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Valeri Lobanovsky

This article does not citeany references or sources. (December 2007)
Please help improve this articleby adding citations to reliable sources. Unverifiablematerial may be challenged and removed. Valeri Lobanovsky Personal information Full name Valeri Vasilyevich Lobanovsky Date of birth January 6, 1939(1939-01-06) Place of birth    Kiev, Soviet UnionDate of death    May 13, 2002(aged 63) Place of death    Zaporizhia, UkrainePlaying position Forward Youth clubs Dynamo KyivSenior clubs1 Years Club App (Gls)* 1957-1964
1965-1966
1967-1968
Dynamo Kyiv
Chornomorets Odessa
Shakhtar Donetsk
144 (42)
59 (15)
50 (14)    National team 1960-1961 USSR2 (0) Teams managed 1969-1973
1974
1975-1976
1976-1982
1982-1983
1983-1986
1986-1990
1990-1993
1994-1996
1997-2000
2000-2001
2001-2002 Dnipro Dnipropetrovsk
Dynamo Kyiv
Dynamo Kyiv, USSR
Dynamo Kyiv
Dynamo Kyiv, USSR
Dynamo Kyiv
Dynamo Kyiv, USSR
UAE
Kuwait
Dynamo Kyiv
Dynamo Kyiv, Ukraine
Dynamo Kyiv

1 Senior club appearances and goals
counted for the domestic league only.
* Appearances (Goals)

Valery Vasilyevich Lobanovsky - or Valeriy Vasylyovych Lobanovskyi - (Ukrainian: Валерій Васильович Лобановський, (January 6, 1939 - May 13, 2002) was a Ukrainian football manager. He is most famous for his spells managing Dynamo Kyiv, the Ukraine national football team, and the USSR national football team. In 1975 his Dynamo Kyiv team became the first side from the Soviet Union to win a major European trophy when they beat Hungarian side Ferencváros in the final of the Cup Winners' Cup. He was notorious for both his highly scientific and harsh disciplinarian approaches to management.

Contents

Playing career

Lobanovsky began his playing career as a left winger with Dynamo Kyiv, his hometown club, whilst with the side he won both the USSR league and cup. He spent seven years with the club before finishing his career with brief spells at Chornomorets Odessa, and Shakhtar Donetsk. Lobanovsky ended his playing career at the age of 29 having scored 71 goals in 253 games. He also earned two full caps for the Soviet Union and played in two Olympic games. He is most famous for his legendary ability to be able to score from corner kicks and his ability to curve the ball and place it where ever he pleased; His immense fame gained from this led him to take over as a coach for Dynamo Kiev.

Managerial career

A year after retiring as a player Lobanovsky was named as the manager of FC Dnipro Dnipropetrovsk. After four relatively unremarkable years with Dnipro, Lobanovsky moved to his former club, Dynamo Kyiv, before the start of the 1974 season, he would manage the side for 15 of the next 17 years (he spent 1983-1984 managing the USSR). During these two spells Kyiv were successful in breaking the Russian dominance of Soviet football. Lobanovsky led his side to the Soviet super league eight times, the cup six times, and the European Cup Winners' Cup of 1975 and 1986.

Lobanovsky also spent three spells managing the Soviet Union during this period. He took the side to the bronze medal in the 1976 Summer Olympics during his first spell. However, it was his third, and last, spell with the side that he gained the most attention. He was asked to manage the side on the eve of the 1986 World Cup. The side, which consisted mainly of his own Dynamo Kyiv players, finished top of their group, but were knocked out in the second round by Belgium 4-3 after extra time. The team did, however, achieve far greater success at the 1988 European Championship. The team again finished top of their group, beating the Netherlands on the way. However, they played the Dutch again in the final and failed to repeat their previous victory.

A monument to Valery Lobanovsky in front of the Dynamo stadium in Kiev

Following perestroika many of Lobanovsky's best players, for both club and country, left the USSR to play in Western Europe. Going into the 1990 World Cup he couldn't call upon his own Kyiv players to form the core of the side as he had previously done. His subsequent lack of ability to completely control his side led to the team finishing bottom of their group.

