2002 Russian Premier League

2002 was the first season of the Russian Premier League. While the structure of the competition did not change, the top level clubs gained independence from the Professional Football League.

Spartak's six-year dominance in the league was broken by Lokomotiv.

Overview

Team Head coach
FC Lokomotiv Moscow Yuri Syomin
PFC CSKA Moscow Valery Gazzaev
FC Spartak Moscow Oleg Romantsev
FC Torpedo Moscow Vitaliy Shevchenko (until July)
Sergei Petrenko (from July)
FC Krylia Sovetov Samara Alexander Tarkhanov
FC Shinnik Yaroslavl Aleksandr Pobegalov
FC Saturn-RenTV Ramenskoye Vladimir Shevchuk
FC Dynamo Moscow Aleksandr Novikov (until April)
Viktor Prokopenko Ukraine (from April)
FC Rotor Volgograd Vladimir Salkov
FC Zenit St. Petersburg Yuri Morozov (until April)
Mikhail Biryukov (caretaker) (April to July)
Yuri Morozov (July)
Mikhail Biryukov (caretaker) (July to August)
Boris Rappoport (from August)
FC Rostselmash Rostov-on-Don Anatoly Baidachny (until August)
Sergei Balakhnin (caretaker) (from August)
FC Alania Vladikavkaz Volodymyr Muntyan Ukraine (until June)
Bakhva Tedeyev (from July)
FC Uralan Elista Sergei Pavlov (until August)
Yuri Shishlov (caretaker) (August)
Revaz Dzodzuashvili Georgia (country) (from August)
FC Torpedo-ZIL Moscow Vadim Nikonov
FC Anzhi Makhachkala Leonid Tkachenko (until May)
Aleksandr Reshetnyak (caretaker) (May to June)
Myron Markevych Ukraine (June to August)
Aleksandr Reshetnyak (caretaker) (August)
Gadzhi Gadzhiyev (from August)
FC Sokol Saratov Aleksandr Koreshkov (until April)
Anatoli Aslamov (caretaker) (April to May)
Leonid Tkachenko (from May)

Standings

Pos
Team
Pld
W
D
L
GF
GA
GD
Pts
Qualification or relegation
1 Lokomotiv Moscow (C) 30 19 9 2 46 14 +32 66 2003–04 UEFA Champions League Third qualifying round
2 CSKA Moscow 30 21 3 6 60 26 +34 66 2003–04 UEFA Champions League Second qualifying round
3 Spartak Moscow 30 16 7 7 49 36 +13 55 2003–04 UEFA Cup First round
4 Torpedo Moscow 30 14 8 8 47 32 +15 50 2003–04 UEFA Cup Qualifying round
5 Krylia Sovetov Samara 30 15 4 11 39 32 +7 49
6 Saturn 30 13 8 9 41 37 +4 47
7 Shinnik Yaroslavl 30 13 8 9 42 37 +5 47
8 Dynamo Moscow 30 12 6 12 38 33 +5 42
9 Rotor Volgograd 30 11 5 14 27 34 7 38
10 Zenit St. Petersburg 30 8 9 13 36 42 6 33
11 Rostselmash 30 7 10 13 29 49 20 31
12 Alania Vladikavkaz 30 8 6 16 32 42 10 30
13 Uralan Elista 30 6 11 13 32 42 10 29
14 Torpedo-ZIL Moscow 30 6 10 14 20 39 19 28
15 Anzhi Makhachkala (R) 30 5 10 15 22 43 21 25 Relegation to Russian First Division 2003
16 Sokol Saratov (R) 30 5 8 17 24 45 21 23

Source: RFPL
Rules for classification: 1) points; 2) goal difference; 3) number of goals scored
(C) = Champion; (R) = Relegated; (P) = Promoted; (E) = Eliminated; (O) = Play-off winner; (A) = Advances to a further round.
Only applicable when the season is not finished:
(Q) = Qualified to the phase of tournament indicated; (TQ) = Qualified to tournament, but not yet to the particular phase indicated; (RQ) = Qualified to the relegation tournament indicated; (DQ) = Disqualified from tournament.

As CSKA and Lokomotiv finished at the top of the table with equal points, the title was decided in a championship play-off.

Lokomotiv Moscow 10 CSKA Moscow
Loskov 6' (Report)
Attendance: 34,000
Referee: V. Ivanov

Torpedo qualified for the UEFA Cup thanks to Spartak winning the Russian Cup in 2003.

Top goalscorers

RankNameGoalsTeam
1Rolan Gusev15CSKA
Dmitri Kirichenko15CSKA
3Aleksandr Kerzhakov14Zenit
4Vladimir Beschastnykh12Spartak
Andrei Karyaka12Krylya Sovetov
6Robertas Poškus Lithuania11Krylya Sovetov
Serghei Rogaciov Moldova11Saturn-REN-TV
Igor Semshov11Torpedo
9Aleksandr Shirko10Torpedo
Zurab Tsiklauri10Uralan

Awards

On December 10 Russian Football Union named its list of 33 top players:[1]

