- Vladimir Maminov
-
Vladimir Maminov Personal information Date of birth 4 September 1974 Place of birth Moscow, Soviet Union Height 1.78 m (5 ft 10 in) Playing position central midfielder Club information Current club Lokomotiv Moscow (assistant) Senior career* Years Team Apps† (Gls)† 1992-2008 FC Lokomotiv Moscow 400 (31) National team 2001-2005 Uzbekistan 12 (3) Teams managed 2009 Lokomotiv Moscow (caretaker) 2009- Lokomotiv Moscow (Assistant) 2011 Lokomotiv Moscow (caretaker) * Senior club appearances and goals counted for the domestic league only.
† Appearances (Goals).Vladimir Aleksandrovich Maminov (Russian: Владимир Александрович Маминов) (born 4 September 1974) is a retired Russian footballer who also has Uzbekistan citizenship. He is currently assistant coach of FC Lokomotiv Moscow.
Contents
Career
He played his all career for Russian Premier League club FC Lokomotiv Moscow as a midfielder.
International
Maminov received 12 caps and scored three goals for the national team between 2001 and 2005.[1]
Club career stats
Last update: 29 November 2008
Season Team Country Division Apps Goals 1992 FC Lokomotiv Moscow Russia
1 0 0 1993 FC Lokomotiv Moscow Russia
1 2 0 1994 FC Lokomotiv Moscow Russia
1 11 1 1995 FC Lokomotiv Moscow Russia
1 11 1 1996 FC Lokomotiv Moscow Russia
1 31 3 1997 FC Lokomotiv Moscow Russia
1 31 6 1998 FC Lokomotiv Moscow Russia
1 19 3 1999 FC Lokomotiv Moscow Russia
1 21 3 2000 FC Lokomotiv Moscow Russia
1 17 2 2001 FC Lokomotiv Moscow Russia
1 25 5 2002 FC Lokomotiv Moscow Russia
1 28 4 2003 FC Lokomotiv Moscow Russia
1 23 2 2004 FC Lokomotiv Moscow Russia
1 18 1 2005 FC Lokomotiv Moscow Russia
1 20 0 2006 FC Lokomotiv Moscow Russia
1 5 0 2007 FC Lokomotiv Moscow Russia
1 9 0 2008 FC Lokomotiv Moscow Russia
1 17 0 Honors
Team
- Russian Premier League :
- Russian Cup
- Winner: 5 (1995/96, 1996/97, 1999/00, 2000/01, 2006/07)
- Runner-up: 1 (1997/98)
- Russian Super Cup
- CIS Cup :
- Winner: 1 (2005)
Individual
- 33 Best Russian Player :
- 1st: 2004
- 2nd: 2002, 2003
Coaching career
Maminov was named as caretaker head coach for FC Lokomotiv Moscow on 28 April 2009, he replaced Rashid Rakhimov.[2] Maminov started his coaching career with a victory over Spartak Nalchik. He became assistant to Yuri Semin when Semin was appointed the new manager. After Yuri Krasnozhan was fired from manager position in June 2011, Maminov was appointed the caretaker once more. This time he managed the team for about 3 weeks before being replaced by José Couceiro.
See also
- One-club man
References
- ^ Uzbekistan - Record International Players
- ^ Lokomotiv Moscow fires coach Rakhimov on www.usatoday.com
External links
- Career history at National Football Teams
FC Lokomotiv Moscow – managers Stolyarov (1936) · Limbeck (1937) · Sushkov (1938–1945) · Blinkov (1946) · Maksimov (1947–1948) · Apukhtin (1948) · Maksimov (1948–49) · Kachalin (1949–1952) · Arkadyev (1952–1957) · Yeliseyev (1958–1959) · Morozov (1959–1962) · Kostylev (1962) · Arkadyev (1963–1965) · Rogov (1965) · Beskov (1966) · Bubukin (1966–1968) · Maryenko (1969–1970) · Rogov (1971–1972) · Volchok (1972) · Yakushin (1973) · Volchok (1973–1978) · Maryenko (1978–1980) · Sevidov (1981–1982) · Radionov (1983) · Volchok (1983–1985) · Syomin (1985–1990) · Filatov (1991) · Syomin (1992–2005) · Eshtrekov (2005) · Muslin (2006) · Dolmatov (2006) · Byshovets (2007) · Bilyaletdinov (2007c) · Rakhimov (2008–2009) · Maminov (2009c) · Syomin (2009–2010) · Krasnozhan (2011) · Maminov (2011c) · Couceiro (2011–)
(c) caretakerCategories:- 1974 births
- Living people
- Sportspeople from Moscow
- Russian footballers
- Uzbekistani footballers
- Uzbekistan international footballers
- FC Lokomotiv Moscow players
- Russian Premier League players
- Russian football managers
- FC Lokomotiv Moscow managers
- Russian Premier League managers
- Russian football biography stubs
- Uzbekistani football biography stubs
Wikimedia Foundation. 2010.