Sergei Yuran
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| Sergei Yuran | ||
| Personal information | ||
|---|---|---|
| Full name | Sergei Nikolayevich Yuran | |
| Date of birth | June 11, 1969 | |
| Place of birth | Luhansk, Ukrainian SSR, Soviet Union | |
| Playing position | Forward | |
| Senior clubs1 | ||
| Years | Club | App (Gls)* |
| 1989-91 1991-94 1994-95 1995 1996 1996-97 1997-99 1999 1999-2001 |
Dynamo Kyiv Benfica FC Porto Spartak Moscow Millwall Fortuna Düsseldorf VfL Bochum Spartak Moscow Sturm Graz |
31 (15) 63 (19) 23 (4) 8 (2) 13 (1) 16 (5) 27 (5) 17 (3) 26 (6) |
| National team | ||
| 1990-91 1992 1992-99 1990-99 |
USSR CIS Russia Total: |
13 (4) 3 (0) 25 (5) 41 (9) |
| Teams managed | ||
| 2004 2006 2006 2007–present |
Dynamo Stavropol FC Ditton FC TVMK Shinnik Yaroslavl |
|
|
1 Senior club appearances and goals |
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Sergei Nikolayevich Yuran (Russian: Сергей Николаевич Юран) (born June 11, 1969 in Luhansk) is a former football striker. He was capped by the USSR, and, despite being born in Ukraine, represented Russia after its breakup. At club level he played in six different countries. After his playing career abruptly ended in 2001 following a skull injury, he became a manager. His first experience in coaching was assistant manager position under Andrey Chernyshov in Spartak Moscow, 2003. After three months, Chernyshov and his assistants were fired from Spartak. In 2004 Yuran managed Dynamo Stavropol. After a brief spell with Latvian side SK Ditton from January to May 2006,[1] Yuran was appointed as manager of Estonian champions FC TVMK in July 2006,[2] but in December he unexpectedly left the team.[3] Soon, he took charge at the First Division side Shinnik Yaroslavl, aiming to win promotion to the Premier League.[4]
Contents |
- USSR Champion: 1990
- USSR Cup: 1990
- Portuguese Cup: 1993
- Portuguese Champion: 1994, 1995
- Russian Champion: 1999
- ^ Weltfussball.de profile. Retrieved on 2007-05-30. (German)
- ^ Yuran to take on TVMK task. UEFA (2006-07-29). Retrieved on 2007-05-30.
- ^ Smirnov takes charge at Tallinn. UEFA (2006-12-29). Retrieved on 2007-05-30.
- ^ YURAN SPEAKS ABOUT THE FUTURE. Sport-Express (2006-12-26). Retrieved on 2007-05-30.
| Awards | ||
|---|---|---|
| Preceded by |
Ukrainian Footballer of the Year 1990 |
Succeeded by |
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|
|
|---|---|
| 1 Cherchesov • 2 Kuznetsov • 3 Gorlukovich • 4 Galiamin • 5 Nikiforov • 6 Ternavski • 7 Piatnitski • 8 Popov • 9 Salenko • 10 Karpin • 11 Beschastnykh • 12 Tetradze • 13 Borodyuk • 14 Korneyev • 15 Radchenko • 16 Kharine • 17 Tsymbalar • 18 Onopko • 19 Mostovoi • 20 Lediakhov • 21 Khlestov • 22 Yuran • Coach: Sadyrin |
|
| Persondata | |
|---|---|
| NAME | Yuran, Sergei Nikolaievich |
| ALTERNATIVE NAMES | Yuran, Sergei |
| SHORT DESCRIPTION | Russian professional footballer |
| DATE OF BIRTH | 1969-06-11 |
| PLACE OF BIRTH | Luhansk, Ukraine |
| DATE OF DEATH | |
| PLACE OF DEATH | |
Categories: 1969 births | Living people | Ukrainian footballers | Russian footballers | Russia international footballers | Soviet footballers | Soviet Union international footballers | Football (soccer) strikers | Dynamo Kyiv players | Benfica players | FC Porto players | Millwall F.C. players | Spartak Moscow footballers | Fortuna Düsseldorf players | VfL Bochum players | UEFA Euro 1992 players | FIFA World Cup 1994 players | FC TVMK managers | Ukrainian-Russians | Russian football biography stubs | Soviet people stubs