Goalkeepers
  1. Russia Sergei Ovchinnikov (Lokomotiv Moscow)
  2. Russia Ruslan Nigmatullin (CSKA Moscow)
  3. Russia Valeri Chizhov (Saturn)
Sweeper
  1. Russia Sergei Ignashevich (Lokomotiv Moscow)
  2. Armenia Sargis Hovsepyan (Zenit)
  3. Ukraine Bohdan Shershun (CSKA Moscow)
Defensive midfielders
  1. Bosnia and Herzegovina Elvir Rahimić (CSKA Moscow)
  2. Russia Yevgeni Aldonin (Rotor)
  3. Russia Igor Semshov (Torpedo Moscow)

Medal squads

1. FC Lokomotiv Moscow

Goalkeepers: Sergei I. Ovchinnikov (31).
Defenders: Sergei Ignashevich (29 / 1), Gennadiy Nizhegorodov (29), Vadim Evseev (24 / 7), Dmitri Sennikov (24 / 1), Oleg Pashinin Uzbekistan (24), Jacob Lekgetho South Africa (23 / 2), Yuri Drozdov (18), Milan Obradović Serbia (17).
Midfielders: Dmitri Loskov (30 / 7), Vladimir Maminov Uzbekistan (29 / 4), Narvik Sirkhayev Azerbaijan (15 / 4), Marat Izmailov (14 / 2), Bennett Mnguni South Africa (4).
Forwards: James Obiorah Nigeria (23 / 5), Maksim Buznikin (23 / 2), Ruslan Pimenov (19 / 7), Júlio César Brazil (11 / 3), Nemanja Vučićević Serbia (9), Baba Adamu Ghana (8 / 1), Giorgi Demetradze Georgia (country) (6), Sergei V. Ovchinnikov (1).
(league appearances and goals listed in brackets)

One own goal scored by Dmytro Semochko Ukraine (FC Uralan Elista).

Manager: Yuri Syomin.

Transferred out during the season: Giorgi Demetradze Georgia (country) (to FC Alania Vladikavkaz).

2. PFC CSKA Moscow

Goalkeepers: Ruslan Nigmatullin (15), Veniamin Mandrykin (13), Dmitriy Kramarenko Azerbaijan (3).
Defenders: Denis Yevsikov (29), Deividas Šemberas Lithuania (28), Andrei Solomatin (26 / 3), Vyacheslav Dayev (22 / 1), Bohdan Shershun Ukraine (18 / 1), Aleksei Berezutski (16), Aleksandr Berketov (8), Yevgeni Varlamov (2), Vasili Berezutski (2).
Midfielders: Rolan Gusev (30 / 15), Elvir Rahimić Bosnia and Herzegovina (30 / 2), Igor Yanovsky (29 / 4), Juris Laizāns Latvia (27 / 3), Sergei Semak (24 / 6), Aleksei Triputen (9), Artur Tlisov (3).
Forwards: Denis Popov (28 / 7), Dmitri Kirichenko (26 / 15), Spartak Gogniyev (21 / 2), Roman Monaryov Ukraine (12), Igor Piyuk (1).

One own goal scored by Martin Hyský Czech Republic (FC Dynamo Moscow).

Manager: Valery Gazzaev.

Transferred out during the season: Igor Piyuk (to FC Torpedo-ZIL Moscow).

3. FC Spartak Moscow

Goalkeepers: Maksym Levytskyi Ukraine (19), Stanislav Cherchesov (7), Dmitri Goncharov (6).
Defenders: Igor Mitreski Republic of Macedonia (27), Ibra Kébé Senegal (24 / 3), Moisés Brazil (23 / 1), Dmitri Ananko (21), Dmytro Parfenov Ukraine (16 / 2), Yuri Kovtun (16 / 1), Jerry-Christian Tchuissé Cameroon (12), Valeri Abramidze Georgia (country) (6), Dmitri Khlestov (6), Andrei Streltsov (4), Samuel Ogunsania Nigeria (1).
Midfielders: Vasili Baranov Belarus (24 / 1), Dmitri Kudryashov (22 / 5), Yegor Titov (20 / 4), Eduard Tsykhmeystruk Ukraine (20 / 2), Maksym Kalynychenko Ukraine (11 / 1), Artyom Bezrodny (6 / 1), Aleksandr Pavlenko (5), Dmitri Torbinski (3), Marcelo Silva Brazil (2), Pyotr Nemov (2), Aleksandr Sheshukov (2), Aleksei Rebko (1), Aleksandr Samedov (1), Robert Scarlett Jamaica (1).
Forwards: Vladimir Beschastnykh (30 / 12), Aleksandr Danishevsky (21 / 4), Dmitri Sychev (18 / 9), Okon Flo Essien Nigeria (9 / 1), Aleksandr Sonin (8 / 2), Pavel Pogrebnyak (2), Raman Vasilyuk Belarus (1).

Manager: Oleg Romantsev.

Transferred out during the season: Dmitri Ananko (to France AC Ajaccio), Eduard Tsykhmeystruk Ukraine (to Ukraine FC Metalurh Donetsk), Dmitri Sychev (to France Marseille), Dmitri Goncharov (to FC Alania Vladikavkaz), Raman Vasilyuk Belarus (to Belarus FC Dinamo Minsk).

See also

2002 in Russian football

References

  1. Названы имена лучших футболистов России (in Russian). Sport Express. 2002-12-10.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.