Anatoly Fyodorovich Byschowez

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Anatoly Fyodorovich Byschowez

Anatoliy Byshovets ( Russian Анатолий Фёдорович Бышовец scientific. Transliteration Anatoly Fedorovic Býšovec , Ukrainian Анатолій Федорович Бишовець , Anatoly Fedorowytsch Byschowez , scientific. Transliteration Anatoly Fedorovyč Býšovec '* 23. April 1946 in Kiev , Ukrainian SSR ) is a Ukrainian / Russian football coach and former soccer player . In his active time as a striker in the 1960s and 1970s, he won the Soviet championships four times and the cup twice with Dynamo Kiev and took part in the 1970 World Cup. The greatest success as a coach is winning the 1988 Olympic football tournament .

Active time

Byschowez played for the Dynamo club from his hometown Kiev as a youth player and remained loyal to the club throughout his playing days. His first appearances for the first team in Kiev he had in 1964, his first goal in the Soviet league he scored in the 1965/66 season, but was only used in five games in the championship season. In the 1966/67 season he was able to play in the main team of Dynamo and the Soviet national team, he scored 19 goals in 32 league games and played a significant role in defending Kiev's title, as well as in the championships in 1967/68 and 1969/71. When he ended his active career in 1973, he had scored 49 goals in 139 league games. In addition to his club career, Byschowez also played very successfully for the national team of the USSR. Between October 16, 1966 and July 6, 1972, he came to 39 missions and scored 15 goals. He took part in both the 1968 European Championship and the 1970 World Cup. At the 1970 World Cup he scored four of his team's six goals.

Trainer / official

After his playing days, Byschowez remained loyal to Dynamo Kiev, he became a trainer of the club's own football school, and later coach of the club's youth teams. In 1982 he was coach of the youth team of the USSR, in 1986 coach of the Olympic team, which he led to the 1988 Olympic gold medal in Seoul. After the Olympic victory, Byschowez was head coach of Dynamo Moscow for two years before he was appointed as the last coach of the selection of the USSR in 1990. After the successful qualification for the European Championship 1992 , in which Italy could be left behind, the USSR dissolved, Bychowez also coached the successor team of the CIS until their dissolution at the end of the European Championship 1992 . He then coached the Cypriot club AEL Limassol in the 1992/93 season to become the national coach of South Korea , which he remained until 1997. In the 1997/98 season he trained Zenit Saint Petersburg . After failing to qualify for the 1998 World Cup, Byschowez became the coach of the Russian team , but he remained national coach for only a few months and was dismissed in December of the same year after a 5-1 home defeat against Brazil , the sixth loss in the sixth game during his tenure .

He then went to Shakhtar Donetsk , but was dismissed after the 1998/99 season, when only second place in the Ukrainian championship could be won with him. After his dismissal, Byschowez worked mostly as a coach and consultant for Russian second division clubs, it was not until 2003 that he was again coach of a European first division club, from Marítimo Funchal from the Portuguese island of Madeira . In 2004/05 he was the sports director of the Scottish first division club Heart of Midlothian before he was head coach of the Russian club Tom Tomsk for the 2005 season . His last job was Lok Moscow .

swell

  1. Statistics from national-soccer-teams.com (http://www.national-soccer-teams.com/php/player.php?id=20895 (link not available), English ).
  2. International match statistics according to the rsssf ( Soviet Union / CIS - Record International Players ; ( English )).
  3. "Anatoliy Byshovets fired" by Andrij Kudla Wynnyckyj, The Ukrainian Weekly of January 17, 1999 ({{Web archive | text = archive link | url = http: //www.ukrweekly.com/Archive/1999/039916.shtml | wayback = 20061219014612 | archiv-bot = 2018-03-29 16:50:34 InternetArchiveBot}} (link not available), English ).

Web links

Commons : Anatoly Fyodorowitsch Byschowez  - collection of pictures, videos and audio files