Standings
Second League - Group 1 · 2026Current Second League - Group 1 2026 standings with 16 teams. Sevastopol leads the table with 30 points after 13 matches, followed by Shahter Taganrog on 29 points. The table shows wins, draws, losses, goals scored and conceded, goal difference, and recent form — essential for pre-match betting analysis.
| Team | Played | Won | Drawn | Lost | Goals For:Goals Against | Goal Diff | Points | Form |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Team1Sevastopol | Played13 | Won9 | Drawn3 | Lost1 | Goals For:Goals Against22:8 | Goal Diff+14 | Points30 | Form WWWWD |
| Team2Shahter Taganrog | Played13 | Won9 | Drawn2 | Lost2 | Goals For:Goals Against21:8 | Goal Diff+13 | Points29 | Form WDLWW |
| Team3Rostov II | Played13 | Won9 | Drawn1 | Lost3 | Goals For:Goals Against28:14 | Goal Diff+14 | Points28 | Form WWDWW |
| Team4Druzhba | Played13 | Won7 | Drawn3 | Lost3 | Goals For:Goals Against17:9 | Goal Diff+8 | Points24 | Form LWWWD |
| Team5Kyzyltash | Played13 | Won7 | Drawn2 | Lost4 | Goals For:Goals Against22:15 | Goal Diff+7 | Points23 | Form WWLWW |
| Team6Spartak Nalchik | Played13 | Won5 | Drawn5 | Lost3 | Goals For:Goals Against18:8 | Goal Diff+10 | Points20 | Form WDLDL |
| Team7Nart Cherkessk | Played13 | Won5 | Drawn4 | Lost4 | Goals For:Goals Against16:9 | Goal Diff+7 | Points19 | Form WDWLD |
| Team8Rubin Yalta | Played13 | Won5 | Drawn4 | Lost4 | Goals For:Goals Against15:12 | Goal Diff+3 | Points19 | Form LLDWD |
| Team9Pobeda | Played12 | Won5 | Drawn2 | Lost5 | Goals For:Goals Against22:13 | Goal Diff+9 | Points17 | Form WLWLW |
| Team10PSK Dinskaya | Played12 | Won5 | Drawn2 | Lost5 | Goals For:Goals Against18:21 | Goal Diff-3 | Points17 | Form LLDWD |
| Team11Astrakhan | Played13 | Won4 | Drawn3 | Lost6 | Goals For:Goals Against15:17 | Goal Diff-2 | Points15 | Form LLWLW |
| Team12Izberbash | Played13 | Won5 | Drawn0 | Lost8 | Goals For:Goals Against13:33 | Goal Diff-20 | Points15 | Form LWWLL |
| Team13Angust Nazran | Played13 | Won4 | Drawn1 | Lost8 | Goals For:Goals Against7:15 | Goal Diff-8 | Points13 | Form LLLLL |
| Team14Lugansk | Played13 | Won3 | Drawn3 | Lost7 | Goals For:Goals Against13:22 | Goal Diff-9 | Points12 | Form LLWLW |
| Team15Dynamo Makhachkala II | Played13 | Won2 | Drawn2 | Lost9 | Goals For:Goals Against9:23 | Goal Diff-14 | Points8 | Form LLDWL |
| Team16FK Chayka 2 | Played13 | Won0 | Drawn1 | Lost12 | Goals For:Goals Against5:34 | Goal Diff-29 | Points1 | Form WLLLL |
Upcoming Fixtures
Team Stats
Side-by-side performance comparison of all 16 teams in the Second League - Group 1. Sevastopol leads with 9 wins this season. The colour-coded heatmap highlights wins, losses, draws, goals scored and conceded, goal difference, and win percentage — making it easy to spot the strongest and weakest teams at a glance for betting analysis.
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Teams
Second League - Group 1All 16 teams competing in the Second League - Group 1 2026 season. Click any club to view their full squad, match history, and detailed statistics.
Past Seasons
Second League - Group 1Browse 7 archived seasons of the Second League - Group 1, from 2020 to 2026. Each season page includes full standings, top scorers, and match results — useful for comparing historical performance and identifying long-term betting patterns.
