this season had been more successful compared to previous year. They ended up 5th.

Promotion to the Premier League

In December 2010, FC Krasnodar signed a contract with Serbian manager Slavoljub Muslin. Before the start of the next season, FC Krasnodar got another promotion despite finishing fifth in the league. This happened because Saturn Ramenskoye, Nizhny Novgorod and KAMAZ declined to play in the Russian Premier League due to financial problems. On 25 January 2011, the Premier League committee decided to replace FC Saturn with FC Krasnodar.

After promotion to the Premier League, the team performed with mixed success. Both matches against perennial title contender CSKA Moscow ended in draws, which could be considered success considering the disparity between the two's squad strengths.{{cite web |script-title = ru:Сергей Галицкий: «Мы не должны испытывать эйфории от места, которое сейчас занимаем» |access-date = 15 September 2014 |archive-date = 25 April 2017 |archive-url = https://web.archive.org/web/20170425125449/https://fckrasnodar.ru/team/news/54884.html |url-status = dead

The team's second season in 2012–13 was less successful. The team lost all but one match against the eventual top-three teams in the league. FC Krasnodar ended the year in tenth, one of the likelier reasons that led the board to terminate manager Slavoljub Muslin's contract. Muslin himself, however, stated that he was sacked because the club stopped investing into the club to improve its on-field performance.

On 11 August 2013, Belarusian coach Oleg Kononov was named manager of FC Krasnodar, with club management also bolstering the squad ahead of the 2013–14 season, with Ari, Artur Jędrzejczyk and Andreas Granqvist joining the club.

Contenders and the first title

These personnel changes awarded the club a top-five Premier League finish, making it eligible to compete in the UEFA Europa League for the first time in its history for 2014–15. FC Krasnodar also advanced to the Russian Cup Final where the club was narrowly defeated by Rostov in a penalty shoot-out. FC Krasnodar successfully completed three Europa League qualification phases after defeating Sillamäe Kalev, Diósgyőr and Real Sociedad on aggregate. The team then advanced to the Group Stage, where they were drawn into Group H alongside Lille, Wolfsburg and Everton, eventually finishing third.

The following year Krasnodar got to the Europa League group stage for the second time in a row. Their group consisted of Borussia Dortmund, PAOK and Gabala. They won all their home games and pulled off a 1–0 win against Dortmund. They finished first with 4 wins (1–0 against Dortmund, 2–1 against PAOK, 2–1 and 3–0 against Gabala), 1 draw (0–0 against PAOK and 1 loss (1–2 against Dortmund). They continued to the round of 32 and were drawn against Sparta Prague. They lost 1–0 in their away game and lost a poor home game, 3–0.

Their 2019–20 season was marred by injuries. Viktor Claesson and Rémy Cabella suffered ACL tears (Claesson missed whole season and Cabella played 12 games), Yury Gazinsky, Ari and Uroš Spajić all missed months of play. After eliminating Porto in the Champions League third qualifying round, they lost to Olympiacos 1–6 on aggregate in the play-off round. In the subsequent Europa League campaign, the club did not advance from group stage to the knock-out rounds. In the RPL, Krasnodar led the table early in the season, but finished the league in the 3rd spot, only qualifying for the Champions League qualifying rounds again; however, they managed to qualify to the 2020–21 UEFA Champions League group stage for the first time in their history. They also became the only Russian team to advance from the group stage of UEFA competitions that season, before being eliminated in the Europa League Round of 32 by Dinamo Zagreb. On the domestic front, the 2020–21 Russian Premier League season was not very successful, as the club spent most of the season mid-table, they finished in 10th place and failed to qualify for European competition after 7 consecutive seasons of doing so. Late in the season, Murad Musayev resigned as manager and was replaced by Viktor Goncharenko on a contract until the summer of 2023. 8 Months later, in January 2022, Viktor Goncharenko was sacked as head coach of the club. On 13 January 2022, Krasnodar announced Daniel Farke as Viktor Goncharenko's replacement as head coach. Farke and his coaching staff left the club on 2 March 2022, due to the Russian invasion of Ukraine. On 3 March 2022, 8 foreign players' contracts were suspended, but not terminated. The players would train on their own, but remained under contract. However, on 5 March 2022, Viktor Claesson was the first foreign player to be released from the club.

