FC Arsenal Tula

Last updated • 7 min readFrom Wikipedia, The Free Encyclopedia
Arsenal Tula
FC Arsenal Tula logo.svg
Full nameАНО «Профессиональный футбольный клуб «Арсенал», Тула»
Nickname(s)Krasno-zholtyye (Red-yellows)
Kanoniri (Canoneers)
Pryaniki (Gingercakes)
Pushkari (The Gunners)
Oruzheyniki (Gunsmiths)
Samovars
Founded1946;79 years ago (1946)
Ground Arsenal Stadium
Capacity19,241 [1]
Owner Valery Lvovich Grinkovsky
ChairmanAlexander Zotov
Manager Aleksandr Storozhuk [2]
League Russian First League
2023–24 4th of 18
Website https://arsenaltula.ru
Soccerball current event.svg Current season

FC Arsenal Tula (Russian : ФК Арсенал Тула) is a Russian professional football club from Tula playing in the second-tier Russian First League.

Contents

Originally founded in 1923, FC Arsenal Tula was promoted to the Russian Premier League in 2014 for the first time in its history after finishing as runners-up in the 2013–14 Russian National Football League. This achievement marked three successive promotions for the club. On its debut season in the 2014–15 Russian Premier League, it finished in last place and was relegated back to the FNL. The club spent one season in the FNL before returning to the Premier League for the 2016–17 season, in which they have competed until the 2021–22 Russian Premier League season, when they were relegated again after finishing last. [3] [4]

The team currently plays its home games in Arsenal Stadium, which has a capacity of 19,241.

History

Team name history

Early years

Arsenal Tula played their first season in the USSR Championship in 1946 under the name Zenit Tula, competing in the Central Division of the RSFSR Championship and finished 5th in their debut season. The precursors to Arsenal Tula played mainly in the Soviet Second League and never played in the Soviet Top League. The club was the champions of Zone West of the Russian Professional Football League in 1997 and 2003 and competed in the Russian Football National League from 1998 until 2001 and in 2004. In 2005, Arsenal Tula did not receive an FNL license due to financial difficulties and once again competed in Zone West in the PFL. In 2006 the team FC Arsenal Tula was liquidated and FC Oruzheynik Tula was formed in its place, playing in the Amateur Division. In 2011, it was announced that the team FC Arsenal Tula would be reformed. [5]

Recent history

The present day team FC Arsenal Tula was formed at the end of 2011, replacing the former team FC Arsenal-Tula. The first coach of Arsenal was the famous Russian footballer Dmitri Alenichev and the coaching staff included Dmitri Ananko, Oleg Samatov, and famous goalkeeper Aleksandr Filimonov. The club's initial squad also had several famous players such as midfielder Yegor Titov and defender Dmytro Parfenov. Over the course of the 2011/12 season, Arsenal finished in 8th place in the Russian Amateur Football League and all of the famous footballers left the club. Trainer Dmitri Alenichev decided to replace them with young players.

On June 18, 2012, Arsenal received a license to compete in Zone Center in the 2012–13 Russian Second Division. Arsenal won promotion at their first attempt, finishing the season with 73 points and 22 wins, 7 draws, and just 1 loss. In the 2013–14 season, FC Arsenal Tula were promoted once again, finishing as runners-up and being promoted to the Russian Premier League for the first time in their history. Over the course of the 2014–15 Russian Premier League, Arsenal finished in last place with 25 points and were relegated back to the FNL. During this season, on April 9, 2015, Arsenal had a sensational 1–0 victory over Spartak Moscow. In this match, the fans of Spartak climbed onto the roof of Arsenal Stadium despite it being unsafe and one fan was hospitalized. This match resulted in the club being fined 500,000 rubles and being forced to play their next match against Krasnodar at a neutral venue. In the 2014–15 Russian Cup, Arsenal reached the quarterfinals, beating Zenit Saint Petersburg in their home stadium.

Before the beginning of the 2015–16 season, trainer Dmitri Alenichev left for Spartak Moscow and was replaced by Viktor Bulatov. Viktor Bulatov was sacked after 24 games, with the club having won 14, drawn 4, and lost 6 games under his tenure. Bulatov was replaced by Sergei Pavlov, who led Arsenal back to the Premier League, with the club finishing as runners-up with 82 points. In the 2016–17 Russian Premier League, Arsenal started poorly, and in October 2016, Pavlov was sacked and replaced with Sergei Kiriakov. Arsenal finished in 14th place and advanced to the relegation play-offs against Yenisey Krasnoyarsk, which Arsenal survived and stayed in the Premier League because of the away goals rule, as Arsenal had won 1–0 in Tula and lost 2–1 in Krasnoyarsk. In the 2017–18 season Arsenal hired Miodrag Božović, who led them to their highest ever position of 7th in the Premier League. Božović left Arsenal after one year. Oleg Kononov took over as the manager, but also left after 5 months at the helm. Igor Cherevchenko eventually led them to 6th place in the 2018–19 season, which qualified them for the very first time for the European competition, 2019–20 UEFA Europa League. [6]

