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FC Okzhetpes
Association football club in Kazakhstan From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
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Football Club Okzhetpes (Kazakh: Оқжетпес Футбол Клубы, Oqjetpes Kókshetaý Fýtbol Klýby) is a Kazakhstani professional football based in the Torpedo Stadium in Kokshetau. The club currently plays in the Kazakhstan Premier League.
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History
Summarize
Perspective
Although having finished only 9th in the 2008 Kazakhstan Premier League, the club gained entry to the first qualifying round of the inaugural season of the UEFA Europa League because of the denial of licenses by UEFA and withdrawal of higher placed teams.
On 3 January 2019, Andrei Karpovich was announced as Okzhetpes manager for the 2019 Kazakhstan Premier League season.[1]
Names
- 1957 : Founded as Torpedo
- 1990 : Renamed Spartak
- 1991 : Renamed Kokshetau
- 1994 : Renamed Kokshe
- 1997 : Renamed Avtomobilist and moved to Shortandy (Nur-Sultan suburb)
- 1998 : Renamed Khimik and moved to Stepnogorsk
- 1999 : Renamed Akmola
- 2000 : Moved back to Kokshetau
- 2001 : Renamed Esil
- 2004 : Renamed Okzhetpes
Should not be mistaken with the defunct club FC Azhar also based in Kokshetau
Origin of name
The club takes its name from a cliff, Okzhetpes, which means 'an arrow won't reach'. According to fan club president Viktor Kruk:
"Eighteenth century Kazakh ruler Ablai Khan could not decide which of his warriors to give a captive girl to and so allowed her to choose a husband for herself. She climbed to the top of the highest cliff and said she would marry whoever hit her shawl with an arrow. Nobody managed it."[2]
Domestic history
Continental history
- Notes
- 1Q: First qualifying round
- 2Q: Second qualifying round
- 3Q: Third qualifying round
- PO: Play-off round
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Current squad
- As of 12 April 2025[4]
Note: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules; some limited exceptions apply. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.
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Managers
Syarhyey Hyerasimets (2006), (2009–10)
Vladimir Cheburin (January 2011 – December 2011)
Viktor Dohadailo (December 2011 – March 2012)
Viktor Semenov (interim) (March 2012– May 2012)
Vladimir Cheburin (May 2012 – Feb 2013)
Vladimir Mukhanov (December 2014 – May 2017)
Viktor Semenov (interim) (May 2017– May 2017)
Viktor Pasulko (May 2017 – September 2017)
Sergey Popkov (December 2017 – December 2017)[5]
Andrei Karpovich (January 2019 –December 2020)[1][6]
Sergei Popkov (January 2021 – present)[7]
External links
References
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