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Pakhtakor FC

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Pakhtakor
Full namePakhtakor Football Club[1]
Nickname(s)Uzbek: Paxtakorlar
(The cotton grower)
Uzbek: Sherlar
(The Lions)
Uzbek: Xalq jamoasi
(People's team)
Founded8 April 1956; 68 years ago (1956-04-08)
GroundPakhtakor Central Stadium
Capacity35,000
PresidentJakhongir Artikkhodjayev
ManagerPedro Moreira
LeagueUzbekistan Super League
2024Uzbekistan Super League, 6th of 14
Websitewww.pakhtakor.uz
Current season

Pakhtakor Football Club (Uzbek: Paxtakor futbol klubi) is an Uzbek professional football club, based in the capital city of Tashkent, that competes in the Uzbekistan Super League. Pakhtakor is often considered the most successful football club in Uzbekistan.

Pakhtakor was the only Uzbek club to play in the top-level Soviet football league and the only Central Asian club to appear in a Soviet Cup final. Playing in the Uzbek League since 1992, the club has been the undisputed powerhouse in Uzbekistan since the fall of the Soviet Union, winning fourteen Uzbek League titles, including six in a row from 2002 to 2007.[2] Pakhtakor also won seven consecutive domestic cups between 2001 and 2007, winning eleven cups in total.[3] Players from the club have won Uzbek footballer of the Year honours eight times, and Pakhtakor teammates swept the top three spots in 2002. Club managers have been named Uzbek coach of the year twice.[4]

The team is also a perennial competitor in the AFC Champions League, having reached the semi-finals of the competition twice in 2003 and 2004. Pakhtakor currently holds the record in number of consecutive participations in the AFC Champions League, participating in 11 tournaments from 2002 to 2013.

Name

[edit]

The word Pakhta (پخته) in تورکچه means cotton and "kor" (kar) is from verb, ( kâshtan (Dari langaage ), koshtan, kishtan (uzbek pronunciation) ) which means "to cultivate"; so the combination "Pakhtakor" produces a job name and literally means "cotton maker".

History

[edit]

The early Soviet period

[edit]

Pakhtakor's first official match was on 8 April 1956, date considered to be the club's "birthday". Its first match was played against a team from the city of Perm, Russia (then called Molotov city), presumably FC Zvezda Perm. The first goal in Pakhtakor history was scored by Laziz Maksudov on a penalty shot and Maksudov's goal was the only and game-winning strike.[5]

The team was formed in three months, and the government invited the senior trainer Valentin Bekhtenev from Moscow to recruit the best Tashkent players for the new Pakhtakor. At the time, the club was to represent Uzbekistan in Soviet football.[6]

In 1959, the club was promoted to the Soviet Top League for the first time. During the 1960s, Pakhtakor's squad was anchored by the striker Gennadiy Krasnitskiy, who led it to a 6th-place finish in 1962. After periods back and forth between the Top League and the Soviet First League, the club reached the final of the Soviet Cup competition in 1968 – the only Central Asian club to reach a Soviet Cup final – losing to Torpedo Moscow 1–0.[5][6] A win in this final could have qualified the club for the UEFA Cup Winners' Cup.

In 1971, Pakhtakor again departed from the First League, but was not long detained in the lower division as it gained promotion the following year.[5]

Pakhtakor was the only Uzbek side to appear in the history of the USSR Championship during the Soviet era, appearing the highest echelon 22 times, and recording 212 wins, 211 draws, and 299 losses. Their best league finish was 6th place, which they achieved twice, in 1962 and 1982.[citation needed]

Aircrash 1979

[edit]
Pakhtakor-79 monument near Kamianske (ex-Dniprodzerzhynsk), Ukraine

In August 1979, Pakhtakor made it back to the Soviet Top League, but shortly thereafter disaster struck the club and Soviet football. During a flight to play Dinamo Minsk, Pakhtakor's plane was involved in a mid-air collision over Dniprodzerzhynsk, Ukrainian SSR.[7] All 178 people aboard both planes involved died.[8]

Seventeen Pakhtakor players and staff members died in the crash:[9]

Annually, in August, the club sponsors a youth tournament in memory of the people lost in the disaster.[10]

