FC Akhmat Grozny

Russian football club From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Republican Football Club Akhmat (Chechen: футболан клуб Ахмат Соьлжа-ГӀала; Russian: Республиканский футбольный клуб Ахмат Грозный), commonly known as Akhmat Grozny, and formerly as Terek Grozny from 1958 to 2017, is a Russian professional football club based in Grozny that plays in the Russian Premier League.

Full nameРеспубликанский футбольный клуб «Ахмат»
Republican Football Club
Akhmat
Founded1958; 68 years ago (1958)
Capacity30,597
Quick facts Full name, Founded ...
Akhmat Grozny
Full nameРеспубликанский футбольный клуб «Ахмат»
Republican Football Club
Akhmat
Founded1958; 68 years ago (1958)
GroundAkhmat Arena
Capacity30,597
PresidentYakub Zakriyev
Head coachStanislav Cherchesov
LeagueRussian Premier League
2024–25Russian Premier League, 14th of 16
Websitefc-akhmat.ru
Current season
Close

History

The club was founded in 1946, as Dynamo; it changed its name in 1948 to Neftyanik and in 1958 to Terek. On 7 June 2017, the team was renamed Akhmat, after Akhmad Kadyrov, former President of the Chechen Republic.[1][2]

In the 1990s the club was disbanded for some time due to the war in Chechnya.[3] From the 1990s to 2007 the club played its home games in the neighbouring resort city of Pyatigorsk, Stavropol Krai.

They won the Russian Cup by beating Krylya Sovetov Samara in the final and the Russian First Division in 2004.[4] In 2004 they advanced through the UEFA Cup qualification by beating the Polish team Lech Poznań 1–0 in both legs but lost to Swiss outfit FC Basel in the first round. They played in the Russian Premier League in 2005 but were relegated after finishing last. Terek finished second in the First Division in 2007 and were promoted back into the Premier League.[citation needed]

Before the start of the 2008 Premier League season, the Russian Football Union granted Terek the right to host Premier League matches in Grozny.[citation needed] On 3 July 2008, Terek signed three Romanian players at once: Andrei Margaritescu (Dinamo București), Florentin Petre (CSKA Sofia) and Daniel Pancu (Rapid București).[5] Terek finished 12th in the 2010 Russian Premier League season.[6]

A new stadium has been built for the club.[citation needed]

Cameroonian FC Lotus-Terek Yaoundé, founded by Terek player Guy Stephane Essame and coached by Thomas Libiih, is a farm team of the Russian club.[7]

In January 2011 the club signed former Dutch international Ruud Gullit to an 18-month contract to manage the club.[8] On 14 June 2011 Gullit was sacked for poor results.[9]

On 30 October 2017, manager Oleg Kononov resigned,[10][better source needed] with Mikhail Galaktionov taking over in a caretaker capacity, before being announced as Akhmat's permanent manager on 14 December 2017.[11]

On 30 September 2019, after a 2–0 away defeat to Sochi, Rashid Rakhimov resigned as manager,[12] with Igor Shalimov being appointed as Rakhimov's replacement the same day.[13] On 26 July 2020, Igor Shalimov's contract as manager expired and he left Akhmat Grozny, to be replaced by Andrei Talalayev.[14]

On 11 September 2022, Andrei Talalayev was relieved of his duties as Head Coach, with Yury Nagaytsev taking over in a caretaker capacity.[15] On 22 September 2022, Sergei Tashuyev was announced as Akhmat Grozny's new permanent Head Coach.[16]

In the 2024–25 season, Akhmat finished 14th and qualified for the relegation play-offs.[17] Akhmat defeated Ural Yekaterinburg in the play-offs and remained in the Premier League.[18]

League

USSR

More information Season, Div. ...
Season Div. Pos. Pl. W D L GS GA P Cup Europe Top scorer
(league)
Head coach
1990 2nd,
"Center"
13 42 17 7 18 51 52 41 Soviet Union Masudov – 13 Soviet Union Dyachenko
1991 5 42 19 11 12 55 40 49 Soviet Union Gilagaev – 11 Soviet Union Tarkhanov
Close