In the 2023–24 Russian First League season, Arsenal qualified for the Russian Premier League promotion play-offs. [7] Arsenal lost to Pari Nizhny Novgorod 2–3 on aggregate and remained in the First League. [8]

League and Cup history

FC Arsenal Tula

Soviet Union

SeasonDiv.Pos.Pl.WDLGSGAP Cup
1946 3rd, "Center" 516808384916
1947–1948
1949 2nd, RSFSR-4 13266515366617
1950–1958
1959 2nd, Zone 2 13285815264418
1960 2nd, RSFSR-Zone 1 83011613394328R64
19616241167362228R128
1962103211813324530R256
196311309813303526R512
1964 3rd, RSFSR-Zone 2 123281212313828R64
1965 3rd, RSFSR-Zone 1 934111310382435R1024
196623215134331543R512
3rd, Semi-final 14211325
3rd, Final 33102452
1967 2nd (Group 2) 133891811263536R512
1968144091615314034R256
196953812197362543R128
1970442211110803853R16
1971 3rd, Zone 2 2382387582877
19721238121016475146
1973 3rd, Zone 3 16347819376119
1974 3rd, Zone 2 1040151114425141
1975 3rd, Zone 3 193891019295128
1976184061222265724
1977 3rd, Zone 1 104016915513441
1978 3rd, Zone 3 244681127397027
1979 3rd, Zone 1 194681820417234
198083619512664343
198117324523256713
198215306618245618
198311309912273127
19843321958562943
198543215125503442R32
19862301776391941R64
198712328915294025
1988163812719566131
1989154215621414636
1990 4th, Zone 5 15328816314824
1991124219716544145

Russia

SeasonDiv.Pos.Pl.WDLGSGAP Cup
1992 3rd, Zone 2 74222713564551R16
1993 3rd, Zone 3 2342176581549
1994 3rd, Zone Center 93214711473335
1995640191011614367R256
19964422958793692
1997 3rd, Zone West 1382873912691R16
1998 2nd 542181113655365QF
199994219716615164R32
20001138131312453952QF
20011634101014273540R32
2002 3rd, Zone West 2382387662977R256
20031362655831883R32
2004 2nd 1342151314393258
2005 3rd, Zone West 13328816263132R256
200618347423265825R512
2007 4th, Zone Central -
Black Earth Region
2321895712163
20085342185752771
20097241239402439
20105221129272535
2011–12842181014584364
2012–13 3rd, Zone Center 1302271742073R256
2013–14 2nd 2362169623969R64
2014–15 1st 16307419204625QF
2015–16 2nd 2382576643682R64
2016–17 1st 14307716184028R32
2017–18 73012612354142
2018–19 63012108403346SF
2019–20 83011514374138R16

European record

As of 1 August 2019

SeasonCompetitionRoundClubHomeAway Agg.
2019–20 UEFA Europa League 2QR Flag of Azerbaijan.svg Neftçi 0–10–30–4
Notes

Feeder club

Arsenal's feeder club Arsenal-2 Tula participated in the third tier of professional Russian football, Russian Professional Football League, beginning with the 2014–15 season. The club was dissolved after the 2016–17 season. [9] Another team was called Arsenal-2 and competed professionally from 1998 to 2002, it last competed as Dynamo Tula.

Supporters

Arsenal Ultras Ul'tras Arsenala.png
Arsenal Ultras
Arsenal Fans Bolel'shchiki tul'skogo <<Arsenala>>.jpg
Arsenal Fans

Traditionally, the games of Arsenal have drawn great interest from the local football loving population. In the 2011–12 season, when Arsenal was still an amateur team, over 13,500 fans showed up for a match between Arsenal and Rusichi, which is an attendance record for a Russian amateur game. [10] In the second division, FC Arsenal Tula's attendance was over 8,000 people on average. According to data collected by the Russian Football Union in 2013, Arsenal's attendance was 15th out of 106 professional clubs in Russia. [11] In the FNL, the average attendance of Arsenal was 10,844, with over 16,500 people showing up for the key game against Torpedo Moscow. In Arsenal's first season in the Premier League, the average attendance was 12,154.

There are several ultras groups among Arsenal fans including the well-known Red-Yellow Cannoneers. [12] The shirt number 12 has been permanently retired by the club management in honor of the fans.

Current squad

As of 26 March 2025, according to the First League website.Note: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules; some limited exceptions apply. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.

