About the Book
Please note that the content of this book primarily consists of articles available from Wikipedia or other free sources online. Pages: 32. Chapters: Akil DeFreitas, Aleksei Borisovich Yeryomenko, Aleksei Prudnikov, Alexei Eremenko, Anders Eriksson (footballer), Andrei Borissov, Angel Ginev, Antti-Jussi Karnio, Bjorn-Erik Sundqvist, Denis Tumasyan, Frank Jonke, Fredrik Svanback, Hans Gillhaus, Heikki Aho, Henri Myntti, Ilja Venalainen, Irakli Sirbiladze, Jani Backman, Jani Koivisto, Jani Tanska, Janne Vellamo, Jan Ahlvik, Jari Vanhala, Jarmo Saastamoinen, Jens Portin, Jermu Gustafsson, Jevgeni Novikov, Joel Bouchoucha, Jonas Emet, Jonas Portin, Joonas Laurikainen, Jukka-Pekka Tuomanen, Jussi Aalto, Kare Bjorkstrand, Kim Suominen, Kristian Kojola, Mahmod Hejazi, Marco Matrone, Marko Tuomela, Markus Kronholm, Mike Banner, Mikko Hyyrynen, Mikko Paatelainen, Milorad Ze evi, Mladen Milinkovi, Nosh A Lody, Ole Talberg, Patrick Byskata, Petter Meyer, Roman Eremenko, Sam Ayorinde, Sa a Stevi, Sebastian Mannstrom, Sergei Ratnikov, Simon Skrabb, Steven Irwin, Teuvo Moilanen, Tillmann Grove, Toomas Kallaste, Urmas Rooba, Venance Zeze, Vesa Heikinheimo, Ville Vaisanen, Vitali Tele, Ymer Xhaferi. Excerpt: Aleksei Alekseyevich Yeryomenko (Russian: born 24 March 1983) is a Russian-born Finnish professional footballer who currently plays for Rubin Kazan in Russia. He is a Midfielder who is able to operate in many roles, and is also known as a set piece specialist. Eremenko was born in Rostov-on-Don, Russian SFSR, Soviet Union but moved to Finland with his family at the age of seven when his father, former FC Dynamo Moscow and FC Spartak Moscow player Alexei Eremenko Sr., came to play in Finland with FF Jaro. He was granted Finnish citizenship in 2003, but still holds a Russian passport as well. He is the elder brother of Roman Eremenko, and also a new father with a son born in September 2007. Eremenko spent some time with Tromso IL in Norway (his father played for the senior team, he himself played for the under-fifteens team) and with the youth academy of FC Metz in France, before returning to Finland to make his Veikkausliiga debut with FC Jokerit in 2001. A try out with Aston Villa followed, but in the next season he moved to HJK, and eventually became the league's top player. He won two Finnish championships and one Finnish Cup with HJK. In the summer of 2004, Eremenko moved abroad, joining Italian Serie A club US Lecce. After failing to make a major breakthrough at Lecce, he moved to FC Saturn on a four-year deal in January 2006 transfer window, becoming a key player for the Russian side. On the 15th July, 2011 it was reported that he is signing for Leeds United in a Finish newspaper, but the transfer was delayed due to a cancelled flight, which prevented him from linking up with the squad in Scotland. On July 29, 2009 Eremenko signed a three-year contract with the Ukrainian club FC Metalist Kharkiv, and scored his first goal in his debut game against HNK Rijeka. On March 12, 2010 it was announced that Eremenko had been traded back to his first club, FF Jaro, for the 2010 season. His father, Alexei Eremenko Sr., is the current manager of FF Jaro. He managed to sc