Yevgeny Yuryevich Pashutin

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Basketball player
Yevgeny Pashutin
Evgeniy Pashutin.jpg
Player information
Full name Yevgeny Yuryevich Pashutin
birthday February 6, 1969
place of birth Sochi, Soviet Union
size 190 cm
position Point guard
Clubs as active
1988–1991 BK Spartak Saint Petersburg 1991–1992 Impulse Krasnodar 1993–1994 Avtodor Saratow 1994–1995 MBK Dynamo Moscow 1995–1999 Avtodor Saratow 1999–2000 Maccabi Ra'anana 2000–2002 UNICS Kazan 2002–2003 PBK CSKA MoscowSoviet UnionSoviet Union
RussiaRussia
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IsraelIsrael
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National team
1993-2002 Russia
Clubs as coaches
2003–2008 CSKA Moscow (youngsters / AC ) 2004–2006 Russia ( U20 ) 2006–2008 Russia (AC) 2008–2009 BK Spartak Saint Petersburg 2009–2010 CSKA Moscow 2010–2012 UNICS Kazan 2012–2014 Kuban Krasnodar locomotive 2014–2017 UNICS Kazan 2017 Wisconsin Herd 2017–2018 Awtodor Saratow Since 2018 Red October CantùRussiaRussia
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0ItalyItaly
Yevgeny Yuryevich Pashutin medal table

Basketball (men)

Russia
World Championship
silver 1994 Toronto
European Championship
bronze 1997 Catalonia

Yevgeny Jurjewitsch Pashutin ( Russian Евгений Юрьевич Пашутин ; born February 6, 1969 in Sochi , RSFSR ) is a Russian basketball coach and former national player . Paschutin was only active as a player for one year in Israel for Russian clubs and at the end of his playing career he won the Russian championship in 2003 with PBK CSKA from Moscow . With the Russian national team he became vice world champion as a player in 1994 and won a bronze medal at the 1997 European championship . As a coach, he became European champion with the Russian Juniors in 2005 and as an assistant coach for the men in 2007, with CSKA Moscow he won the Russian double as head coach in 2010 and the first edition of the VTB United League as well as with UNICS from Kazan in 2011 and Lok Kuban from Krasnodar in 2013 ULEB Eurocup . His career is closely linked to that of his five years younger brother Sachar Paschutin , with whom he played for a long time and whom he himself trained at UNICS between 2010 and 2012.

Player career

Club career (1988 to 2003)

With Spartak from Saint Petersburg , Yevgeny Pashutin was runner-up in 1991 in the Soviet Union . While his five-year-old brother, who had just completed his first appearances in the first team of Spartak, stayed with this club, he moved to Impuls in Krasnodar for the 1991/92 season . In 1993 the brothers found each other again at Awtodor in Saratov and in 1994 they won the runner-up behind the series champions CSKA. Yevgeni then played in the 1994/95 season for MBK Dynamo Moscow , with whom he was again runner-up. From 1995 they played again together with Avtodor Saratov and after a third place in 1996 they won the runner-up behind the series champion CSKA three times in a row. Most of the European club competitions were eliminated prematurely. In 1998 they reached the semi-finals in the then EuroCup , in which they were defeated by the later title holder Žalgiris Kaunas . In the following season 1998/99 you were allowed to start in the then FIBA Europaliga , but retired in the first group stage after three wins in sixteen games. In 1999, the two brothers parted ways when they both moved abroad.

In the 1999/00 season Yevgeny Paschutin played for Maccabi from Ra'anana . With this club he reached the runner-up behind series champion Maccabi Tel Aviv in Israel together with Kelly McCarty, among others . For the season 2000/01 he returned to Russia and played for UNICS from Kazan, with whom he was twice again Russian runner-up behind Ural Great Perm . In the 2002/03 season, Yevgeny moved to CSKA, where his brother Sakhar already played, and both won their first Russian championship after defeating defending champions Ural Great in the final series. While Yevgeny ended his playing career, Sakhar was loaned out for one season to the final loser Ural Great.

National team (1993 to 2002)

At the basketball world championship in 1994 Yevgeny Pashutin was used for the first time in a final squad of the Russian national team . In the second round you lost a game against the national basketball team of the United States, which was the first to compete in a world championship with NBA professionals . After a narrow semi-final victory over Croatia , they lost the final game against the US selection again and won the silver medal. Paschutin got hardly any playing time in the national team squad, which was strong in his positions with Sergei Basarewitsch , Sergei Babkov and the two years younger Vasily Karassjow , who had also started his career at Spartak Saint Petersburg, and was only used in five of eight tournament games. At the 1995 European basketball championship , there were only two short appearances before the placement round. It was only after missing qualification for the 1996 Olympic Games that Pashutin were used for 33 minutes in the final win in the game for seventh place against France .

At the 1997 European Championship , his brother Sachar was also represented in the squad for the first time. After losing to Italy in the semi-finals , they won the bronze medal in the game for third place against Greece , against which they had lost in the preliminary round. Yevgeny Pashutin only got a limited time in this tournament and was not represented at the following World Cup in 1998 , where Russia again won silver. At the EM 1999 Babkow was no longer used after the preliminary round and Yevgeny was in the three games of the intermediate round with more than 30 minutes playing time per game. In the final intermediate round win over the defending champions BR Yugoslavia (Serbia and Montenegro) who had already qualified as group winners for the final round , Yevgeni narrowly missed a double-double with 9 points, 10 assists and 4 steals . In the quarter-finals, in which he was only used for a few minutes, Italy clearly defeated and after a victory in the placement round over Germany ended up in sixth place, which was also the last qualifying place for the Olympic Games.

