- Oleh Venhlynskyi
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Oleh Venhlynskyi Personal information Full name Oleh Mykolayovych Venhlynskyi Date of birth 21 March 1978 Place of birth Kiev, Ukrainian SSR, Soviet Union Height 1.79 m (5 ft 10 1⁄2 in) Playing position Forward Club information Current club none Youth career Dynamo Kyiv Senior career* Years Team Apps† (Gls)† 1997-2002 Dynamo Kyiv 30 (6) 1995-2001 → Dynamo-2 Kyiv 143 (58) 2002-2005 Dnipro Dnipropetrovsk 57 (31) 2005-2006 AEK Athens 15 (3) 2006-2009 Chornomorets Odessa 46 (4) National team‡ 1998 Ukraine-21 3 (2) 1998-2005 Ukraine 10 (1) * Senior club appearances and goals counted for the domestic league only and correct as of 22 January 2009.
† Appearances (Goals).
‡ National team caps and goals correct as of 22 January 2009Oleh Venhlynskyi (Ukrainian: Олег Миколайович Венглинський, born 21 March 1978, Kiev, in the Ukrainian SSR of the Soviet Union) is a Ukrainian football player.
Oleh Venhlynskyi began his career with the Ukrainian powerhouse Dynamo Kyiv, but made a name for himself after moving to Dnipro Dnipropetrovsk. He spent a long stint in the Dynamo's second team, but after transferring to Dnipropetrovsk he has become a favorite after scoring a couple of impressive and decisive goals in Ukrainian Championship and UEFA Cup for Dnipro Dnipropetrovsk. In 2003 he was promised by experts an overwhelming career after earning the Ukrainian Footballer of the Year award. However, Venhlynskyi is renowned for his numerous injuries that have hampered his career at certain points in his life. In 2005, he left Dnipro Dnipropetrovsk for AEK Athens FC in Greece, but was unable to solidify a first-place spot at the club. After a full-season with AEK Athens FC, Oleh returned to Ukraine to sign contract with Chornomorets Odessa for three years. In 2009 he left as his contract expired.[1]
Individual honours
References
- ^ Winter-break transfers 2009 (Russian)
External links
- Player's career history (English)
- Oleh Venhlynskyi career stats by KLISF
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: Litovchenko | 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: Venhlynskyi | 2004: Shevchenko | 2005: Shevchenko | 2006: Tymoshchuk | 2007: Tymoshchuk | 2008: Milevskiy | 2009: MilevskiyThis biographical article related to a Ukrainian association football forward born in the 1970s is a stub. You can help Wikipedia by expanding it.