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FC CSKA 1948 Sofia

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FC CSKA 1948
Full nameFootball Club Central Sports Club of the Army 1948 Sofia
Nickname(s)Червените (The Reds)
Founded19 July 2016; 8 years ago (19 July 2016)[1]
GroundStadion Bistritsa
Capacity4,000
OwnerTsvetomir Naydenov
CoachIvan Ivanov
LeagueFirst League
2023–24First League, 7th of 16
Websitehttp://bg.cska1948.bg/
Current season

FC CSKA 1948 Sofia (Bulgarian: ФК ЦСКА 1948 София) is a Bulgarian football club from Sofia. The team plays its home matches at the Bistritsa Stadium and competes in Bulgaria's First League. The colours of the club are red and white.

The club was founded in 2016 by a group of CSKA supporters who opposed Grisha Ganchev's recognition of Litex Lovech for CSKA Sofia after the owner of the old club abolished its phoenix club. The new club quickly progressed from the lower levels of the football system and was eventually promoted to the top level in 2020.

History

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Foundation

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The club was founded on 19 July 2016, at a meeting at the Central Military Club in Sofia. The members of the Constituent Assembly announced partnership with Errea.[2]

2016–2018: Amateur Leagues

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On 21 August 2016, FC CSKA 1948 won its first cup in a friendly four-team tournament in Kokalyane. The team defeated Akademik Sofia 1–0 in the final.

In its first official game for the 2016–17 season in A OFG Sofia (capital) South, FC CSKA 1948 won 8–0 against Lyulin Sofia. The club began playing its home games at Vasil Levski National Stadium, but later during the season used the stadiums in Obelya and German. FC CSKA 1948 won its group and became champion of the whole A OFG Sofia (capital) after victory 4–3 against Nadezhda Dobroslavtsi. Then, on 7 June 2017, the team played with Bratsigovo in order to qualify for the Third League and won after penalties (7–6).[3] Beside that, FC CSKA 1948 reached the final for the Cup of Bulgarian Amateur League, which they lost on 25 May 2017 to the club from the Third league Chernomorets Balchik.[4]

For their first season in the third division of the Bulgarian football (2017–18), the club moved to Dragalevtsi Stadium, in order to comply with the requirements of the respective league. After very strong performance, on 19 May 2018, FC CSKA 1948 secured its place in Second Professional League.[5] The team finished with 29 wins, 5 draws and no losses, as two players of the Reds became goalscorers of the South-West Third League – Andon Gushterov and Petko Petkov. Also, FC CSKA 1948 had again a good campaign for the Cup of Bulgarian Amateur League, this time reaching the semi-finals.

2018–2020: Second Professional League

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For the beginning of the 2018–19 season in the Second Professional League, FC CSKA 1948 moved to Vasil Levski National Stadium due to the higher league it is playing in. Strong selection of professional players was done, as the goal for the season is qualification for First League. After four rounds, manager Valentin Iliev, who managed the club from the very beginning, was replaced with Petko Petkov. FC CSKA 1948 eventually finished fourth, three points below the promotion playoff place, which was occupied by Arda Kardzhali. Although FC CSKA 1948 didn't promote to the elite in their first attempt, the team established itself as a strong contender for promotion.

For the 2019–20 season, FC CSKA 1948 started the season on a high note, defeating local rivals Lokomotiv Sofia 2–0 at home. This was followed by an away win at newly promoted Spartak Pleven with a score of 1–4. Another dominant 2–0 win against Spartak Varna earned the team three out of three wins in their first three matches. An away win against Montana, followed by a home destruction of OFC Pomorie extended their winning steak to 5 games. FC CSKA 1948's spectacular form continued, as the team defeated Lokomotiv Gorna Oryahovitsa and Strumska Slava in the following rounds. The team then beat fellow Sofia rivals Septemvri Sofia 5–0 at home. The first defeat of the season came in the tenth round, when FC CSKA 1948 lost 1–0 to Litex Lovech. After a 2–0 home win against Chernomorets Balchik, FC CSKA 1948 suffered another loss in the hands of Kariana Erden. This was followed by three consecutive wins, which ended with a disappointing 2–2 home draw against Ludogorets II. Following that, the team managed to win two away games, against Botev Galabovo and Lokomotiv Sofia again, which put them in second place in the table, three points behind Septemvri Sofia, before the winter break.

