Ilya Tsymbalar

Ilya Tsymbalar
Personal information
Full name Ilya Vladimirovich Tsymbalar
Date of birth 17 June 1969 (1969-06-17) (age 42)
Place of birth Odessa, Ukrainian SSR, Soviet Union
Height 1.74 m (5 ft 8 12 in)
Playing position Midfielder
Youth career
1977–1986 Chornomorets Odessa
Senior career*
Years Team Apps (Gls)
1986 Chornomorets Odessa 0 (0)
1987 Dinamo Odessa
1987–1989 SKA Odessa 83 (13)
1989–1993 Chornomorets Odessa 100 (14)
1993–1999 Spartak Moscow 146 (42)
2000 Lokomotiv Moscow 10 (0)
2001–2002 Anzhi Makhachkala 16 (1)
National team
1992 Ukraine 3 (0)
1994–1999 Russia 28 (4)
Teams managed
2004–2006 Khimki (assistant)
2006 Spartak-MZhK Ryazan
2008–2009 Nizhny Novgorod
2010 Shinnik Yaroslavl (assistant)
* Senior club appearances and goals counted for the domestic league only.
† Appearances (Goals).

Ilya Vladimirovich Tsymbalar (Russian: Илья Владимирович Цымбаларь) (born 17 June 1969 in Odessa, Ukrainian SSR) is a former Ukrainian and association footballer who played midfielder and coach.

At club level, Tsymbalar has played for Dinamo Odessa (1987), SKA Odessa (1987–89), FC Chornomorets Odessa (1986, 1989–93), Spartak Moscow (1993–99), Lokomotiv Moscow (2000), Anzhi Makhachkala (2001–2002). Tsymbalar was named Russian Footballer of the Year in 1995. He retired after the 2002 season with Anzhi Makhachkala.

For Russia, Tsymbalar has been capped 28 times, scoring 4 goals. He played for the country at the 1994 World Cup and Euro 96, where he scored a goal against Italy at Anfield. Beforehand, in 1992, he had played in three international matches for the newly formed Ukraine national team.

After retiring, Tsymbalar became vice-president of Anzhi Makhachkala, before turning to coaching by taking over Spartak’s reserve team, moving on to the coaching team of FC Khimki. In 2006 he became head-coach of FC Spartak-MZhK Ryazan, whom he led to promotion to the Russian First Division. In February 2008, he was named as head coach of FC Nizhny Novgorod. In January 2009 he resigned from the club.[1] On 22 December 2009 he was appointed an assistant of new Shinnik Yaroslavl coach and Tsymbalar's former teammate Igor Lediakhov.

His son, Sergey Tsymbalar, is also a footballer, having played in FC Chornomorets Odessa reserve team lately.

Honours

External links

References