No.Pos.NationPlayer
1 GK Flag of Russia.svg  RUS David Sangaré
3 DF Flag of Russia.svg  RUS Erving Botaka
4 DF Flag of Russia.svg  RUS Daniil Penchikov
5 MF Flag of Russia.svg  RUS Nikita Razdorskikh
6 MF Flag of Russia.svg  RUS Vladislav Levin
7 MF Flag of the Dominican Republic.svg  DOM Edarlyn Reyes
8 MF Flag of Russia.svg  RUS Artyom Popov
9 FW Flag of Russia.svg  RUS Amur Kalmykov
10 MF Flag of Armenia.svg  ARM Ishkhan Geloyan
11 MF Flag of Russia.svg  RUS Sergei Tkachyov
14 MF Flag of Montenegro.svg  MNE Miloš Brnović
17 MF Flag of Benin.svg  BEN Mattéo Ahlinvi
18 GK Flag of Russia.svg  RUS Mikhail Tsulaya
19 MF Flag of Russia.svg  RUS Kirill Bogdanets
20 MF Flag of Russia.svg  RUS Ansor Khabibov
No.Pos.NationPlayer
22 MF Flag of Russia.svg  RUS Alan Tsarayev
24 FW Flag of Russia.svg  RUS Ilya Azyavin
25 FW Flag of Montenegro.svg  MNE Uroš Đuranović
31 DF Flag of Russia.svg  RUS Kirill Bolshakov
33 MF Flag of Russia.svg  RUS Dmitry Sergeyev
36 GK Flag of Russia.svg  RUS Mikhail Levashov
44 DF Flag of Russia.svg  RUS Aleksei Berdnikov
46 DF Flag of Belarus.svg  BLR Ilya Moskalenchik
50 MF Flag of Russia.svg  RUS Ilya Sokolov
51 GK Flag of Russia.svg  RUS Timofey Kashintsev
59 MF Flag of Armenia.svg  ARM Tigran Avanesyan
64 DF Flag of Russia.svg  RUS David Semenchuk
78 MF Flag of Russia.svg  RUS Danil Lipovoy
95 DF Flag of Russia.svg  RUS Aleksandr Mukhin

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.

No.Pos.NationPlayer
GK Flag of Russia.svg  RUS Vladimir Sugrobov (at Chelyabinsk until 30 June 2025)
DF Flag of Russia.svg  RUS Daniil Melnikov(at Volgar Astrakhan until 30 June 2025)
No.Pos.NationPlayer
DF Flag of Russia.svg  RUS Artyom Sukhanov (at KAMAZ until 30 June 2025)
MF Flag of Russia.svg  RUS Maksim Kaynov (at Sochi until 30 June 2025)

Coaching staff

Honours

Notable players

Had international caps for their respective countries. Players whose name is listed in bold represented their countries while playing for Arsenal.

Managers

References

  1. "стадион Центральный стадион "Арсенал"". premierliga.ru. Retrieved 16 December 2018.
  2. "Экс-тренер "Краснодара" Сторожук возглавил тульский "Арсенал"" (in Russian). sports.ru. 2023-01-14.
  3. «Арсенал» возвращается в Премьер-лигу! (in Russian). Russian Football National League. 10 May 2016.
  4. ""Уфа" вырвала победу у "Арсенала", туляки досрочно заняли 16-е место" (in Russian). Russian Premier League. 14 May 2022.
  5. Возрождение тульского «Арсенала» (in Russian). Tula Oblast Committee on Sport and Youth Politics. 27 October 2011. Archived from the original on 16 November 2012. Retrieved 25 July 2012.
  6. "Arsenal qualified for Europa League for the first time in history" (in Russian). Russian Premier League. 22 May 2019.
  7. "РФС выдал тульскому "Арсеналу" лицензию для участия в Мир РПЛ" (in Russian). Russian Football Union. 23 May 2024.
  8. ""Пари НН" сохранил прописку в Мир РПЛ благодаря победе над "Арсеналом" в два мяча" (in Russian). Russian Premier League. 1 June 2024.
  9. Тульский «Арсенал-2» расформирован, фарм-клубом «Арсенала» стал новомосковский «Химик». Tula Football. 7 June 2017.
  10. На матче «Арсенал» — «Госуниверситет-Русичи» установлен рекорд первенств Черноземья по посещаемости (in Russian). tula-football.ru. Archived from the original on February 27, 2014. Retrieved March 29, 2013.
  11. "30 самых посещаемых футбольных клубов России" (in Russian). sports.ru. Archived from the original on June 25, 2013.
  12. "Интервью представителя фанатского движения Red-Yellow Cannoneers". russian-ultras.com. Archived from the original on December 13, 2014. Retrieved March 29, 2013.