Mikalay Ryndzyuk

Mikalay Ryndzyuk
Personal information
Full name Mikalay Ryndzyuk
Date of birth (1978-02-02) 2 February 1978
Place of birth Minsk, Byelorussian SSR, Soviet Union
Height 1.77 m (5 ft 9 12 in)
Playing position Forward
Club information
Current team
Smorgon (head coach)
Senior career*
Years Team Apps (Gls)
1994–1995 Smena Minsk 19 (11)
1996–1997 BATE Borisov 45 (58)
1998–1999 Lokomotiv Moscow 12 (0)
1999Lokomotiv Moscow (reserves) 31 (9)
1999 BATE Borisov 11 (9)
2000 Lokomotiv Nizhny Novgorod 9 (0)
2000 Kristall Smolensk 11 (3)
2001–2002 Gaziantepspor 6 (0)
2002 Rubin Kazan 9 (2)
2003 Dinamo Minsk 19 (8)
2004 BATE Borisov 11 (4)
2004 Shanghai Jiucheng 10 (5)
2005 Guangzhou 18 (14)
2006 Nanjing Yoyo 16 (2)
2007–2008 Daugava Daugavpils 41 (18)
2008Dinaburg (loan) 21 (9)
2009 MTZ-RIPO Minsk 11 (5)
2009–2010 Shakhtyor Soligorsk 19 (2)
2010–2011 Mash'al Mubarek 20 (7)
2011 Dinamo Samarqand 13 (4)
2012 Smorgon 7 (1)
2012 Navbahor Namangan 8 (2)
2013–2014 Smorgon 52 (23)
National team
1996–1999 Belarus U21 16 (4)
1997–2002 Belarus 13 (3)
2004 Belarus Olympic 1 (0)
Teams managed
2015– Smorgon

* Senior club appearances and goals counted for the domestic league only and correct as of 7 January 2014.
† Appearances (goals)

‡ National team caps and goals correct as of 1 December 2009

Mikalay Ryndzyuk (Belarusian: Мікалай Рындзюк; Russian: Николай Рындюк; born 2 February 1978) is a retired Belarusian footballer and currently a coach, who works as a menager for Smorgon.

Football career

Mikalay Ryndzyuk started his career at Smena Minsk. He played the first season at 1994/95 at third level. After he played the first winter league in 1995, he transferred to BATE Borisov, at that time in third division. His high goal scoring rate helped BATE win promotion to top division in 1997. He then was signed by Lokomotiv Moscow in 1998.

In summer 1999, he moved back to BATE, and spent 2000 season for FC Lokomotiv Nizhny Novgorod and Kristall Smolensk.

In November 2000, he was signed by Gaziantepspor, where he signed a deal until summer 2003.

But he was away from field since November 2001, and in September 2002, he transferred to Rubin Kazan.[1]

International goals

# Date Venue Opponent Score Result Competition
1 5 August 1997 Dynama Stadium (Minsk), Belarus  Israel 2 – 3 2–3 Friendly
2 7 October 2000 Stadion Widzewa, Łódź, Poland  Poland 1 – 1 1–3 2002 World Cup qualifier
3 11 October 2000 Dynama Stadium (Minsk), Belarus  Armenia 2 – 0 2–1 2002 World Cup qualifier

References

  1. "Belkevitch blow for Belarus". UEFA.com. 4 September 2002.

External links

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