Oleg Kononov

This name uses Eastern Slavic naming customs; the patronymic is Georgiyevich and the family name is Kononov.
Oleg Kononov
Personal information
Full name Oleg Georgiyevich Kononov
Date of birth (1966-03-23) 23 March 1966
Place of birth Kursk, Russian SFSR
Height 1.83 m (6 ft 0 in)
Playing position Midfielder
Youth career
Iskra Smolensk
Senior career*
Years Team Apps (Gls)
1983–1985 Iskra Smolensk
1986–1988 Dnepr Mogilev 70 (8)
1989 Zarya Voroshilovgrad 8 (0)
1989–1992 KIM Vitebsk 101 (9)
1993–1994 Lokomotiv Vitebsk 14 (2)
1994 Dvina Vitebsk 11 (0)
1995 Ruch Chorzów 3 (0)
1996–1997 Naftan-Devon Novopolotsk 59 (3)
1998–1999 Torpedo-MAZ Minsk 30 (9)
Teams managed
2001–2002 Torpedo Minsk (assistant)
2003 Lokomotiv Minsk (assistant)
2004 Metalurh Zaporizhia (assistant)
2005–2008 Sheriff Tiraspol (assistant)
2008–2011 Karpaty Lviv
2012–2013 Sevastopol
2013–2016 Krasnodar

* Senior club appearances and goals counted for the domestic league only.


Oleg Georgiyevich Kononov (Russian: Олег Георгиевич Кононов, Belarusian: Алег Георгіевіч Конанаў, translit. Aleh Heorhijevič Konanaŭ, Aleh Heorhiyevich Konanaw, born 23 March 1966 in Kursk) is a Russian-Belarusian coach and retired footballer.

Playing career

Oleg Kononov began his playing career in Russia at Iskra Smolensk in 1983.

He later moved to Belarus, where he would play for various clubs until 1999.

In 1998 was named the Player of the year in Belarusian Premier League.[1] As a player he with KIM Vitebsk became the runner-up of the Belarusian Premier League.

Managing career

Sheriff Tiraspol

The most glory Kononov attained as a coach, was while in charge of FC Sheriff Tiraspol. His team became the champions in Moldovan National Division three times (2004/05-2006/07), was the Moldavian Cup holder in 2006, and the Moldovan Super Cup in 2005.

Karpaty Lviv

On 9 June 2008, Kononov was invited to take charge of Ukrainian Premier League club Karpaty Lviv following the resignation of Valery Yaremchenko.[2] He brought a new style of play to the team, including the use of a 4-3-3 formation which emphasizes the flanks instead of the usual 4-4-2 formation.[3][4] At the end of the 2008-09 season, Karpaty finished in the season in middle of the league at 9th place.[5] Kononov enjoyed more success the next season, guiding Karpaty to top 8 in the Ukrainian Cup where they were eliminated by eventual finalists Metalurh Donetsk. They also finished fifth in the league and therefore qualifying for the 2010–11 UEFA Europa League, where after impressively passing Galatasaray in the Playoff Round, finished last in Group J with 1 point.

Krasnodar

He took over the management of FC Krasnodar early in the 2013–14 Russian Premier League and led them for the first time to the European competition, taking 5th spot in the league and qualifying for the 2014–15 UEFA Europa League. In 2014-15 season they defeated, among others, Real Sociedad in the Europa League qualifiers and advanced to the group stage. They did not qualify for the knockout phase. Midway through the 2014–15 Russian Premier League competition, they reached the 2nd spot in the standings. He resigned from his Krasnodar position on 13 September 2016.[6]

Honours

As coach
Sevastopol
Krasnodar

References

External links

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