JK Narva Trans

Association football club in Estonia

Football club
Narva Trans
Full nameJalgpalliklubi Narva Trans
Founded1979; 47 years ago (1979) (as Avtomobilist)
GroundNarva Kalev-Fama Stadium
Capacity1,000[1]
PresidentNikolai Burdakov
ManagerRoman Kozhukhovskyi
LeagueMeistriliiga
2025Meistriliiga, 5th of 10
Websitewww.fctrans.ee

Jalgpalliklubi Narva Trans, commonly known as Narva Trans or simply Trans, is an Estonian professional football club based in Narva that competes in the Meistriliiga, the top flight of Estonian football. Although the club's traditional home ground is Kreenholm Stadium, they currently play their home matches at Kalev-Fama Stadium.

The club was founded as Avtomobilist in 1979, changed their name to Autobaas in 1989 and Narva Trans in 1992. Narva Trans were one of the founding members of the Meistriliiga and are one of two clubs which have never been relegated from the Estonian top division since its inception in 1992, along with Flora. Narva Trans have won three Estonian Cups and two Estonian Supercups.

History

The club was founded in 1979 as Avtomobilist by the workers of the Motor Depot 13 in Narva. In 1984, the club was promoted to the Estonian SSR Championship, but was relegated at the end of the season. The club returned to the top division in 1987, but was relegated again after finishing the season last. In 1989, the club changed its name to Autobaas and returned to the top division once again.

In 1992, the club changed the name to Narva Trans and became founding members of the new Meistriliiga, finishing the inaugural season in seventh place. The club earned their first medals after reaching the 1993–94 Estonian Cup final, finishing as runners-up. One year later, Narva Trans earned their first league medals by finishing the 1994–95 league season in third place. The club made their European debut in the 1996 UEFA Intertoto Cup.

Narva Trans facing Tammeka in 2011

On 24 May 2001, Narva Trans lifted their first trophy by defeating Flora 1–0 in the 2000–01 Estonian Cup final. Narva experienced their most successful period from 2005 to 2011, as the club first came third in the 2005 league season and finished as runners-up in 2006 with club record 83 points, their best league finish to this date. The team won back-to-back Estonian Supercups in 2007 and 2008 by defeating Levadia in both of the finals. Narva Trans finished third for four consecutive seasons in 2008, 2009, 2010 and 2011.[2] In the years that followed, financial competition with the capital city clubs grew more difficult, and Narva Trans gradually transitioned into a mid-table club.[3] Since then, the team has occasionally been referred to as "cup specialists" in recognition of their strong performances in the Estonian Cup competition. The club won their second Estonian Cup trophy in the 2018–19 season, defeating Nõmme Kalju 2–1 after extra time in the final.[4] In 2023, Narva Trans won their third Estonian Cup by defeating FC Flora 2–1 in the 2022–23 final.[5]

Crest and colours

The former crest which was introduced in 1997, featured the logo of Narva Auto AS, the transport enterprise that was the basis on which the football club was founded.[6] The colour scheme reflected the colours of the city's flag - yellow and blue.

The logo of the club was modernised in 2018. The central part of the current crest of Narva Trans features the city's main symbol Narva Hermann Castle, and the logo of Narva Auto AS. The crest carries the club's colours, which are red and blue.[6]

Kit manufacturers and shirt sponsors

Sportland have been the primary shirt sponsor of Narva Trans for more than two decades.
Period Kit manufacturer Shirt sponsor Ref
2000–2013 Nike Sportland [7]
2014–2015 Fama
2016– Sportland

Stadium

Kreenholm Stadium

Kreenholm Stadium has been the home ground of Narva Trans since its founding in 1979. The multi-purpose stadiums seats 1,065. In 2025, the club announced they will play their 2025 season home matches at Narva Kalev-Fama Stadium due to Kreenholm Stadium's poor condition.[8]

Kalev-Fama Stadium

Since 2025, Narva Trans plays their home matches at the Kalev-Fama artificial turf stadium, having previously used it as their home ground during winter and early spring months. Renovated in 2013 and in 2025, the stadium complex is also the training base of the club.

In 2024, Narva opened an indoor football facility named Narva Jalgpallihall, which serves as the club's training ground during the snowy winter period. With the construction cost of €7 million, it is the most expensive football hall built in Estonia.[9]

Players

Current squad

As of 25 August 2025[10][11]

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  EST Valeri Shantenkov
3 DF  EST Denis Sibul
4 DF  RUS Aleksandr Ivanyushin
5 DF  CAN Cristian Campagna
6 MF  EST German Šlein
7 MF  POR Afonso Correia
8 MF  EST Stanislav Agaptsev
9 FW  TOG Josué Doké
10 FW  NGA Ahmed Gero
11 FW  UKR Mykhaylo Kozhushko
12 DF  BRA Eriks Santos
13 DF  EST Oleg Gonsevich
14 DF  EST Aleksander Filatov
17 DF  EST Artjom Škinjov
No. Pos. Nation Player
19 MF  CIV Elysée (captain)
21 DF  EST Mark Maksimkin
22 MF  EST Egor Zhuravlev
23 DF  EST Aleksandr Jegorov
25 DF  GEO Shalva Burjanadze
29 FW  RUS Viktor Kudryashov
31 GK  EST Ilya Rebrik
32 DF  UKR Dmytro Bondar
35 GK  EST Aleksandr Kraizmer
47 FW  EST Nikita Baljabkin
77 MF  RUS Denis Polyakov
80 FW  EST Sten Viidas (on loan from Paide)
88 GK  EST Aleksei Matrossov

For season transfers, see transfers summer 2024.

