Ruslan Boryssenko

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UkraineUkraine  Ruslan Boryssenko Ice hockey player
Date of birth January 11, 1983
place of birth Chernihiv , Ukrainian SSR
size 184 cm
Weight 91 kg
position Defense
Shot hand Left
Career stations
1999-2000 HK Sokil Kiev II
2000-2001 HK Kiev
2001-2002 Windsor Spitfires
2002-2003 Bridgewater Bandits
2003-2004 HK Kiev
2004-2005 Kansas City Outlaws
2005 Crystal Saratov
2006-2008 HK Liepājas Metalurgs
2008-2009 DHK Latgale
2009-2011 HK Beibarys Atyrau
2011–2012 HK Donbass Donetsk II
2012-2014 HK Kompanjon-Naftohas Kiev
2014-2017 Association pour le Développement du Hockey Mulhousien
since 2017 CS Progym Gheorgheni

Ruslan Witalijowytsch Boryssenko ( Ukrainian Руслан Віталійович Борисенко ; English transcription Ruslan Borisenko * 11. January 1983 in Chernihiv , Ukrainian SSR , Soviet Union ) is a Ukrainian hockey player and coach, who has been in 2017 when CS PROGYM GHEORGHENI in the Romanian Hockey League is under contract and there is also head coach.

Career

Ruslan Boryssenko began his career as an ice hockey player at HK Sokil Kiev , for whose second team he played in the B group of the East European Hockey League at the age of 16 . 2000 moved to HK Kiev in the A group of EEHL. Then he moved to Canada. The Owen Sound Attack had drafted him in the CHL Import Draft in the second round as a total of 60th player, but he played for the Windsor Spitfires in the Ontario Hockey League . After a year in Windsor, he moved to the Bridgewater Bandits in the Eastern Junior Hockey League, where he also played a year. In 2004 he came back to the Ukraine for HK Kiev for a year, only to move to North America again a year later and play for the Kansas City Outlaws in the United Hockey League . After the Outlaws stopped playing in April 2005 due to legal disputes over a sponsorship contract, Boryssenko finally returned to Europe.

First he played with Kristall Saratow in the Wysschaja Liga , the second highest Russian division. During the current season, however, he went to HK Liepājas Metalurgs , with the 2008 Latvian national champion . After this success he moved to DHK Latgale , who at that time played as a Latvian club in the Belarusian extra league. When the team from Daugavpils ended this engagement after only one year, Boryssenko accepted an offer from the newly founded HK Beibarys Atyrau and moved to the Kazakh league. With the team from the city on the Caspian Sea , he immediately became runner-up and won the national championship title in 2011 . Then he went back to his homeland and played for a year in the second team of HK Donbass Donetsk , with whom he won his first Ukrainian title after the titles in Latvia and Kazakhstan . From 2012 to 2014 he played again in the capital with HK Kompanjon-Naftohas Kiev . After winning the national championship with the club in 2014, he moved to France where he played for three years with the Association pour le Développement du Hockey Mulhousien in the second-rate Division 1 and won the class championship in 2017. He then moved to Romania, where he has since played for the CS Progym Gheorgheni in the Romanian ice hockey league.

International

In the youth field, Boryssenko was initially on the ice for his home country at the U18 World Championships in 2000 and 2001 in the top division. At the U-20 World Cup in 2003 he was in Division I and rose with his team in the top division.

For the Ukrainian national ice hockey team for men, however, he was nominated for the first time in November 2012 for the qualifying tournament of the first stage for the 2014 Winter Olympics in Sochi when he was already 29 years old. Although the Ukrainians clearly won the home tournament in Kiev , it was not considered for the second stage of qualification. After the blue and yellow had no chance there, Boryssenko was considered again at the Division I World Cup 2013 . With his Ukrainians, he was promoted from group B to group A, from which the team had been relegated the year before.

Trainer

In addition to his playing career, Boryssenko has also been a coach at CS Progym Gheorgheni in the Romanian ice hockey league since 2017 .

Achievements and Awards

statistics

Seasons Games Gates Assists Points Penalty minutes
EEHL main round 1 8th 0 1 1 2
Extraliga main round 2 49 4th 7th 11 66
Latvian League 2 69 2 17th 19th 148
Kazakh League (Main Round) 2 91 4th 8th 12 79
Kazakh League (Playoffs) 2 17th 0 6th 6th 4th
PHL main round 2 58 2 20th 22nd 46
PHL playoffs 1 3 0 0 0 4th

(Status: end of the 2012/13 season)

Individual evidence

  1. Борисенко Руслан Витальевич Статистика

Web links