After the 2022 Russian invasion of Ukraine, the European Club Association suspended the team. German manager and former Norwich City head coach Daniel Farke left his position in light of the Russian invasion, and his three assistant coaches left with him.

In the 2023–24 season, Krasnodar led the league for long stretches. Manager Vladimir Ivić was fired and replaced by returning Murad Musayev after Krasnodar's Russian Cup elimination by a second-division club Khimki, even though Krasnodar was second in the table one point behind the leaders at the time. Some losses early under Musayev's management meant they entered the last game in 3rd place, 3 points behind league leaders Dynamo Moscow, whom Krasnodar hosted in the last game. Krasnodar beat Dynamo 1–0 and overtaken them in the standings, however, Zenit St. Petersburg won their game against Rostov 2–1 in a late comeback, taking their sixth consecutive title and leaving Krasnodar in second place.

Krasnodar started the 2024–25 season with a 2–4 loss to Zenit in the 2024 Russian Super Cup, followed by three draws against teams Krasnodar was heavily favoured against, taking 12th position in the table. However, Krasnodar followed it by a club-record 11 consecutive wins, taking the top spot in the standings by late October. The streak included victories over all other Top-6 teams (Zenit and 4 Moscow-based clubs) with an aggregate score of 11–1. On the last day of the season, 24 May 2025, Krasnodar beat Dynamo Moscow with the score of 3–0 and won the title for the first time in club's history.

League position

SeasonLeagueRussian CupEuropeTop goalscorer(s)Manager(s)Div.Pos.Pl.WDLGFGAPName(s)League
20083rd South3rd342266602372Russia Denis Dorozhkin12Russia Vladimir Volchek
20092nd10th381410145047523RRussia Andrei Mikheyev8Russia Nurbiy Khakunov
20102nd5th38171011604461R32Russia Yevgeni Kaleshin11Russia Sergei Tashuyev
2011–121st9th44161315586161R32 / R32ARM Yura Movsisyan14Serbia Slavoljub Muslin
2012–131st10th3012612453942R16BRA Wánderson13Serbia Slavoljub Muslin
2013–141st5th3015510463950Runners-upBRA Wánderson9Serbia Slavoljub Muslin
Belarus Oleg Kononov
2014–151st3rd301794522760R16EL GSURU Mauricio Pereyra9Belarus Oleg Kononov
2015–161st4th301686542556SFEL R32Russia Fyodor Smolov20Belarus Oleg Kononov
2016–171st4th3012135402249QFEL R16Russia Fyodor Smolov18Belarus Oleg Kononov
Russia Igor Shalimov
2017–181st4th301668463054R32EL PORussia Fyodor Smolov14Russia Igor Shalimov
Russia Murad Musayev (caretaker)
2018–191st3rd301686552356QFEL R16Sweden Viktor Claesson12Russia Sergey Matveyev
Russia Murad Musayev (caretaker)
2019–201st3rd3014106493052R32CL PO
EL GSSweden Marcus Berg9Russia Murad Musayev
2020–211st10th3012513524541R16CL GS
EL R32Sweden Marcus Berg9Russia Murad Musayev
Belarus Viktor Goncharenko
2021–221st4th301488423050R32ARM Eduard Spertsyan8Belarus Viktor Goncharenko
Germany Daniel Farke
Russia Aleksey Antonyuk (caretaker)
Russia Aleksandr Storozhuk
2022–231st6th301398624648Runners UpCOL Jhon Córdoba14Russia Aleksandr Storozhuk
Serbia Vladimir Ivić
2023–241st2nd301686452956Regions QF Stage1COL Jhon Córdoba15Serbia Vladimir Ivić
Russia Murad Musayev

Honours

Domestic

Non-official

  • Match Premier Cup:

European history

On 17 July 2014, FC Krasnodar played its first-ever match in the UEFA Europa League, playing Estonian club Sillamäe Kalev. FC Krasnodar took a conclusive 4–0 victory. The second match between these teams was also won by Krasnodar; the score was 5–0. In the next round, FC Krasnodar faced Diósgyőr, winning both matches by 5–1 and 3–0 scorelines, respectively.

In a draw for the playoff round, FC Krasnodar was unseeded, which brought them a much stronger opponent, Spanish club Real Sociedad. The first match against this club ended up in a 1–0 defeat, though FC Krasnodar won the second match 3–0, taking them to the competition's group stage.