Following the debacle of the World Cup, Lobanovsky decided to leave Dynamo Kyiv and take up the lucrative offer of managing the United Arab Emirates national football team. After four relatively lacklustre years he was sacked and went on to spend the next two years managing the Kuwait national football team, before he was again sacked.

In January 1997 Lobanovsky returned to manage Dynamo Kyiv for a third time. The club by this time had fallen somewhat from their former heights. The club had been thrown out of European competition by UEFA following attempts to bribe an official, and the club was also struggling somewhat in the league. Lobanovsky, however, managed to turn the club around quickly. Aside from leading the team to five consecutive championships, Lobanovsky managed to turn the side into one of the best sides in Europe, reaching the semi-finals of the Champions League in 1999. He was made manager of the Ukraine national side in March 2000, but was sacked after the side lost a playoff to reach the 2002 World Cup to Germany.

Lobanovsky suffered a stroke on May 7, 2002, shortly after his Dynamo Kyiv side had beaten FC Metalurh Zaporizhzhya. He died on May 13, during brain surgery, following complications suffered after the stroke. At the Champions League final in Glasgow two days later, UEFA held a minute's silence in his honour.

After-death

Following his death Lobanovsky was awarded the title Hero of Ukraine, the nation's highest honour. Dynamo Kyiv's stadium was also renamed the Lobanovsky Stadium in his honour.

After his death, AC Milan won the Champions League in 2003 with Andriy Shevchenko in the team. After the victory Shevchenko flew to Kyiv to put his medal by the grave of his former manager.

External links

v • d • eUSSR squad- 1986 FIFA World CupDasayev • 2 Bessonov • 3 Chivadze • 4 Morozov • 5 Demyanenko • 6 Bubnov • 7 Yaremchuk • 8 Yakovenko • 9 Zavarov • 10 Kuznetsov • 11 Blokhin • 12 Bal • 13 Litovchenko • 14 Rodionov • 15 Larionov • 16 Chanov • 17 Yevtushenko • 18 Protasov • 19 Belanov • 20 Aleinikov • 21 Rats • 22 Krakovsky • Coach: Lobanovsky
v • d • eUSSR squad- UEFA Euro 1988Dasayev • 2 Bessonov • 3 Khidiyatullin • 4 Kuznetsov • 5 Demyanenko • 6 Rats • 7 Aleinikov • 8 Litovchenko • 9 Zavarov • 10 Protasov • 11 Belanov • 12 Vishnevsky • 13 Sulakvelidze • 14 Sukristov • 15 Mikhailichenko • 16 Chanov • 17 Dmitriev • 18 Gotsmanov • 19 Baltacha • 20 Pasulko • Coach: Lobanovsky
v • d • eUSSR squad- 1990 FIFA World CupDasayev • 2 Bessonov • 3 Khidiyatullin • 4 Kuznetsov • 5 Demyanenko • 6 Rats • 7 Aleinikov • 8 Litovchenko • 9 Zavarov • 10 Protasov • 11 Dobrovolski • 12 Borodyuk • 13 Tsveiba • 14 Liuty • 15 Yaremchuk • 16 Chanov • 17 Zygmantovich • 18 Shalimov • 19 Fokin • 20 Gorlukovich • 21 Broshin • 22 Uvarov • Coach: Lobanovsky
v • d • eUkraine national football team– Managers

Prokopenko (1992) • Pavlov (1992c) • Bazilevych (1993–1994) • Pavlov (1994c) • Szabo (1994) • Koñkov (1995) • Szabo (1996–1999) • Lobanovsky (2000–2001) • Buriak (2002–2003) • Blokhin (2003–2007) Mykhailychenko (2008–present)

(c) caretaker Categories: 1939 births | 2002 deaths | People from Kiev | Soviet footballers | Soviet Union international footballers | Soviet football managers | FC Shakhtar Donetsk players | Dynamo Kyiv players | Ukrainian footballers | Ukrainian football managers | 1986 FIFA World Cup managers | UEFA Euro 1988 managers | 1990 FIFA World Cup managers | Dynamo Kyiv managers | FC Chornomorets Odessa playersHidden categories: Articles lacking sources from December 2007 | All articles lacking sources

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