JoeMoon1506
7 years ago
1 week ago
1,446
Premium

1: Introducing The Kairat Dream

 

This series documents a long-term Football Manager 2026 save with FC Kairat, following the construction of a footballing identity - how it is introduced, tested, refined, and sustained over time at an unfancied club, in a somewhat obscure nation. 

 

Geographically and competitively, Kazakhstan sits on the outer edge of European football. The country is vast and landlocked, culturally closer to Central Asia than Western Europe, bordered by Russia, China, and several former Soviet states. Its identity is shaped by extreme geography: remote plains, and mountainous regions in the south-east around Almaty, where Kairat are based.  

 

Despite this, Kazakhstan competes within UEFA rather than the Asian confederation, placing its clubs in direct competition with far more established European leagues. That distance is reflected on the pitch. The Kazakh league consistently ranks low in UEFA’s country coefficient standings, which determine qualification routes and seeding in European competition. As a result, Kazakh sides enter continental tournaments in the earliest qualifying rounds, rarely benefiting from favourable draws or margin for error.  

 

The location of Almaty within Kazakhstan - 350km from the Chinese border to the East

Against that backdrop, the project is built around a simple premise: what happens when possession-led, development-focused football is treated as a long-term commitment rather than a tactical convenience, in a country where footballing identity is still taking shape? 

Before the save unfolds fully, this opening post sets out the core ideas that shape everything that follows. 

 

Why Kairat? Why Kazakhstan? 

Kazakhstan exists on the margins of European football. Infrastructure and participation have improved, but progress has been uneven, and pathways to the top level of the European game remain fragile. 

 

Since gaining independence following the dissolution of the Soviet Union in 1991, Kazakhstan - like many former Soviet republics - has had to build a national football identity from scratch, competing against nations with far deeper histories and established pipelines.  

 

The national team has never qualified for a World Cup, nor has the country consistently produced a player who has broken through as a genuine star on the European stage. Domestic success has rarely translated into sustained continental relevance, and youth development has often lacked the continuity needed to bridge that gap. 

 

Based in Almaty, the club combine domestic pedigree with the strongest youth academy in the country, and its influence is visible well beyond club level. The senior national team and age-group sides regularly feature a significant number of Kairat-developed players, often forming the core of squads rather than peripheral depth.  

 

That concentration of talent makes Kairat less a rebuilding project and more a structural one. The task is not to tear down and start again, but to align senior football, youth development, and recruitment around a shared set of principles, giving both club and country a clearer sense of direction, improving standards along the way. 

 

The Manager: Miguel Santos 

The save is built around a fictional manager, Miguel Santos. 

 

A Portuguese coach whose career has been spent almost entirely in elite youth environments (Portugal Under-16s, Académica de Coimbra youth, Sporting CP youth), Santos arrives at Kairat for his first senior role with a strong footballing education but little experience of the senior game.  

 

His appointment came largely without warning and has been viewed by many supporters as a gamble: an untested coach stepping into a club with domestic expectations and a clear sense of direction. 

 

Santos’ background has shaped how he sees the game. He values players who are comfortable taking responsibility on the ball, who are willing to take risks in possession rather than defaulting to safety. His work has always leaned towards teaching and development, with progress measured over time rather than in short bursts of results.  

Miguel Santos

 

In preparation for the move, he has begun learning both Kazakh and Russian, conscious that communication and trust will be central to his ability to work effectively within the squad. 

 

His ideas are rooted in the Total Football traditions associated with Ajax and shaped by his time in youth development at Sporting CP. The task he faces is not to reinvent those ideas, but to adapt them to the realities of senior football, where compromise and pressure are unavoidable. 

 

Kairat offer a setting where that transition feels possible. The squad already contains many of the technical and tactical qualities Santos looks for, allowing his principles to be introduced gradually rather than imposed, and giving both coach and club the chance to develop together. 

 

Footballing Philosophy 

The guiding idea behind the save is a possession-led, development-first model. 

 

Possession is treated as a means of control rather than an aesthetic goal. Players are expected to understand space, take responsibility in multiple phases of play, and operate within a collective structure that prioritises the ball.  

 

Individual quality matters, but only insofar as it strengthens the collective - the aim is for the team to function at a higher level than the sum of its parts. Physical dominance is secondary to decision-making, positional awareness, and technical security. 

 

That thinking extends to selection and squad building. The starting XI will not be constructed around foreign signings, though overseas players that fit our philosophy will be bought in, and when genuine opportunities arise, the club’s best young players will be trusted ahead of short-term overseas solutions.  

Development is treated as part of competition rather than something that sits alongside it. Prospects are expected to earn minutes through performance and understanding, but the pathway is clear: regular exposure through the B team in the second division, cup competitions, and, when ready, league and European football. 

 

The early seasons focus on consistency rather than optimisation. Establishing shared habits and a common footballing language across squads takes precedence over short-term gains. Repetition and clarity are used to embed principles, allowing the style to mature naturally as recruitment and development increasingly align. 

 

A useful real-world parallel is Dinamo Zagreb - not in terms of results, but in their ability to produce technically accomplished players and compete beyond their economic weight through clarity of identity and continuity of approach. That model was reflected clearly at the 2018 FIFA World Cup, where 10 of the 24 players selected for the Croatia National Team were developed at Dinamo. It is that level of integration between club development and national progress that this project aims to move towards. 

 

Tactical Framework 

The tactical base in season one is an expansive, pass-first 4-2-3-1. It is deliberately aggressive in its use of the ball, but chosen primarily because it suits the existing squad rather than representing a finished or idealised system. 

 

In possession, build-up begins with the goalkeeper and centre-backs, with the back line stretching the pitch horizontally. One full-back advances high to provide width, while the other tucks inside to form a situational midfield platform.  

 

The 4-2-3-1 formation

 

The double pivot operates as a relationship rather than two fixed roles: players rotate naturally, with one often stepping forward to support attacks while the other holds structure. Wide players are encouraged to drift inside and occupy central pockets, creating overloads between the lines, while width is frequently supplied from deeper positions rather than the front line. 

 

This approach borrows from several modern possession systems. There are clear parallels with Pep Guardiola’s use of asymmetrical full-backs and midfield rotations, particularly in his Bayern Munich and Manchester City sides. Elements of Roberto De Zerbi’s positional play are also present, especially the emphasis on drawing pressure through controlled build-up before exploiting space centrally.  

 

Out of possession, the shape contracts into a compact 4-4-2. Pressing is selective rather than relentless, focused on closing central spaces, guiding play wide, and engaging on clear triggers. The defensive line remains relatively high to keep distances short and allow the team to defend collectively rather than retreat into low blocks. 

 

This is an intentionally pragmatic starting point. The aim in the early stages is not tactical purity, but stability. As the squad develops and recruitment allows for greater positional flexibility, the system is expected to evolve gradually toward a more fluid interpretation of the same core ideas rather than a wholesale change of approach. 

 

Squad and Development Model 

Kairat’s squad is one of the youngest in the league and already well suited to a possession-based approach. Technical security and tactical awareness are common traits across the group, which limits the need for immediate disruption or short-term recruitment simply to force the philosophy into place. The emphasis, at least initially, is on working with what is already there. 