Following the tragedy in 1979 and spurred on by its prolific goalscorer Andrei Yakubik a few years later, Pakhtakor had its best record in 1982, finishing sixth and in front of several Russian and Ukrainian football powerhouses such as Zenit Saint Petersburg, CSKA Moscow, and Shakhtar Donetsk amongst the few. Pakhtakor had a point deducted that season due to exceeding the allowed limit for the games tied (drawn), but it did not influence the club's final standings.[8]

The lean years: 1984–1990

[edit]

After leading Pakhtakor to its best finish, age finally caught up with Yakubik and he moved back to his hometown of Moscow to continue his football career.[11] With the departure of their great forward, the club struggled and spent six years in the Soviet First League. Although the discontent of their fans grew, Pakhtakor's reemergence as a major footballing force followed fast upon the dissolution of the Soviet Union.[5]

Modern period, since 1992

[edit]
FC Pakhtakor, March 2019

After the USSR collapsed, a new page began in the club's history. 1992 saw Pakhtakor participate in the first season of the Uzbek Oliy League. Since 1992 Pakhtakor have become the most successful Uzbek club with 10 Uzbek League titles, and 11 Uzbek Cups. Until 2014 the club is the only team to have participated in all seasons of the AFC Champions League since its inauguration in 2002. Since 2002 the club participated 11 times in AFC Champions League.

The participation in the AFC Champions League season 2011 was not successful. On 4 May 2011 in a match against Al Nassr Pakhtakor lost and finished its Asian campaign. In that match, because of many injured players, Pakhtakor's coach Ravshan Khaydarov formed a starting squad from the youth team players and so the club made a record in the AFC Champions League history as the youngest team of the tournament with average players age of 21,8. The average age of club players for season 2011 was 23,3.[12] In the 2014–15 seasons, Pakhtakor won its 10th and 11th League champion titles.

Rivalries

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Central Asian Derby

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During the Sovet era, Pakhtakor's main and main rival was the strongest club in Kazakhstan at that time — Almaty's Kairat.

The confrontation between these two clubs was called the Central Asian derby . It was mandatory for the top leadership of the republics to attend, and the stadiums had real full houses.

This was part of the general rivalry at all levels that arose between Kazakhstan and Uzbekistan in the mid 20th century.

After the collapse of the USSR, Pakhtakor and Kairat began to compete in their respective national championships and, accordingly, did not often meet in international tournaments, limiting themselves to rare friendly matches. In total, the teams played more than 80 official matches against each other.

Even during the Soviet era, the leading clubs of other Central Asian republics – Dushanbe's CSKA Pamir DushanbeAshgabat's Köpetdag Aşgabat and Bishkek's Alga — were considered Pakhtakor's main rivals.

Capital derby

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Since Bunyodkor's promotion to the Uzbek League, matches between the two clubs from the capital is considered by supporters on both sides and football journalists as the Uzbek capital derby or the Toshkent derby.

El Clasico

[edit]

The match between Pakhtakor and Neftchi Farg'ona is one of the most popular rivalries in Uzbek League held since 1992. The first match between the two clubs was played on 25 May 1992 in Tashkent.

Stadium

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Pakhtakor Markaziy Stadium in Tashkent

Pakhtakor Markaziy Stadium was built in 1956 with a capacity of 55.000 spectators. The stadium was renovated in 1996, and in July 2007 club management announced the next renovation. Reconstruction work finished in 2009, the capacity was reduced to 35.000 and the stadium became an all-seater stadium. In January 2010, the stadium was chosen as the best sporting facility in 2009 of Uzbekistan.[13][14]

[edit]

The famous Uzbek singers Shahzoda, Rustam Gaipov, groups "Parvoz"(ex), "Quartet", "Bojalar" and "Ummon" dedicated their songs to Pakhtakor Football Club.[15][16]

Players

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Current squad

[edit]
As of 24 January 2025[17]

