Makar Honcharenko

Makar Honcharenko
Personal information
Full name Makar Mykhaylovych Honcharenko
Date of birth (1912-04-05)5 April 1912
Place of birth Kiev, Russian Empire
Date of death 1 April 1997(1997-04-01) (aged 84)
Place of death Kiev, Ukraine
Height 1.61 m (5 ft 3 in)
Playing position Forward, Winger
Youth career
1929 Kommunalnik
Senior career*
Years Team Apps (Gls)
1931—1932 FC ZhelDor
1932—1934 FC Tekstilshchik Ivanovo
1935—1939 FC Dynamo Kyiv 77 (27)
1940 FC Lokomotiv ? (?)
1941 FC Spartak Odesa 3 (0)
1942 FC Start
1945 FC Dynamo Kyiv 5 (0)
1946 FC Chornomorets Odesa 15 (2)
1947 FC Spartak Kherson ? (?)
Teams managed
1962 FC Avanhard Zhovti Vody

* Senior club appearances and goals counted for the domestic league only.

† Appearances (goals)

Makar Mykhaylovych Honcharenko (Ukrainian: Макар Михайлович Гончаренко), (April 5, 1912, Kiev, Russian Empire April 1, 1997, Kiev, Ukraine) was a Soviet-Ukrainian football player and coach. During his career, he played as a forward for a number of clubs, but most noticeably for Dynamo Kyiv.

Biography

Honcharenko was born in a poor working family. In order to help his family, he had to repair footwear early in his childhood. All his free time was dedicated to football.

His career started in 1929. when he started playing for a junior football team of the factory Kommunalnik. Then he played for a Dombalya tram factory team. After that he moved to ZhelDor, where he became a first choice player in 1931.

In the autumn of 1934 Sergey Bartminskiy, the former deputy of the Ukrainian SSR State Political Directorate forced Honcharenko to move to Ivanovo where he started playing for the local Dynamo. On the 3rd of August 1933 he participated in a match between Dynamo and Turkey national team. His team won 7-3. In the same year he played for RSFSR team and was named one of the best 33 football players in USSR and the second best right winger.

In 1934 he returned to Kyiv and started playing for Dynamo Kyiv. In 1935 he played for Kyiv city team in the USSR championship. After that he was called to the Ukrainian SSR team.

He played a football player in a film called The Goalkeeper, which was shot in 1936.

1938 was the best year of his career. Honcharenko was awarded The Best Scorer of the USSR football championship after he scored 19 goals in 24 matches, but was excluded from The best 33 USSR football players.

The season 1939 was a failure - Honcharenko played in 23 games and scored only twice. After this season he left Dynamo for Lokomotiv Kyiv. In 1941 he moved to Spartak Odessa. He was able to play in only three times before the war came.

During the Nazi occupation of Kyiv he lived with his mother-in-law and was a member of a sport society Rukh. The members of Rukh were loyal to the new government, which made it possible to work legally, receive rations, and, most importantly, to avoid being arrested and sent to Germany.

Soon he was found by Nikolai Trusevich and was offered a workplace at the bakery #1, where he was able to play for a factory football team Start Kyiv.

In the June of 1942 Start was allowed to organise friendly games in Kyiv. Honcharenko was a part of the famous Death Match. Some time after he was arrested. First, he was held in a solitary confinement by the Gestapo, then, in September 1942 he was transferred to Syrets concentration camp. There along with M. Sviridovskiy he was repairing boots for German soldiers.

In September 1943 he escaped from the camp and returned home, where his neighbours helped him to hide.

After the war he was inspected by NKVD and was allowed to join Dynamo Kyiv.

In 1946 he played for Pischevik Odessa for one year, then he moved to Spartak Kherson where he retired.

After the retirement he worked as a coach in Odesa, Sumy, Lviv, Kherson and Kyiv. In 1962 he was appointed the manager of FC Avangard (Zhyoltyye Vody).

Honours

Team

Personal

Remembrance

In September 1964, the Presidium of the Supreme Soviet of the USSR awarded Honcharenko the Medal for Battle Merit.


This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the Monday, January 11, 2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.