 

Youth development sits at the centre of the project. The B team functions as a direct extension of the first team, operating under the same tactical ideas and positional demands. It provides regular exposure to senior football while maintaining continuity in approach, ensuring that progression feels planned rather than reactive.  

 

Where appropriate, some players will also be sent on domestic loan to gain consistent first-team minutes in competitive environments, particularly when that pathway offers more development value than remaining within the squad. 

 

(Left to right) Daulet Orynbassar, Dastan Satpaev and Ramazan Bagdat

 

The first-team group itself will be kept relatively large. The club’s most promising young players will train regularly with the senior side, benefit from mentoring and shared standards, and then apply those lessons through match minutes with the B team. This structure is designed to bridge the gap between development and competition without rushing or isolating talent. 

 

The ideal Kairat player is comfortable on the ball, adaptable within the system, and capable of contributing in multiple phases of play. Individual quality is valued, but only insofar as it strengthens the collective structure rather than sitting apart from it. 

 

Recruitment Principles 

Recruitment is deliberately restrained in the early stages of the project. 

 

Statues outside the club's 25,000 capacity ‘Almaty Central Stadium’

The first season is primarily evaluative. The focus is on identifying which profiles genuinely suit the system, where limitations appear as demands increase, and how the existing squad responds when principles are applied consistently. Rather than chasing immediate upgrades, recruitment decisions are shaped by observation and context. 

 

Over the longer term, priority is given to technical quality, positional intelligence, and flexibility over raw physical traits. The core of the squad is intended to be Kazakh-developed, supported by a small number of foreign players who integrate quickly and strengthen the collective structure rather than reshape it. 

 

When the club does look beyond the domestic market, there is a clear preference for Portuguese-speaking profiles. The dressing room already contains a strong Portuguese-speaking presence, and Miguel Santos’ background and contacts in Portugal and Brazil make those markets both familiar and accessible.  

Language, cultural understanding, and tactical alignment are treated as practical considerations rather than afterthoughts, helping new arrivals settle quickly and maintain continuity. 

 

Every addition is expected to serve the system. Continuity is valued over novelty, and recruitment is used to reinforce direction rather than alter it. 

 

Short-term goals (Seasons 1–2) 

  • Establish a clear, repeatable possession-led identity across the first team and B team, with consistent principles visible regardless of personnel.
  • Integrate the club’s best youth prospects into senior environments, using the B team, domestic cups, and controlled league minutes to accelerate development and maintain a low average squad age.
  • Prioritise Kazakh-developed talent in the starting XI, avoiding over-reliance on foreign players while selectively adding overseas profiles that complement and elevate the domestic core.
  • Achieve sustained domestic consistency, remaining competitive at the top of the league while embedding tactical ideas - with the aim of annual title challenges and domestic dominance.
  • Develop first-team players into regular contributors for Kazakhstan’s senior and age-group national sides, positioning Kairat as the backbone of the national team pathway.
  • Use European qualification as a platform for growth, targeting steady continental progression and, over time, consistent group-stage appearances in the Champions League.

 

Medium-term goals (Seasons 3–5) 

  • Establish Kairat as a truly dominant domestic force, with sustained control of league title races and regular success in domestic cup competitions.
  • Create a reliable production line of first-team-ready academy graduates, with multiple players making seamless transitions from youth football to senior roles and excelling at the top level.
  • Develop and sell players to stronger European leagues at the right moment, ensuring each move represents clear progression while cementing Kairat’s reputation as an elite development club trusted by Europe’s top sides.
  • Achieve consistent advancement beyond the early qualifying rounds of European competition, steadily closing the gap to established mid-tier European leagues.
  • See Kairat-developed players form the tactical and cultural backbone of the Kazakhstan national team, creating a new generation of domestic icons in the process.
  • Strengthen long-term recruitment pathways, selectively targeting Portuguese-speaking markets to add experience and quality while preserving identity, continuity, and a core group capable of forming a lasting dynasty.

 

Long-term goals (Seasons 6+) 

  • Establish Kairat as the unquestioned centre of Kazakh football, both competitively and developmentally, recognised as the nation’s primary talent producer in the mould of Dinamo Zagreb, Red Star Belgrade, Partizan Belgrade, and Ajax.
  • Compete regularly in the group stages - and increasingly the knockout rounds - of European competition, with Kazakh-developed players performing confidently on the continental and global stage.
  • Build a clear, respected pathway from academy football to elite European leagues, with former Kairat players succeeding abroad while continuing to return sporting and financial value to the club.
  • Play a meaningful role in the evolution of the Kazakhstan national team through both player production and tactical influence, helping to shape a new generation of Kazakh footballing legends forged in Almaty.
  • Leave behind a sustainable system that outlives the manager: a clearly defined club identity strong enough to withstand personnel changes without losing its direction or purpose.

 

What This Series Will Be 

Expect discussion around tactics, squad building, youth development, and long-term planning, with results and standout performances used as reference points rather than the main narrative. Match outcomes will matter, but primarily in how they test ideas, expose weaknesses, and shape decision-making over time.  

 

The aim is to document how a coherent footballing identity is built under constraint, how it holds up under pressure, and how it evolves as players, systems, and expectations change 

 

Next up: Inside Kairat Almaty - understanding the club’s background, values, and history 

JoeMoon1506
7 years ago
1 week ago
1,446
Premium

2: Inside Kairat Almaty

 

To construct a footballing identity, it’s essential to understand what came before, not simply in terms of trophies or results, but in how a club has been shaped by its environment, its history, and its role within the wider domestic game.

 

Kairat’s role within Kazakh football predates independence, UEFA membership, and even the foundations of the modern domestic league, giving the club a depth of history and context that is unlike any other.

 

Origins and the Soviet Era

Kairat were founded in 1954 in Alma-Ata, then the capital of the Kazakh Soviet Socialist Republic. The club underwent several name changes in its early years before adopting the name Kairat in 1956, a term rooted in the Kazakh language that broadly conveys strength, vitality, and energy.

 

During the Soviet period, Kairat occupied a unique position. They were the only club from the Kazakh SSR to compete regularly in the Soviet Top League, spending much of the 1960s, 1970s, and 1980s at the highest level of Soviet football. In that context, Kairat functioned less as a title contender and more as a representative institution, carrying the sporting identity of an entire republic within a competition dominated by clubs from Russia and Ukraine. It was during this era that the club became widely known as ‘The People’s Team’ or ‘The Nation’s Team’, a reflection of its role as Kazakhstan’s primary footballing standard-bearer.

 

Their most successful Soviet league finish came in 1986, when they ended the season seventh, a rare moment of prominence at the time. More often, survival and competitiveness were the primary objectives.

 

Independence and Uncertainty

The dissolution of the Soviet Union in 1991 marked a profound shift. Kazakhstan’s domestic football system had to be built almost entirely from scratch, and Kairat, despite their history, were not immune to the instability that followed.

Locomotive Alma-Ata in 1954 - the year of their formation

The early years of the newly formed Kazakhstan Premier League were characterised by financial uncertainty, inconsistent governance, and limited infrastructure. Kairat experienced periods of success, including league titles, but these were rarely sustained.

