Anton Idzkovsky
Personal information | |||
---|---|---|---|
Date of birth | (1907-12-29)29 December 1907 | ||
Place of birth | Kiev, Russian Empire | ||
Date of death | 24 January 1995(1995-01-24) (aged 87) | ||
Place of death | Kyiv, Ukraine | ||
Position(s) | Goalkeeper | ||
Senior career* | |||
Years | Team | Apps | (Gls) |
1926–27 | Sovtorgsluzhashchiye | ||
1928–41 | Dynamo Kyiv | 74 | |
1942–43 | Dynamo Kazan | ||
1944–45 | Dynamo Kyiv | 13 | |
International career | |||
1934 | USSR (unoff.) | 1 | (−1) |
Managerial career | |||
1946 | Dynamo Kyiv | ||
*Club domestic league appearances and goals |
Anton Leonardovych Idzkovsky (Ukrainian: Антон Леонардович Ідзковський, Polish: Anton Idzkowski) was a Soviet football and ice hockey player, goalkeeper, and later an administrator for the Football Federation of the Ukrainian SSR. He is honored as the Distinguished Master of Sports (1945) and the Distinguished Coach of Ukraine (1961).
Anton Idzkovsky was an ethnic Pole and Roman Catholic.[1] In interview to Ukrayinskyi Futbol newspaper answering questions about rumors of the Idzkovsky's cooperation with NKVD, the former secretary of Football Federation of the Ukrainian SSR Klavdia Kirianova explained that he was cautious and never talked about his origin.[1]
References
- ^ a b The witness's recollections, or Four decades in the FFU (Воспоминания очевидца, или Четыре десятка лет в ФФУ). Terrikon (from "Ukrayinskyi futbol"). 25 March 2014
External links
- Profile at rusteam.ru
Preceded by M.Kuznetsov | Presidents of FFU 1963–1964 | Succeeded by Fedir Martynyuk |
- v
- t
- e
- 1969: Serebryanikov
- 1970: Muntyan
- 1971: Rudakov
- 1972: Blokhin
- 1973: Blokhin
- 1974: Blokhin
- 1975: Blokhin
- 1976: Blokhin
- 1977: Blokhin
- 1978: Blokhin
- 1979: Starukhin
- 1980: Blokhin
- 1981: Blokhin
- 1982: Demyanenko
- 1983: Taran
- 1984: Lytovchenko
- 1985: Demyanenko
- 1986: Zavarov
- 1987: Mykhaylychenko
- 1988: Mykhaylychenko
- 1989: Bezsonov
- 1990: Yuran
- 1991: Tsveiba
- 1992: Leonenko
- 1993: Leonenko
- 1994: Leonenko
- 1995: Kalitvintsev
- 1996: Rebrov
- 1997: Shevchenko
- 1998: Rebrov
- 1999: Shevchenko
- 2000: Shevchenko
- 2001: Shevchenko
- 2002: Tymoshchuk
- 2003: Venhlinskyi
- 2004: Shevchenko
- 2005: Shevchenko
- 2006: Tymoshchuk
- 2007: Tymoshchuk
- 2008: Milevskyi
- 2009: Milevskyi
- 2010: Konoplyanka
- 2011: Voronin
- 2012: Konoplyanka
- 2013: Yarmolenko & Konoplyanka
- 2014: Yarmolenko
- 2015: Yarmolenko
- 2016: Rotan
- 2017: Yarmolenko
(MVP of the UPL)
- 1995: Kalitvintsev
- 1996: Rebrov
- 1997: Shevchenko
- 1998: Rebrov
- 1999: Rebrov
- 2000: Vorobey
- 2001: Byalkevich
- 2002: Tymoshchuk
- 2003: Byalkevich
- 2004: Rykun
- 2005: Husiev
- 2006: Nazarenko
- 2007: Nazarenko
- 2008: Jajá Coelho
- 2009: Milevskyi
- 2010: Pyatov
- 2011: Yarmolenko
- 2012: Mkhitaryan
- 2013: Konoplyanka
- 2014: Yarmolenko
- 2015: Teixeira
- 2016: Marlos
(MVP of the UPL)
- 2016: Yarmolenko
- 2017: Marlos
- 2018: Marlos
- 2019: Taison
This biographical article related to a Ukrainian association football goalkeeper born in the 1900s is a stub. You can help Wikipedia by expanding it. |
- v
- t
- e
This biographical article related to a Soviet association football goalkeeper is a stub. You can help Wikipedia by expanding it. |
- v
- t
- e