FC Tyumen

FC Tyumen
Tyumen
Logo of FC Tyumen.gif
Full name Football Club Tyumen
Founded 1961
Ground Tyumen Stadium, Tyumen
(Capacity: 14,000)
Chairman Aleksandr Popov
Manager Sergei Nikitin
League Russian Second Division,
Ural-Povolzhye zone
2010 2nd
Home colours
Away colours

FC Tyumen is a Russian football club based in Tyumen. The former member of the Russian Premier League, Tyumen plays in the Second Division.

The club was previously known as Geolog (in 1961-1963 and 1983–1991, meaning Geologist), Priboy (in 1964-1965, meaning Surf), Neftyanik (in 1966-1977, meaning Oiler), Stroitel (meaning Builder), Fakel (in 1980-1982, meaning Torch), Dinamo-Gazovik (in 1992-1996), SDYSOR-Sibnefteprovod (in 2003).

The club was founded in 1961 and played in the Soviet Class B (1961–1970), Second League (1971–1986), and First League (1987–1991). In 1992 Tyumen entered the newly formed Russian Premier League and finished last between 20 teams. In 1993 Tyumen won the eastern zone of the First Division and returned to the Premier League for another two seasons, achieving their best result in history in 1994 (12th position). After relegation in 1995 Tyumen once again won the First Division in 1996. In 1998 and 1999 Tyumen suffered two consecutive relegations, ending up in the Second Division. In 2000-2002, Tyumen played in the Second Division, finishing no lower than fourth. In 2003 the club refused to participate in the Second Division, instead fielding a youth team in the Amateur League. In 2004 the club fielded a senior team as well, winning the zonal tournament of the Amateur League, but declined promotion. After finishing first again in 2005, Tyumen returned to professional football and now play in the Second Division.

Contents

Current squad

As of August 25, 2011, according to the official RFU website.

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
Russia GK Vitali Pyanchenko
Russia GK Sergei Lokotayev
Russia GK Dmitri Yermakov
Russia DF Aleksandr Burmatov
Russia DF Aleksandr Korotkov
Russia DF Artemi Ogarkov
Russia DF Ivan Plishkin
Russia DF Andrei Pushkarev
Russia DF Ilya Soshnin
Russia DF Viktor Trenev
Russia DF Vladimir Vagin
Russia DF Anton Vasilyev
Russia MF Artyom Bogomolov
Russia MF Alim Karkayev
No. Position Player
Russia MF Aleksandr Khlebnikov
Russia MF Alan Murtazov
Russia MF Aleksei Pustozerov
Russia MF Artur Sadirov
Russia MF Dmitri Shestakov
Russia MF Viktor Shkurat
Russia MF Sergei Volosyan
Russia MF Aleksandr Yevstafyev
Russia FW Aleksei Buznyakov
Russia FW Aleksei Kazakov
Russia FW Andrei Mamatyuk
Russia FW Aleksei Martynov
Russia FW Stanislav Prokofyev
Russia FW Dmitri Zarva

2011 transfers

In

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
Russia MF Maksim Boychenko (from FC Saturn-2 Moscow Oblast)
Russia DF Aleksandr Burmatov
Russia FW Aleksei Buznyakov (from FC SKA Rostov-on-Don)
Russia MF Alim Karkayev (from FC Torpedo Armavir)
Russia MF Aleksandr Khlebnikov (from FC Luch-Energiya Vladivostok)
Russia DF Aleksandr Korotkov (from FC Chernomorets Novorossiysk)
Russia FW Andrei Mamatyuk (from FC Spartak Moscow)
Russia FW Aleksei Martynov (from FC Metallurg-Yenisey Krasnoyarsk)
Russia MF Alan Murtazov
Russia DF Artemi Ogarkov (end of loan to FC Sakhalin Yuzhno-Sakhalinsk)
Russia DF Ivan Plishkin
No. Position Player
Russia FW Stanislav Prokofyev (from FC Gazovik Orenburg)
Russia DF Andrei Pushkarev (from FC Sakhalin Yuzhno-Sakhalinsk)
Russia GK Vitali Pyanchenko (from FC Gornyak Uchaly)
Russia MF Artur Sadirov (from FC Mashuk-KMV Pyatigorsk)
Russia MF Dmitri Shestakov (from FC Fakel Voronezh)
Russia MF Viktor Shkurat (from FC SKA Rostov-on-Don)
Russia DF Ilya Soshnin (from FC Spartak Kostroma)
Russia DF Vladimir Vagin
Russia DF Anton Vasilyev (from FC Ufa)
Russia GK Dmitri Yermakov (from FC Spartak Tambov)
Russia MF Aleksandr Yevstafyev (from FC Dynamo St. Petersburg)