 

Unlike clubs in parts of Eastern Europe that inherited strong academy traditions and export pipelines, Kazakh football entered independence without a deeply embedded development culture.

 

Culture In a Nutshell

Kairat’s location has always been central to their identity. Based in Almaty, Kazakhstan’s largest city and former capital, the club operates at the country’s cultural and economic heart. The city’s infrastructure, relative openness, and population density have long made it a focal point for sport, education, and youth participation, shaping both the scale of the club and its national visibility.

 

The city sits at the foothills of the Tian Shan mountains in south-eastern Kazakhstan, with altitude and terrain influencing both daily life and sporting conditions. Winters are long and severe, while summers are hot and dry, creating sharp seasonal contrasts across the season.

 

Buildings in front of the Tian Shan mountains

From the 2010s onwards, Kairat began to separate themselves more clearly through youth development. Targeted investment in academy structures, coaching, and methodology positioned the club as the most consistent producer of elite domestic talent in the country. By the start of the 2020s, this influence was clear across Kazakhstan’s senior and youth national teams, where Kairat-developed players regularly formed the core of squads.

 

The academy’s emphasis on technical security, positional understanding, and tactical education over short-term physical advantage has allowed players to transition more effectively into senior football. That concentration of talent has given Kairat an importance that extends beyond club competition.

 

Derbies and Important Matches

Kairat’s most significant domestic rivalry is with FC Astana, a fixture that has come to define the modern Kazakhstan Premier League. The rivalry is not geographic, but symbolic, reflecting competition between Kazakhstan’s former and current centres of political and sporting power. Since Astana’s rise in the mid-2010s, driven by sustained investment and regular European participation, meetings between the two have frequently shaped title races and cup outcomes. The fixture is often referred to in domestic media as the ‘Two Capitals Derby’.

Kairat celebrate winning the 2008 Kazakhstan Cup final

In more recent seasons, FC Ordabasy have emerged as an increasingly important rival. Based in Shymkent, Ordabasy represent the south of the country and have developed into consistent challengers at the top end of the league, with their 2023 championship marking a shift in the domestic landscape. Matches between Kairat and Ordabasy carry a clearer regional edge.

 

Stadium and Facilities

Kairat play their home matches at Almaty Central Stadium, a venue that functions as a civic landmark as much as a football ground. Opened in 1958, the stadium reflects its Soviet-era origins and remains one of the most recognisable sporting sites in Kazakhstan.

 

Despite several renovations, it has not been fundamentally modernised, and by European standards it is ageing in both design and matchday infrastructure. Its seating capacity of 23,804 makes it one of the largest stadiums in the country, and it continues to host national team fixtures alongside Kairat’s home matches.

Almaty Central Stadium

 

Away from matchdays, the club operates in a more contemporary setting. During the mid-2010s, Kairat invested in a dedicated training and development base at Besagash, on the outskirts of Almaty. The complex includes five full-size pitches, combining natural grass and artificial surfaces, and features an air-supported indoor dome, allowing year-round training in Kazakhstan’s severe winter conditions. Gym, recovery, and accommodation facilities are integrated on site, supporting both first-team and academy operations.

 

Compared to domestic standards, the infrastructure is significantly ahead of most rivals, enabling consistent training volume, structured coaching programmes, and closer integration between the academy, B team, and first team. While it may not match elite Western European academies in scale, within the context of Kazakh football the facilities are genuinely state of the art and form the structural backbone of Kairat’s reputation as the country’s leading development club.

 

Context at the Start of 2025

Kairat enter the 2025 season as reigning Kazakhstan Premier League champions, having won the 2024 title ahead of Astana after a tightly contested campaign. The two seasons prior provide important context: they finished fourth in both 2022 and 2023, remaining competitive at the top end of the league without fully controlling the title race.

 

In European competition, the modern reference point remains the 2021–22 season, when Kairat became the first Kazakh club to reach the UEFA Europa Conference League group stage, finishing fourth in their group.

 

As the 2025 season begins, Kairat are still working to translate the levels of 2024 into repeatable European momentum. It is within that gap - between national success and continental consistency - that this save begins. Rightly or wrongly, Miguel Santos is seen as the perfect man to take this unique club to the next level. 

 

Next up: Meet The Squad - an introduction to Kairat’s first-team players ahead of the 2025 domestic campaign!

JoeMoon1506
7 years ago
1 week ago
1,446
Premium

3: Meet The Squad 

 

Kairat’s first-team group ahead of the 2025 domestic campaign is dictated by youth, technical quality, and a clear tactical identity beginning to take shape. 

 

As the season gets underway, the squad already appears well aligned with Miguel Santos’ principles. One of the youngest groups in the league, Kairat are technically secure, tactically aware, and comfortable operating in a possession-dominant framework. Rather than requiring wholesale change, the focus in year one is refinement - improving decision-making, reinforcing shared principles, and allowing players to grow within a clearly defined structure. 

 

Squad Balance and Tactical Fit 

Miguel Santos at the Kairat training ground

Depth is strongest in the areas that matter most to Santos’ model. Academy-developed players dominate the spine of the team, bringing composure on the ball and an understanding of space that immediately sets Kairat apart domestically. The balance between youth and experience is deliberate, with senior figures providing stability and leadership while emerging talents are trusted with responsibility. 

 

Versatility is a defining feature across the squad. Many players are capable of contributing in multiple phases and positions, a prerequisite for a system built on rotation and interpretation rather than rigid roles. This flexibility allows rotation without a significant drop in technical or tactical standards. 

 

The 4-2-3-1 used this season serves as a foundation rather than a finished product. It suits the current balance of the squad while introducing Total Football principles in a controlled way. Build-up responsibility is shared from the goalkeeper through the centre-backs, the double pivot operates as a partnership, and wide players are encouraged to interpret space rather than occupy fixed lanes. 

 

Out of possession, the team settles into a compact, disciplined shape that prioritises control over chaos, protecting central areas while maintaining a relatively high defensive line. The structure provides clarity without restricting evolution as the project develops. 

 

Key Individuals 

2025 Starting XI

While the system remains the priority, several individuals naturally elevate the collective. Dastan Satpaev leads the line as the academy’s crown jewel, offering elite finishing and composure. Valeriy Gromyko functions as the creative and tactical reference point between midfield and attack, providing intelligence, work rate, and consistency. 

 

At the back, Aleksandr Martynovich supplies authority and leadership, setting standards within a developing defensive unit, while Luis Mata adds pace, width, and attacking thrust from wingback - a crucial outlet in possession and a key component of the overall structure. 

 

Around this core, the squad contains numerous profiles well suited to a possession-heavy, rotation-based system. Egor Sorokin’s mobility and two-footedness allow for flexible build-up play – a left-footed, ball-playing profile bringing natural balance and progression from deep. 

 

In midfield, Adilet Sadybekov and Damir Kasabulat offer intelligence, versatility, and control within the pivot, with Dan Glazer and Ofri Arad providing physicality and contrast when required. Further forward, players such as Jorginho and Giorgi Zaria are comfortable drifting inside to overload central areas. 

 

Depth in the forward line - including Ramazan Bagdat, Joao Paulo, and additions to join later in the season - ensure rotation is possible without diluting the principles or placing undue strain on developing players. 

