Volodymyr Kaplychnyi
Volodymyr KaplychnyiPersonal information |
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Full name |
Volodymyr Oleksandrovych Kaplychnyi |
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Date of birth |
(1944-02-26)26 February 1944 |
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Place of birth |
Kamianets-Podilskyi, USSR |
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Date of death |
19 April 2004(2004-04-19) (aged 60) |
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Place of death |
Kiev, Ukraine |
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Playing position |
Defender |
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Senior career* |
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Years |
Team |
Apps† |
(Gls)† |
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1962–1963 |
FC Dynamo Khmelnytskyi |
? |
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1964–1965 |
SKA Lviv |
? |
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1966–1975 |
CSKA Moscow |
288 |
(5) |
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National team |
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1968–1974 |
USSR |
62 |
(0) |
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Teams managed |
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1978 |
CSKA Moscow (assistant) |
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1979–1980 |
SKA Lviv |
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1981 |
SKA Kyiv (technical director) |
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1983–1984 |
SKA Odessa |
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* Senior club appearances and goals counted for the domestic league only.
† Appearances (goals)
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Volodymyr Oleksandrovych Kaplychnyi (Russian: Владимир Александрович Капличный; 26 February 1944 – 19 April 2004 in Kiev) was a Soviet footballer of Jewish ethnicity.[1]
During his career he played for FC Dynamo Khmelnitsky (1962–1963), SKA Lviv (1964–1965) and PFC CSKA Moscow (1966–75). He earned 62 caps for the USSR national football team, and participated in UEFA Euro 1968, the 1970 FIFA World Cup, and UEFA Euro 1972. He also earned a bronze medal in football at the 1972 Summer Olympics.
External links
References
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- Grinin (1954–57)
- Dyomin (1958)
- Nikanorov (1958–60)
- Shaposhnikov (1961–65)
- Kesler (1966–68)
- Betsa (1969)
- Kesler (1970)
- Rybak (1971)
- Kesler (1977)
- Dudarenko (1979)
- Kaplychnyi (1979–80)
- Samarin (1982–84)
- Bulhakov (1984–86)
- Fales (1987)
- Karimov (1987)
- Sekech (1988–89)
- Karimov (1989–)
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- Shaposhnikov (1952–60)
- Cherkaskyi (1962)
- Victor Fyodorov (1963–65)
- Mamykin (1966–67)
- Shaposhnikov (1967)
- Kvochak (1968–69)
- Blinder (1969)
- Maslovskyi (1970)
- Matveyev (1971)
- Shemelyev (1976–81)
- Maslovskyi (1982)
- Kaplychnyi (1983–84)
- Zubkov (1985)
- Betsa (1986)
- Maslovskyi (1987–89)
- Marusin (1989)
- Halytskyi (1989)
- Tarkhanov (1990)
- Marusin (1991–92)
- Zharkov (1992–93)
- Smarovoz (1993–94)
- Marusin (1994–97)
- Melnyk (1997c)
- Shcherbakov (1997)
- Holokolosov (1997–98)
- Shcherbakov (1998–99)
- Nakonechnyi (1999)
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