Vitaliy Holubyev
Soviet footballer
Personal information | |||
---|---|---|---|
Date of birth | (1926-03-19)19 March 1926 | ||
Place of birth | Moscow, USSR | ||
Date of death | 25 March 1991(1991-03-25) (aged 65) | ||
Position(s) | Defender | ||
Senior career* | |||
Years | Team | Apps | (Gls) |
1946–1948 | FC Dynamo Luhansk | ||
1948–1950 | DO Kiev | ||
1951–1959 | FC Dynamo Kyiv | 158 | (0) |
1960 | FC Dynamo Khmelnytskyi | 6 | (0) |
1960 | FC Lokomotiv Vinnytsia | 13 | (0) |
1961 | FC Avanhard Sumy | ||
International career | |||
1956 | Ukraine | 3 | (0) |
1955 | USSR (unofficial) | 1 | (0) |
*Club domestic league appearances and goals |
Vitaliy Holubyev (19 March 1926 – 25 March 1991) was an association footballer from the former Soviet Union who played for FC Dynamo Kyiv.
In 1956 Holubyev played couple of games for Ukraine at the Spartakiad of the Peoples of the USSR.[1]
References
- ^ Football at the 1956 Spartakiad of the Peoples of USSR
External links
- Vitaliy Holubyev at FootballFacts.ru (in Russian)
- v
- t
- e
the Ukrainian SSR
(and predecessors)
- 1922: Privalov
- 1923: Privalov
- 1924: Norov
- 1925: Privalov
- 1926: Privalov
- 1927: Privalov
- 1928: Babkin
- 1929: Piontkowski
- 1930: Piontkowski
- 1931: Piontkowski
- 1932: Babkin
- 1933: Shchegotsky
- 1934: Idzkovsky
- 1935: Shylovsky
- 1936: Shchegotsky
- 1937: Komarov
- 1938: Honcharenko
- 1939: Kuzmenko
- 1940: Laiko
- 1944: Makhynia
- 1945: Idzkovsky
- 1946: Vinkovatov
- 1947: Vinkovatov
- 1948: Vinkovatov
- 1949: Borzenko
- 1950: Fomin
- 1951: Ponomaryov
- 1952: Holubyev
- 1953: Borzenko
- 1954: Fomin
- 1955: Koman
- 1956: Koman
- 1957: Voynov
- 1958: Voynov
- 1959: Voynov
(Komsomolskoye Znamia)
- 1960: Voynov
- 1961: Makarov
- 1962: Lobanovskyi
- 1963: Lobanovskyi
- 1964: Bannikov
- 1965: Khmelnytskyi
- 1966: Biba
- 1967: Turyanchyk
- 1968: Turyanchyk & Muntyan
- 1969: Serebryanikov
- 1970: Muntyan
- 1971: Rudakov
- 1972: Blokhin
- 1973: Blokhin
- 1974: Blokhin
- 1975: Blokhin
- 1976: Blokhin
- 1977: Blokhin
- 1978: Blokhin
- 1979: Starukhin
- 1980: Blokhin
- 1981: Blokhin
- 1982: Demyanenko
- 1983: Taran
- 1984: Lytovchenko
- 1985: Demyanenko
- 1986: Zavarov
- 1987: Mykhaylychenko
- 1988: Mykhaylychenko
- 1989: Bezsonov
- 1990: Yuran
- 1991: Tsveiba
- 1992: Leonenko
- 1993: Leonenko
- 1994: Leonenko
- 1995: Kalitvintsev
- 1996: Rebrov
- 1997: Shevchenko
- 1998: Rebrov
- 1999: Shevchenko
- 2000: Shevchenko
- 2001: Shevchenko
- 2002: Tymoshchuk
- 2003: Venhlinskyi
- 2004: Shevchenko
- 2005: Shevchenko
- 2006: Tymoshchuk
- 2007: Tymoshchuk
- 2008: Milevskyi
- 2009: Milevskyi
- 2010: Konoplyanka
- 2011: Voronin
- 2012: Konoplyanka
- 2013: Yarmolenko & Konoplyanka
- 2014: Yarmolenko
- 2015: Yarmolenko
- 2016: Rotan
- 2017: Yarmolenko
(MVP of Ukrainian clubs)
- 1988: Mykhaylychenko
- 1989: Kudrytsky
- 1990: Lytovchenko
- 1991: Tsymbalar
(MVP of the Vyshcha Liha)
- 1992: Martinkėnas
- 1993: Leonenko
- 1994: Suslov
(MVP of the UPL)
- 1995: Kalitvintsev
- 1996: Rebrov
- 1997: Shevchenko
- 1998: Rebrov
- 1999: Rebrov
- 2000: Vorobey
- 2001: Byalkevich
- 2002: Tymoshchuk
- 2003: Byalkevich
- 2004: Rykun
- 2005: Husiev
- 2006: Nazarenko
- 2007: Nazarenko
- 2008: Jajá Coelho
- 2009: Milevskyi
- 2010: Pyatov
- 2011: Yarmolenko
- 2012: Mkhitaryan
- 2013: Konoplyanka
- 2014: Yarmolenko
- 2015: Teixeira
- 2016: Marlos
(MVP of the UPL)
- 2016: Yarmolenko
- 2017: Marlos
- 2018: Marlos
- 2019: Taison
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