 

Meet The Team 

This section breaks down Kairat’s first-team players individually, with an emphasis on roles, development potential, and how each profile contributes to the wider system:

 

Goalkeepers 

Kairat’s goalkeeping unit contains a balance of promising youth and international experience. Temirlan Anarbekov profiles as the future number one, offering elite 1v1 ability, sharp reflexes, and composure suited to a modern sweeper-keeper role, albeit with physical development still required. Sherkhan Kalmurza provides a high-upside understudy option, rotating with the second team as his strength and robustness are developed. Completing the group, Alexandr Zarutskii brings experience, leadership, and dependable cover, ensuring stability while the younger goalkeepers progress.

 

 

Left Backs / Wingbacks 

Luis Mata offers pace, width, and an attack-minded profile well suited to an advanced wingback role, with the added potential to build strong synergy with Jorginho ahead of him once his move becomes permanent. Lev Kurgin provides dependable rotational cover, offering defensive reliability despite a limited long-term ceiling. The standout development prospect is Daniyar Tashpulatov, a rapid and technically gifted wingback whose all-round potential and positional versatility align closely with the demands of a possession-based, high-mobility system.

 

 

Centre Backs 

Kairat’s centre-back options are structured around complementary profiles and clear roles. Aleksandr Martynovich remains the senior reference point, offering leadership and aerial dominance, with Egor Sorokin providing the mobility, two-footedness, and technical security required to balance the pairing. Amirbek Bazarbayev adds long-term upside as a left-footed, ball-playing defender whose development could enhance build-up and structural balance, while Aleksandr Shirobokov offers reliable rotational cover for cup matches and selective league use.

 

 

Right Backs / Wingbacks 

The right flank requires reliability, endurance, and tactical flexibility. Erkin Tapalov provides invaluable experience, elite stamina, and positional versatility across both flanks and midfield, making him an important mentor and stabilising presence within the squad. Alongside him, Aleksandr Mrynskii offers relentless energy and work rate as a tireless academy graduate, with the potential to transition into midfield over time while remaining a significant contributor to the first team in the present.

 

 

Defensive Midfielders 

The midfield unit is one of the squad’s strongest and most versatile areas, offering a wide range of profiles to support a flexible double-pivot system. Adilet Sadybekov stands out as a core figure, combining leadership, intelligence, and box-to-box quality, while Damir Kasabulat is being moulded into a defensive enforcer whose versatility and mentality mark him as a potential future captain. Dan Glazer provides a more aggressive, physical option for demanding fixtures, complemented by Ofri Arad’s two-footed box-to-box presence, experience, and short-term leadership value. Rounding out the group, Olzhas Baibek offers elite work rate and balanced all-round ability, making him a reliable rotational option with clear first-team potential.

 

 

Wide Attackers 

Kairat’s wide attacking options offer flexibility, movement, and varied profiles suited to a system that values central overloads over fixed touchline roles. Jorginho provides the most consistent goal threat, cutting inside from the left with acceleration, intelligent movement, and proven end product, while Ismail Beklobat represents a high-upside development player whose pace, finishing, and crossing make him a long-term first-team certainty. On the right, Giorgi Zaria offers creativity and vision, capable of influencing games across multiple attacking roles, with Jug Stanojev supplying pace and functional depth as a rotational option. The standout academy prospect is Daulet Orynbasar, an exceptional talent being reshaped into an inside forward, whose elite acceleration, agility, and finishing give him genuine top-level potential if developed correctly.

 

 

Attacking Midfielders 

Valeriy Gromyko is the clear reference point in attacking midfield, offering work rate, intelligence, and creative quality alongside exceptional versatility across midfield, wide areas, and attack, making him one of the first names on the team sheet. Behind him, Tuiakbaev provides a technically sound development option, progressing primarily with the second team while benefiting from structured mentoring. Completing the group, Abylai Toleukhan represents a high-ceiling but raw long-term project, with strong passing and defensive instincts that will be introduced gradually through carefully managed opportunities.

 

 

Strikers 

The forward line combines elite talent, succession planning, and experience. Dastan Satpaev is the focal point, an exceptional academy product whose finishing, composure, and physical presence mark him out as a once-in-a-generation talent ahead of his planned move to Chelsea in 2026. Ramazan Bagdat operates as the long-term successor, offering versatility, aerial threat, and a two-footed base that make him a strong understudy with clear future starter potential. Completing the group, Joao Paulo provides invaluable experience and leadership as a club legend, contributing through mentoring and selective rotation while maintaining high technical and mental standards.

 

 

Future Arrivals

Mid-season additions further enhance the attacking options and tactical flexibility. Edmilson arrives as a physically dominant, technically competent target man with European experience, offering a contrasting profile that is likely to be particularly valuable during continental competition. Alongside him, Ricardinho joins on loan as a highly talented and creative attacker, capable of operating across the frontline or from wide areas, adding depth, unpredictability, and technical quality as the season progresses.

 

 

Next up: 2025 season summary - the beginning of a new era in Almaty.

JoeMoon1506
7 years ago
1 week ago
1,446
Premium

4: 2025 Review - European Success And Satpaev Supremacy 

 

Following a title-winning campaign in 2024, 2025 posed a far sterner challenge. It tested whether a possession-led, development-focused approach could truly dominate in Kazakhstan - a league where financial power has traditionally dictated success - and whether a bold identity, introduced by an unproven Portuguese coach, could translate into immediate, sustainable results. 

 

It proved to be a long, demanding campaign, but one that will stand as among the most important in Kairat’s history. A league and domestic cup run filled with emphatic victories, a breakthrough surge into European competition, and a record-setting season from the wonderboy himself, Dastan Satpaev, combined to make it unforgettable. 

 

Domestic Control And Stat Summary 

 

Kairat lost just two league matches all season under Miguel Santos and drew once, finishing seven points clear at the top of the table. The squad scored an astonishing 74 goals - the highest total in the division - while conceding just 19, the second-best defensive record in the league. Averaging 2.85 goals per game compared to second-placed Elimai’s 1.65, and keeping 14 clean sheets along the way, the title was secured comfortably and rarely looked in doubt. 

There were prolonged spells of complete control throughout the campaign. Emphatic scorelines became routine: a 5–1 win at home to Turan, a 5–1 demolition away at Turan, a 5–0 victory against a competitive Atyrau side, and a 6–2 dismantling away at Turan. The club also recorded the highest average home attendance in the league at 11,632. 

 

The underlying numbers made Kairat’s identity clear. The team averaged 59% possession - the highest in the league - and completed 89.7% of their passes. They lost possession just 89 times per game, significantly below the league average of 102, and completed 581 dribbles across the season, comfortably ahead of the next-best total of 419. 

2025 League Table
2025 Season Stats

 

Structurally, the team began 36 matches in a 4-2-3-1 in possession, shifting into an asymmetric variation without the ball. Jorginho maintained width high up the pitch while Satpaev remained central as the focal point. Build-up was patient and controlled. The goalkeeper and centre-backs were central to progression, circulating short, inviting pressure, and advancing only when space appeared. 

