WFC Rossiyanka

(Redirected from FK Rossiyanka)

WFC Rossiyanka was a Russian women's football club from Khimki.

WFC Rossiyanka
Full nameWFC Rossiyanka
Founded2003; 21 years ago (2003)[1]
Dissolved2017; 7 years ago (2017)
GroundRodina Stadium
Capacity5 083
ChairmanOleg Shlyapin
ManagerGeorgy Shebarshin
LeagueRussian Championship
2016Champions
WebsiteClub website

History

The team was founded in 1990 as Nadezhda Krasnoarmeysk, being initially a futsal club. Futsal was played until 1998, when the club left it to concentrate in association football. Nadezhda played for two years in the second tier, attaining 5th and 3rd spots, before being disbanded at the end of the 2000 season, with most players moving to newly founded Nadezhda Noginsk.[citation needed]

In 2003 the team was back as Rossiyanka, attaining promotion to the Russian Championship in the first try. Rossiyanka won the 2005 and 2006 championships, preceded by a silver in its 2004 debut. From 2007 to 2009 the team was second to Zvezda Perm, before winning its third championship in 2010. Rossiyanka successfully defended the title in the following season, which ended in 2012 following a short-lived change in the calendar format.[citation needed]

After four seasons with no titles, Rossiyanka won its fifth championship in 2016. The following year most of its squad moved to CSKA Moscow and Rossiyanka was merged into CSKA following the end of the 2017 season. The vacant in the championship was filled by Lokomotiv Moscow.[citation needed]

Rossiyanka was a regular of the Champions League, where it has reached the quarter-finals in 2008 and 2012. As Russia ranks among the top 8 UEFA Leagues by coefficient,[2] Rossiyanka entered the competition both as the Russian Championship's champion or vice-champion.[citation needed]

Titles

Official

Invitational

Record in UEFA competitions

SeasonCompetitionStageResultOpponent
2006–07UEFA Women's CupQualifying Stage5–2 Alma KTZh
7–0 Clujana
6–1 Slovan Duslo Šaľa
Group Stage4–5 Arsenal
1–2 Brøndby
4–2 Femina Budapest
2007–08UEFA Women's CupQualifying Stage7–0 Napredak Kruševac
18–0 Dinamo Tbilisi
3–0 Arsenal Kharkiv
Group Stage3–1 Universitet Vitebsk
2–1 Clujana
2–2 Umeå
Quarter-finals0–0, 1–2 Frankfurt
2009–10Champions LeagueQualifying Stage11–0 St. Francis
1–0 Apollon Limassol
7–0 Maccabi Holon
Round of 323–1, 2–1 Rayo Vallecano
Round of 160–1, 1–1 Umeå
2010–11Champions LeagueQualifying Stage5–0 Osijek
9–0 St. Francis
4–1 1º Dezembro
Round of 323–1, 4–0 Lehenda Chernihiv
Round of 161–6, 0–5 Lyon
2011–12Champions LeagueRound of 322–0, 1–0 Twente
Round of 164–0, 3–3 Energiya Voronezh
Quarter-finals0–2, 0–3 Turbine Potsdam
2012–13Champions LeagueRound of 324–1, 1–2 Den Haag
Round of 161–0, 2–2 Sparta Praha
Quarter-finals1–2, 0–2 Wolfsburg
2013–14Champions LeagueRound of 324–2, 1–1 Spartak Subotica
Round of 161–0, 0–2 Torres
2016–17Champions LeagueRound of 320–0, 2–1 SFK 2000
Round of 160–4, 0–4 Bayern Munich

Current squad

As of 6 October 2016[3]Note: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.

No.Pos. NationPlayer
22DF  RUSNatalia Pertseva
23MF  RUSElena Morozova
29GK  RUSAnastasiya Ananyeva
57FW  CMRGabrielle Onguéné
70DF  RUSElvira Ziyastinova
80DF  RUSKarina Blynskaya
87MF  RUSOlesya Mashina
88FW  CIVInes Nrehy
89MF  ARMKristine Aleksanyan

Former international players

For details of current and former players, see Category:WFC Rossiyanka players.

See also

WFC CSKA

References