Alexander Alexandrovich Kokorin

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Alexander Kokorin
Zenit-Slavia Pr (5) .jpg
Alexander Kokorin (2018)
Personnel
Surname Alexander Alexandrovich Kokorin
birthday March 19, 1991
place of birth Waluiki , RSFSRSoviet Union
size 181 cm
position striker
Juniors
Years station
2002-2008 Moscow locomotive
Men's
Years station Games (goals) 1
2008-2013 Dynamo Moscow 114 (19)
2013 Anzhi Makhachkala 0 0(0)
2013-2016 Dynamo Moscow 62 (22)
2016-2020 Zenit St. Petersburg 62 (17)
2020 →  FK Sochi  (loan) 10 (7)
2020– Spartak Moscow 62 (22)
National team
Years selection Games (goals) 2
2009-2019 Russia U21 17 0(8)
2011-2019 Russia 48 (12)
1 Only league games are given.
As of August 6, 2020

2 As of September 6, 2019

Alexander Alexandrowitsch Kokorin ( Russian Александр Александрович Кокорин , scientific transliteration Aleksandr Aleksandrovič Kokorin ; born March 19, 1991 in Waluiki , Russian SFSR , Soviet Union ) is a Russian football player in the position of a striker and winger .

Career

society

After five years with the Russian first division club Dynamo Moscow , where he became a regular player, he moved to the Dagestani club Anzhi Makhachkala in 2013 . After the club announced austerity measures, Kokorin returned to Moscow in mid-August in the same transfer period, without having played a competitive game for Anschi. He was also followed by Igor Denisov and Juri Schirkow .

In the summer of 2016, Kokorin moved to Zenit St. Petersburg . For the club from the tsarist city, he played 62 league games in which he scored 17 goals. In October 2018, Zenit St. Petersburg announced that it would take disciplinary action against Kokorin. Previously, video footage appeared showing how he and Pavel Mamajew from FK Krasnodar hit a department head of a Russian ministry with a chair on the head and hit him in the face in a cafe. Criminal proceedings have been initiated against both players. Both were in custody arrested and convicted Kokorin in May 2019 and a half years in a penal camp. In the appeal judgment of August 2020, the first instance sentence against Kokorin was confirmed. He resumed his professional activities after serving his sentence.

Kokorin's contract in St. Petersburg ended on June 30, 2019, the ban of the Russian Football Association officially lasted until September 16, 2019. At the beginning of September 2019, a regional court near Belgorod ruled that Kokorin and the others convicted will be released in September 2019.

In the 2020 season, Kokorin moved to FK Sotschi on loan .

National team

In 2011 he made his senior international debut for Russia; In 2012, team boss Dick Advocaat brought him into Russia's 23-man squad at EM 2012 in Poland and Ukraine . On September 22, 2012 Kokorin scored his first international goal in the World Cup qualifier against Israel .

On September 6, 2013 Kokorin scored the fastest goal in the history of the Russian national team in the World Cup qualifier against Luxembourg . The goal to make it 1-0 came 21 seconds after kick-off. In May 2014 Kokorin was accepted into the regular squad of the Russian national team for the 2014 World Cup in Brazil by head coach Fabio Capello . At the European Football Championship in France in 2016 , he was included in the Russian squad . In all three games he was in the first eleven. After the group stage, the team was eliminated in fourth place. Shortly after leaving, Kokorin was suspended from the national team after ordering champagne for 250,000 euros at a party in France. In autumn 2017, however, he was reassigned to the Russian squad. In March 2018, Kokorin suffered a ruptured cruciate ligament and missed the 2018 World Cup in his own country.

successes

Web links

Individual evidence

  1. Russia's Kokorin, Mamayev Investigated for Beating Government Official. In: si.com . October 9, 2018, accessed October 10, 2018 .
  2. a b Officials attacked in the café: Two Sbornaja footballers have to go to the prison camp. In: n-tv.de . September 6, 2019, accessed September 6, 2019 .
  3. Moscow City Court overturns sentences handed down to soccer players Mamaev, Kokorin. In: Interfax. August 3, 2020, accessed on August 4, 2020 .
  4. After the attack on Russian state officials: Soccer professionals Kokorin and Mamajew before release from the prison camp. In: Spiegel Online . September 6, 2019, accessed September 6, 2019 .