Alexander Genrichowitsch Borodjuk

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Alexander Borodyuk
Aleksandr Borodyuk 2011.jpg
Alexander Borodjuk (2011)
Personnel
Surname Alexander Genrichowitsch Borodjuk
birthday November 30, 1962
place of birth VoronezhRussian SFSR , Soviet Union
size 184 cm
position Attack , midfield
Men's
Years station Games (goals) 1
1979 Fakel Voronezh 0 0(0)
1980-1981 Dynamo Vologda 58 (12)
1982-1989 FK Dynamo Moscow 187 (57)
1989-1993 FC Schalke 04 124 (41)
1994-1995 Sc freiburg 20 0(2)
1996 Hannover 96 16 0(3)
1997-1999 Moscow locomotive 32 (13)
1999 Torpedo SIL 12 0(1)
2000 Krylya Sovetov Samara 20 0(1)
National team
Years selection Games (goals)
1987-1991 Soviet Union 13 0(2)
1992-1994 Russia 8 0(4)
Stations as a trainer
Years station
2001-2002 Krylya Sovetov Samara
2002-2005 Russia (interim)
2005-2006 Russia (assistant coach)
2005-2007 Russia U-21
2007–2012 Russia (assistant coach)
2012 FK Dynamo Moscow
2013-2014 Torpedo Moscow
2016 FK Qairat Almaty
2017-2018 Kazakhstan
2020– SV Horn
1 Only league games are given.

Alexander Genrichowitsch Borodjuk ( Russian Александр Генрихович Бородюк ; born November 30, 1962 in Voronezh ) is a former Russian football player and now coach . He played for the national teams of the Soviet Union and Russia , with whom he participated in two world championships. In addition, he was Olympic champion in 1988 with the selection of the Soviet Union . He has been the coach of SV Horn since the 2020/21 season .

Career

As a player

society

Borodjuk began his career at the age of 17 with the second division team Fakel Voronezh , after another brief stint at Dynamo Vologda , he joined the Soviet capital club Dynamo in 1982 . Borodjuk won the Soviet Cup with Dynamo in 1984 , he developed into the top striker of the Soviet league in the second half of the 1980s, so that Western European clubs took notice of him.

Borodjuk moved to FC Schalke 04 in 1989 , initially in the 2nd division , where he scored 29 goals in 61 games. He was the first Russian player to move to the Bundesliga. After returning to the Bundesliga , he played a total of 63 games (12 goals) there until 1994.

In the 1993/1994 season Borodjuk moved to SC Freiburg , for which he played 20 games as a midfielder . He experienced his last football year in Germany, again as a striker, in the 1995/1996 season at Hannover 96 , before he went back to Russia for Lok Moscow . In 1997 he won the Russian Cup there, in 1999 he played for a year for Torpedo-SIL Moscow , in order to end his career with Krylja Sowetow Samara in 2000 .

National team

For the Soviet Union he took part in the 1990 soccer World Cup (1 game / 0 goals), as well as for Russia in the '94 World Cup (2 games / 0 goals).

As a trainer

Since 2001 Borodjuk worked as a trainer in his home country; first until 2002 as an assistant to Krylja Sowetow Samara and then as an association trainer in his homeland. First he was assistant coach of the Russian national team from 2002 to 2005 , when the previous head coach Sjomin was dismissed after the non-qualification for the 2006 World Cup , he temporarily took over the office of the Russian national coach until the beginning of the engagement of the designated successor Guus Hiddink and at the same time became more regular U-21 coach of Russia. In early 2007 he moved from the U-21 post back to the assistant coach position of the A selection. From January 2016 he coached FK Qairat Almaty from Kazakhstan , which is one of the most successful clubs in the Premjer League . After three games, the club dismissed Borodjuk again.

For the 2020/21 season he was coach of the Austrian second division club SV Horn .

Web links

Commons : Aleksandr Borodyuk  - collection of pictures, videos and audio files

Individual evidence

  1. +++ Breaking News +++ svhorn.at, on August 11, 2020, accessed on August 11, 2020