Valery Streltsov

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Valery Streltsov
Personal information
Full nameValery Ivanovich Streltsov
Date of birth (1948-05-07) 7 May 1948
Place of birthBykhov, Belarus, USSR
Playing positionStriker
Club information
Current clubDinamo Minsk (general director)
Senior career*
YearsTeamApps(Gls)
1967–1975Dnepr Mogilev
Teams managed
1976–1984SDYuShOR-7 Mogilev
1984–1985Dnepr Mogilev (director)
1990–2009Dnepr Mogilev (general director)
1986–1993Dnepr Mogilev
1994–1995Dnepr Mogilev
1995–2003Dnepr Mogilev
2000–2003Belarus (assistant)
2002Belarus (caretaker)
2003–2005Dnepr Mogilev
2007–2008Dnepr Mogilev
2009–Dinamo Minsk (general director)
* Senior club appearances and goals counted for the domestic league only.
† Appearances (Goals).

Valery Streltsov is a Belarusian association football manager who is currently holding a position of a general director in Dinamo Minsk.

Club career

Streltsov spent his entire playing career from 1967 until 1975 in Spartak Mogilev (renamed to Dnepr Mogilev in 1973). After his early retirement (at the age of 27) he started working as coach in local Mogilev football academy. From 1984 till 1985 he worked as director for Dnepr Mogilev, and in 1986 he was appointed as team's coach, a position he will hold until 2008 with brief interruptions in 1993-1994, 1995, 2003 and 2005-2007. He stepped down for the last time in 2008 due to health problems. Since 1990 he was appointed as Dnepr's general director.

With Valery Streltsov as a coach Dnepr Mogilev finished at the 2nd place in inaugural Belarusian championship in 1992 and won their only champions title in 1998.

In 2009 Streltsov partied ways with Dnepr and joined Dinamo Minsk as a general director.

National team

From 2000 till 2003 Streltsov worked as assistant coach for Belarus national football team under head coach Eduard Malofeyev. In September 2002 in a Euro 2004 qualifying match against Netherlands he acted as team's caretaker manager, replacing Malofeyev, who was unable to present at the game due to health condition. Belarus lost that game 0–3.[1]

References

External links


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