Under the new national coach Stanislaw Jerjomin , the Pashutin brothers were always represented in the following final squads. Due to the poorer direct comparison , they only reached fourth place in the preliminary round group B at the 2000 Olympic Games and after a quarter-final defeat against the US selection, which again won the gold medal as the defending champion, from the medal award. In the end, they finished eighth after losing twice over against Canada . At the EM 2001 , after two convincing first wins, they only lost the last, rather insignificant preliminary round match against Italy and the quarter-finals against the later bronze medalist Spain . After two more wins in the placement round, they came in fifth and qualified for the 2002 World Cup . Yevgeny Paschutin was now with over 30 minutes playing time in both tournaments of the starting five - point guard in the national team.

At the 2002 World Cup they lost in the preliminary round against the surprise team of the tournament and later semi-finalists New Zealand and against eventual world champions Argentina . In the second round, there were two more defeats against hosts United States and the eventual bronze medalist Germany. Yevgeni got from the outgoing coach Yeryomin in the two rather insignificant placement games that ended in tenth place, again significant playing time and ended his playing career after the following season.

Coaching career

Junior and assistant coach (2003 to 2008)

After his playing career, Yevgeny Paschutin was first a junior coach at CSKA in 2003 and then from 2004 assistant initially to Dušan Ivković and later to Ettore Messina in the first men's team. In addition, he took over the Russian junior national team from 2004 and won the first European championship title in this age group for Russia with this team in 2005, as he had announced before the tournament. After a tenth place in the following edition of this competition, he gave up this position and also became assistant coach of the men's national team under the new national coach David Blatt , with whom they surprisingly won the title for Russia at the 2007 European Championship .

In the CSKA club, his brother Sachar returned to the CSKA team after the year in Ural Great in Perm 2004 and together they continued to win all Russian championships until 2008, including the Russian cup competitions up to 2008. After they were able to achieve a fourth place together as a player in the highest ranking European club competition ULEB Euroleague , which had replaced the FIBA ​​Europaliga, in 2003, this placement was repeated in 2005. In the ULEB Euroleague 2005/06 , this competition was finally won in the final against Maccabi Tel Aviv for the first time since the start of the organization by the ULEB and thus won the triple . In 2007 the defending champion lost the final against Panathinaikos , while in the ULEB Euroleague 2007/08 final opponent Maccabi Tel Aviv could again defeat. Then both brothers left CSKA Moscow and went back to Spartak Saint Petersburg, where they started their careers. Yevgeny Pashutin became head coach and Sakhar continued his career as a player at Spartak.

Club coach (since 2008)

In the Russian championship 2008/09 they were eliminated with Spartak Saint Petersburg in the semifinals against runner-up BK Chimki and Yevgeny Paschutin succeeded Ettore Messina at CSKA in the 2009/10 season. After three defeats in three games of the intermediate round, they won again the Russian championship and the Russian cup competition without defeats in the play-offs . The first regular staging of the Eastern European VTB United League was also won after only one preliminary round defeat at Žalgiris Kaunas in the final against UNICS Kazan. In the ULEB Euroleague 2009/10 , however, they were only third after a narrow extension win against KK Partizan Belgrade , whose coach Duško Vujošević succeeded Paschutin at CSKA. Paschutin, on the other hand, switched as a coach to the VTB final opponent UNICS Kazan, for whom he was already active as a player from 2000 to 2002.

His brother Sakhar followed Yevgeny Paschutin in 2010 as a player to UNICS Kazan and together they won the main round of the newly founded Russian top division Professionalnaja Basketbolnaja Liga , but then dropped out in the play-off semi-final series against runner-up BK Chimki . In the second most important European club competition Eurocup 2010/11 , however, they were victorious and Yevgeny Paschutin celebrated his first title win as head coach in a continental club competition. By winning the Eurocup, the club started in the ULEB Euroleague 2011/12 . Although he was still a junior national coach himself five years earlier, his squad for the European league season with his brother, Kelly McCarty, Alexei Sawrasenko and Pyotr Samoilenko, had assembled a number of his mid-thirties with whom he had played together during his time as a player in a club or national team. Nevertheless, they immediately reached the quarter-final play-offs against the Spanish champions Regal FC Barcelona , but they were lost in three games. In the VTB United League 2011/12 they reached the final after winning the group, which was lost to the other group winners CSKA Moscow. In the Russian championship, however, in the PBL 2011/12, after a weak main round, only the placement round, where you could still fight for fifth place. Then Pashutin moved to Lokomotiv Kuban in Krasnodar for the following season . With this club he won the Eurocup 2012/13 and thus his second title in this competition, which also meant qualification for the ULEB Euroleague 2013/14 . At the end of the 2013/14 season, the contract with Paschutin in Krasnodar was not renewed and he took over as coach of the Russian national basketball team. In November 2014 he was re-signed by his old club UNICS Kazan.

successes

As a player

  • Silver medalist World Cup 1994
  • Bronze medalist EM 1997
  • Champion Russia 2003

As a trainer

  • Winner Eurocup 2011, 2013
  • Champion Russia 2010
  • Winner VTB United League 2010

Web links

Individual evidence

  1. Pashutin - We can win in Europe. FIBA Europa , May 28, 2005, accessed November 9, 2011 .