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
1 GK Uzbekistan UZB Nikita Shevchenko
2 DF Uzbekistan UZB Behruzbek Askarov
4 MF Uzbekistan UZB Abdulla Abdullaev
5 DF Uzbekistan UZB Mukhammadkodir Khamraliev
6 FW Uzbekistan UZB Mukhammadali Urinboev
7 DF Uzbekistan UZB Khojiakbar Alijonov
8 MF Uzbekistan UZB Diyor Kholmatov
9 MF Uzbekistan UZB Ibrokhim Ibrokhimov
11 FW Uzbekistan UZB Pulatkhuzha Kholdorkhonov
13 DF Uzbekistan UZB Islom Anvarov
15 DF Uzbekistan UZB Diyor Ortikboev
16 DF Uzbekistan UZB Temur Odilov
17 MF Uzbekistan UZB Dostonbek Khamdamov
18 MF Uzbekistan UZB Saidumarxon Saidnurullaev
21 GK Uzbekistan UZB Otabek Boymurodov
22 DF Uzbekistan UZB Umar Adkhamzoda
No. Pos. Nation Player
23 MF Uzbekistan UZB Abdurauf Buriev
24 MF Uzbekistan UZB Kirill Todorov
27 MF Uzbekistan UZB Sardor Sabirkhodjaev
30 FW Uzbekistan UZB Otabek Jurakuziev
31 MF Uzbekistan UZB Mukhammadali Usmonov
44 DF Uzbekistan UZB Makhmud Makhamadzhonov
55 DF Uzbekistan UZB Mukhammadrasul Abdumajidov
77 DF Uzbekistan UZB Dilshod Saitov
88 DF Uzbekistan UZB Shakhzod Azmiddinov
99 FW Uzbekistan UZB Ulugbek Khoshimov
GK Brazil BRA Jhonatan
MF Brazil BRA Jonatan Lucca
MF Iraq IRQ Bashar Resan
FW Brazil BRA Flamarion
FW Uzbekistan UZB Igor Sergeev
FW Colombia COL Brayan Riascos

Out on loan

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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
DF Uzbekistan UZB Abubakir Ashurov (on loan to Metallurg Bekabad)
MF Uzbekistan UZB Nurlan Ibraimov (on loan to Olimpik-Mobiuz Tashkent)
No. Pos. Nation Player
DF Uzbekistan UZB Mirkamol Abdurazzakov (on loan to Olympic Tashkent)
FW Uzbekistan UZB Abbos Ergashboev (on loan to Metallurg Bekabad)

Youth squad

[edit]

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
1 GK Russia RUS Nikita Shevchenko
18 MF Uzbekistan UZB Saidumarkhon Saidnurullaev
21 GK Uzbekistan UZB Otabek Boymurodov
26 MF Iran IRN Mohammadreza Kooshki
29 MF Uzbekistan UZB Muhriddin Pazildinov
31 MF Uzbekistan UZB Muhammadali Usmonov
32 MF Uzbekistan UZB Asadbek Beglarkhonov
37 DF Uzbekistan UZB Sarvarbek Adhamov
38 DF Uzbekistan UZB Temur Odilov
39 MF Uzbekistan UZB Shahzod Imomov
40 FW Kyrgyzstan KGZ Kimi Merk
41 MF Uzbekistan UZB Rustambek Fomin
42 DF Uzbekistan UZB Muhammadali Zohidov
No. Pos. Nation Player
43 GK Uzbekistan UZB Maksim Murkayev
44 MF Uzbekistan UZB Daler Tuxsanov
45 DF Uzbekistan UZB Rustam Pazilov
46 DF Uzbekistan UZB Alisher Mominov
47 DF Uzbekistan UZB Javohir Bahodirov
48 DF Uzbekistan UZB Behzod Nematov
49 MF Uzbekistan UZB Dilshod Abdullayev
50 GK Uzbekistan UZB Ali Murodjonov
51 MF Uzbekistan UZB Nodirkhon Habibullaev
52 MF Uzbekistan UZB Nurlan Ibraimov
55 DF Uzbekistan UZB Muhammadrasul Abdumajidov
62 MF Uzbekistan UZB Danat Miftakhutdinov
75 GK Uzbekistan UZB Shahzod Suyunov
99 FW Uzbekistan UZB Akbar Uktamov

Personnel

[edit]

Management

[edit]
Office Name
President Jakhongir Artikkhodjayev
Vice-president Dilshod Karimov
General director Dmitry Adisman
Director of General Affairs Maksim Shatskikh
Director of General Affairs Nikolay Minchev

Current technical staff

[edit]
As of 4 December 2024
Position Name
Head coach Portugal Pedro Moreira
Assistant coach Portugal José Borges
Assistant coach Portugal Marco Leite
Assistant coach Portugal Miguel Soares
Goalkeeper coach Portugal Ricardo Vasconcelos

