Valdas Ivanauskas

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Valdas Ivanauskas
Valdas Ivanauskas.JPG
Personnel
birthday July 31, 1966
place of birth KaunasLithuanian SSR , Soviet Union
size 187 cm
position striker
Juniors
Years station
until 1983 Vėtra Vilnius
Men's
Years station Games (goals) 1
1984 Žalgiris Vilnius 12 0(1)
1985-1986 CSKA Moscow 32 0(2)
1986-1990 Žalgiris Vilnius 83 (19)
1990 Moscow locomotive 16 0(7)
1990-1993 FK Austria Vienna 78 (28)
1993-1997 Hamburger SV 91 (13)
1997-1999 SV Austria Salzburg 35 0(7)
1999-2001 SV Wilhelmshaven 50 (16)
2001-2002 BV Cloppenburg 24 0(3)
National team
Years selection Games (goals)
1988-1990 USSR 5 0(0)
1990-2000 Lithuania 28 0(8)
Stations as a trainer
Years station
2001-2002 BV Cloppenburg (player-coach)
2003-2004 Lithuania (assistant coach)
2004-2005 FBK Kaunas
2005-2006 Heart of Midlothian (Assistant Trainer)
2006-2007 Heart of Midlothian
2007 FC Carl Zeiss Jena
2008 Banga Gargždai
2008-2009 Lithuania U-18
2009-2010 Standard sumqayıt
2010 FK Šiauliai
2013 FC Dila Gori
2013-2015 SKA Energia Khabarovsk
2017 Lutsch-Energija Vladivostok
2018-2019 Zagłębie Sosnowiec
1 Only league games are given.

Valdas Ivanauskas (born July 31, 1966 in Kaunas ) is a Lithuanian football coach and former football player .

Player career

societies

Ivanauskas' first club was Vėtra Vilnius from Rūdiškės, where he played in his youth. Via Žalgiris Vilnius , then playing in the highest Soviet league , he came to Moscow and played there for CSKA Moscow . Then he went back to his homeland and played for four years with his former club Žalgiris Vilnius, with which he won the Baltic League in 1990 , but then moved back to Moscow for the Lokomotive club . In 1991, when the Soviet Union had finally disintegrated, he went to Austria for FK Austria Wien . Between 1991 and 1993 he won the Austrian championship three times with Austria, and the cup in 1992. Ivanauskas was twice the club's top scorer, in 1993 one of his goals was voted “Goal of the Year” in Austria.

In 1993 Ivanauskas became the first player from Lithuania to join a club in German professional football. For Hamburger SV he played 91 Bundesliga games until 1997 , in which he scored 13 goals. Because of his hot, quick-tempered manner, he was nicknamed "Ivan the Terrible". A move to VfL Wolfsburg failed in 1997 due to an objection from his wife Beatrix, who could not imagine living in Wolfsburg . A move back to Austria followed, to SV Austria Salzburg . From 1999 to 2001 he played again in Germany at SV Wilhelmshaven , with whom he was relegated from the Regionalliga Nord to the Oberliga . He ended his career as an active player at BV Cloppenburg after a season as a libero for the then top division club.

National team

He made his international debut in 1988 for the national team of the USSR , for which he played five games. After Lithuania's independence, he completed 28 international matches (eight goals) for Lithuania's senior team .

Coaching career

Ivanauskas obtained his coaching license at the German Sport University Cologne in 2002 and worked in 2003 as an assistant coach for the Lithuanian national team during qualification for the 2004 European Football Championship in Portugal .

As a club coach Ivanauskas worked in the 2004/05 season at FBK Kaunas in Lithuania and then became assistant coach in Scotland at Heart of Midlothian . At that time, the Scottish association had a Russian-Lithuanian president in Vladimir Romanov and thus had close contacts in Ivanauskas' home country. After working as a coaching assistant to Graham Rix for a year , he became the interim head coach in March 2006. After winning the national cup and second place in the league, nobody doubted his abilities and Ivanauskas was finally head coach. However, he had to resign from this office in March 2007 due to ongoing health problems.

On September 21, 2007 Ivanauskas took over the Thuringian second division club FC Carl Zeiss Jena . However, he could not meet the expectations placed on him and was therefore released on December 22nd of the same year. After a brief engagement with the Lithuanian club Banga Gargždai , he took over on November 14, 2008 as interim coach of the U-18 national team of Lithuania. He held other coaching positions at Standard Sumqayıt in Azerbaijan, at FK Šiauliai in Lithuania and at FC Dila Gori in Georgia. From 2013 to April 2015 Ivanauskas looked after the Russian second division club SKA-Energija Khabarovsk .

successes

as a player

as a trainer

Awards

Web links

Individual evidence

  1. Matthias Arnhold: Valdas Ivanauskas Vatslavich - Matches and Goals in Bundesliga . RSSSF . June 7, 2018. Retrieved June 8, 2018.
  2. Experiment under wolves (www.berliner-zeitung.de, January 2007)
  3. ^ Roberto Mamrud: Valdas Ivanauskas - International Appearances . RSSSF . June 7, 2018. Retrieved June 8, 2018.
  4. Valdas Ivanauskas resigns from Heart of Midlothian (www.boerse-express.com, March 20, 2007)
  5. Valdas Ivanauskas is the new trainer at Jena (www.tagesspiegel.de)
  6. Jena provides coach Ivanauskas (www.sueddeutsche.de, December 22, 2007)
  7. HSV Fußball AG / Hamburger Sport-Verein eV (ed.): Offside: What is ... Valdas Ivanauskas doing? In: Official website of Hamburger SV. December 27, 2014, archived from the original on December 27, 2014 ; accessed on December 27, 2014 .
  8. Transfermarkt.de GmbH & Co. KG (ed.): Valdas Ivanauskaks. In: transfermarkt.de. Retrieved March 18, 2016 .