Mykola Kudrytsky
Personal information | |||
---|---|---|---|
Full name | Mykola Ivanovych Kudritsky | ||
Date of birth | (1962-10-06)6 October 1962 | ||
Place of birth | Nikopol, Ukrainian SSR | ||
Date of death | 16 March 1994(1994-03-16) (aged 31) | ||
Place of death | Ra'anana, Israel | ||
Height | 1.66 m (5 ft 5+1⁄2 in) | ||
Position(s) | Midfielder/Striker | ||
Senior career* | |||
Years | Team | Apps | (Gls) |
1983 | FC Kolos Nikopol | 3 | (0) |
1984 | FC Kryvbas Kryvyi Rih | 34 | (18) |
1984–1985 | FC Kolos Nikopol | 28 | (7) |
1985–1991 | FC Dnipro Dnipropetrovsk | 143 | (29) |
1991–1994 | Bnei Yehuda | 85 | (51) |
*Club domestic league appearances and goals |
Mykola Ivanovych[a] Kudritsky (Ukrainian: Микола Іванович Кудрицький, Russian: Николай Иванович Кудрицкий; 6 October 1962, in Nikopol – 16 March 1994, in Ra'anana, Israel) was a Ukrainian professional football player.
Kudrytsky perished in a car crash on the road from Haifa to Tel-Aviv while heading back home early in the morning at 4 o'clock.[1] He was ejected out of his car when it flipped. Kudrytskyi was returning to Tel-Aviv after meeting with players of the Ukraine national football team that a day before played a friendly match with the Israel national football team.
Honours
- Dnipro Dnipropetrovsk
- Soviet Top League champion: 1988
- Soviet Top League runner-up: 1987, 1989
- USSR Super Cup winner: 1988
- Soviet Cup winner: 1989
- USSR Federation Cup winner: 1986, 1989
- USSR Federation Cup finalist: 1990
Notes
- ^ sometimes his patronymic name is written as Mykhailovych
References
- ^ FC Dnipro. wildstat.ru
External links
- Career summary by KLISF
- They played in Israel. Mykola Kudrytsky. Israelfootball.com. 3 November 2003
- Mykola Kudrytsky at FootballFacts.ru (in Russian)
- 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 midfielder born in the 1960s is a stub. You can help Wikipedia by expanding it. |
- v
- t
- e