Managerial history

[edit]
List of Pakhtakor FC managers
Name From To Duration P W D L Win %
Soviet Union Valentin Bakhtenev 1956 1956
Soviet Union Yury Khodotov 1957 1957
Soviet Union Lev Olshansky 1957 1959
Soviet Union Alexander Keller 1960 1963
Soviet Union Gavriil Kachalin 1963 1963
Soviet Union Alexander Abramov 1964 1964
Soviet Union Mikhail Yakushin 1965 1966
Soviet Union Boris Arkadyev 1967 1967
Soviet Union Yevgeny Yeliseyev 1968 1968
Soviet Union Mikhail Yakushin 1969 1970
Soviet Union Alexander Keller 1971 1971
Soviet Union Vyacheslav Solovyov 1972 1975
Soviet Union Gavriil Kachalin 1975 1975
Soviet Union Anatoli Bashashkin 1976 1976
Soviet Union Gennadi Krasnitsky 1976 1976
Soviet Union Alexander Kochetkov 1977 1979
Soviet Union Oleh Bazylevych 1979 1979
Soviet Union Sergei Mosyagin 1980 1980
Hungary Ishtvan Sekech 1981 1985
Soviet Union Viktor Tikhonov 1986 1986
Soviet Union Berador Abduraimov 1987 1988
Soviet Union Viktor Nosov 1989 1989
Soviet Union Fyodor Novikov 1990 1991
Soviet Union Ahral Inayatov 1991[18] 1991
Russia Aleksandr Tarkhanov 1991 1992
Uzbekistan Ahral Inayatov 1992 1992
Uzbekistan Bahadir Ibrahimov 1993 1993
Uzbekistan Rustam Akramov 1994 1994
Uzbekistan Ahral Inayatov 1994 1994
Netherlands Hans Verèl 1995 1996
Uzbekistan Alexander Ivankov 1996 1997
Brazil Ubirajara Veiga da Silva 1998 1999
Uzbekistan Alexander Ivankov 2000 2000
Russia Sergei Butenko 2001 2002
Uzbekistan Viktor Djalilov 2002 2002
Uzbekistan Ravshan Khaydarov 2002 2002
Turkmenistan Täçmyrat Agamyradow 2003 2006
Russia Valery Nepomnyashchy 2006 2006
Uzbekistan Ravshan Khaydarov 2006 2007
Uzbekistan Viktor Djalilov 2008 2009
Montenegro Miodrag Radulović 1 January 2010 3 May 2010 122 days
Uzbekistan Ravshan Khaydarov 4 May 2010 27 September 2011 1 year, 146 days
Uzbekistan Murad Ismailov 28 September 2011 27 December 2011 90 days
Serbia Dejan Đurđević 28 December 2011 20 June 2012 175 days
Uzbekistan Murad Ismailov 20 June 2012 31 December 2013 1 year, 194 days
Uzbekistan Samvel Babayan 3 January 2014 23 June 2015 1 year, 171 days
Uzbekistan Numon Khasanov 8 July 2015 29 May 2016 326 days
Uzbekistan Grigory Kolosovsky 30 May 2016 5 April 2017 310 days
Uzbekistan Ravshan Khaydarov 6 April 2017 1 June 2017 56 days
Georgia (country) Shota Arveladze 23 June 2017 21 December 2020 3 years, 181 days 124 90 18 16 72.58
Netherlands Pieter Huistra 6 January 2021[19] 10 January 2022[20] 1 year, 160 days 37 23 8 6 62.16
North Macedonia Slavče Vojneski 11 January 2022[21] 7 July 2022 177 days 17 8 5 4 47.06
Uzbekistan Maxim Shatskikh 14 July 2022 4 December 2024 2 years, 143 days 90 43 22 25 47.78
Portugal Pedro Moreira 4 December 2024 present 55 days 0 0 0 0

Notable players

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Former players

[edit]