 

Temirlan Anarbekov’s 97% pass completion rate - the highest in the league among all players, including goalkeepers - perfectly captured the approach. Playing short, drawing opponents forward, and exposing gaps through gradual build-up became a defining feature of Kairat’s play. 

 

Key Stats: 

  • 2 league defeats
  • 1 draw
  • 7-point gap to second place
  • 74 goals scored (highest in the division)
  • 19 goals conceded (second-best defensive record)
  • 2.85 goals per game
  • 14 clean sheets
  • 11,632 average home attendance (highest in the league)
  • 59% average possession (highest in the league)
  • 89.7% pass completion rate
  • 89 possession losses per game
  • 581 total dribbles completed

 

European Breakthrough 

 

Reaching the Champions League group stage was an achievement in itself. Kairat navigated four demanding qualifying rounds, eliminating opponents with far greater European pedigree. Ludogorets were edged out across two disciplined legs. Slovan Bratislava were managed with composure. Celtic - the standout name in the draw - were beaten over two matches that showcased intelligent game management. 

 

The team defended when required, slowed matches when necessary, and showed an ability to manage moments rather than chase them. The group stage, however, presented a different challenge entirely. Kairat could no longer rely on territorial dominance. They were well beaten by global heavyweights such as Arsenal and Manchester City, and the margin for error proved far smaller than in domestic competition. 

 

Dastan Satpaev with a Champions League match ball

 

Among this, the 2–0 victory over Red Star Belgrade delivered the first Champions League group-stage win ever recorded by a Kazakh club - a landmark result. Fittingly, Dastan Satpaev scored both goals. 

 

Proving The Doubters Wrong 

 

When Miguel Santos arrived in Almaty, there wasn’t belief across the board. An untested Portuguese coach stepping out of elite youth football and into a title-contending senior side was always going to invite scrutiny. His ideas were clear, but there were understandable doubts about whether a possession-heavy, development-led approach could withstand the physical edge and expectations of the Kazakh league. 

 

Buy-in came through clarity and consistency. Players weren’t asked to reinvent themselves but they were instead given defined roles within a coherent structure. Standards were set early and senior figures were respected and trusted.  

 

As performances improved, results followed and scepticism quickly faded. A key part of that stability was the leadership group Santos established. Adilet Sadybekov and Temirlan Anarbekov emerged as strong Kazakh voices within the squad. João Paulo and Jorginho played an equally important role, bridging the gap between Kazakh and Portuguese speakers and ensuring communication remained unified. The dressing room felt aligned, culturally and tactically. 

 

Santos has also been transparent about the future. He has acknowledged that players such as Ofri Arad, Aleksandr Martynovich and Egor Sorokin may not form part of the long-term vision. Nonetheless that honesty never translated into exclusion. Each remained involved and contributed meaningfully throughout the campaign. It’s fair to say that Santos’ strength lies in his approach, which is measured, direct, and supportive. He is as much a man-manager as a tactician. 

Perhaps most significantly, he was unafraid to trust youth. Dastan Satpaev’s groundbreaking season was the product of real responsibility placed on young shoulders. Bekbolat, Bagdat and Baibek were also afforded genuine opportunities rather than token appearances.  

 

Miguel Santos in discussion with Damir Kasabulat and Adilet Sadybekov

 

Tactically, Santos refined his system as the season progressed. The asymmetric 4-2-3-1 became sharper, pressing triggers more defined, and European game management more measured. However, one minor criticism from sections of the fanbase centred on his reluctance to significantly alter the structure against elite European opposition. Against sides such as Arsenal and Manchester City, the team occasionally looked exposed, and some supporters felt a more pragmatic adjustment might have limited the damage. 

 

Talking Points 

 

The Kazakh Pivot 

 

One of the quieter developments across 2025 was the growing understanding between academy graduates Damir Kasabulat and Adilet Sadybekov. When paired together, the balance felt instinctive. Kasabulat anchored, screened and disrupted, while Sadybekov interpreted space intelligently, progressed possession and supported attacks without ever abandoning structure. 

 

What makes that partnership even more impressive is context. Kasabulat began the season as a natural centre-back, with little experience operating in a double pivot. Yet he adapted quickly, showing positional discipline and composure beyond his years. The conversation now stretches beyond club level. Both are 23, both technically secure, both tactically mature. Could this pairing become the long-term midfield reference point not just for Kairat, but for the Kazakhstan national team as well? 

 

Central Defensive Overhaul 

 

Success covered up what could become a significant issue. Aleksandr Martynovich’s leadership and organisational authority were central to the defensive stability in 2025, but succession planning can’t be postponed indefinitely. With external interest building around both Martynovich and Egor Sorokin, the possibility of departures feels realistic. Santos’ system adds another layer to the challenge. The left-sided centre-back role demands a naturally left-footed player comfortable progressing play under pressure. 

 

Complicating matters further, Damir Kasabulat’s long-term future is clearly in midfield. His development into a destructive presence in the double pivot removes what might otherwise have been a defensive solution. Taken together, the signs point toward the need for something close to a central defensive reset.  

 

Plan B for Europe 

 

The Champions League campaign exposed the limits of applying the same approach regardless of opponent. At times, tactical stubbornness left Kairat exposed against stronger, more ruthless sides. Against elite opposition, small structural imbalances were punished quickly, and control proved harder to sustain. 

 

Whether that means adopting a more compact defensive block in certain phases, introducing a secondary shape in transition, or using a more direct outlet when pressed aggressively, progression will depend. The identity should remain possession-led. But in Europe, pragmatism may be the difference maker. 

 

A Place for Returning Loanees? 

Sultan Askarov representing Kazakhstan U-21

 

Several loan spells demand consideration ahead of 2026. Centre-back Sultan Askarov impressed with consistent minutes and visible development, gaining the kind of defensive exposure that cannot be replicated on the training ground or as part of the B team. His comfort in build-up and improving physical presence suggest he could realistically compete for rotational involvement. 

 

Up front, Yan Trufanov’s spell away delivered valuable senior experience and sharper end product. While the pathway remains competitive - especially with Satpaev leading the line until he departs for Chelsea - added depth will be essential. Beyond those two, several other academy prospects have also been gaining minutes out on loan.  

 

Standout Individuals 

 

Dastan Satpaev 

 

Satpaev’s numbers define the season as much as any collective metric. Twenty-one league goals made him the division’s top scorer, arriving at a rate of one every 74.43 minutes. His 7.56 average rating was the highest in the league, and five Man of the Match awards prove how often he was the decisive figure. 

 

It really was the season of Satpaev. What separates him is mentality. The confidence and determination he carries are far beyond his years. He looks like a player waiting for a bigger stage.It feels inevitable that he is destined for the very top, and equally inevitable that, in time, he becomes the greatest player ever to represent the Kazakh national team. 

 

Jorginho 

 

Jorginho’s contribution was incredible even if it was somehow overshadowed by his strike partner. Eleven goals and eleven assists placed him among the league’s most productive attackers, but his importance ran far deeper than numbers – his versatility meant that he was an ever-present. 

 

Operating high and wide in the asymmetric system, he stretched defences without disconnecting from the collective. By holding width out of possession and drifting intelligently in transition, he gave Kairat balance and became a constant outlet who preserved shape while still influencing the final third. 

