FC Ural Yekaterinburg

Ural Yekaterinburg
Full nameFootball Club Ural
Sverdlovsk Oblast
or FC Ural Yekaterinburg
Nickname(s)Shmeli (Bumblebees)
Oranzhevo-chornyye (Orange and Black)
Uraltsy (Ural men)
FoundedSeptember 1, 1930 (1930-09-01)
GroundEkaterinburg Arena
Capacity35,061
OwnerSverdlovsk Oblast
ChairmanGrigori Ivanov
ManagerMiroslav Romaschenko
LeagueRussian First League
2024–254th of 18
Websitefc-ural.ru

FC Ural Yekaterinburg (Russian: ФК Урал) is a Russian professional association football club based in Yekaterinburg that plays in the Russian First League.[1]

History

The club was founded in 1930 and was known as Avangard (1930–1948, 1953–1957), Zenit (1944–1946), Mashinostroitel (1958–1959), and Uralmash (1949–1952, 1960–2002). The club is currently named after the Russian region of Ural, where Yekaterinburg is the capital.

The club participated in the Soviet championships beginning in 1945. They mostly played in the higher leagues, with the exception of the 1969 season spent in the lowest league. They were the easternmost Russian SFSR club to compete in the third Soviet division (the easternmost Soviet club overall was FC Kairat from Alma-Ata, Kazakh SSR).

Uralmash reached the quarterfinals of the Soviet Cup in 1965/66, 1967/68, and 1990/91.

After the dissolution of the USSR, Uralmash were entitled to enter the Russian Top Division and played there for five seasons, from 1992 to 1996. Their best result was eighth position in 1993 and 1995. Despite reaching the semifinal of the Intertoto Cup in 1996, Uralmash finished 16th out of 18 in the league and were relegated. In 1997 another relegation followed, now to the Second Division. From 1998 to 2002 Uralmash played in the Second Division. After winning promotion, the club was renamed Ural. In 2003, the team were relegated from the Russian First Division, but were promoted again after the 2004 season. The team's best finish in the First Division was third in 2006.

FC Ural reached the Russian cup final in 2017 for the first time in their history. They lost the final against Lokomotiv Moscow. In 2019, FC Ural faced Lokomotiv Moscow again in their second Russian cup final. Lokomotiv Moscow defeated FC Ural in that final.

In the 2023–24 season, Ural finished 13th, qualifying for the relegation play-offs.[2] They lost 2–3 to Akron Tolyatti on aggregate and were relegated to the Russian First League after 11 seasons at the top tier.[3]

In the 2024–25 season, Ural finished 4th in the First League and qualified for the promotion play-offs.[4] They lost to Akhmat Grozny with an aggregate score of 2–3 and remained in the First League.[5]

Domestic

Current squad

First team

As of 5 July 2025[6]

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. Nation Player
2 DF  BIH Silvije Begić
5 MF  RUS Andrei Yegorychev
8 MF  CRO Danijel Miškić
14 MF  RUS Yuri Zheleznov
15 MF  RUS Ilya Ishkov
16 DF  BRA Ítalo
17 FW  CRO Martin Sekulić
18 MF  RUS Nikita Morozov
20 FW  RUS Yevgeni Markov
24 DF  BLR Yegor Filipenko
31 MF  RUS Maksim Sergeyev
35 MF  RUS Nikita Khrisanfov
37 MF  RUS Vitaly Bondarev
42 MF  RUS Yegor Mosin
43 DF  RUS Timofei Margasov
44 MF  BLR Vladislav Malkevich
No. Pos. Nation Player
46 DF  RUS Artyom Mamin
50 FW  RUS Maksim Voronov
55 MF  RUS Timur Ayupov
57 GK  RUS Aleksandr Selikhov
71 GK  RUS Aleksei Mamin
75 MF  RUS Fanil Sungatulin
77 GK  BLR Denis Shcherbitsky
86 GK  RUS Ivan Kuznetsov
88 GK  RUS Vladimir Pavlov
GK  RUS Mikhail Oparin
DF  RUS Sergey Loskutov
DF  BLR Dmitry Prishchepa
MF  RUS Roman Akbashev
MF  BLR Valery Bocherov
MF  RUS Yevgeni Kharin
FW  RUS Aleksei Kashtanov

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. Nation Player
GK  RUS Nikita Alekseyev (at Pyunik until 30 June 2025)
No. Pos. Nation Player
DF  RUS Dmitry Burkin (at Volgar Astrakhan until 31 December 2025)

Reserve team

Retired numbers

Coaching staff

Notable players

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

Managers

Honours

Domestic

Invitational

References

  1. ^ "FK URAL SVERDLOVSKAYA OBLAST". Soccerway. Archived from the original on 29 October 2017. Retrieved 7 May 2016.
  2. ^ ""Пари НН" и "Урал" – участники переходных матчей за места в Мир РПЛ" [Pari NN and Ural will play in the relegation play-offs] (in Russian). Russian Premier League. 25 May 2024.
  3. ^ ""Акрон" уступил "Уралу", но победил по сумме двух встреч и завоевал путёвку в Мир РПЛ" (in Russian). Russian Premier League. 1 June 2024.
  4. ^ "«Ахмат» встретится с «Уралом» в стыковых матчах за право играть в РПЛ, «Пари НН» – с «Сочи». «Черноморец» не получил лицензию" [Akhmat will play Ural in the RPL play-offs, Pari NN will play Sochi. Chernomorets was not issued a license] (in Russian). Sports.ru. 24 May 2025. Retrieved 24 May 2025.
  5. ^ ""Ахмат" остался в Мир РПЛ благодаря победе над "Уралом" в ответном переходном матче" [Akhmat remained in Mir RPL thanks to a victory over Ural in the second-leg playoff game] (in Russian). Russian Premier League. 31 May 2025. Retrieved 31 May 2025.
  6. ^ "Ural squad" (in Russian). Russian First League. Retrieved 25 February 2025.
  7. ^ "ANFA Invitational Tournament (Nepal)". RSSSF. Archived from the original on 16 November 2013. Retrieved 9 July 2014.