Sergey Yaromko

Sergey Yaromko
Personal information
Full name Sergey Valeryevich Yaromko
Date of birth (1967-04-07) 7 April 1967
Place of birth Minsk, Belarus
Playing position striker
Club information
Current team
Gorodeya (manager)
Youth career
Dinamo Minsk
Senior career*
Years Team Apps (Gls)
1984–1988 Burevestnik Minsk
1989–1990 Meliorator Chimkent 70 (24)
1991 Alga Frunze 24 (5)
1991–1992 Metal Kluczbork
1993 Shinnik Bobruisk 10 (5)
1993–1994 Fandok Bobruisk 29 (24)
1995–1996 MPKC Mozyr 43 (30)
1997–2000 Torpedo-MAZ Minsk 103 (39)
2001 SKAF Minsk
National team
1994 Belarus 1 (0)
Teams managed
2001 SKAF Minsk
2005 Smena Minsk
2005–2009 Minsk
2010 Dinamo Minsk (assistant)
2011 SKVICH Minsk
2012 Belshina Bobruisk
2012–2013 Irtysh Pavlodar (assistant)
2014– Gorodeya

* Senior club appearances and goals counted for the domestic league only and correct as of 7 October 2011.
† Appearances (goals)

‡ National team caps and goals correct as of 7 October 2011

Sergey Yaromko (Belarusian: Сяргей Яромка (Syarhey Yaromka); Russian: Серге́й Яромко; born 7 April 1967) is a former Belarusian footballer (striker) and currently a coach. Since May 2014 he is a head coach for Gorodeya.[1]

Playing career

In his early career Yaromko played in Belarusian SSR league for Burevestnik Minsk, before leaving to play a few seasons in Central Asia and Poland.

He returned to Belarus in 1993 and immediately became one of the most prolific strikers of Belarusian Premier League. He scored 103 goals in 184 games between 1993 and 2000 and became a league top scorer twice (in 1995 and 1998). Despite this, he didn't have much of a career in Belarus national team, for which he only played once (friendly match against Poland in 1994).

He spent his last season before retirement in 2001 as a player-manager for SKAF Minsk in the Second League

Manager career

After one season with SKAF Minsk, Yaromko spent next few years studying for a manager. In 2005 he managed Smena Minsk and at the end of the year was appointed as a head coach of a new club FC Minsk, which took over Smena license. He left Minsk in 2009, after which he worked in Dinamo Minsk and SKVICH Minsk.

External links

References

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