Aleksandr Borodyuk

Alexander Genrichowitsch Borodjuk (Russian Александр Генрихович Бородюк; born November 30, 1962 in Voronezh ) is a Russian football coach and a former Soviet and Russian football player. The former offensive player was the late 1980s, several top scorer in the Soviet League, as well as the early 1990s, scorer of Schalke 04 he played for the national teams of the Soviet Union and Russia, he took part in two World Championships and 1988 Olympic gold medalist with the selection of the Soviet Union. As a coach, he is usually employed as an assistant, but he was also from December 2005 to June 2006 transition coach of Russia.

Life

Borodjuk began his career at age 17 at second division Fakel Voronezh, after another brief stop at Dynamo Vologda he came in 1982 to the Soviet capital club Dynamo. Borodjuk won with Dynamo 1984 Soviet Cup, he became in the second half of the 1980s to the top striker of the Soviet league so that Western European societies were aware of him.

Borodjuk 1989 moved to FC Schalke 04, first in the second league, where he scored 29 goals in 61 games. He was the first Russian player, who moved to the Bundesliga. After the re-emergence in the Bundesliga, he completed until 1994 a total of 63 games ( 12 goals).

In the 1993/1994 season Borodjuk moved to SC Freiburg, for whom he played 20 games as a midfielder. His last year of football in Germany, he experienced, again as a striker in the 1995/1996 season at Hannover 96 before moving to Russia went back to Lok Moscow. In 1997, he won there the Russian Cup in 1999, he played one year for torpedo -SIL Moscow, around 2000 to let his career end with Krylia Sovetov Samara.

For the Soviet Union, he took in 1990 at the FIFA World Cup finals (1 game / 0 goals), as well as for Russia at the World Cup '94 (2 matches / 0 goals).

Since 2001 Borodjuk works as a trainer in his home; first to 2002. Krylia Sovetov Samara as an assistant to and since then as head coach of his native At first he was from 2002 to 2005 co- coach of the Russian national team, as after the non qualification for World Cup 2006, the current head coach Syomin was released, he took on a transitional basis until the beginning of the commitment of the designated successor, Guus Hiddink, the Office of the Russian national team and was also a regular U-21 coach of Russia. In early 2007 he switched from U-21 post back to the assistant coach items in the A- range.

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