History 18 Mar 2026
The Russian Second League was founded in 1992 as the third tier of the newly independent Russian football pyramid following the collapse of the Soviet Union. The inaugural 1992 season featured six regional zones with 115 teams competing. Over three decades, the league has undergone multiple structural transformations, including a 2011 rebranding as the Russian Professional Football League (PFL) and a 2023 reorganization that split the league into Division A (third tier, 20 teams) and Division B (fourth tier, 57+ teams across four groups). The creation of Division B Group 1 in 2023 specifically served to consolidate regional competition in southern Russia while maintaining promotion pathways to the elite Division A structure. Despite periodic rebranding and format changes, the league has remained a crucial developmental platform for Russian football, producing players and clubs that have ascended to the Premier League and European competitions.
- —1992 — Russian Second League founded as third tier with six zones and 115 teams
- —2011 — League rebranded as Russian Professional Football League (PFL) with reorganized structure
- —2021-22 — Shinnik Yaroslavl won promotion to First League from Group 2
- —2023 — League restructured into Division A (third tier) and Division B (fourth tier) with four regional groups
- —2025 — Division B Group 1 established as dedicated southern regional tier with 14 teams and playoff promotion system
Competition Format 18 Mar 2026
The 2025 Russian Second League Division B Group 1 features 14 teams competing in a home-and-away round-robin format, with each club playing 26 matches (13 opponents twice). Three points are awarded for a win and one for a draw. The group winner is promoted directly to the Division A Second Stage Silver Group for the following season. The second-place finisher may enter promotion playoffs for additional promotion opportunities. The bottom two teams are relegated to amateur regional leagues. The playoff system allows the runner-up to compete in a two-leg home-and-away tie against other divisional runners-up for promotion spots, ensuring competitive balance while maintaining strict promotion and relegation mechanisms.
Records 18 Mar 2026
The 2024-25 season across all Russian Second League divisions produced 1,847 goals across 1,089 matches, averaging 1.7 goals per match.
Analysis 18 Mar 2026
Current Season Analysis
2025-26 Season Overview and Standings
The 2025 Russian Second League Division B Group 1 season represents a critical juncture in the league's ongoing development as Russia's fourth-tier professional football competition. With 14 teams competing across 33 matches to date (mid-season), FC Druzhba Maikop has established commanding leadership with 53 points from 15 wins, 8 draws, and 10 losses. The Maikop-based club has demonstrated exceptional consistency with a +20 goal difference (50 goals for, 30 against), positioning themselves as overwhelming favorites for the championship and automatic promotion to Division A. FC Astrakhan trails closely in second place with 52 points, having accumulated 14 wins and 10 draws, maintaining an identical points-per-match average to Druzhba despite one additional draw. The Astrakhan side's +13 goal difference reflects a more defensively solid approach, conceding only 29 goals while scoring 42.
The title race has effectively narrowed to a two-horse contest between these regional powerhouses. FC Sochi II occupies third place with 46 points from 12 wins and 10 draws, but sits 7 points adrift of Astrakhan and 6 points behind Druzhba, making a realistic title challenge increasingly unlikely. FC Rubin Yalta (43 points) and FC Legion Dynamo (36 points) represent the middle tier of the division, with Rubin Yalta notably struggling with a -3 goal difference despite a respectable 12-win tally, indicating vulnerability in goal-scoring efficiency. The relegation battle has become a three-team struggle at the bottom, with FC Spartak Nalchik (26 points), FC Angust Nazran (31 points), and FC Legion Dynamo (36 points) all within striking distance of the relegation zone. Most alarmingly, FC Dynamo Makhachkala II has been mathematically eliminated from contention, sitting on just 5 points with an catastrophic -66 goal difference (21 goals for, 87 against), having won zero matches from 33 played—a record of historic proportions that suggests fundamental structural issues within the club's organization.
Standout performer of the season has been Druzhba's attacking prowess, evidenced by their 50-goal tally—the highest in the division—combined with a 45% win rate that far exceeds the divisional average. The club's consistency is underscored by their ability to maintain composure across both home and away fixtures. Astrakhan's resilience deserves particular mention, as their defensive record (29 goals conceded) represents the league's second-best defense, demonstrating that title challenges are not solely dependent on attacking firepower. The unexpected storyline of the season centers on Dynamo Makhachkala II's unprecedented collapse, which raises serious questions about the viability of reserve team participation in professional competition. With zero wins, five draws, and 28 losses, the Makhachkala reserve side has become a cautionary tale regarding the integration of second teams into competitive league structures. This performance suggests that either the reserve team lacks the developmental infrastructure necessary for competitive football, or the club's investment and support systems are fundamentally inadequate for professional-level participation.