 

Aleksandr Mrynskii 

 

Mrynskii was one of the season’s understated successes. Seven assists only tell part of the story. His relentless energy down the right provided contrast to the more technically intricate left flank, giving the team vertical drive and tempo when matches threatened to slow. It’s hard to believe that he started the season at just 20 years of age. 

 

Miguel Santos holding a presentation on future transfers and league adaptation

 

An academy product with stamina to spare, he improved steadily as the campaign progressed. In a system built on technical ability, his directness and work rate added necessary edge, even when he was played in an unfamiliar right wing or central midfield role. 

 

Valeriy Gromyko 

 

If Satpaev finished moves, Gromyko often started them. He linked midfield to attack with intelligence and discipline, contributing goals and assists while covering ground defensively. Though the attacking midfielder looks to be off during the next transfer window, his time at the club will be remembered fondly. 

 

Across the 2025 campaign, his value lied in interpretation. He understood space, pressed with purpose, and rarely disrupted structure. Removing him from the side often made Kairat a less productive team, so whoever fills in for the Belarusian in 2026 will have a hard act to follow. 

 

Damir Kasabulat 

 

Kasabulat quietly established himself as the anchor. Initially a natural central defender, Santos identified his potential as a midfield destroyer and he became one of several options in the defensive midfield role. He grew into the position and made it his own through consistency and positional awareness. 

Damir Kasabulat representing the Kazakh senior national team

 

Combative without being reckless, disciplined without being passive, he shielded the defence while allowing the more creative profiles ahead of him to operate freely. In a possession-heavy system, his reading of danger was just as important as his work on the ball. 

 

The Importance Of Depth  

 

One of the most encouraging aspects of the 2025 season was how little the overall structure wavered, even when personnel changed. Kairat relied on a clear core group, but rotation was managed impressively. Injury spells for Zaria and Martynovich could have destabilised the side; instead, this was handled without a significant drop-off in performance or identity. 

 

The attacking unit, in particular, saw consistent rotation. The front four shifted regularly depending on form, fitness and opposition, yet the underlying principles remained intact. This flexibility made Kairat harder to prepare for, without sacrificing cohesion.  

 

Younger players were introduced carefully rather than hurriedly. Bagdat, Baibek and Bekbolat all received meaningful minutes, supported by a B team that finished second in its division. That alignment between first team and second team ensured development felt like a continuation of the same philosophy. 

 

Experience was managed just as thoughtfully. Tapalov, Zarutskii and João Paulo each contributed when called upon, providing stability and professionalism. 

Late-season arrivals Edmilson and Ricardinho had limited time to shape the campaign, but both expand the tactical palette heading into 2026. Ricardinho, in particular, showed flashes of technical quality that suggest his influence will grow considerably once fully integrated into the structure. 

 

Success On Every Front 

 

Kairat were crowned Kazakhstan Premier League champions, reclaiming domestic supremacy with authority. The campaign was reinforced early by a composed 2–0 victory over Aktobe in the Kazakhstan Super Cup, setting the tone for what followed. 

 

The season’s dominance was underlined again in the Kubogy Cup final, where a 4–0 win over Elimai removed any doubt about the gap between Kairat and the rest of the division. 

Countrymen Jorginho, Miguel Santos and Luis Mata

 

In Europe, qualification for the Champions League group stage marked a historic achievement. The campaign went further still, as Kairat became the first Kazakh club ever to win a Champions League group-stage match - a landmark result that shifted perceptions beyond domestic borders. 

 

What 2025 Taught Us 

 

The most important takeaway from 2025 is simple - the identity works. 

 

This group can control games. The technical foundation is strong enough to dominate domestically, and committing to youth development has not weakened competitiveness. The balance between structure and expression proved sustainable across a long campaign. 

 

Looking ahead, recruitment will reflect the system and filling in gaps. The focus is likely to fall on gradually lowering the squad’s age profile, introducing additional Portuguese-speaking technicians who align with the manager’s methodology, preparing for potential departures - particularly Sorokin, Gromyko and Martynovich - and, above all, preserving a strong domestic core. 

 

Then there is Dastan Satpaev. A campaign of that magnitude will draw attention. Managing interest, expectation and succession planning now becomes essential, as we already know his future lies in London. 

 

Finally, balancing domestic dominance with deeper European ambitions will stretch the squad physically and tactically.  

 

Next up: 2026 transfer summary and season beginning 

JoeMoon1506
7 years ago
1 week ago
1,446
Premium

5: 2026 Mid-Season Review - Steady Progress and Portuguese Influence 

 

From the initial 2026 season transfer window and early results to tactical adaptations and dominant displays, there are a number of significant storylines that have cropped up through the first 20 to 25 matches of the campaign. 

 

Now at the midway point of the 2026 domestic season, it’s clear this campaign so far has been about much more than reshaping identity. Following a significant summer exodus, a new generation has been handed responsibility. The focus hasn’t just been on replacing departures either, but on adjusting the squad’s profile to fit Miguel Santos’ system. The new group have been given time to absorb the demands of the Portuguese coach’s tactics – and so far their adaptation has been close to seamless. 

 

The summer window was hectic but importantly so. Experienced figures moved on to accommodate individuals with specialist profiles. Glazer, Zaria, Sorokin, Arad, Gromyko and Martynovich all departed, taking leadership and familiarity with them. In their place, the squad has adopted a bold new identity constituting a strong Kazakh core, complemented by carefully selected profiles built specifically for Kairat’s possession-dominant 4-2-3-1. 

 

Incomings 

2026 Winter Window incomings (L-R): João Queirós, Marco Antonio, Alibek Qasym, Alimardon Shukurov, Pedro Naressi, Pablo Baianinho, Kauã Freire, Gaston Lodico and Valter

Nine first-team players arrived during the window, each brought in with a clear purpose. The objective was to raise the technical level, bring the average age down, protect the domestic core and gradually weave in a stronger Portuguese-speaking influence that reflects Santos’ identity and style.  

 

The result is a group that feels refreshed and more intentional - younger, sharper on the ball and far better suited to the controlled, possession-heavy football Kairat want to play, So far, there have certainly been more hits than misses: 

 

Pedro Naressi (Ludogorets, £850k)

 

Having established himself in European competition with Bulgarian champions Ludogorets, Naressi arrived with experience of high-tempo continental football and a reputation as a disciplined defensive midfielder. The Brazilian had also previously faced Kairat in Champions League qualifying, making him a familiar profile to the recruitment team. 

 

Naressi touched down in January as the headline signing of the window, recruited to provide the midfield control Santos’ system demands. Six months on, his impact has been steady rather than spectacular, but undeniably important. 

 

Rotating frequently with Damir Kasabulat, both have formed an effective ball-winning presence at the base of midfield alongside Sadybekov. Offering strong defensive instincts and positional discipline, Pedro provides the stability that allows Kairat to control matches through possession while remaining protected against counterattacks. 

 

Naressi may not grab headlines, but his tactical awareness and calm presence in possession have helped stabilise the midfield structure.

