Boris Razinsky

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Boris Razinsky
Personal information
Full nameBoris Davidovich Razinsky
Date of birth(1933-07-12)July 12, 1933
Place of birthLyubertsy, USSR
Date of death6 August 2012(2012-08-06) (aged 79)
Place of deathMoscow, Russia
Playing positionGoalkeeper/Striker
Youth career
Pishchevik Tula
Senior career*
YearsTeamApps(Gls)
1947–1951V/Ch Bologoye
1951GTsOLIFK Moscow
1952CSKA Moscow0
1952Kalinin City Team2(0)
1953MVO Moscow0(0)
1953FC Spartak Moscow1(0)
1954–1961CSKA Moscow160(2)
1961FC Spartak Moscow4(0)
1962FC Dynamo Kyiv18(0)
1963FC Chornomorets Odessa28(3)
1964Serp i Molot Moscow2(0)
1966SKA Odessa7(0)
1967–1968FC Metallurg Lipetsk?(23)
1969Politotdel Tashkent Oblast39(1)
1970FK Daugava Rīga8(0)
1970FC Ararat Yerevan11(0)
1971Volga Gorky
1972–1973Granit Tetyukhe
National team
1955–1956USSR3(−3)
Teams managed
1974Dvina Vitebsk (director)
1974CSKA Moscow (assistant)
1975–1976FK Daugava Rīga (scout)
1999Suwon Bluewings (assistant)
1999–2000FC Chernomorets Novorossiysk (assistant)
2001FC Khimki (assistant)
2001FC Chernomorets Novorossiysk (assistant)
2001–2002FC Volgar-Gazprom Astrakhan (assistant)
* Senior club appearances and goals counted for the domestic league only.
† Appearances (Goals).
Olympic medal record
Competitor for  Soviet Union
Men's Football
Gold 1956 Melbourne Team Competition

Boris Davidovich Razinsky (Russian: Борис Давидович Разинский) (July 12, 1933 — August 6, 2012) was a Soviet Russian football player and manager. He played both as a goalkeeper and as a striker (usually keeping one specific position while playing at the same club). He played in goal for the national team as a backup to Lev Yashin. He was born in Lyubertsy and died in Moscow.[1]

Biography

Honours

International career

Razinsky made his debut for USSR on October 23, 1955, in a friendly against France.

Personal life

He is Jewish.[2] In 2009, Razinsky attended the 2009 Maccabiah Games to watch his grandson participate in the under-18 football competition. Razinsky's visit was marred by a brawl between the Russian and Argentine sides and both squads were told not to return for the 2013 Maccabiah Games.[3]

See also

  • List of select Jewish football (association; soccer) players

Footnotes

External links

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