The following year, Krasnodar got to the Europa League group stage for the second time in a row. Their group consisted of Borussia Dortmund, PAOK and Gabala. They won all their home games, and even pulled off a 1–0 win against Dortmund. They finished first with four wins (1–0 against Dortmund, 2–1 against PAOK, 2–1 and 3–0 against Gabala), one draw (0–0 against PAOK) and one loss (1–2 against Dortmund). They continued to the round of 32, and were drawn against Sparta Prague. They lost 1–0 in their away game, and lost their home game 3–0.

Overall

CompetitionPldWDLGFGAW%Notes
UEFA Champions League
UEFA Europa League

Matches

SeasonCompetitionRoundOpponentHomeAwayAggregate
2014–15UEFA Europa League2QEstonia Sillamäe Kalev5–04–09–0
3QHungary Diósgyőr3–05–18–1
POSpain Real Sociedad3–00–13–1
Group HFrance Lille1–11–13rd out of 4
Germany VfL Wolfsburg2–41–5
England Everton1–11–0
2015–16UEFA Europa League3QSVK Slovan Bratislava2–03–35–3
POFIN HJK Helsinki5–10–05–1
Group CGermany Borussia Dortmund1–01–21st out of 4
Greece PAOK2–10–0
Azerbaijan Gabala2–13–0
R32Czech Republic Sparta Prague0–30–10–4
2016–17UEFA Europa League3QMalta Birkirkara3–13–06–1
POAlbania Partizani4–00–04–0
Group IGermany Schalke 040–10–22nd out of 4
Austria Red Bull Salzburg1–11–0
France Nice5–21–2
R32Turkey Fenerbahçe1–01–12–1
R16Spain Celta Vigo0–21–21–4
2017–18UEFA Europa League3QDNK Lyngby BK2–13–15–2
POSRB Red Star Belgrade3–21–24–4 (a)
2018–19UEFA Europa LeagueGroup JTUR Akhisarspor2–11–02nd out of 4
BEL Standard Liège2–11–2
ESP Sevilla2–10–3
R32GER Bayer Leverkusen0–01–11–1 (a)
R16ESP Valencia1–11–22–3
2019–20UEFA Champions League3QPOR Porto0–13–23–3 (a)
POGRE Olympiacos1–20–41–6
UEFA Europa LeagueGroup CSWI Basel1–00–53rd out of 4
ESP Getafe1–20–3
TUR Trabzonspor3–12–0
2020–21UEFA Champions LeaguePOGRE PAOK2–12–14–2
Group EESP Sevilla1–22–33rd out of 4
ENG Chelsea0–41–1
FRA Rennes1–01–1
UEFA Europa LeagueR32Croatia Dinamo Zagreb2–30–12–4

;Notes

  • 2Q: Second qualifying round
  • 3Q: Third qualifying round
  • PO: Play-off round
  • R32: Round of 32
  • R16: Round of 16

Stadium

[[Krasnodar Stadium

The first stadium FC Krasnodar played its official matches at is Trud stadium. It is a 3,000-seat stadium situated in the southern part of Krasnodar city.

The stadium was used in 2008 when FC Krasnodar was playing in the Second Division. But after promotion to the First Division, the stadium's capacity ceased to be enough. Therefore, in 2009, FC Krasnodar had to move to Kuban Stadium (the stadium which is also used by FC Kuban).

In 2013, FC Krasnodar began to construct its own stadium with a capacity of 35,074 seats. The stadium project was created by English and German companies. The estimated cost of this stadium is €200 million. The stadium will meet the requirements for hosting international matches. Café, club shop, museum, nightclub, several banquet rooms, fitness room, business clubs, and children's room will be located inside the stadium.

Ownerships, kit suppliers, and sponsors

PeriodKit manufacturersPeriodSponsorsOwner
2008—2016Kappa2011—2013Home CreditSergey Galitsky and Constell Group
2013—2014Westa
2014—2022Zott
2016—2022Puma

Players

Current squad

Other players under contract

Krasnodar-2

Main article: FC Krasnodar-2

Out on loan

Coaching staff

PositionName
ManagerRUS Murad Musayev
Assistant ManagerRUS Artur Olenin
RUS Vitaliy Korneev
Technical coachRUS Artyom Popravkin
Goalkeeping coachUKR Mikhail Savchenko
Conditioning coachRUS Aleksey Malakhov

WFC Krasnodar, FC Krasnodar-2 and FC Krasnodar-3

Main article: WFC Krasnodar

Main article: FC Krasnodar-2

Main article: FC Krasnodar-3

A professional farm club called FC Krasnodar-2 was founded in 2013 and participated in the Russian Professional Football League (third tier). It was promoted to the second-tier Russian Football National League for the 2018–19 season, and formerly amateur FC Krasnodar-3 was licensed for the PFL.

