FC Sibir Novosibirsk
|  | |||
| Full name | Football Club Sibir Novosibirsk | ||
|---|---|---|---|
| Nickname(s) | Orly (The Eagles) Chikalda | ||
| Founded | 1936 | ||
| Ground | Spartak Stadium, Novosibirsk | ||
| Capacity | 12,500 | ||
| Chairman | Lev Strelkov | ||
| Manager | Boris Stukalov | ||
| League | Russian National Football League | ||
| 2014–15 | 11th | ||
|  | |||
FC Sibir Novosibirsk (Russian: ФК «Сибирь» Новосибирск) is 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
The club was founded in 1936 and has been known as:
- Burevestnik (Petrel) in 1936–1937
- Krylya Sovetov (Soviet Wings) in 1938–1956
- 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) since 2006
The team played in the Soviet leagues in 1937 (Group E), 1946–1947 (Third Group and Second Group), in 1957–1960 (Class B), 1964–1965 (Class B), 1969–1984 (Group 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 and independent sources , 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.
Continuing to make history: on 19 August 2010 Sibir sensationally beat PSV in a Europa League match, 1–0, with a goal in stoppage time.
Club honours
- Russian Cup: Runner-up 2009/2010
- 2010–11 UEFA Europa League play-off round
League history

 Russia
 Russia
- 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  Kovalyov – 11 Kovalyov – 11 Yerkovich Yerkovich- 1993 - 2nd, "East" - 14 - 30 - 8 - 7 - 15 - 39 - 43 - 23 - R256  Nikulin – 9 Nikulin – 9 Yerkovich Yerkovich- 1994 - 3rd, "Siberia" - 1 - 22 - 16 - 3 - 3 - 51 - 12 - 35 - R256  Nikulin – 12 Nikulin – 12 Shevchenko Shevchenko- 1995 - 2nd - 11 - 42 - 19 - 4 - 19 - 58 - 65 - 61 - R32  Galkin – 14 Galkin – 14 Shevchenko Shevchenko- 1996 - 2nd - 22 - 42 - 7 - 6 - 29 - 44 - 102 - 27 - R64  Pimenov – 10 Pimenov – 10 Shevchenko / Shevchenko / Zaburdaev Zaburdaev- 1997 - 3rd, "East" - 6 - 34 - 16 - 8 - 10 - 46 - 32 - 56 - R64  Obgolts – 9 Obgolts – 9 Yerkovich Yerkovich- 1998 - 3rd, "East" - 2 - 30 - 16 - 12 - 2 - 41 - 17 - 60 - R512  Nikulin – 9 Nikulin – 9 Iromashvili Iromashvili- 1999 - 3rd, "East" - 5 - 30 - 16 - 6 - 8 - 60 - 42 - 54 - R32  Lidrik – 17 Lidrik – 17 Iromashvili Iromashvili- 2000 - LFL(4th), "Siberia" - 1 - 16 - 15 - 1 - 0 - 65 - 6 - 46 - R1024  Iromashvili Iromashvili- 2001 - 3rd, "East" - 5 - 28 - 12 - 11 - 5 - 36 - 21 - 47  Lidrik – 11 Lidrik – 11 Iromashvili Iromashvili- 2002 - 3rd, "East" - 2 - 30 - 19 - 6 - 5 - 61 - 28 - 63 - R256  Ragoza – 17 Ragoza – 17 Iromashvili / Iromashvili / Yerkovich Yerkovich- 2003 - 3rd, "East" - 6 - 24 - 11 - 7 - 6 - 38 - 27 - 40 - R32  Shtyn – 8 Shtyn – 8 Yerkovich / Yerkovich / Shmarov Shmarov- 2004 - 3rd, "East" - 1 - 27 - 19 - 5 - 3 - 53 - 19 - 62 - R256  Akimov – 24 Akimov – 24 Puzanov Puzanov- 2005 - 2nd - 10 - 42 - 15 - 11 - 16 - 51 - 53 - 56 - R512  Akimov – 18 Akimov – 18 Puzanov / Puzanov / Davydov Davydov- 2006 - 2nd - 7 - 42 - 19 - 8 - 15 - 67 - 45 - 65 - R64  Akimov – 23 Akimov – 23 Davydov / Davydov / Radyukin Radyukin- 2007 - 2nd - 3 - 42 - 25 - 11 - 6 - 80 - 39 - 86 - R16  Akimov – 34 Akimov – 34 Fayzulin Fayzulin- 2008 - 2nd - 14 - 42 - 14 - 16 - 12 - 51 - 41 - 58 - R4  Akimov – 12 Akimov – 12 Oborin Oborin- 2009 - 2nd - 2 - 38 - 22 - 7 - 9 - 60 - 21 - 73 - F  Medvedev – 18 Medvedev – 18 Kriushenko Kriushenko- 2010 - 1st - 16 - 30 - 4 - 8 - 18 - 34 - 58 - 20 - R8 - EU - PO  Medvedev – 6 Medvedev – 6 Kriushenko Kriushenko- 2011–12 - 2nd - 7 - 52 - 19 - 19 - 14 - 76 - 57 - 76 - R32  Akimov – 20 Akimov – 20 Kriushenko / Kriushenko / Radyukin / Radyukin /- 2012–13 - 2nd - 8 - 32 - 12 - 9 - 11 - 34 - 38 - 45 - R32  Medvedev – 6 Medvedev – 6 Yuran / Yuran / Kubicki Kubicki
European campaigns
| Season | Competition | Round | Opponent | Home | Away | Aggregate | 
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 2010–11 | UEFA Europa League | 3Q |  Apollon Limassol | 1–0 | 1–2 | 2–2 | 
| PO |  PSV Eindhoven | 1–0 | 0–5 | 1–5 | 
Current squad
As of 25 February 2016,[1] according to the Official FNL website.
Note: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.
| 
 | 
 | 
Reserve squad
FC Sibir reserve team, FC Sibir-2 Novosibirsk, played in Russian Second Division (East Zone) in 2008, and then once again beginning in 2011.
Notable players
The following players represented their countries while playing for Sibir.
References
External links
- Official website (Russian)


