Russia

More information Season, Div. ...
Close

European

More information Season, Competition ...
Season Competition Round Club Home Away Aggregate
2004–05 UEFA Cup Second qualifying round Poland Lech Poznań 1–0 1–0 2–0
First round Switzerland Basel 1–1 0–2 1–3
Close

Stadium

The Akhmat-Arena

Between the 1990s and the 2007 Season, Akhmat Grozny played their home games at the Central Stadium in the neighbouring resort city of Pyatigorsk in Stavropol Krai. At the start of the 2008 season they moved to the Sultan Bilimkhanov Stadium, playing their home games there until the opening of Akhmat-Arena on 20 May 2011, when they beat Anzhi Makhachkala 1–0 in the Russian Premier League.

Players

Current squad

As of 19 February 2026.[19]

Note: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules; some limited exceptions apply. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.

Out on loan

Note: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules; some limited exceptions apply. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.

More information No., Pos. ...
Close

Terek-2 Grozny

In 2013, a professional farm club called FC Terek-2 Grozny was created. It played in the third-tier Russian Professional Football League until they were dissolved after the 2015–16 season.

Honours

Club officials

Management

Manager Russia Stanislav Cherchesov
Assistant manager Hungary Csaba Máté
Goalkeeping coach Russia Ramzan Tsutsulayev
Fitness coach Russia Vladimir Panikov
Doctor Russia Magomedtagir Sugaipov
Team director Russia Ruslan Serbiyev

Source: Russian Premier League club profile

Managerial history

As of match played 30 March 2025
More information Name, Nat. ...
Name Nat. From To P W D L GS GA %W Honours Notes
Vyacheslav Hroznyi  Ukraine 1 June 2008 20 October 2009 451414175064031.11
Shahin Diniyev (c)  Azerbaijan 20 October 2009 December 2009 5005210000.00 Caretaker
Anatoly Baidachny  Russia January 2010 December 2011 3189142838025.81
Víctor Muñoz  Spain December 2010 January 2011 000000!
Ruud Gullit  Netherlands 18 January 2011 14 June 2011 13337917023.08
Isa Baytiyev (c)  Russia 15 June 2011 27 September 2011 145361823035.71 Caretaker
Stanislav Cherchesov  Russia 27 September 2011 26 May 2013 532410196766045.28
Yuri Krasnozhan  Russia 26 May 2013 28 October 2017 14167714007.14
Vait Talgayev (c)  Kazakhstan 29 October 2013 7 November 2013 100101000.00 Caretaker
Rashid Rakhimov  Tajikistan 7 November 2013 22 May 2017 113452939133122039.82
Oleg Kononov  Belarus 22 May 2017 30 October 2017 165381624031.25
Mikhail Galaktionov (c)  Russia 30 October 2017 14 December 2017 522165040.00 Caretaker
Mikhail Galaktionov  Russia 14 December 2017 7 April 2018 401327000.00
Igor Lediakhov  Russia 7 April 2018 2 September 2018 12543129041.67
Ruslan İdiqov (c)  Azerbaijan 2 September 2018 5 September 2018 000000! Caretaker
Rashid Rakhimov  Tajikistan 5 September 2018 30 September 2019[12] 381113143446028.95
Igor Shalimov  Russia 30 September 2019[13] 26 July 2020[14] 195772029026.32
Andrei Talalayev  Russia 26 July 2020[14] 11 September 2022[15] 753114309794041.33
Yury Nagaytsev (c)  Latvia 11 September 2022[15] 22 September 2022[16] 210133050.00 Caretaker
Sergei Tashuyev  Russia 22 September 2022[16] 15 August 2023[20] 32153145048046.88
Miroslav Romaschenko  Belarus 18 August 2023[21] 4 April 2024[22] 2376102729030.43
Magomed Adiyev  Russia 5 April 2024[23] 1 September 2024[24] 196582132031.58
Sergei Tashuyev  Russia 3 September 2024[25] 2165102433028.57
Close

Notable players

Had international caps for their respective countries. Players whose names are listed in bold represented their countries while playing for Akhmat or Terek.

Russia
Europe
Africa
Asia
South and Central America

References

Related Articles

Wikiwand AI