About the Book
Please note that the content of this book primarily consists of articles available from Wikipedia or other free sources online. Pages: 69. Chapters: Adrian Pukanych, Aleksandr Malygin, Andriy Boyko, Andriy Demchenko, Andriy Hlushchenko, Andriy Konyushenko, Andriy Oberemko, Andriy Tovt, Anton Hay, Aram Hakobyan, Ara Hakobyan, Artem Putivtsev, Artem Savin, Artem Sukhotskyi, Artur Siryk, Artur Zapadnya, Bohdan Butko, Bohdan Shust, Dainius Gleveckas, Denys Kozhanov, Denys Kulakov, Dmytro Hrechyshkin, Dmytro Nazarov, Dmytro Nevmyvaka, Dmytro Skoblov, Dmytro Vorobey, Dmytro Yesin, Eduard Tsykhmeystruk, Eric Kamdem Kamdem, Gediminas Paulauskas, Giorgi Gabedava, Giorgi Tsimakuridze, Hennadiy Altman, Hennadiy Zubov, Ihor Bazhan, Ihor Belanov, Ihor Buryak, Ihor Chaykovskyi, Ihor Chuchman, Ihor Kirienko, Ihor Korotetskiy, Ihor Shukhovtsev, Ihor Skoba, Ihor Tyschenko, Ivan Kozoriz, Ivan Kryvosheyenko, Ivan Ordets, Kostyantyn Kravchenko, Kostyantyn Yaroshenko, Maksym Kovalyov, Mantas Samusiovas, Mikalay Kashewski, Mykola Volosyanko, Mykyta Kamenyuka, Mykyta Shevchenko, Oleh Koshelyuk, Oleh Krasnopyorov, Oleh Mazurenko, Oleh Ostapenko, Oleh Volotyok, Oleksandr Haydash, Oleksandr Ivashchenko, Oleksandr Kasyan, Oleksandr Papush, Oleksandr Rykun, Oleksandr Shevelyukhin, Oleksandr Sytnyk, Oleksandr Yatsenko, Oleksiy Antonov, Oleksiy Gai, Oleksiy Horodov, Oleksiy Polyanskiy, Pavel Byahanski, Pavel Kirylchyk, Pavlo Ksyonz, Pavlo Onysko, Pylyp Budkivskiy, Ritvars Rugins, Rogerio Correa, Roman Yemelyanov, Ruslan Fomin, Ruslan Hunchak, Ruslan Levyha, Ruslan Solyanyk, Rustam Khudzhamov, Serghei La cencov, Serhiy Diryavka, Serhiy Hrybanov, Serhiy Pivnenko, Serhiy Popov, Serhiy Shevchuk, Serhiy Shyshchenko, Serhiy Yavorskyi, Serhiy Zakarlyuka, Severino Lima de Moura, Stanislav Hudzikevych, Stanislav Mykytsey, Stepan Molokutsko, Timofei Kalachev, Tornike Okriashvili, Vadym Melnyk, Valentin Nefyodov, Valeri Nenenko, Vitaliy Fedotov, Vitaliy Khmelnytskyi, Vitaliy Vitsenets, Vladlen Yurchenko, Vladyslav Nasibulin, Volodymyr Braila, Volodymyr Dychko, Volodymyr Kilikevych, Volodymyr Olefir, Vsevolod Romanenko, Vyacheslav Sharpar, Vyacheslav Shevchenko, Vytautas Luk a, Yarema Kavatsiv, Yehor Ivanov, Yehor Kartushov, Yevhen Bredun, Yuriy Sak, Yuriy Shatalov. Excerpt: Ihor Ivanovych (or Ivanovich) Belanov (Ukrainian: born 25 September 1960) is an Ukrainian retired footballer who played as a striker. He made a name for himself at Dynamo Kyiv, winning five major titles and being named European Footballer of the Year in 1986. He then spent six years in Germany with two teams, with little success. Belanov represented the Soviet Union at one World Cup and one European Championship. Belanov was born in Odessa, Ukraine, Soviet Union. He started playing professionally in his hometown, with SKA Odessa and FC Chornomorets Odessa, joining country giants FC Dynamo Kyiv in 1985, and scoring ten goals in his first season, which ended with league and cup conquest. Alongside with teammates Oleg Blokhin and Oleksandr Zavarov, Belanov led the scoring charts at the 1985-86 UEFA Cup Winners' Cup (five apiece) as Dynamo won the competition for the second time. He played the full 90 minutes in the final against Atletico Madrid (3-0). Mid-way through 1989, 29-year old Belanov got the long-awaited clearance to join a Western European side, making a move to Germany to join Borussia Monchengladbach. His debut in the Bundesliga came on 4 November 1989 in a 0-4 away defeat against VfB Stuttgart, but he failed to impress overall, scoring only four goals in his one 1/2-season stint. Belanov moved to second level's Eintracht Braunschweig in January 1991, after his wife had been involved in a shoplifting affair. He made his debut for his new club on 23 February, and went on to net just 13 times in the competition in three seasons combined, also suffering relegation in 1992-93 without making a single appearance. In 1995 Belanov returned home to Chernomorets for one...