FC Tom Tomsk

FC Tom Tomsk (Russian: Футбольный клуб Томь Томск) was a Russian professional football club, based in the Siberian city of Tomsk. The team played in Trud Stadium (Tomsk) before dissolving in 2022.

Tom Tomsk
Full nameOOO Football Club Tom'[1]
Nickname(s)Sibiryaki (Siberians), Belo-Zelyonye (White-Greens)
FoundedMarch 9, 1957 (1957-03-09)
Dissolved2022 (2022)
GroundTrud Stadium, Tomsk
Capacity10,028
OwnerTomsk Oblast
ManagerVacant
2021–22FNL, 14th
WebsiteClub website

History

The team was previously named Burevestnik (1957), Tomich (1958, 1961–1963), Sibelektromotor (1959–1960), Torpedo (1964–1967, 1974–1978), Tomles (1968–1973) and Manometr (1979–1987). The club is currently named after the river of Tom, where Tomsk is located.

In the 1990s the team acquired a number of players that would help them begin their ascent out of the Russian Second Division. Viktor Sebelev, Valery Konovalov and Ruslan Akhidzhak were key players of the early part of the decade with Sergei Ageyev, Vyacheslav Vishnevskiy and Dmitry Kudinov strengthening the team as they made a run on the division championship. In 1996, the team finished 2nd in the division, just falling short of promotion to the Russian First Division. In 1997, Tomsk finally achieved a significant goal when they advanced to the First Division with a strong season.

Previous logo, used until 2007

Following promotion, the team acquired a number of new players including Sergei Zhukov, Andrei Talalaev and Mikhail Murashov to help keep the team in the First Division. However, Tomsk suffered a blow when their newly privatised sponsor, Eastern Oil Company (VNK) pulled out and left the team with no sponsor. At this point, advancement was a pipe dream with survival in the tougher division becoming a priority. It was at this point that the team also had to upgrade their stadium to new standards of the league.

The team played middling football for several years until the arrival of a new sponsor brought in much-needed funds and allowed the team to acquire new players and begin to compete. Third-place finishes in 2002 and 2003 left the team just short of promotion. However, the 2004 season brought new joy and Tomsk finished second in the division, earning promotion to the Russian Premier League for the 2005 season. The 2005 season saw Tomsk survive their first year in top-flight football with a 10th-place finish. In 2006, the team improved its position slightly with an 8th-place finish but in 2007, the club slipped to an 11th-place finish.

The former jersey sponsor Tomskneft, a local subsidiary of Yukos, has recently been sold to new investors. Today, the team is sponsored by the regional authorities.

The club's directors disclosed that the club needed to raise funds or it would go out of business due to debts of 200 million roubles in June 2009.[2]

At the end of the 2018–19 season, they qualified for the Premier League promotion play-offs, but lost to FC Ufa with an aggregate score of 1–2.

In the 2020–21 Russian Football National League, Tom finished in the relegation zone, but remained in the league because two other clubs were disqualified for separate reasons.

Tom failed to receive the license for the 2022–23 FNL season and announced they will apply for the third-tier Russian Football National League 2 license.[3] The FNL2 license was subsequently denied as well due to lack of financial guarantees.[4]

League and cup history

Club records

Largest Margin of Victory — Dynamo Yakutsk – 9–1 (1995), FC Sakhalin Yuzhno-Sakhalinsk – 8–0 (1993), PFC Spartak Nalchik 8–0 (1998)

Largest Margin of Defeat FC Dynamo Barnaul 0–7 (1962)

All time Leading Scorer Russia Viktor Sebelev – 83 goals in 287 matches (1989–2004)

Most goals in a season Russia Ruslan Akhidzhak – 18 goals in 21 matches (1994), Russia Denis Kiselyov – 18 goals in 37 matches (2004)

Reserve squad

A farm club FC Tom-2 Tomsk began competing professionally in the third-tier Russian Professional Football League in the 2014–15 season. The team was dissolved after the 2015–16 season.

Notable players

These players have had international caps for their respective countries. Players whose name is listed in bold represented their countries while playing for Tom.

References

  1. Official Football National League Website
  2. Fyodorov, Gennady (2009-06-23). "Siberian club Tom Tomsk could fold because of huge debts". Reuters. Archived from the original on 2009-07-25. Retrieved 2009-06-23.
  3. ""Томи" отказали в лицензии РФС-2" (in Russian). FC Tom Tomsk. 3 June 2022. Retrieved 3 June 2022.
  4. ""ТОМЬ" НЕ СЫГРАЕТ В НОВОМ СЕЗОНЕ НА ПРОФЕССИОНАЛЬНОМ УРОВНЕ" (in Russian). Match TV. 27 June 2022. Retrieved 27 June 2022.
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