 

Gaston Lodico (Instituto, Loan with Obligation)

 

Lodico arrived from Instituto in Argentina, where he had built a reputation as one of the league’s most technically gifted creative midfielders. A product of Lanús’ academy before establishing himself in Córdoba, he was known for his vision, composure and ability to dictate play between the lines. Earlier in his career, the playmaker had a brief, unsuccessful spell in Europe with Hungarian side Ferencvárosi TC, though clearly it did little to halt his progress before moving to Kazakhstan.

 

Lodico’s first months at the club have been interrupted by a few short injury spells, but whenever the Argentine has been available he has looked every bit the elite technician the recruitment team believed they were signing. 

 

Comfortable receiving between the lines and capable of unlocking defences with subtle passes and intelligent movement, Lodico has already elevated the team’s creativity during his limited appearances. His influence on attacking phases is immediately noticeable, giving Kairat a player capable of dictating tempo and manipulating space in the final third. 

 

If he can maintain fitness through the second half of the season, Lodico looks destined to become one of the team’s most influential players. 

 

João Queirós (Ararat Armenia, £650k)

 

Once considered one of Portugal’s brightest defensive prospects, Queirós developed through Braga’s academy and represented Portugal extensively at youth international level. After spells across several European leagues, he rebuilt his consistency with Ararat Armenia prior to his move to Kazakhstan. 

 

Queirós has quietly settled into the defensive unit since arriving in January. Reliable in possession and comfortable progressing the ball from the back, the Portuguese defender fits the tactical requirements of Santos’ system well. 

 

However, his performances have been solid rather than spectacular. While rarely making costly errors, he has yet to fully convince as an undisputed starter, and rotation during the second half of the season appears likely. There has also been some suggestion that the fee paid may have been slightly inflated given his overall impact. 

 

Nevertheless, Queirós remains a dependable presence and a capable option within the defensive rotation. 

 

Alibek Qasym (Aktobe, Free)

 

A Kazakh international and product of Kairat’s own academy, Qasym returned to the club after establishing himself domestically with Aktobe. His performances in the Kazakhstan Premier League had already earned him a reputation as one of the country’s most physically dominant defenders. 

 

Excellent in the air and fiercely competitive, Qasym has brought leadership and authority to the defensive structure. His performances have been consistently impressive both domestically and in international competition, often setting the tone with his intensity and commitment. 

 

Leading by example on the pitch, he has quickly established himself as one of the first names on the teamsheet and a cornerstone of the team’s defensive identity. 

 

Pablo Baianinho (Guarani, £600k)

 

Baianinho joined from Brazilian side Guarani, where his performances in Série B had begun attracting attention for his technical quality and attacking output from midfield areas. Still early in his professional career, he was viewed as a player with significant developmental upside. 

 

What was initially viewed as a project has turned into one of the most exciting stories of the season. 

 

Baianinho has been nothing short of a revelation since arriving, rapidly establishing himself as one of the team’s most dangerous attacking players. Technically sharp, intelligent in his movement and surprisingly clinical in front of goal, he has consistently found ways to influence matches. 

 

Far from simply developing in the background, the young Brazilian has emerged as a genuine contender for Player of the Season honours, massively surpassing expectations and proving himself a decisive contributor in the final third. 

Valter (Mafra, £350k)

 

Valter arrived from Portuguese side Mafra after emerging as a promising attacking talent in the Portuguese lower leagues. Already capped at senior level for Angola, he had built a reputation as a fearless winger capable of beating defenders in one-on-one situations. 

 

Valter’s first months at Kairat have been a mixture of promise and adjustment. The Angolan winger has already delivered some important goals and flashes of the explosive attacking ability that made him an attractive signing. 

 

However, he has yet to fully secure a starting place and has struggled at times with consistency. A slight dip in confidence has become noticeable roughly five months into his time in Kazakhstan. 

 

Interest from other clubs could potentially lead to a temporary move to aid his development, though the coaching staff remain convinced of his long-term potential. 

 

Marco Antonio (Bahia, £550k) 

 

Marco Antonio was recruited from Brazilian club Bahia, where he had been highly regarded within the club’s youth structure as a physically imposing left-footed defender. Despite his lack of senior experience, scouts viewed him as a player with significant long-term potential. 

 

Marco Antonio was always considered a longer-term investment, but his early development has been encouraging. Immediately sent on loan within Kazakhstan, the young Brazilian defender has impressed during his first few months of senior football. 

 

Strong physically and comfortable in possession, he has adapted well to the demands of the league and shown clear signs of progression. 

 

The expectation now is that he may be recalled and loaned again to a stronger club or a more competitive environment for the second half of the season as the club continues to accelerate his development. 

 

Kauã Freire (Portuguesa, Free) 

 

Freire was signed from Portuguesa in Brazil, where he had developed a reputation as a prolific youth-level forward. His physical profile and mobility made him an intriguing long-term option suited to the centre-forward role within Santos’ tactical system. 

 

Freire has spent the first half of the season on loan at Shakhtar Karagandy, where he has enjoyed a productive introduction to Kazakh football. 

 

The rangy forward has adapted well to the physical demands of the league and continues to develop within a competitive environment. With regular minutes proving beneficial for his progression, the decision has been made for him to remain at Shakhtar for the remainder of the 2026 season. 

 

The club view this pathway as the most effective way for Freire to prepare for future involvement in the Kairat first team. 

 

Alimardon Shukurov (Torpedo Zhodino, Free) 

 

Shukurov arrived from Belarusian side Torpedo Zhodino with experience across several Central Asian and Eastern European leagues. Known primarily for his versatility and work rate, he was initially viewed as a practical squad-depth addition. 

 

Shukurov’s time at the club proved brief. After making a single league appearance, the decision was taken to release the midfielder and allow him to find opportunities elsewhere. 

 

Santos was keen to free up the squad space in order to promote a younger academy player into the first-team environment, preferring to invest minutes in developing talent rather than retaining a depth option unlikely to feature regularly. 

 

Outgoings 

 

There was significant turnover during the window, as the Kairat board fully backed Miguel Santos in reshaping the squad to fit his long-term vision. The headline-grabbing Champions League exploits of 2025 only strengthened that belief, convincing the hierarchy that Santos is the right man for both the present and the future. 

 

Dan Glazer’s departure removed experience and leadership from midfield, but it also created the space for Pedro Naressi to step in as the system’s new defensive reference point. Giorgi Zaria’s exit created a pathway for Pablo Baianinho, whose development now becomes a key project within the attacking unit. 

 

At the back, the exits of Yegor Sorokin and Aleksandr Martynovich marked the conclusion of the previous defensive core. Ofri Arad and Aleksandr Shirobokov followed, freeing up rotational minutes.

 

Further forward, Valeriy Gromyko’s release allowed a tactical evolution in the attacking midfield role through Lodico’s profile and technical ability. Jug Stanojev’s departure was addressed directly with the arrival of Valter, a like-for-like positional replacement but stylistically aligned to Santos’ Portuguese preference.

 

Meanwhile, Ian Trufinov’s £115k sale represented efficient business on a striker who had become surplus to requirements. 

 

The average age has dropped, the technical ceiling has risen, yet the domestic spine remains intact. Players such as Kasanbulat Myrinskii and others within the Kazakh core are expected to play central roles throughout 2026, ensuring that while the profile of the squad has evolved, the identity of Kairat remains firmly preserved. 