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

USSR/Uzbekistan
Former USSR countries
Others countries

Recent seasons

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Domestic record

[edit]
Champions Runners-up 3rd Place, 4th Place or Losing semi-finalists
Season League Uzbekistan Cup Top goalscorer
Div. Pos. Pl. W D L GS GA P Name League
1992 1st 1st 32 24 3 5 94 40 51 First round Valery Kechinov 24
1993 1st 2nd 30 20 7 3 74 29 47 Winner Shukhrat Maqsudov 15
1994 1st 8th 30 13 9 8 56 37 35 Semi-final
1995 1st 4th 30 20 5 5 67 27 65 Quarter-final
1996 1st 6th 30 15 3 12 50 30 48 Runner-up Dilmurod Nazarov
Ravshan Bozorov
12
1997 1st 5th 34 18 7 9 65 35 61 Winner
1998 1st 1st 30 24 4 2 96 29 76 Semi-final Mirjalol Qosimov
Igor Shkvyrin
22
1999 1st 4th 30 18 4 8 69 42 58 N/A
2000 1st 7th 38 17 9 12 67 51 60 Quarter-final Igor Shkvyrin 20
2001 1st 2nd 34 23 3 8 72 32 72 Winner Nematullo Quttiboev 16
2002 1st 1st 30 24 2 4 85 22 74 Winner Goçguly Goçgulyýew 14
2003 1st 1st 30 25 2 3 82 23 77 Winner Zayniddin Tadjiyev 13
2004 1st 1st 26 22 3 1 81 15 69 Winner Leonid Koshelev 12
2005 1st 1st 26 21 2 3 78 15 65 Winner Anvarjon Soliev 29
2006 1st 1st 30 25 2 3 84 12 77 Winner Server Djeparov 18
2007 1st 1st 30 26 4 0 83 13 82 Winner Alexander Geynrikh 16
2008 1st 2nd 30 23 5 2 64 14 74 Runner-up Zayniddin Tadjiyev 17
2009 1st 2nd 30 18 10 2 69 16 64 Winner Odil Ahmedov 16
2010 1st 2nd 26 17 6 3 41 19 57 Quarter-final Alexander Geynrikh 11
2011 1st 3rd 26 15 6 5 33 17 51 Winner Dušan Savić 7
2012 1st 1st 26 18 5 3 51 16 59 Semi-final Temurkhuja Abdukholiqov 13
2013 1st 4th 26 17 3 6 45 25 54 Semi-final Kakhi Makharadze
Temurkhuja Abdukholiqov
Dilshod Sharofetdinov
6
2014 1st 1st 26 23 3 0 54 14 72 Semi-final Igor Sergeev 11
2015 1st 1st 30 24 3 3 66 23 75 Semi-final Igor Sergeev 23
2016 1st 5th 30 15 7 8 49 30 52 Third round Igor Sergeyev 11
2017 1st 3rd 30 18 5 7 44 28 59 Round of 16 Igor Sergeev 13
2018 1st 2nd 20 11 4 5 38 17 46 Runner-up Tiago Bezerra 17
2019 1st 1st 26 22 3 1 75 18 69 Winner Dragan Ćeran 23
2020 1st 1st 26 21 2 3 76 18 65 Winner Dragan Ćeran 21
2021 1st 1st 26 19 3 4 51 18 60 Runner-up Dragan Ćeran 16
2022 1st 1st 26 15 9 2 47 18 54 Semi-final Dragan Ćeran 20
2023 1st 1st 26 16 5 5 41 25 53 Round of 16 Dragan Ćeran 13
2024 1st 6th 26 11 5 10 42 37 38 Semi-final Dragan Ćeran 13
2025 1st

Records

[edit]

Asian record

[edit]

