Viktor Pozhechevskyi
Personal information | |||
---|---|---|---|
Full name | Viktor Oleksandrovych Pozhechevskyi | ||
Date of birth | (1951-02-04) 4 February 1951 (age 73) | ||
Place of birth | Poltava, USSR | ||
Height | 1.86 m (6 ft 1 in) | ||
Position(s) | defender | ||
Senior career* | |||
Years | Team | Apps | (Gls) |
Silbud Poltava | 0 | (0) | |
1974–1977 | Sputnyk Poltava | ||
Managerial career | |||
1981–1982 | FC Kolos Poltava (administrator) | ||
1986–1990 | FC Vorskla Poltava | ||
1994–1998 | FC Vorskla Poltava | ||
1998–1999 | Köpetdag Aşgabat | ||
1998–1999 | Turkmenistan | ||
1999–2000 | FC Naftovyk-Ukrnafta Okhtyrka | ||
2014 | FC Poltava (director) | ||
2015 | FC Poltava (honorary president) | ||
*Club domestic league appearances and goals |
Viktor Oleksandrovych Pozhechevskyi (Ukrainian: Віктор Олександрович Пожечевський; born 4 February 1951 in Poltava, USSR) is a Ukrainian professional football player and manager.
Career
He was a footballer of the Silbud Poltava, but by high competition has not played any match.
In 1984, he started his coaching career in FC Vorskla Poltava. In 1998, he coached the Turkmenistan national football team. Also he was a coach of the Köpetdag Aşgabat. Later he coached FC Naftovyk-Ukrnafta Okhtyrka.[1]
References
- ^ Віктор Пожечевський: Хвилювався, що пересварив тренера Динамо з футболістами - UA-Футбол
External links
- Viktor Pozhechevskyi at FootballFacts.ru (in Russian)
- Profile at KLISF.ru at the Wayback Machine (archived December 4, 2014)
- v
- t
- e
- Skrypchenko (1955)
- Zubrytskyi (1955–56)
- Zhyhan (1957)
- Lifshyts (1957–58)
- Zagretskiy (1959)
- Duhanov (1959–60)
- Zhyltsov (1964)
- Skrypchenkoc (1964)
- Balaba (1964–65)
- Skrypchenko (1965)
- Zhyltsov (1966)
- Aksyonov (1967)
- Alpatov (1968–70)
- Voynov (1970–72)
- Alpatov (1972–73)
- Nosov (1973–74)
- Vitkov (1974–76)
- Salkov (1976)
- Basyuk (1977–80)
- Aksyonov (1980–82)
- Putivskyi (1982)
- Pozhechevskyi (1984–90)
- Lysenchuk (1990)
- Pozhechevskyi (1990)
- Khodus (1991)
- Pozhechevskyi & Slyusaryev & Basyuk & Dyaczenko & Kryvenko & Lukash (1991)
- Koltun (1992)
- Dotsenko (1992)
- Brukhti (1992–93)
- Maslov (1993)
- Pozhechevskyi (1994–98)
- Dovbiy (1998)
- Sobetskyi & Shariyc (1998)
- Konkov (1998–2000)
- Morozov (2000–01)
- Bal (2001–03)
- Morhunc (2003)
- Dolmatov (2003)
- Morhunc (2003)
- Lozynskyi (2003–04)
- Muntyan (2004–05)
- Nosov (2005–07)
- Momotc (2007)
- Pavlov (2007–12)
- Yevtushenko (2012)
- Svystunc (2012–13)
- Momotc (2013–14)
- Sachko (2014–19)
- Kosovskyi (2019)
- Maksymov (2019–22)
- Skrypnyk (2022–23)
- Dolhanskyic (2024–)
This biographical article related to Ukrainian football is a stub. You can help Wikipedia by expanding it. |
- v
- t
- e
This biographical article relating to Soviet association football is a stub. You can help Wikipedia by expanding it. |
- v
- t
- e