About the Book
Please note that the content of this book primarily consists of articles available from Wikipedia or other free sources online. Pages: 135. Not illustrated. Chapters: Aris Limassol Players, Oleg Blokhin, Aris Limassol F.c., Nikos Kounenakis, Paulo Costa, Hristo Yovov, Adrian Mihalcea, Scott Mcgarvey, Jani Viander, Atanas Bornosuzov, Edwin Ouon, Radostin Stanev, Daniel B lan, Slavi a Dugi, Jan Vorel, Leopoldo Jimenez, Marc Eberle, Ion Geolg u, Adam Foti, Manuel Estevao Sanches, Eduardo Marques de Jesus Passos, Jamie Mckenzie, Suad Be irevi, Marcio Ferreira de Souza, Andreas Melanarkitis, Yiasoumis Yiasoumi, Ognjen Leki, Gabor Korolovszky, Savvas Exouzidis, Miklos Lendvai, Stelios Parpas, Levan Maghradze, Demetris Maris, Ivan Trabalik, Filippos Filippou, Bruno Filipe Tavares Pinheiro, Ricardo Nunes, Toma Kucha, Joseph Nwafor, Sofronis Avgousti, Giorgos Iosifidis, Carl Lombe, Ventsislav Vasilev, Panayiotis Assiotis, Alekos Alekou, Marios Antoniou, Xenios Kyriacou, Marios Nicolaou, Akos Seper, Giorgos Vasiliou, Sa a Stojanovi, Andrew Esealuka, Constantinos Zarnas, Elias Elia, Costas Markou, Panayiotis Ioannou, Ernandes Bueno de Castro. Excerpt: Oleh Volodymyrovych Blokhin (Ukrainian: ) (born 5 November 1952 in Kiev) is a Ukrainian football coach of mixed Ukrainian (by mother) and Russian (by father) ethnicity who was formerly a striker for the Soviet national team. He was named European Footballer of the Year, winning the Ballon d'Or, in 1975 and was the first Ukrainian player to achieve such a feat. Blokhin was born in Kiev, the capital of the Ukrainian SSR, in 1952 to a mother of Ukrainian ethnicity and a father of Russian ethnicity. Blokhin's father was a native of Moscow. Blokhin played during most of his career for Dynamo Kyiv, becoming the USSR national championship's all-time leader and goalscorer with 211 goals, as well as making more appearances than any other player with 432 appearances. He won the championship 8 times. He led Dynamo to the UEFA Cup ...