2020–present: First Professional League

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FC CSKA 1948 secured their First League spot for the 2020–21 season after finishing 1st in the 2019–20 Second League. Krasimir Balakov was announced as manager for the new season on 2 June, and the club unveiled a new logo on 30 June in preparation for their First League debut. On 7 August 2020, the team faced CSKA in its first ever top flight game, with the encounter resulting in a 2–2 draw.[6]

CSKA 1948 established itself in the following years in the First League, frequently finishing in the top six of the championship. During the 2022–23 season, the team reached the final of the Bulgarian Cup for the first time in club history, eliminating Lokomotiv Sofia in the semi-finals.

Club culture

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Until 2022, the club had a policy of relying exclusively on Bulgarian players,[7] which gained the approval of a lot of the club's supporters who had previously criticized CSKA Sofia for fielding teams with many foreign footballers.[8]

Shirt, sponsor and mascot

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The colours of the team main kit are red and white. The second kit is in white and the third – in black, with white sleeves.

On 31 January 2017 CSKA 1948 presented its main sponsor – Efbet. The company sponsors not only the first team, but the academy too.[9]

Period Kit manufacturer Shirt partner
2016 Italy Erreà None
2017–2020 Efbet
2020–2023 Germany Adidas
2023– Germany Puma

Since 2018, the team mascot is Army the lion.[10]

Honours

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Players

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Current squad

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As of 30 October 2024

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

No. Pos. Nation Player
1 GK Bulgaria BUL Petar Marinov
2 DF Brazil BRA Johnathan
5 DF Bulgaria BUL Asen Georgiev
6 MF Bulgaria BUL Radoslav Iliev
7 MF Brazil BRA Thalis
9 MF Bulgaria BUL Birsent Karagaren
10 FW Bulgaria BUL Radoslav Kirilov (captain)
11 FW Brazil BRA Cassiano Bouzon
12 GK France FRA Lévi Ntumba
14 DF Bulgaria BUL Teodor Ivanov
15 DF Bulgaria BUL Simeon Vasilev
19 DF France FRA Steve Furtado
21 MF Bulgaria BUL Emil Tsenov
No. Pos. Nation Player
22 DF Bulgaria BUL Reyan Daskalov
25 FW Ukraine UKR Yevheniy Serdyuk
28 MF Serbia SRB Nedeljko Piščević
31 DF France FRA Tom Rapnouil
33 GK Bulgaria BUL Aleksandar Bozhev
34 MF Bulgaria BUL Petar Vitanov
39 MF Tajikistan TJK Parvizdzhon Umarbayev
40 FW North Macedonia MKD Mario Ilievski
58 MF Bulgaria BUL Marto Boychev
61 MF Brazil BRA Octávio
70 FW Brazil BRA Dudu Hatamoto
77 MF Bulgaria BUL Simeon Aleksandrov
91 DF France FRA Ryan Bidounga

For recent transfers, see Transfers winter 2023–24 and Transfers summer 2024.

Foreign players

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Up to twenty foreign nationals can be registered and given a squad number for the first team in the Bulgarian First League, however only five non-EU nationals can be used during a match day. Those non-EU nationals with European ancestry can claim citizenship from the nation their ancestors came from. If a player does not have European ancestry he can claim Bulgarian citizenship after playing in Bulgaria for 5 years.

Second-team squad

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Goalscoring and appearance records

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As of 10 June 2024

Most appearances for the club in all competitions

Rank Name Career Appearances
1 Bulgaria Daniel Naumov 2019–2024 137
2 Bulgaria Georgi Rusev 2020–2023 120
3 Bulgaria Ivaylo Chochev 2020–2024 104
4 Bulgaria Andon Gushterov 2017–2020 93
5 Bulgaria Mario Topuzov 2020–present 95
6 Bulgaria Denislav Aleksandrov 2019–2023 85
7 Bulgaria Angel Bastunov 2020–2023 83
8 Bulgaria Simeon Petrov 2020–2024 82
9 Bulgaria Sasho Aleksandrov 2019–2021
2022–2023
80
10 Bulgaria Reyan Daskalov 2022–present 68