Overview

[edit]
As of match played 2 December 2024
Competition Pld W D L GF GA
Asian Cup Winners' Cup 14 6 2 6 37 23
Asian Club Championship 2 1 0 1 5 9
AFC Champions League / AFC Champions League Elite 124 48 29 47 156 165
Total 135 53 30 52 191 190
Season Competition Round Club Home Away Aggregate
1994–95 Asian Cup Winners' Cup Preliminary round Tajikistan Ravshan Kulob 10–0
Kazakhstan Taraz 0–3
Kyrgyzstan Alay-Osh-Pirim 5–1
Turkmenistan Merw 4–0
1998–99 Asian Cup Winners' Cup First round Tajikistan Khujand 4–1 1–1 5–2
Second round Turkmenistan Nisa Aşgabat 6–0 0–5 6–5
Third round Saudi Arabia Al-Ittihad 0–1 0–3 0–4
1999–2000 Asian Club Championship First round Kazakhstan Irtysh Pavlodar 5–2 0–7 5–9
2001–02 Asian Cup Winners' Cup First round Kyrgyzstan SKA-PVO Bishkek 3–1 1–2 4–3
Second round Tajikistan Regar-TadAZ Tursunzoda 2–2 1–3 3–5
2002–03 AFC Champions League Group stage Iran Persepolis 1–0 1st
Iraq Al-Talaba 3–0
Turkmenistan Nisa Aşgabat 3–0
Semi-final Thailand BEC Tero Sasana 1–0 1–3 2–3
2004 Group stage Iran Zob Ahan 2–0 0–1 1st
Qatar Qatar 1–0 0–0
Bahrain Riffa w/o w/o
Quarter-final United Arab Emirates Al Wahda 4–0 1–1 5–1
Semi-final South Korea Seongnam 0–0 0–2 0–2
2005 Group stage Saudi Arabia Al-Ahli 2–1 0–3 2nd
Iraq Al-Zawra'a 1–2 0–1
Syria Al-Jaish 4–1 2–0
2006 Group stage Kuwait Qadsia 2–2 1–2 2nd
Iran Foolad 2–0 3–1
Syria Al-Ittihad 2–0 1–2
2007 Group stage Saudi Arabia Al Hilal 0–2 0–2 2nd
Kuwait Kuwait 2–1 1–0
Iran Esteghlal w/o w/o
2008 Group stage Kuwait Qadsia 0–1 2–2 2nd
Iraq Erbil 2–0 5–1
Qatar Al-Gharafa 2–0 2–2
2009 Group stage Saudi Arabia Al Hilal 1–1 0–2 2nd
Iran Saba Qom 2–1 2–0
United Arab Emirates Al-Ahli 2–0 2–1
Round of 16 Saudi Arabia Ettifaq 2–1
Quarter-final Saudi Arabia Al-Ittihad 1–1 0–4 1–5
2010 Group stage Saudi Arabia Al Shabab 1–3 1–2 2nd
Iran Sepahan 2–1 0–2
United Arab Emirates Al Ain 3–2 1–0
Round of 16 Qatar Al-Gharafa 0–1
2011 Group stage Qatar Al Sadd 1–1 1–2 4th
Saudi Arabia Al Nassr 2–2 0–4
Iran Esteghlal 2–1 2–4
2012 Group stage Saudi Arabia Al-Ittihad 1–2 0–4 3rd
United Arab Emirates Baniyas 1–1 0–2
Qatar Al-Arabi 3–1 1–0
2013 Group stage Qatar Lekhwiya 2–2 1–3 4th
United Arab Emirates Al Shabab 1–2 1–0
Saudi Arabia Ettifaq 1–0 0–2
2015 Group stage United Arab Emirates Al Ain 0–1 1–1 3rd
Iran Naft Tehran 2–1 1–1
Saudi Arabia Al Shabab 0–2 2–2
2016 Group stage Saudi Arabia Al Hilal 2–2 1–4 3rd
Iran Tractor Sazi 1–0 0–2
United Arab Emirates Al Jazira 3–0 3–1
2018 Play-off round Qatar Al-Gharafa 1–2
2019 Preliminary round 2 Iraq Al-Quwa Al-Jawiya 2–1
Play-off round United Arab Emirates Al-Nasr 2–1
Group stage Iran Persepolis 1–0 1–1 3rd
Saudi Arabia Al Ahli 1–0 1–2
Qatar Al Sadd 2–2 1–2
2020 Group stage United Arab Emirates Shabab Al-Ahli 2–1 0–0 1st
Iran Shahr Khodro 3–0 1–0
Saudi Arabia Al Hilal 0–0 1–2
Round of 16 Iran Esteghlal 2–1
Quarter-final Iran Persepolis 0–2
2021 Group stage Iran Tractor 3–3 0–0 3rd
Iraq Al-Quwa Al-Jawiya 1–0 0–0
United Arab Emirates Sharjah 1–1 1–4
2022 Group stage Iran Sepahan 1–3 1–2 4th
Qatar Al-Duhail 0–3 2–3
Saudi Arabia Al-Taawoun 5–4 1–0
2023–24 Group stage Saudi Arabia Al Fayha 1–4 0–2 3rd
United Arab Emirates Al Ain 0–3 3–1
Turkmenistan Ahal 3–0 1–1
2024–25 AFC Champions League Elite League phase United Arab Emirates Al Wasl 0–1 -
Iran Persepolis - 1–1
Iraq Al-Shorta - 0–0
Qatar Al-Rayyan 0–1 -
Iran Esteghlal - 0–0
United Arab Emirates Al Ain 1–1 -
Qatar Al-Gharafa -
Qatar Al Sadd -