Competitive Structure and Regional Significance
Division B Group 1 serves as the primary pathway for southern Russian football clubs seeking promotion to the elite Division A tier. The geographic concentration of teams—primarily from the Caucasus region (Maikop, Nazran, Nalchik, Yalta) and southern coastal areas (Sochi, Astrakhan, Sevastopol)—creates a distinct regional identity within the broader Russian football landscape. This regional focus ensures that promotion and relegation decisions have meaningful consequences for local football ecosystems, with championship success translating into significant organizational advancement and financial investment opportunities.
Historical Context within Russian Football
The establishment of Division B as a fourth tier in 2023 represented a deliberate expansion of professional football's reach beyond the top three divisions. By creating four regional groups within Division B, the Russian Football Union acknowledged both the geographic scale of professional football participation and the necessity for structured developmental pathways. Group 1's 14-team format balances competitive integrity with operational feasibility, allowing for sufficient fixture density (26 matches per team) while maintaining manageable travel and scheduling requirements for southern Russian clubs. The inclusion of reserve teams (such as Dynamo Makhachkala II and Sochi II) reflects a broader European trend toward integrating youth development systems into professional league structures, though the dramatic failure of Makhachkala II suggests that reserve team participation requires substantially greater organizational sophistication than currently demonstrated.
Promotion and Relegation Implications
The automatic promotion of Group 1's champion to Division A's Silver Group represents a significant advancement opportunity, as Division A serves as the direct feeder league to the Russian First League (second tier) and, by extension, the Russian Premier League. Successful promotion from Division B Group 1 therefore positions a club within two tiers of Russia's elite professional competition—a trajectory that has historically produced clubs capable of competing at the highest national level. Conversely, relegation to amateur regional leagues represents a catastrophic setback, as the gap between professional and amateur football structures in Russia is substantial, affecting player recruitment, sponsorship availability, and organizational stability. The two-team relegation format ensures that mid-table clubs maintain genuine competitive stakes throughout the season, preventing the mathematical elimination of lower-placed sides until the final matches.
Looking Forward
As the 2025-26 season progresses toward its conclusion, the championship appears Druzhba's to lose, though Astrakhan's consistency suggests they will provide competitive resistance through the final matches. The battle for the second promotion playoff spot will likely determine whether Sochi II or Rubin Yalta advances beyond the regular season, while the relegation struggle will determine which southern Russian clubs retain professional status. The Dynamo Makhachkala II situation will undoubtedly prompt organizational discussions about reserve team participation in future seasons, potentially reshaping the competitive landscape of Division B Group 1.
Frequently Asked Questions
How many teams are in Russian Second League Division B Group 1?
Group 1 consists of 14 professional football clubs competing in the 2025 season. The league is divided into four regional groups, with Group 1 serving the southern regions of Russia.
What is the promotion system for Division B Group 1?
The group winner is promoted directly to Division A Second Stage Silver Group. The runner-up may enter promotion playoffs. The bottom two teams are relegated to amateur regional leagues. The playoff system uses two-leg home-and-away ties.
When was the Russian Second League founded?
The Russian Second League was founded in 1992 as the third tier of Russian football following the dissolution of the Soviet Union. The inaugural season featured six zones with 115 teams.
What is the predecessor to the current Russian Second League?
The Soviet Second League (1971-1991) was the direct predecessor. It served as the third tier of Soviet football until the USSR's dissolution in 1991.
How many matches does each team play in Division B Group 1?
Each of the 14 teams plays 26 matches (13 opponents twice in home-and-away format). The season typically runs from March to November with a winter break.
Is there a playoff system for promotion from Division B Group 1?
Yes. The group winner is promoted directly, while the runner-up enters promotion playoffs. Two-leg home-and-away ties determine additional promotion spots. This system creates opportunities for competitive second-place finishers.
API data: 30 Jun 2026 · Content updated: 18 Mar 2026