 

Staff Incomings 

 

With Miguel Santos’ impact proving transformative after such a strong campaign, the moment felt right to reshape the structure around him. Coaching, scouting and medical departments were rebuilt from the ground up, with more than 15 new staff arriving to align the club fully with Santos’ philosophy. 

 

César Diniz arrives as Assistant Manager, bringing extensive experience from across Asia and a long-standing connection to Miguel Santos. Once a mentor figure in Santos’ early coaching development, the dynamic has evolved - with Diniz now stepping in as a trusted lieutenant within his former protégé’s project. The Brazilian is highly regarded for his eye for talent and his ability to nurture young players 

 

Dmitrii Ogai joins as Chief Scout, arriving from Atyrau. One of Kazakhstan’s most experienced talent identifiers, he will coordinate the expanding scouting network across Europe and South America, strengthening both domestic recruitment and overseas profiling. From a structural perspective, the appointment of Iurii Logvinnenko as Director of Football is significant too. Joining from Aktobe, he is a respected figure within the Kazakh game and will oversee football operations at executive level. 

 

Igor Slesarchuk, a Russian set-piece specialist, fills a previously unoccupied role. His appointment shows an intent to maximise marginal gains - particularly given the squad’s aerial strength and physical profile. In an attacking sense, Brazilian Igor Guerra further strengthens the coaching unit, valued specifically for his developmental work with emerging talent - an attribute central to the club’s long-term vision. 

 

Completing the upper-tier reshuffle, Leonel Pontes takes on the role of Technical Director. The Portuguese operator arrives with extensive experience, most recently enjoying a successful spell at Shanghai Shenhua, and was one of the most sought-after staff members secured during the rebuild. Finally, Lucas Goes steps in as Head of Youth Development. Highly regarded within both Portuguese and Brazilian football circles, his mandate is clear: elevate the academy pathway and ensure Kairat’s future remains internally sustainable. 

 

The Season So Far 

The current league table

The season began with a level of cohesion that arrived quicker than many expected, considering the busy window before it. Performances were controlled, structured and confident - not the erratic form of a side rebuilding, but one already comfortable in its new shape. 

 

The first real test came away in the Two-Capital Derby against Astana. It was cagey and frustrating with Kairat trailing 1–0 deep into the second half in a match that threatened to stall early momentum. Then Valter - one of the so-called “project” signings – came off the bench and struck late to rescue a point and send the away end into a frenzy. On paper it was only a draw, but it did wonders for collective belief. 

 

Santos followed with calculated rotation. Core players were rested and youth were given responsibility rather than cameo minutes for a stretch of easier matches. Tashpulatov delivered two assists from the left in one of his first starting appearances, strengthening his reputation as a devastating impact option from the bench. Returning loanee Omotai scored from range and dictated tempo with authority beyond his years. 

 

Early April brought the first major league marker - first versus second away at Tobol. The hosts struck early through a direct transition. Ricardinho responded quickly but Tobol regained the lead immediately after the break in a moment that could have bruised lesser sides. By full-time, the numbers reflected absolute control: 60% possession, the higher expected goals, and the better chances created. Pablo equalised late, assisted by Bekbolat, securing a 2–2 draw that kept the table tight. 

 

A subtle tactical refinement has played a key role in the evolution of the team since matchday 1. The attacking midfield role has been tweaked - less channel-running, more positional discipline. The emphasis has shifted towards a true advanced playmaker rather than a roaming connector, and that change has unlocked Ricardinho. His early goal return was modest, but his movement and assist output were consistent. As the structure sharpened, so did his finishing, making him a must-sign for the conclusion of his loan. 

 

The starting XI

Valter has quickly developed a reputation for decisive moments, including a long-range winner in a 3–2 victory over Orbassy and his late derby intervention.

 

Injuries have tested the squad’s resilience. Lodico’s two-month absence forced tactical creativity, compounded by young gem Orynbasar’s setback. Pablo responded emphatically, scoring a hat-trick away at Jenis - proof that raw talent, when trusted, can accelerate rapidly. Lodico’s return coincided with a 2–1 win over Atyrau, Bagdat scoring twice with trademark headers to underline the side’s aerial strength. 

 

Alongside the results, synergy between the first-team and youth squads continues to signal a bold long-term strategy. Azamat Tuiakbaev’s promotion and Shukurov’s swift contract termination reinforce a consistent theme under Santos - pathways remain open, but standards remain firm. 

 

Midway through the campaign, the statistical profile is impressive: 

 

  • Top of the league
  • 64% average possession (league-high; Astana at 57%)
  • Unbeaten in the league
  • 22 consecutive matches scored in
  • 49 goals scored
  • Just 11 conceded
  • 111 chances created (Astana second with 69)
  • 4 goals from indirect free-kicks

 

The Halfway Verdict 

 

There are still clear challenges ahead. Lodico’s influence within the new attacking structure will need to be measured, particularly as fixture congestion intensifies. Defensive cohesion must remain intact as rotation increases, and the next step in the title race will be turning control into decisive victories in tight matches. 

 

Beyond domestic competition, one of the biggest tests will come in Europe. Replicating last season’s Champions League run - and proving it was no anomaly - will define how this project is perceived externally. The element of surprise has gone. Kairat will now be analysed, prepared for and targeted. 

 

Discussion Points 

 

Tashpulatov’s Emergence 

 

One of the most encouraging developments this season has been the emergence of Daniyar Tashpulatov. Still only 19, the young wingback  has already started a number of matches and made an immediate impression with his relentless energy down the left flank and a delivery that consistently causes problems for opposition defences. 

 

What began as depth behind Luis Mata has quickly evolved into genuine competition for a starting place. Tashpulatov’s willingness to attack space and provide quality service into the box has added another dimension to Kairat’s wide play, and his performances suggest the club may already have another long-term contributor developing from within the squad. 

 

Satpaev’s Departure 

 

While new talents are emerging, the team is also preparing to say goodbye to one of its brightest stars. Dastan Satpaev is set to join Chelsea in August, bringing an end to a remarkable early chapter of his career at Kairat. 

 

At just 18 years of age, Satpaev leaves having already carved out an extraordinary legacy, playing a key role in the club’s recent success and becoming one of the most exciting young players to emerge from Kazakh football. Replacing a player of his profile will be one of the club’s biggest upcoming challenges. 

 

Whether that solution arrives through the free-agent market, a tactical adjustment such as moving Lodico into a left-sided role, or an entirely new signing remains to be seen. What is certain is that filling the void left by Satpaev’s creativity and influence will be a major task for the squad. 

 

Settling In

 

Despite impending changes, the overall picture within the squad is an encouraging one. A series of smart and creative recruitment decisions has brought balance to the group, leaving only a small number of positions requiring refinement before the focus can fully shift to developing the team’s long-term tactical identity. 

 

The core of the squad is now firmly established, blending emerging young talents with players already trusted within the system. With that foundation in place, attention can increasingly turn toward refining the ambitious tactical ideas that have begun to shape this Kairat side. 

 

Next up: 2026 overview

You'll need to Login to comment