Honours

[edit]
Pakhtakor FC honours
Type Competition Titles Seasons Runner-Up
Domestic Super League 16 1992, 1998, 2002, 2003, 2004, 2005, 2006, 2007, 2012, 2014, 2015, 2019, 2020, 2021, 2022, 2023 1993, 2001, 2008, 2009, 2010, 2018
Uzbekistan Cup 13 1993, 1997, 2001, 2002, 2003, 2004, 2005, 2006, 2007, 2009, 2011, 2019, 2020 1996, 2008, 2018, 2021
Super Cup 2 2021, 2022[23] 1999, 2015, 2016, 2023, 2024
League Cup 1 2019
Soviet First League 1 1972
Soviet Cup 1967–68
International CIS Cup 1 2007 2008
IFA Shield (IFA)[note 1] 1 1993[24]
AFC Champions League Semi-final 2002–03, 2004
note
  1. ^ Fourth oldest football tournament, organized by the IFA (W.B.), and played between the local clubs of West Bengal and other invited ones.

References

[edit]
  1. ^ Official Website
  2. ^ Stokkermans, Karel (28 February 2008). "Uzbekistan – List of Champions". RSSSF. Archived from the original on 14 October 2003. Retrieved 18 July 2008.
  3. ^ Stokkermans, Karel (19 March 2008). "Uzbekistan Cup Finals". RSSSF. Archived from the original on 13 August 2017. Retrieved 18 July 2008.
  4. ^ Yusupov, Sardorbek (16 May 2008). "Uzbekistan – Footballer and Coach of the Year". RSSSF. Archived from the original on 18 June 2008. Retrieved 18 July 2008.
  5. ^ a b c d "Generations (Founded 1956)" (in Russian). Pakhtakor Tashkent Official Website. 20 January 2008. Retrieved 18 July 2008.
  6. ^ a b "История Ф.К. Пахтакор (Узбекистан), 30.03.2008 (in Russian) Archived 16 August 2011 at the Wayback Machine.
  7. ^ Yuldashev, Mavlyan (11 August 2004). "Двадцать пять лет назад в авиакатастрофе погибли футболисты ташкентской команды "Пахтакор" (Twenty Five Years Have Passed Since the Deadly Air Disaster Involving Pakhtakor Tashkent)" (in Russian). Ferghana.Ru. Archived from the original on 22 July 2012. Retrieved 21 July 2008.
  8. ^ a b Hogstrom, Erik (6 July 2008). "A soccer movie idea to pitch". Dubuque Telegraph Herald. Archived from the original on 11 February 2009. Retrieved 18 July 2008.
  9. ^ "Pakhtakor '79: The Wings of Memory" (in Russian). Pakhtakor Tashkent Official Website. 22 January 2008. Retrieved 18 July 2008.
  10. ^ "Memorial Tournament Will Be Played 6–10 August". Pakhtakor Tashkent Official Website. 16 July 2008. Retrieved 18 July 2008.
  11. ^ "Andrei A. Yakubik" (in Russian). Peoples.ru. 24 January 2008. Archived from the original on 27 December 2007. Retrieved 18 July 2008.
  12. ^ "Championat.uz: «Пахтакор» ОЧЛ рекордини ўрнатди, 05.05.2011 (in Uzbek) Archived 14 March 2012 at the Wayback Machine.
  13. ^ "Стадион "Пахтакор" признан лучшим спортивным сооружением Узбекистана". CA-News. 19 January 2010. Archived from the original on 2 April 2015.
  14. ^ "Стадион "Пахтакор" признан лучшим спортивным сооружением Узбекистана". Sportportal. 19 January 2010.[permanent dead link]
  15. ^ "Shahzoda – Pakhtakor". Archived from the original on 19 December 2021 – via YouTube.
  16. ^ "Bojalar – Pakhtakor". Archived from the original on 19 December 2021 – via YouTube.
  17. ^ "Paxtakor" (PDF). pfl.uz. Uzbekistan Professional Football League. Retrieved 21 March 2024.
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