Youth academy

FC Krasnodar owns a network of youth football schools spread in four Russian regions – Krasnodar Krai, Adygea, Stavropol Krai and Kabardino-Balkaria. The main school is situated in the eastern part of Krasnodar. The Academy infrastructure includes 10 football fields, a 3000-seat stadium, a medical rehabilitation center, a swimming pool, a sauna, and a gym. There is also a dining room, an assembly hall, offices and hotel rooms for students' parents. The club owner Sergey Galitsky has stated that his goal is to compose the majority of the FC Krasnodar squad from locally trained players.

Notable players

Had international caps for their respective countries. Players whose name is listed in bold represented their countries while playing for Krasnodar. ;Russia

  • Russia Stanislav Agkatsev
  • Russia Ilzat Akhmetov
  • Russia Ari
  • Russia Sergei Borodin
  • Russia Aleksei Bugayev
  • Russia Vladimir Bystrov
  • Russia Aleksandr Chernikov
  • Russia Maksim Demenko
  • Russia Daniil Fomin
  • Russia Yury Gazinsky
  • Russia Vladislav Ignatyev
  • Russia Aleksei Ionov
  • Russia Marat Izmailov
  • Russia Ruslan Kambolov
  • Russia Lyubomir Kantonistov
  • Russia Nikolay Komlichenko
  • Russia Stanislav Kritsyuk
  • Russia Nikita Krivtsov
  • Russia Fyodor Kudryashov
  • Russia Yevgeni Latyshonok
  • Russia Pavel Mamayev
  • Russia Valentin Paltsev
  • Russia Sergei Petrov
  • Russia Matvei Safonov
  • Russia Oleg Shatov
  • Russia Roman Shirokov
  • Russia Roman Shishkin
  • Russia Igor Smolnikov
  • Russia Fyodor Smolov
  • Russia Yegor Sorokin
  • Russia Dmitry Stotsky
  • Russia Dmitri Torbinski
  • Russia Daniil Utkin
  • Russia Sergei Volkov
  • Russia Dmitry Vorobyov
  • Russia Roman Vorobyov
  • Russia Renat Yanbayev
  • Russia Aleksandr Yerokhin

;Europe

  • Armenia Georgy Arutyunyan
  • Armenia Arsen Beglaryan
  • Armenia Yura Movsisyan
  • Armenia Marcos Pizzelli
  • Armenia Eduard Spertsyan
  • Belarus Syarhey Kislyak
  • Belarus Alyaksandr Kulchy
  • Belarus Alyaksandr Martynovich
  • Bosnia and Herzegovina Ricardo Baiano
  • Bosnia and Herzegovina Ognjen Vranješ
  • France Rémy Cabella
  • GEO Aleksandre Amisulashvili
  • GEO Otar Martsvaladze
  • GEO Tornike Okriashvili
  • GEO Nukri Revishvili
  • Hungary Vladimir Koman
  • Iceland Jón Guðni Fjóluson
  • Iceland Ragnar Sigurðsson
  • Kazakhstan Almir Mukhutdinov
  • Moldova Valeriu Ciupercă
  • Moldova Igor Picușceac
  • Montenegro Nikola Drinčić
  • Netherlands Tonny Vilhena
  • Norway Stefan Strandberg
  • Poland Artur Jędrzejczyk
  • Poland Grzegorz Krychowiak
  • Portugal Manuel Fernandes
  • Romania Andrei Ivan
  • Serbia Dušan Anđelković
  • Serbia Mihailo Ristić
  • Serbia Uroš Spajić
  • Sweden Marcus Berg
  • Sweden Viktor Claesson
  • Sweden Andreas Granqvist
  • Sweden Kristoffer Olsson
  • Ukraine Denys Dedechko
  • Ukraine Andriy Dykan