Most goals for the club in all competitions

Rank Name Career Goals
1 Bulgaria Andon Gushterov 2017–2020 72
2 Bulgaria Ivaylo Chochev 2020–2024 48
3 Bulgaria Georgi Rusev 2020–2023 23
4 Bulgaria Denislav Aleksandrov 2019–2023 19
5 Bulgaria Galin Ivanov 2020–2022 18
6 Brazil Pedrinho 2023–present 17
7 Bulgaria Vasil Shopov 2019–2021
2022
13
8 Bulgaria Emil Gargorov 2017–2018 13
9 Bulgaria Aleksandar Kolev 2022–2023 12
10 Bulgaria Petko Petkov 2018–2019 11
As of 2 June 2024

Most appearances for the club in First League

Rank Name Career Appearances
1 Bulgaria Georgi Rusev 2020–2023 108
2 Bulgaria Daniel Naumov 2019–2024 106
3 Bulgaria Ivaylo Chochev 2020–2024 94
4 Bulgaria Mario Topuzov 2020–present 88
5 Bulgaria Angel Bastunov 2020–2023 76
6 Bulgaria Simeon Petrov 2020–2024 71
7 Bulgaria Lazar Marin 2020–2023 62
8 Bulgaria Reyan Daskalov 2022–present 60
9 Bulgaria Radoslav Kirilov 2022–present 55
10 Tajikistan Parvizdzhon Umarbayev 2022–present 51


Most goals for the club in First League

Rank Name Career Goals
1 Bulgaria Ivaylo Chochev 2020–2024 43
2 Bulgaria Georgi Rusev 2020–2023 22
3 Bulgaria Galin Ivanov 2020–2022 18
4 Brazil Pedrinho 2023–present 12
5 Bulgaria Aleksandar Kolev 2022–2023 10
6 Bulgaria Martin Kamburov 2018–2021 9
7 Bulgaria Angel Bastunov 2020–2023 8
8 Brazil Héliton 2022–2024 6
Bulgaria Birsent Karagaren 2023–present 6
10 Bulgaria Radoslav Kirilov 2022–present 5
  • Players in bold are still playing for FC CSKA 1948.

Notable players

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Had international caps for their respective countries, or held any club record. Players whose name is listed in bold represented their countries.

Club officials

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Coaching staff and personnel

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Bulgaria Ivo Stanislavov Operations director
Bulgaria Kiril Emilov Sports Director
Bulgaria Valentin Iliev Head coach
Bulgaria Petko Vasilev Assistant coach
Bulgaria Plamen Zdravkov Assistant coach
Bulgaria Deyan Kostadinov Goalkeeping coach
Bulgaria Aleksandar Kostadinov Analyzer
Bulgaria Spas Nikolayev Scout
Bulgaria Ivan Atanasov Scout
Bulgaria Ivan Georgiev Fitness coach
Bulgaria Panayot Milenkov Fitness coach
Bulgaria Hristo Deyanov Physiotherapist
Bulgaria Nikolay Predragov Physiotherapist
Bulgaria Ilian Radomirov Masseur
Bulgaria Ivaylo Iliev Psychologist
Bulgaria Tsvetan Yordanov Administrator
Bulgaria Dushko Stefanov Administrator
Bulgaria Lyubomir Lyupchov U19 coach
Bulgaria Ivan Svetoslavov U17 coach
Bulgaria Emil Petkov U15 coach
Bulgaria Rumen Kirilov U11 coach

Manager history

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Name Nat From To Honours
Adalbert Zafirov Bulgaria 1 July 2016 1 September 2016
Valentin Iliev Bulgaria 2 September 2016 21 June 2018 99991 Fourth League title
1 Third League title
Petko Petkov Bulgaria 1 July 2018 21 October 2019
Yordan Yurukov Bulgaria 21 October 2019 6 June 2020 1 Second League title
Krasimir Balakov Bulgaria 6 June 2020 23 March 2021
Rosen Kirilov (interim) Bulgaria 23 March 2021 24 April 2021
Todor Kiselichkov Bulgaria 25 April 2021 26 July 2021
Miroslav Mindev Bulgaria 27 July 2021 30 August 2021
Nikolay Kirov Bulgaria 3 September 2021 20 May 2022
Lyuboslav Penev Bulgaria 28 May 2022 9 December 2022
Todor Yanchev Bulgaria 13 December 2022 25 May 2023
Atanas Ribarski Bulgaria 25 May 2023 15 August 2023
Nikolay Panayotov Bulgaria 15 August 2023 5 April 2024
Valentin Iliev Bulgaria 5 April 2024 Present

