Clubname: | WFC Rossiyanka |
Fullname: | WFC Rossiyanka |
Founded: | [1] |
Ground: | Rodina Stadium |
Capacity: | 5 083 |
Chairman: | Oleg Shlyapin |
Manager: | Georgy Shebarshin |
Position: | Champions |
Pattern La1: | _whiteshoulders |
Pattern Ra1: | _whiteshoulders |
Leftarm1: | FF0000 |
Body1: | FF0000 |
Rightarm1: | FF0000 |
Shorts1: | FF0000 |
Socks1: | FF0000 |
Leftarm2: | FFFFFF |
Body2: | FFFFFF |
Rightarm2: | FFFFFF |
Shorts2: | FFFFFF |
Socks2: | FFFFFF |
Website: | http://www.fc-ross.ru |
WFC Rossiyanka was a Russian women's football club from Khimki.
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.
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.
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.
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.
Season | Competition | Stage | Result | Opponent |
---|---|---|---|---|
Qualifying Stage | 5–2 | Alma KTZh | ||
7–0 | Clujana | |||
6–1 | Slovan Duslo Šaľa | |||
Group Stage | 4–5 | Arsenal | ||
1–2 | Brøndby | |||
4–2 | Femina Budapest | |||
Qualifying Stage | 7–0 | Napredak Kruševac | ||
18–0 | Dinamo Tbilisi | |||
3–0 | Arsenal Kharkiv | |||
Group Stage | 3–1 | Universitet Vitebsk | ||
2–1 | Clujana | |||
2–2 | Umeå | |||
Quarter-finals | 0–0, 1–2 | Frankfurt | ||
Qualifying Stage | 11–0 | St. Francis | ||
1–0 | Apollon Limassol | |||
7–0 | Maccabi Holon | |||
Round of 32 | 3–1, 2–1 | Rayo Vallecano | ||
Round of 16 | 0–1, 1–1 | Umeå | ||
Qualifying Stage | 5–0 | Osijek | ||
9–0 | St. Francis | |||
4–1 | 1º Dezembro | |||
Round of 32 | 3–1, 4–0 | Lehenda Chernihiv | ||
Round of 16 | 1–6, 0–5 | Lyon | ||
Round of 32 | 2–0, 1–0 | Twente | ||
Round of 16 | 4–0, 3–3 | Energiya Voronezh | ||
Quarter-finals | 0–2, 0–3 | Turbine Potsdam | ||
Round of 32 | 4–1, 1–2 | Den Haag | ||
Round of 16 | 1–0, 2–2 | Sparta Praha | ||
Quarter-finals | 1–2, 0–2 | Wolfsburg | ||
Round of 32 | 4–2, 1–1 | Spartak Subotica | ||
Round of 16 | 1–0, 0–2 | Torres | ||
Round of 32 | 0–0, 2–1 | SFK 2000 | ||
Round of 16 | 0–4, 0–4 | |||
As of 6 October 2016[3]
For details of current and former players, see .