Russian National Football Team Managers - Guus Hiddink, Oleg Romantsev, Valery Gazzaev, Georgi Yartsev, Yuri Syomin, Aleksandr Borodyuk (Paperback)


Purchase includes free access to book updates online and a free trial membership in the publisher's book club where you can select from more than a million books without charge. Chapters: Guus Hiddink, Oleg Romantsev, Valery Gazzaev, Georgi Yartsev, Yuri Syomin, Aleksandr Borodyuk, Anatoliy Byshovets, Boris Ignatyev, Pavel Sadyrin. Excerpt: Aleksandr Borodyuk Olympic medal record Aleksandr Genrikhovich Borodyuk (Russian: ) (born 30 November 1962 in Voronezh ) is a Russian football manager and former international player for USSR (playing one match in 1990 FIFA World Cup) and Russia (appearing twice in the 1994 edition ). Borodyuk attended the Fakel football school and spent one season with their senior team. He was conscripted to play for Dynamo Vologda and transferred to FC Dynamo Moscow a year later. When the conscription term ended, Borodyuk stayed in Moscow and later achieved the rank of junior lieutenant . With Dynamo he won the Soviet Cup in 1984 and became the top scorer of the Soviet League in 1986 and 1988. Valery Gazzaev, Igor Dobrovolsky and Igor Kolyvanov were among his teammates. In 1988 Borodyuk became Olympic champion . After Anatoly Byshovets became the manager of Dynamo, Borodyuk lost his place in the starting line-up and moved to Germany to play for FC Schalke 04, achieving promotion to the Bundesliga and ranking among the club league's topscorers from 1989-1993. In January 1994, however, he moved to SC Freiburg and finished third in the league in 1994-1995, although he appeared in only 7 league contests. In October 1995, Borodyuk changed sides again, joining second division 's Hannover 96 . He scored the 30,000th goal in the Bundesliga. Borodyuk returned to Russia at the age of 34 and was invited to FC Lokomotiv Moscow by Yuri Semin . With Lokomotiv he reached the semifinal of the UEFA Cup and won the Russian Cup in 1997. After stints with Torpedo-ZIL Moscow and Krylia Sovetov Samara, he retired aged 38, as a member of the Grigory Fedotov ...

R496

Or split into 4x interest-free payments of 25% on orders over R50
Learn more

Discovery Miles4960
Free Delivery
Delivery AdviceOut of stock

Toggle WishListAdd to wish list
Review this Item

Product Description

Purchase includes free access to book updates online and a free trial membership in the publisher's book club where you can select from more than a million books without charge. Chapters: Guus Hiddink, Oleg Romantsev, Valery Gazzaev, Georgi Yartsev, Yuri Syomin, Aleksandr Borodyuk, Anatoliy Byshovets, Boris Ignatyev, Pavel Sadyrin. Excerpt: Aleksandr Borodyuk Olympic medal record Aleksandr Genrikhovich Borodyuk (Russian: ) (born 30 November 1962 in Voronezh ) is a Russian football manager and former international player for USSR (playing one match in 1990 FIFA World Cup) and Russia (appearing twice in the 1994 edition ). Borodyuk attended the Fakel football school and spent one season with their senior team. He was conscripted to play for Dynamo Vologda and transferred to FC Dynamo Moscow a year later. When the conscription term ended, Borodyuk stayed in Moscow and later achieved the rank of junior lieutenant . With Dynamo he won the Soviet Cup in 1984 and became the top scorer of the Soviet League in 1986 and 1988. Valery Gazzaev, Igor Dobrovolsky and Igor Kolyvanov were among his teammates. In 1988 Borodyuk became Olympic champion . After Anatoly Byshovets became the manager of Dynamo, Borodyuk lost his place in the starting line-up and moved to Germany to play for FC Schalke 04, achieving promotion to the Bundesliga and ranking among the club league's topscorers from 1989-1993. In January 1994, however, he moved to SC Freiburg and finished third in the league in 1994-1995, although he appeared in only 7 league contests. In October 1995, Borodyuk changed sides again, joining second division 's Hannover 96 . He scored the 30,000th goal in the Bundesliga. Borodyuk returned to Russia at the age of 34 and was invited to FC Lokomotiv Moscow by Yuri Semin . With Lokomotiv he reached the semifinal of the UEFA Cup and won the Russian Cup in 1997. After stints with Torpedo-ZIL Moscow and Krylia Sovetov Samara, he retired aged 38, as a member of the Grigory Fedotov ...

Customer Reviews

No reviews or ratings yet - be the first to create one!

Product Details

General

Imprint

Books + Company

Country of origin

United States

Release date

May 2010

Availability

Supplier out of stock. If you add this item to your wish list we will let you know when it becomes available.

First published

May 2010

Creators

Dimensions

152 x 229 x 3mm (L x W x T)

Format

Paperback - Trade

Pages

56

ISBN-13

978-1-155-68127-6

Barcode

9781155681276

Categories

LSN

1-155-68127-4



Trending On Loot