;Africa

  • Angola João Batxi
  • Burkina Faso Charles Kaboré
  • Cameroon Ambroise Oyongo
  • Cameroon Adolphe Teikeu
  • Cape Verde Kevin Pina
  • Nigeria Olakunle Olusegun
  • Senegal Moussa Konaté

;South America

  • Colombia Kevin Castaño
  • Colombia Jhon Córdoba
  • Ecuador Cristian Ramírez
  • Paraguay **Júnior Alonso **
  • Peru Christian Cueva
  • Uruguay Giovanni González
  • Uruguay Lucas Olaza

;Asia

  • Tajikistan Alidzhoni Ayni
  • Uzbekistan Odil Ahmedov

Managers

NameNat.FromToPWDLGSGA%WHonoursNotes
Vladimir Volchek1 January 200818 August 2008
Nurbiy Khakunov200931 December 2009
Sergei Tashuyev1 January 201010 December 2010
Slavoljub Muslin1 January 20119 August 2013
Oleg Kononov11 August 201313 September 2016
Igor Shalimov (caretaker)13 September 20166 October 2016
Igor Shalimov6 October 20161 April 2018
Murad Musayev3 April 20183 April 2021
Viktor Goncharenko3 April 20215 January 2022
Daniel Farke13 January 20222 March 2022
Aleksey Antonyuk (caretaker)2 March 20225 April 2022
Aleksandr Storozhuk5 April 2022Present
  • Notes: W – Won matches D – Drawn matches L – Lost matches GS – Goal scored GA – Goals against

%W – Percentage of matches won}}

Nationality is indicated by the corresponding FIFA country code(s).

References

References

  1. (2021-10-05). "Хашиг о назначении Хачатурянца: "Лига идет к лучшему с новым президентом"". sports.ru.
  2. (24 May 2025). ""Краснодар" впервые стал чемпионом Мир РПЛ!". Russian Premier League.
  3. "The Krasnodar Derby". Soccer Football.
  4. link
  5. (March 2022). "Which sports have banned Russian athletes?". BBC Sport.
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  11. (9 August 2013). link
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  13. (30 September 2020). "PAOK 1–2 Krasnodar".
  14. (3 April 2021). "МУРАД МУСАЕВ ПОДАЛ В ОТСТАВКУ ПО СОБСТВЕННОМУ ЖЕЛАНИЮ". FC Krasnodar.
  15. (6 April 2021). "ВИКТОР ГАНЧАРЕНКО СТАЛ ГЛАВНЫМ ТРЕНЕРОМ КРАСНОДАРА". FC Krasnodar.
  16. (5 January 2022). "КРАСНОДАР РАСТОРГ КОНТРАКТ С ВИКТОРОМ ГАНЧАРЕНКО". FC Krasnodar.
  17. (13 January 2022). "ГЛАВНЫМ ТРЕНЕРОМ "КРАСНОДАРА" СТАЛ ДАНИЭЛЬ ФАРКЕ". FC Krasnodar.
  18. (2 March 2022). ""КРАСНОДАР" И ДАНИЭЛЬ ФАРКЕ РАСТОРГЛИ КОНТРАКТ ПО ВЗАИМНОМУ СОГЛАСИЮ". FC Krasnodar.
  19. (3 March 2022). ""КРАСНОДАР" ПРИОСТАНОВИЛ КОНТРАКТЫ С НЕСКОЛЬКИМИ ИГРОКАМИ". FC Krasnodar.
  20. (5 March 2022). ""Краснодар" расторг контракт с Виктором Классоном. Официальный сайт ФК "Краснодар"". FC Krasnodar.
  21. Corrick, Lewis. (4 March 2022). "Russian club FC Krasnodar suspends contracts of eight foreign players".
  22. (2 March 2022). "Former Norwich Daniel Farke leaves Russian club Krasnodar".
  23. (25 May 2024). ""Краснодар" – вице-чемпион Мир РПЛ-2023/24, "Динамо" стало бронзовым призёром". Russian Premier League.
  24. (28 October 2024). "«Краснодар» выиграл 10 матчей чемпионата подряд. Рекорд России у ЦСКА – 13". Sports.ru.
  25. link
  26. "Club Profile. FC Krasnodar Official site".
  27. (18 January 2014). link
  28. "Krasnodar squad by Russian Premier League". Russian Premier League.
  29. Championat. link. (24 July 2018)
  30. link
  31. link
  32. link
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