Oleksiy Mychajlychenko

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Oleksiy Mychajlychenko
Oleksiy Mykhaylychenko in 2016.jpg
Mychajlychenko (2016)
Personnel
Surname Oleksiy Oleksandrovytsch Mychajlychenko
birthday March 30, 1963
place of birth KievUSSR , Soviet Union
size 186 cm
position Attacking midfield
Men's
Years station Games (goals) 1
1983-1990 Dynamo Kiev 137 (39)
1990-1991 Sampdoria Genoa 24 0(3)
1991-1996 Glasgow Rangers 110 (22)
National team
Years selection Games (goals)
1987-1992 Soviet Union 41 (9)
1992 Ukraine 2 (0)
Stations as a trainer
Years station
1997-2002 Dynamo Kiev (assistant)
2002-2004 Dynamo Kiev
2004-2008 Ukraine U-21
2008-2009 Ukraine
2012-2013 Dynamo Kiev (assistant)
2019- Dynamo Kiev
1 Only league games are given.

Oleksiy Oleksandrowytsch Mychajlytschenko ( Ukrainian Олексій Олександрович Михайличенко , Russian Алексей Александрович Михайличенко / Alexei Alexandrovich Michailitschenko ; * the 30th March 1963 in Kiev , Ukrainian SSR ) is a Ukrainian football coach and former Soviet-Ukrainian football player . The offensive midfielder was a long-time national player of the USSR (41 games) and Ukraine (2 appearances). With the selection of the Soviet Union in 1988 he became Olympic Champion and Vice European Champion . Mychajlytschenko belongs to the successful Dynamo Kiev team in the 1980s , and won the Italian and Scottish championships with various clubs in the 1990s; since 2004 he has coached the U-21 team of Ukraine.

He was considered one of the best Soviet footballers in the late 1980s / early 1990s. In the Ballon d'Or votes in 1988, 1989 and 1991 he was the best-placed Soviet player, in 1988 and 1989 he was Ukrainian Footballer of the Years and 1988 Footballer of the Year in the USSR .

Career

Mychajlytschenko is a graduate of the football boarding school of Dynamo Kiev, 1981/82 he came to the first missions in the men's team of Kiev, but he was able to establish itself as a regular player only in the year the European Cup victory in 1985/86 and was in the summer of 1986 after a Einwechselung UEFA Supercup - Game against Steaua Bucharest for the first time in a European Cup final that was lost; as well as his second Supercup final in 1990 with Sampdoria Genoa against AC Milan . His achievements made top Western European clubs aware of Mychajlytschenko, in 1990 he moved to Serie A to Sampdoria, which had just won the European Cup and with which he was able to win the club's first Italian championship, but returned to the club after just one season left. His next stop was the Glasgow Rangers in the Scottish Premier Division , with whom he won the Scottish Championship every year before ending his career in 1996 after five years.

One year after retiring from active football, in July 1997 he became assistant coach of Dynamo Kiev under Valery Lobanovskyi , after whose sudden death he followed him in May 2002 as coach of Dynamo. Despite winning the Ukrainian championship in his first two years (2002/03, 2003/04), the club's management dismissed him in August 2004 because of a bad start to the season. Mychajlytschenko then coached the junior national team of Ukraine and in early 2008 succeeded Oleh Blochin as national coach of Ukraine.

titles and achievements

societies

National team

Personally

As a trainer

Individual evidence

  1. Matthias Arnhold Oleksiy Oleksandrovich Mykhailychenko - International Appearances on RSSSF.com , (English, visited June 29, 2008) .
  2. James M. Ross European Competitions 1985-86 on RSSSF.com , ( accessed November 28, 2007) .
  3. James M. Ross European Competitions 1989-90 on RSSSF.com , (English, visited November 28, 2007) .
  4. Michailitschenko inherits Blochin in Ukraine