Kalpana Kalpana (Editor)

Russian Premier League

Updated on
Edit
Like
Comment
Share on FacebookTweet on TwitterShare on LinkedInShare on Reddit
Country
  
Russia

Number of teams
  
16

Founder
  
Suleyman Kerimov

Confederation
  
UEFA

Level on pyramid
  
1

Current champion
  
PFC CSKA Moscow

Founded
  
27 August 2001, Russia

Domestic cup
  
Russian Cup

Russian Premier League httpslh3googleusercontentcomUwDpsOJKAe4AAA

Relegation to
  
Football National League

International cup(s)
  
Champions League Europa League

Current champions
  
CSKA Moscow (2015–16 season)

Most championships
  
Spartak Moscow (9 titles)*

Teams
  
FC Spartak Moscow, FC Zenit Saint Petersburg, PFC CSKA Moscow, FC Lokomotiv Moscow, FC Rostov

Profiles

Russian premier league round 10 spartak moscow 2 2 zenit


The Russian Football Premier League (Russian: Чемпионат России по футболу), or Russian Premier League, is the top division professional association football league in Russia. The competition is administered by the Russian Football Premier League. There are 16 teams in the competition. The league currently has two Champions League places, however, from the 2017–18 season, the league will have three Champions League qualifying spots given to the top three teams at the end of the season and the two Europa League spots will be allocated to the fourth and fifth placed teams. The cup winner qualifies for the UEFA Europa League without play-offs. The last two teams are relegated to the Russian National Football League at the end of the season. The Russian Premier League was established in 2001 and succeeded the Top Division. The Top Division was run by the Professional Football League of Russia. Creation of the Premier League is considered to give the clubs a greater degree of independence. The league is currently called Rosgosstrakh Russian Football Championship for sponsorship reasons.

Contents

CSKA Moscow is the current Russian Premier League champion.

Fernando fires spartak moscow in to lead against krasnodar


History

After the dissolution of the Soviet Union, starting in 1992, each former Soviet republic organized an independent national championship. In Russia, the six Russian teams who had played in the Soviet Top League in 1991 (CSKA Moscow, Spartak Moscow, Torpedo Moscow, Dynamo Moscow, Spartak Vladikavkaz, and Lokomotiv Moscow) were supplemented with 14 teams from lower divisions to form a 20-team Russian Top Division. The Top Division was further divided into two groups to reduce the total number of matches. The number of teams in the Top Division was gradually reduced to 18 in 1993 and 16 in 1994. Since then, the Russian Top Division (and subsequently the Premier League) has consisted of 16 teams, except for a short-lived experiment with having two more teams in 1996 and 1997.

Spartak Moscow was the dominant force in the Top Division, winning nine of the first ten titles. Spartak-Alania Vladikavkaz was the only team which managed to break Spartak's dominance, winning the Top Division title in 1995.

Lokomotiv Moscow have won the title twice, and CSKA Moscow six times.

In 2007, Zenit St. Petersburg climbed to the top, winning the title for the first time in their history in Russian professional football; they had also won a Soviet title in 1984. 2008 brought the pinnacle of the rise of Rubin Kazan, a club entirely new to the Russian top flight, as it had never even competed in the Soviet Top League.

Competition

Teams in the Russian Premier League play each other twice, once at home and once away, for a total of 30 matches. Three points are awarded for a win, one for a draw, and none for a loss. If teams are level on points, the tie-breakers are the number of wins, then the goal difference, followed by several other factors. If the teams are tied for the first position, the tie-breakers are the number of wins, then head-to-head results. If the teams tied for the first place cannot be separated by these tie-breakers, a championship play-off is ordered.

As of 2010, the champions and the runners-up qualify for the UEFA Champions League group stage. The third-placed team qualifies for the Champions League second qualifying round. The fourth- and fifth-place teams qualify for the UEFA Europa League. The bottom two teams are relegated to the First Division (renamed the National Football League starting in 2011).

Unlike most other European football leagues, the league traditionally ran in summer, from March to November, to avoid playing games in the cold and snowy weather in winter. This was altered ahead of the 2012–13 season, with the league planning to run the season from autumn to spring. The transitional season of the competition began in early 2011 and continued until summer of 2012. After the 16 Premier League teams played each other twice over the course of the 2011 calendar year, they were split into two groups of eight, and the teams played other teams in their groups two more times for a total of 44 games (30 in 2011 and 14 in 2012). Those two groups were contested in spring 2012, with the top eight clubs playing for the title and European places. The other sides vied to avoid relegation: the bottom two went down while the next two played off against the sides third and fourth in the National Football League, with the two losers being relegated (or denied promotion). Under the current autumn-spring calendar, the league takes a three-month winter break from mid-December until mid-March.

Youth championship

The Youth championship (Russian: Молодежное первенство), also known as Youth teams championship (Russian: Первенство молодёжных команд), Reserve team tournament (Russian: Турнир дублирующих составов) or Reserves tournament (Russian: Турнир дублёров), full name Youth football championship of Russia among teams of clubs of the Premier League (Russian: Молодёжное Первенство России по футболу среди команд клубов Премьер-Лиги), is a league that runs in parallel to the Russian Premier League and includes the youth or reserve teams of the Russian Premier League teams. The number of players a team can have on the pitch at a time that are over 21 years of age or without a Russian citizenship is limited. 16 teams participate in the league. Matches are commonly played a day before the match of the senior teams of the respective teams. All of the Russian Premier League teams are obliged to have a youth team that would participate in the Youth championship. The teams that are promoted from the National Football League and do not have a youth team must create one. The teams in the league are not relegated based on their final league position, but on the league position of their respective clubs' senior teams.

It has to be noted however that some Premier League clubs have three teams. Apart from the senior team and the team that plays in the Youth championship a team might have another senior team that plays in a lower division of Russian football and serves as the farm team for the main team. Some examples include Spartak-2 and Zenit-2, playing in the Russian Football National League.

Youth Champions since 2001

  • 2001: Rotor Volgograd
  • 2002: Dynamo Moscow
  • 2003: Dynamo Moscow
  • 2004: Terek Grozny
  • 2005: CSKA Moscow
  • 2006: Spartak Moscow
  • 2007: Spartak Moscow
  • 2008: Spartak Moscow
  • 2009: Zenit Saint Petersburg
  • 2010: Spartak Moscow
  • 2011: Lokomotiv Moscow
  • 2012: Dynamo Moscow
  • 2012–13: Spartak Moscow
  • 2013–14: Dynamo Moscow
  • 2014–15: Dynamo Moscow
  • 2015–16: Lokomotiv Moscow
  • Russian Teams in European Championships

    Russia are currently sixth in the UEFA coefficient rankings. Russia recently overtook Portugal and are 2 points behind France. The best teams in Europe as of November 2016:

    Current clubs

    The following teams are competing in the 2016–17 season:

    New Stadiums

    In 2016 new stadiums opened. CSKA Moscow got a new stadium named Arena CSKA,later VEB Arena . It holds a capacity of 30,000. FC Krasnodar got the most modern stadium in Europe named Krasnodar Stadium. It holds a capacity of 34,000.

    UEFA Ranking

  • 1. La Liga
  • 2. Bundesliga
  • 3. Premier League
  • 4. Serie A
  • 5. Ligue 1
  • 6. Primeira Liga
  • 7. Russian Premier League
  • 8. Ukrainian Premier League
  • All-time table

    As of 10 July 2015

    References

    Russian Premier League Wikipedia


    Similar Topics