Yuri Yelissyeev

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Yuri Yelissyeev
Personnel
Surname Jurij Kostjantynowytsch Jelissjejew
birthday September 26, 1949
place of birth SverdlovskUkrainian SSR , Soviet Union
size 178 cm
position Storm
Juniors
Years station
Shakhtar Sverdlovsk
Men's
Years station Games (goals) 1
1968-1969 Shakhtar Sverdlovsk over 35 (15)
1970-1977 Zorya Vorozhylovhrad 125 (36)
1970-1976 Zorya Vorozhylovhrad II ? (35)
1978-1979 Krylya Sovetov Kuibyshev 55 (18)
1979 Krylya Sovetov Kuibyshev II ? 0(2)
1979-1980 BSG Motor Babelsberg 10 0(2)
1980-1982 BSG Motor Hennigsdorf 17 (12)
1982-1984 BSG Stahl Merseburg ? (38)
National team
Years selection Games (goals) 2
1972 Soviet Union 7 0(2)
Stations as a trainer
Years station
1996 Zorya-MALS Luhansk (Cotrainer)
1999-2000 Zorya Luhansk (cotrainer)
2000 Zorya Luhansk
2002 Zorya Luhansk
2003-2004 Ahata Luhansk
2012 SK Zorya Luhansk
2013– SK Zorya Luhansk (cotrainer)
1 Only league games are given.
Status: end of career

2 Status: end of career

Jurij Kostjantynowytsch Jelissjejew ( Ukrainian Юрій Костянтинович Єлісєєв , Russian Юрий Константинович Елисеев Yuri Yeliseyev Konstantinowitsch * 26. September 1949 in Sverdlovsk , Ukrainian SSR , Soviet Union , now Ukraine ) is a former Soviet-Ukrainian football player and coach .

Player career

Club career

Yuri Yelissyeev was born in Luhansk Oblast , where he learned to play football with Shakhtar Sverdlovsk . In 1968, at the age of 18, he was accepted into the men's team. This played at that time in the third-class Soviet Wtoraja League in Zone 2 of the Ukrainian SSR, where they reached a position in the middle of the table at the end of the season with 13th place out of 21 teams. Jelissjejew played 35 of 40 games. In the 1969 season, his team reached third place in the table and thus qualified for the Ukrainian promotion relegation, where they could only get a draw from five games and so as the bottom of the table through a league reform in which the 14 third division seasons were made three, even in the fourth class was relegated.

Then left Jelissjejew his hometown club and joined Sorja Woroschylowhrad to that in the first-class Wysschaja League played. The team reached fifth place at the end of the season, but Jelissjejew was still mostly used in the second team. In 1971 the team reached fourth place. In the following year, the team managed to win the Soviet football championship, which qualified them for participation in the 1973/74 European Cup. There Jelissjejew played all four games, in which they first defeated APOEL Nicosia 2-0 and 1-0 and then eliminated after 0-0 and 0-1 against Spartak Trnava . Seventh place in the league was reached this year. 1974 Zorya narrowly escaped relegation to the Pervaya League , as they only had a goal difference better than relegated Qairat Almaty by one goal . 1975 place ninth meant the safe middle field of the table. In 1976, both halves of the season were played individually, so there were two championships. In the spring season Zorya was bottom of the table, but since there was no relegation, the team was able to play in the first division in the fall, where they reached twelfth place. In 1977 Jelissjejew reached ninth place with his team.

After he was hardly used from 1976, he moved to the 1978 season in the RSFSR to the second division club Krylja Sowetow Kuibyshev from today's Samara . The team became champions and rose to the Wysschaja League. There were the relegated of the 1979 season Zorya and Krylya Sowetow.

As a result Jelissjejew left the Soviet Union and moved to the GDR for the second-rate DDR-Liga playing BSG Motor Babelsberg . The team was relegated to the district league and Jelissjejew moved on to BSG Motor Hennigsdorf . In 1982 this also got down and he switched to the lower class BSG Stahl Merseburg, where he ended his career in 1984 at the age of 34. The team had reached third place in 1983 and seventh place in 1984 in the third-class Halle district league.

National team career

In 1972 German Sonin became the coach of the Soviet national team . Under him, Yelissyeev was also a master with Zorya in the same year. Sonin called him to the national team, where he made his debut on June 29 in a 1-0 win against Uruguay . He made other games on July 2 in a 1-0 draw against Argentina and on July 6 in a 1-0 draw against Portugal . On August 6th, Sonin was no longer in office, but Alexander Ponomarev . He called Jelissjejew to a game against Sweden . This ended 4: 4, with Jelissjejew achieving the 1: 1 in the meantime. In the same month, the Summer Olympics began , where Yelissjejew was used in the first two preliminary round games against Burma and Sudan . Then the Soviet Union reached the second round, where he came on against Morocco and scored the 3-0 two minutes later. In the game for third place, which ended in a draw against the GDR , he was no longer used. The game against Morocco was his last national team appearance.

Coaching career

After his playing career, Jurij Jelissjejew was briefly co-trainer at his former club Zorya Luhansk , both in 1996 and from 1999 to 2000 , which changed its name several times during this time: from Voroschylowhrad to Luhansk, then to Zorya-MALS and back to Zorya Luhansk . The team played in 1996 in the Wyschtscha Liha , but was relegated and in 1998 even slipped into the Ukrainian third division. In April 2000 he took over the team as head coach, but could not bring them back towards promotion and was replaced in December. In the following season he was head coach again during the second half of the season, but the promotion failed again. A year later he was a season coach with the amateur team Ahata Luhansk. It wasn't until 2012 that he got his next coaching job when he became the head coach of the lower-class SK Sorja Luhansk, which only has the same name as its more famous counterpart. He has been co-trainer there since 2013.

successes

Web links

Individual evidence

  1. Table Wtoraja Liga 1968 Ukrainian SSR Zone 2 at wildstat.ru
  2. Table Wtoraja Liga 1969 Ukrainian SSR Zone 2 at wildstat.ru
  3. Table Wtoraja Liga 1969 Relegation to the Ukrainian SSR at wildstat.ru
  4. Table Wysschaja Liga 1970 at wildstat.ru
  5. Table Wysschaja Liga 1971 at wildstat.ru
  6. Table Wysschaja Liga 1972 at wildstat.ru
  7. Table Wysschaja Liga 1973 at wildstat.ru
  8. Table Wysschaja Liga 1974 at wildstat.ru
  9. Table Wysschaja Liga 1975 at wildstat.ru
  10. Table of the Vysschaja League spring 1976 at wildstat.ru
  11. Table Wysschaja League fall of 1976 at wildstat.ru
  12. Table Vysschaja Liga 1977 at wildstat.ru
  13. Table Pervaya League 1978 at wildstat.ru
  14. Table Wysschaja Liga 1979 at wildstat.ru
  15. According to transfermarkt.de , he played at BSG Chemie Buna Schkopau
  16. Tables of the Halle district league at spitzerwinkel.de