Igor Anatolyevich Ledjachow
Igor Ledjachow | ||
Igor Ledyakhov 2011
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Personnel | ||
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Surname | Igor Anatolyevich Ledjachow | |
birthday | May 22, 1968 | |
place of birth | Sochi , USSR | |
size | 188 cm | |
position | midfield player | |
Juniors | ||
Years | station | |
-1985 | SKA Rostov | |
Men's | ||
Years | station | Games (goals) 1 |
1986-1987 | Taganrog torpedo | 7 | (0)
1988-1989 | SKA Rostov | 64 | (1)
1990 | Dnipro Dnipropetrovsk | 5 | (1)
1991-1992 | Rotor Volgograd | 34 | (2)
1992-1993 | Spartak Moscow B | 3 | (2)
1992-1994 | Spartak Moscow | 65 (21) |
1994-2002 | Sporting Gijón | 206 (40) |
1998 | → Yokohama wing (loan) | 23 (15) |
2002-2003 | SD Eibar | 19 | (1)
National team | ||
Years | selection | Games (goals) |
1992 | CIS | 7 | (1)
1993-1994 | Russia | 9 | (0)
Stations as a trainer | ||
Years | station | |
2007 | FK Rostov (Sports Director) | |
2008-2009 | Spartak Moscow (youth and assistant coach) | |
2008 | → Spartak Moscow (Interim) | |
2009-2010 | Shinnik Yaroslavl | |
2011-2013 | Spartak Moscow (assistant coach) | |
2013 | Rotor Volgograd | |
2013 | FC Terek Grozny | |
2018 | Baltika Kaliningrad | |
1 Only league games are given. |
Igor Anatoljewitsch Ledjachow ( Russian: И́горь Анато́льевич Ледя́хов , born May 22, 1968 in Sochi ) is a Russian football coach and former midfielder . He was last head coach of the Russian first division team Schinnik Yaroslavl in 2009/10 , before that he was employed in various positions in the coaching staff of the record champions Spartak Moscow , including in the summer of 2008 as an interim coach for a few weeks. As a midfielder during the transition of the USSR he was one of the best players in Spartak Moscow, during his time there he won three consecutive Russian champions, 1992 Russian footballer of the year and took part in the 1994 World Cup as a national player . He then moved to the Spanish first division club Sporting Gijón , where he stayed until just before the end of almost a decade.
player
In 1986 he moved from his youth club SKA Rostov to the Soviet third division club Torpedo Taganrog for two years , before returning to SKA Rostov for the first time in the second Soviet league in 1988/89 and quickly becoming a regular player. In 1990 he played first class for Dnipro Dnipropetrovsk before he was signed to the dominant capital club Spartak Moscow after a short stopover at Rotor Volgograd during the transition from the Soviet to the Russian league operation. At Spartak was a very dangerous goal as a defender and won the first three Russian championships and was also a national player (first CIS then Russia ); he was part of the squad for both the EURO 1992 and the 1994 World Cup . After the World Cup, he moved to the Spanish Primera División for Sporting Gijón , where he was one of the stars of the team, before he was loaned to the Japanese club Yokohama Wings for a few months in 1998 . Back in Spain at Sporting Gijón, his sporting record was mixed, he was more noticeable for his lack of discipline: in 2000 he was suspended for six games for assaulting opponents and the referee and dismissed for violating the discipline of Gijón after a lawsuit against the club therefore the comparison was made for around 500,000 euros. After Gijón he played another season for the Spanish second division club SD Eibar before ending his career.
Trainer
In the spring of 2007 Ledjachow became sports director at FK Rostov . In 2008 and 2009 he worked in the coaching staff at Spartak Moscow, in summer 2008 he became the club's interim coach for a few weeks before Michael Laudrup became the new boss at the beginning of September . Shortly before Christmas 2009, the 1st Divisionist Schinnik Yaroslavl Ledjachow hired as head coach, but after the ninth matchday and 18th place in the 2010 season the contract was mutually dissolved due to unsuccessfulness.
Individual evidence
- ^ Andrei Moros: Ledjachow, Igor Anatoljewitsch. (No longer available online.) In: klisf.info . Club Ljubitelei Istorii in Statistiki Futbola, archived from the original on September 26, 2007 ; Retrieved January 6, 2010 (Russian). Info: The archive link was inserted automatically and has not yet been checked. Please check the original and archive link according to the instructions and then remove this notice.
- ↑ a b c Qué fue de… Lediakhov. In: 20minutos.es. October 15, 2008, accessed May 27, 2010 (Spanish).
- ↑ a b Igor Ledjachow. In: rusteam.com ( Memento from February 12, 2006 in the Internet Archive ). Retrieved January 6, 2010 (Russian).
- ↑ Ledjachow nasnatschen sportiwnym dipektorom FK Rostov. In: Gazeta.ru . March 6, 2007, archived from the original on August 4, 2012 ; Retrieved January 6, 2010 (Russian).
- ^ Anton Solomin: "Moskwa" or "Wolewuju pobedu nad" "Spartakom". In: Sport-Express . September 13, 2008, accessed January 17, 2010 (Russian).
- ↑ Michail Kontuev, Radmila Subjenko: Igor Ledjachow i Schinnik rastorgli dogowor po oboiudnomu soglassiu. (No longer available online.) In: Komsomolskaya Prawda . May 11, 2010, archived from the original on June 6, 2014 ; Retrieved May 27, 2010 (Russian). Info: The archive link was inserted automatically and has not yet been checked. Please check the original and archive link according to the instructions and then remove this notice.
personal data | |
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SURNAME | Ledjachow, Igor Anatolyevich |
ALTERNATIVE NAMES | Ледяхов, Игорь Анатольевич (Russian); Lediakhov, Igor |
BRIEF DESCRIPTION | russian soccer coach and player |
DATE OF BIRTH | May 22, 1968 |
PLACE OF BIRTH | Sochi |