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
DF  CAN Kelsey Egwu (at Valour until 31 December 2025)

Club officials

Honours

League

Cups

Seasons and statistics

Seasons

Season Division Pos Pld W D L GF GA GD Pts Top goalscorer Cup Supercup
1992 Meistriliiga 7 13 4 4 5 23 37 –14 12
1992–93 6 22 11 2 9 51 34 +17 24 Estonia Nikolai Toštšev (11)
1993–94 4 22 12 6 4 50 16 +34 30 Estonia Nikolai Toštšev (14) Runners-up
1994–95 3 24 11 6 7 32 24 +8 39 Estonia Nikolai Toštšev (7) Semi-finals
1995–96 5 24 8 6 10 33 32 +1 30 Estonia Boriss Nejolov (8) Quarter-finals
1996–97 6 24 7 6 11 28 38 −10 27 Estonia Stanislav Kitto (9) Semi-finals
1997–98 4 24 9 4 11 27 45 −18 31 Russia Dmitri Lipartov (8) Semi-finals
1998 4 14 6 5 3 28 20 +8 23 Russia Dmitri Lipartov (7)
1999 4 28 11 7 10 40 28 +12 40 Estonia Maksim Gruznov (13) Quarter-finals
2000 5 28 12 7 9 64 40 +24 43 Estonia Maksim Gruznov (22) Third round
2001 4 28 16 3 9 79 35 +44 51 Estonia Maksim Gruznov (37) Winners Runners-up
2002 4 28 14 5 9 54 49 +5 47 Estonia Maksim Gruznov (24) Semi-finals
2003 4 28 14 5 9 58 43 +15 47 Estonia Maksim Gruznov (16) Semi-finals
2004 4 28 15 2 11 43 39 +4 47 Estonia Maksim Gruznov (9) Semi-finals
2005 3 36 23 6 7 99 34 +65 75 Estonia Maksim Gruznov (26) Semi-finals
2006 2 36 25 8 3 106 36 +70 83 Estonia Maksim Gruznov (31) Semi-finals
2007 4 36 25 3 8 89 28 +61 78 Russia Dmitri Lipartov (30) Runners-up Winners
2008 3 36 16 8 12 62 54 +8 56 Estonia Nikolai Lõsanov (13) Quarter-finals Winners
2009 3 36 23 7 6 82 29 +53 76 Estonia Aleksandr Tarassenkov (13) Semi-finals
2010 3 36 23 7 6 67 31 +36 76 Lithuania Marius Bezykornovas (13) Fourth round
2011 3 36 22 7 7 107 29 +78 73 Latvia Aleksandrs Čekulajevs (46) Runners-up
2012 4 36 16 7 13 52 44 +8 55 Russia Vladislav Ivanov (13) Runners-up Runners-up
2013 7 36 11 3 22 39 55 −16 36 Estonia Albert Taar (7) Semi-finals
2014 8 36 6 10 20 37 79 −42 28 Estonia Viktor Plotnikov (9) Third round
2015 6 36 14 7 15 50 46 +4 49 Latvia Vitālijs Ziļs (13) First round
2016 8 36 11 8 17 60 68 −8 41 Russia Dmitri Proshin (14) Third round
2017 5 36 13 6 17 46 63 −17 45 Belarus Dzmitry Kowb (10) Second round
2018 4 36 18 7 11 76 57 +19 61 Russia Dmitri Barkov (17) Semi-finals
2019 6 36 13 9 14 57 49 +8 48 United States Eric McWoods (13) Winners
2020 8 30 6 7 17 31 49 −18 25 Russia Aleksandr Zakarlyuka (8) Runners-up Runners-up
2021 6 32 9 6 17 36 61 −25 33 Russia Aleksandr Zakarlyuka (10) Semi-finals
2022 7 36 10 8 18 43 58 −15 38 Ukraine Denys Dedechko (12) Semi-finals
2023 8 36 12 2 22 32 64 −32 38 Estonia Tristan Koskor (16) Winners
2024 6 36 10 12 14 48 63 −15 42 Burkina Faso Pierre Landry Kaboré
Georgia (country) Sergo Kukhianidze (11)
Fourth round Runners-up
2025 5 36 15 6 15 53 52 +1 51 Burkina Faso Pierre Landry Kaboré (12) Semi-finals

Europe

  1. ^
    UEFA awarded Narva Trans a 3–0 win due to IF Elfsborg fielding a suspended player.

References

  1. ^ "Narva Kalevi staadion". Eesti Spordiregister. Retrieved 16 April 2025.
  2. ^ История [History] (in Russian). JK Narva Trans.
  3. ^ "Narva Trans 45: alatine kõrgseltskonna liige, keda lahutab" [Narva Trans 45: a forever member of top division, separated from perfection by a championship title]. jalgpall.ee. 26 July 2024.
  4. ^ "Trans alistas lisaaja järel Kalju ja tuli karikavõitjaks". ERR (in Estonian). 25 May 2019.
  5. ^ Cole, Michael (5 May 2023). "Narva Trans shock Flora to win Tipner Trophy". ERR.
  6. ^ a b "Эмблема". JK Narva Trans (in Russian). Retrieved 23 November 2023.
  7. ^ "JK Narva Trans Kit History". Football Kit Archive. Retrieved 15 March 2023.
  8. ^ "Narva Kalev-Fama staadion saab uue kunstmurukatte". jalgpall.ee (in Estonian). 15 April 2025.
  9. ^ "Narva linn sõlmis lepingu jalgpalli pneumohalli ehitamiseks". ERR (in Estonian). 24 July 2023.
  10. ^ "Main squad of FC Narva Trans". JK Narva Trans.
  11. ^ "JK Narva Trans" (in Estonian). Estonian Football Association. Retrieved 8 September 2018.
  • Official website (in Russian)
  • JK Narva Trans at Estonian Football Association
  • JK Narva Trans at UEFA.com
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