Out

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
Russia DF Dmitri Andreyev (to FC Gazovik Orenburg)
Russia MF Aleksei Antonnikov (to FC Volga Tver)
Russia GK Timur Bagautdinov (end of loan from FC Sibir Novosibirsk)
Russia GK Sergei Borodin (to FC Irtysh Omsk)
Russia MF Maksim Boychenko (to FC Saturn-2 Moscow Oblast)
Russia MF Yuri Dubrovin (to FC Luch-Energiya Vladivostok)
Russia MF Vadim Gagloyev (to FC Nizhny Novgorod)
Russia FW Konstantin Garbuz (end of loan from FC SKA-Energiya Khabarovsk)
Russia DF Aleksei Germashov (to FC Torpedo Vladimir)
Russia DF Igor Kaleshin (to FC Chernomorets Novorossiysk)
No. Position Player
Russia MF Aleksandr Kudryavtsev (end of loan from PFC CSKA Moscow)
Russia DF Denis Kulikov (to FC Lokomotiv-2 Moscow)
Russia MF Andrei Pavlenko (to FC Volga Ulyanovsk)
Russia DF Aleksei Puchkov (to FC Metallurg-Kuzbass Novokuznetsk)
Russia MF Damir Sadikov (end of loan from FC Amkar Perm)
Russia MF Marat Sagirov (to FC KAMAZ Naberezhnye Chelny)
Russia GK Maksim Shumailov (end of loan from FC Amkar Perm)
Russia MF Ruslan Surodin (to FC Chernomorets Novorossiysk)
Russia FW Vladimir Zelenovskiy (to FC Dynamo Kostroma)
Russia FW Viktor Zemchenkov (to FC Khimki)

Reserve squad

Tyumen's reserve squad played professionally as FC Dynamo-Gazovik-d Tyumen in the Russian Third League in 1995-1996.

Notable past players

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

External links


Wikimedia Foundation. 2010.

Игры ⚽ Нужно решить контрольную?

Look at other dictionaries:

  • Tyumen — (audio ru|Тюмень|Ru Tyumen.ogg) is a city in Russia, located on the Tura River km to mi|2144 east of Moscow. It is the administrative center of Tyumen Oblast in the Urals Federal District.Population: ru census2002|510719|; su… …   Wikipedia

  • Tyumen State Oil and Gas University — is the largest university in the Tyumen region of Russia. It has 7 schools, including construction, social sciences, engineering, and the Institute of Management and Business. There are 4 petroleum universities in Russia. Tyumen State Oil and Gas …   Wikipedia

  • Tyumen (Russia) — Hotels: Quality Hotel Tyumen (City) …   International hotels

  • Tyumen — [tyo͞o men′] city in W Asian Russia, near the Urals: pop. 491,000 …   English World dictionary

  • Tyumen Oblast —    An administrative region of the Russian Federation. Tyumen stretches nearly 2,000 kilometers, from the Kara Sea in the north to the Kazakh steppe in the south. Existing as autonomous okrugs (AOks) within Tyumen, the federal subjects of… …   Historical Dictionary of the Russian Federation

  • Tyumen Oblast — Infobox Russian federal subject EnglishName=Tyumen Oblast RussianName=Тюменская область Locator LocatorMap CoatOfArmsLink=Coat of arms of Tyumen Oblast FlagLink=Flag of Tyumen Oblast Anth …   Wikipedia

  • Tyumen-2 — p1 Tyumen 2 p1 Schiffsdaten Flagge Russland …   Deutsch Wikipedia

  • Tyumen — Stadt Tjumen Тюмень Flagge Wappen …   Deutsch Wikipedia

  • Tyumen — Original name in latin Tyumen Name in other language TJM, Tjumen, Tjumen , Tyumen, Tyumen , Tyumen’, Тюмень State code RU Continent/City Asia/Yekaterinburg longitude 57.15222 latitude 65.52722 altitude 81 Population 519119 Date 2013 04 27 …   Cities with a population over 1000 database

  • Tyumen — /tyooh men /; Russ. /tyooh myen /, n. a city in the SW Russian Federation in Asia. 456,000. * * * ▪ Russia also spelled  Tiumen, or T umen         , city and administrative centre of Tyumen oblast (province), central Russia. The city lies in the… …   Universalium

  • Tyumen — noun A city in Russia, administrative centre of Tyumen oblast …   Wiktionary

Share the article and excerpts

Direct link
Do a right-click on the link above
and select “Copy Link”