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Russian football club From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
FK Yenisey Krasnoyarsk (ФК Енисей Красноярск) is a Russian football club based in Krasnoyarsk, in Krasnoyarsk Krai. The club plays in the Russian First League.
Full name | Futbolny Klub Yenisey Krasnoyarsk | ||
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Founded | 1937 | ||
Ground | Central Stadium, Krasnoyarsk | ||
Capacity | 15,000 | ||
Chairman | Dmitry Fedoseyev | ||
Manager | Andrey Tikhonov | ||
League | Russian First League | ||
2023–24 | RFL, 6th of 18 | ||
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The club was founded in 1937 as Lokomotiv Krasnoyarsk and spent one season in Class D of the Soviet league. In 1957 the club was re-formed and entered the Far East zone of Class B. In 1968 Lokomotiv was renamed Rassvet and, in 1970, Avtomobilist. In 1991 it became Metallurg, a title it held until February 2010 when it was renamed Metallurg-Yenisey (formally, Metallurg was excluded from the league and a new independent club Metallurg-Yenisey was admitted into the league).[1] In 2011, the club was renamed to Yenisey.[2] The club is named after the Yenisei river, on which Krasnoyarsk is located.
Yenisey (or their predecessors) never played in the Soviet Top League or Russian Premier League until 2018. Their best result in Soviet League was a 2nd position in Group 7 of Class B in 1959, while their best result in Russian history is the 3rd position in Russian National Football League in 2016–17 and 2017–18. Since the end of the Soviet Union, the club has suffered relegation to the Second Division on five occasions, most recently in 2006. In the 2015–16 season, Yenisey took 16th spot in the FNL and should have been relegated, but one of the third-tier Russian Professional Football League zone winners, FC Smena Komsomolsk-na-Amure, refused to be promoted due to lack of financing, and Yenisey stayed in the FNL.[3] At the end of the 2016–17 season, Yenisey reached the Russian Premier League promotion play-offs, but lost to FC Arsenal Tula on away goals rule (2–1 at home, 0–1 away) and stayed in the FNL. Despite spending a portion of the next 2017–18 season in the top-two direct-promotion spot, by the end of the season Yenisey dropped into 3rd position and qualified for promotion play-offs again.[4] They defeated FC Anzhi Makhachkala 6–4 on aggregate in the promotion play-offs and were promoted to the Russian Premier League for the 2018–19 season for the first time in the team's history.
They were relegated back to the second tier after one year in the Premier League.
Yenisey ended the 2022–23 season in 4th place in the First League and qualified for the promotion play-offs.[5] Yenisey lost 0–3 on aggregate in the playoffs to Fakel Voronezh and remained in the First League.[6]
As of 12 September 2024, according to the Official First League website. Note: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.
Note: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.
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Had international caps for their respective countries. Players whose name is listed in bold represented their countries while playing for Yenisey.
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Position | Name |
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Manager | Artyom Gorlov |
Assistant manager | Konstantin Zaitsev |
First-team coach | Plenkin Denis Vladimirovich |
Goalkeeping coach | Eduard Steinbrecher |
Fitness coach | Suleimanov Artur Arturovich |
Analyst | Sergey Klushantsev |
Doctor | Vladimir Fomin |
Rehabilitation Specialist | Michael Romanov |
Masseur | Vadim Zhdanov |
Masseur | Shevtsov Denis Igorevich |
Team Administrator | Suleimanov Artur Arturovich |
Team Administrator | Yudt Dmitry Evgenievich |
Team Leader | Butan Evgenii |
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