Russian Amateur Football League

Russian championship between amateur football clubs (III division) (Russian: Первенство России среди любительских футбольных клубов (III дивизион)) is the fourth overall tier of the Russian football league system. Sometimes it is called Amateur Football League, after the organization that holds the competition (Russian: Любительская Футбольная Лига). The league has amateur-semipro status. At the end of each season ten teams are promoted from the Amateur Football League to the full professional Second Division, located one step above (even though often the winning teams voluntarily choose to stay in the AFL due to higher financial commitments in the Second Division). Bottom-ranked clubs in the first divisions of Moscow, Moscow Oblast, and Siberia may be or are relegated to the second (fifth tier). The league is divided into ten regional divisions.

From 1994 to 1997 a professional fourth-level Russian Third League existed. Its teams moved back to the amateur competition in 1998. For more details, see 1994 Russian Third League, 1995 Russian Third League, 1996 Russian Third League, 1997 Russian Third League. Current name: Rosgosstrakh Russian Football Championship Division 3 (CFC)

Far East

Champions:

  • 1987 – FC Montazhnik Yakutsk
  • 1991 – FC Lokomotiv Ussuriysk
  • 1992 – FC Portovik Vladivostok
  • 1994 – FC Voskhod Vladivostok
  • 1995 – FC Rybak Starodubskoye
  • 1996 – FC Portovik Vladivostok
  • 1997 – FC Gornyak Raychikhinsk
  • 1998 – FC Viktoriya Komsomolsk-on-Amur
  • 1999 – FC Viktoriya Komsomolsk-on-Amur
  • 2000 – FC Viktoriya Komsomolsk-on-Amur
  • 2001 – FC Portovik Kholmsk
  • 2002 – FC Neftyanik Nogliki
  • 2003 – FC Portovik Kholmsk
  • 2004 – FC Portovik Kholmsk
  • 2005 – FC Portovik Kholmsk
  • 2006 – FC Sakhalin Yuzhno-Sakhalinsk
  • 2007 – FC Portovik-Energiya Kholmsk
  • 2008 – FC LuTEK Luchegorsk
  • 2009 – FC LuTEK-Energiya Luchegorsk
  • 2010 – FC LuTEK-Energiya Luchegorsk
  • 2012 – FC LuTEK-Energiya Luchegorsk
  • 2012 – FC LuTEK-Energiya Luchegorsk (transitional)
  • 2013 – FC LuTEK-Energiya Luchegorsk
  • 2014 – FC Belogorsk
  • 2015 – FC Dalstroyindustriya Komsomolsk
  • 2016 – FC Belogorsk
  • 2017 – FC Nogliki

Siberia

Champions:

  • 1992 – FC Motor Prokopyevsk
  • 1993 – FC Dorozhnik Uyar
  • 1994 – FC Viktoriya Nazarovo
  • 1995 – FC Yantar Seversk
  • 1996 – FC Atom Zheleznogorsk
  • 1997 – FC Sibiryak Bratsk
  • 1998 – FC Reformatsiya Abakan
  • 1999 – FC Olimpik Novosibirsk
  • 2000 – FC Chkalovets-1936 Novosibirsk
  • 2001 – FC Torpedo-Alttrak Rubtsovsk
  • 2002 – FC Energis Irkutsk
  • 2003 – FC Shakhta Raspadskaya Mezhdurechensk
  • 2004 – FC Chkalovets Novosibirsk
  • 2005 – FC Raspadskaya Mezhdurechensk
  • 2006 – FC Raspadskaya Mezhdurechensk
  • 2007 – FC Raspadskaya Mezhdurechensk
  • 2008 – FC Dynamo Biysk
  • 2009 – FC Dynamo Biysk
  • 2010 – FC Raspadskaya Mezhdurechensk
  • 2012 – FC Dynamo Biysk
  • 2013 – FC Shakhta Raspadskaya Mezhdurechensk
  • 2013 – FC Metallurg Novokuznetsk (transitional)
  • 2014 – FC Restavratsiya Krasnoyarsk
  • 2015 – FC Restavratsiya Krasnoyarsk
  • 2016 – FC Restavratsiya Krasnoyarsk
  • 2017 – FC Novokuznetsk

Ural and West Siberia

Champions:

North West

Champions:

Centre (Moscow)

Champions:

  • 1998 – FC Spartak-Chukotka Moscow
  • 1999 – FC Moskabelmet Moscow
  • 2000 – FC Torpedo-ZIL Moscow (youth)
  • 2001 – FC Mostransgaz Selyatino
  • 2002 – FC Nosorogi Volodarskogo
  • 2003 – FC Almaz Moscow
  • 2004 – FC Presnya Moscow
  • 2005 – FC Torpedo-RG Moscow
  • 2006 – FC Zelenograd
  • 2007 – FC Spartak-Avto Moscow
  • 2008 – FC Spartak-Avto Moscow
  • 2009 – FC Torpedo Moscow
  • 2010 – FC KAIT-Sport Moscow
  • 2012 – FC Prialit Reutov
  • 2012 – FC Zelenograd (transitional)
  • 2013 – FC Zelenograd
  • 2014 – FC Zelenograd
  • 2015 – FC Zelenograd
  • 2016 – FC Troitsk
  • 2017 – FC Rosich Moscow

Centre (Moscow Oblast)

Champions:

  • 2001 – FC Reutov
  • 2002 – FC Lobnya-Alla Lobnya
  • 2003 – FC Lobnya-Alla Lobnya
  • 2004 – FC Lokomotiv-Mosotryad No. 99 Protvino
  • 2005 –
  • 2006 –
  • 2007 –
  • Group A – FC Istra
  • Group B – FC Senezh Solnechnogorsk
  • Group A – FC Zorkiy Krasnogorsk
  • Group B – FC Mytishchi
  • 2010 –
  • Group A – FC Podolye Voronovo
  • Group B – FC Oka Beloomut
  • 2012 –
  • 2012 (Transitional) –

Golden Ring

Champions:

Chernozemye (South-West Region)

Champions:

Privolzhye (Volga Region)

Champions:

South

Champions:

This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.