European record

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As of match played 8 August 2024
Competition Played Won Drew Lost GF GA GD Win%
UEFA Europa Conference League 6 2 1 3 6 10 −4 033.33
Total 6 2 1 3 6 10 −4 033.33

Matches

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Season Competition Round Club Home Away Aggregate
2023–24 UEFA Conference League 2Q Romania FCSB 0–1 2–3 2–4
2024–25 UEFA Conference League 2Q Montenegro Budućnost Podgorica 1–0 1–1 (a.e.t.) 2–1
3Q Cyprus Pafos 2–1 0–4 (a.e.t.) 2–5

Seasons

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Results of league and cup competitions by season
Season League Bulgarian Cup Other competitions Top goalscorer
Division Level P W D L F A GD Pts Pos
2016–17 A OFG Sofia (capital) South 4 22 21 1 0 105 7 98 64 1st ‡ DNE Cup of AFL F
2017–18 South-West Third League 3 34 29 5 0 95 16 79 92 1st ↑ DNQ SF Bulgaria Andon Gushterov 22
2018–19 Second League 2 30 16 11 3 39 18 21 59 4th Round of 32 DNE Bulgaria Andon Gushterov 21
2019–20 2 21 18 1 2 59 18 41 55 1st ↑ Quarter-final Bulgaria Andon Gushterov 28
2020–21 First League 1 31 12 11 8 41 34 7 47 5th Quarter-final Bulgaria Martin Kamburov 9
2021–22 1 32 11 8 13 51 45 6 41 8th Round of 32 Bulgaria Ivaylo Chochev 8
2022–23 1 35 17 13 5 49 22 27 64 3rd Runners-up Bulgaria Ivaylo Chochev 22
2023–24 1 36 13 13 10 35 30 5 52 7th Quarter-final Europa Conference League 2Q Brazil Pedrinho 8
2024–25 1 Qualified 3Q Ukraine Yevheniy Serdyuk 3

League positions

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First Professional Football LeagueSecond Professional Football League (Bulgaria)Third Amateur Football League (Bulgaria)Regional Amateur Football Groups (Bulgaria)

See also

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References

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  1. ^ "Нов ЦСКА бе учреден, ще участва в А окръжна група". 19 July 2016. Archived from the original on 9 May 2021. Retrieved 6 August 2016.
  2. ^ topsport.bg (6 August 2016). "ЦСКА 1948 ще играе с емблема като на "Септемврийско знаме"". Topsport.bg (in Bulgarian). Archived from the original on 24 June 2021. Retrieved 16 August 2022.
  3. ^ "Голям късмет покри "червените": ЦСКА 1948 влезе в Трета лига след невероятна драма (видео+галерия)". Sportal.bg (in Bulgarian). Archived from the original on 16 August 2022. Retrieved 16 August 2022.
  4. ^ "Черноморец разпиля слаб ЦСКА 1948 и спечели Купата! (видео+галерия)". Sportal.bg (in Bulgarian). Archived from the original on 16 August 2022. Retrieved 16 August 2022.
  5. ^ "ЦСКА 1948 го направи! "Червените" са във Втора лига, от догодина имат право да атакуват Европа (видео)". Sportal.bg (in Bulgarian). Archived from the original on 16 August 2022. Retrieved 16 August 2022.
  6. ^ "Красимир Балъков е новият треньор на ЦСКА 1948". gong.bg. 2 June 2020. Archived from the original on 18 April 2021. Retrieved 5 June 2020.
  7. ^ "ФК ЦСКА 1948 взе първи чужденец в своята история". topsport.bg (in Bulgarian). 6 January 2022. Archived from the original on 15 January 2023. Retrieved 15 January 2023.
  8. ^ "Благодетелят на ЦСКА 1948: Само с българи ще превземем света!". gong.bg (in Bulgarian). 24 May 2020. Archived from the original on 13 March 2023. Retrieved 13 March 2023.
  9. ^ "ЦСКА 1948 представя основен спонсор на клуба". Sportal.bg (in Bulgarian). Archived from the original on 16 August 2022. Retrieved 16 August 2022.
  10. ^ "Лъвчето на ЦСКА 1948 ще се казва Арми". Sportal.bg (in Bulgarian). Archived from the original on 16 August 2022. Retrieved 16 August 2022.
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