- Rinat Dasayev
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Rinat Dasayev Personal information Full name Rinat Fayzrakhmanovich Dasayev Date of birth June 13, 1957 Place of birth Astrakhan, Russian SFSR, Soviet Union Height 1.89 m (6 ft 2 1⁄2 in)[1] Playing position Goalkeeper Club information Current club Persidafon Jayapura (Goalkeeper Coach) Youth career 1975 Volgar Astrakhan Senior career* Years Team Apps† (Gls)† 1976–1977 Volgar Astrakhan 26 (0) 1977–1988 Spartak Moscow 335 (0) 1988–1991 Sevilla 59 (0) Total 420 (0) National team 1979–1990 Soviet Union 91 (0) Teams managed 2003–2005 Russia (assistant) 2007–2008 Torpedo Moscow (assistant) 2011- Persidafon Jayapura (Goalkeeper Coach) HonoursCompetitor for Soviet Union Men's Football Bronze 1980 Moscow Team * Senior club appearances and goals counted for the domestic league only.
† Appearances (Goals).This name uses Eastern Slavic naming customs; the patronymic is Fayzrakhmanovich and the family name is Dasayev.Rinat Fayzrakhmanovich Dasayev (Russian: Ринат Файзрахманович Дасаев, Tatar: Rinat Faizrahman uly Dasaev; born June 13, 1957 in Astrakhan, Russian SFSR) is a Russian former football goalkeeper of Tatar ethnicity, who played in three World Cups with the Soviet national team. He is considered the second best Russian goalkeeper ever behind Lev Yashin,[2] and one of the best in the world in the 1980s. He was awarded the title of the World’s Best Goalkeeper of the Year award in 1988 by the IFFHS. In 2004, he was named by Pelé as one of the top 125 greatest living footballers.
Dasayev, nicknamed “The Iron Curtain” and "The Cat", was a goalkeeper for the Russian football club Spartak Moscow during most of the 1980s. He won the Soviet championship in 1979 and 1987 and was named Best Soviet Goalkeeper by Ogonyok (Огонëк) magazine in 1980, 1982, 1983, 1985, 1987, 1988. In 1982 he was named Soviet Footballer of the Year. Dasayev played for the Soviet national team at the 1980 Summer Olympics, winning the bronze medal. He appeared in the 1982, 1986 and 1990 FIFA World Cups, as well as the Euro 88 (where the Soviet Union lost the final and Dasayev was powerless to stop Marco van Basten's legendary volley). In total, he was capped 91 times from 1979 to 1990, being the second-most capped player ever for the Soviet Union.
After his contract ran out with the Spanish club Sevilla FC in the early 1990s, Dasayev retired from the sport.
He was appointed as the 2008 UEFA Champions League Final Ambassador.
Contents
Honours
Club
- Spartak Moscow
- Soviet Top League: 1979, 1987, Winner
- Soviet Top League: 1980, 1981, 1983, 1984, 1985, Runner-up
- Soviet Cup: 1981, Runner-up
Country
- Soviet Union
- UEFA European Football Championship: 1988, Runner-up
FIFA World Cup 2018 bid
Dasayev was a member of Russia's bid committee to hold 2018 FIFA World Cup, which Russia won.
References
- ^ http://www.zerozerofootball.com/player/rinat_dasayev/current/profile/0/default/26835
- ^ IFFHS' Century Elections - rsssf.com - by Karel Stokkermans, RSSSF.
Awards FIFA 100 UEFA Baggio · Ballack · Banks · Baresi · Beckenbauer · Beckham · Bergkamp · Bergomi · Best · Boniek · Boniperti · Breitner · Buffon · Butragueño · Cantona · Ceulemans · Charlton · Cruyff · Dalglish · Dasayev · Davids · Del Piero · Desailly · Deschamps · Emre · Eusébio · Facchetti · Figo · Fontaine · Gullit · Hagi · Henry · Kahn · Keane · Keegan · Klinsmann · Kluivert · Kopa · B. Laudrup · M. Laudrup · Lineker · Luis Enrique · Maier · Maldini · Masopust · Matthäus · Müller · Nedvěd · Neeskens · Nesta · Owen · Papin · Pfaff · Pirès · Platini · Puskás · Raúl · Rensenbrink · Rijkaard · Rivera · Rossi · Rui Costa · Rummenigge · Rüştü · Schmeichel · Seedorf · Seeler · Shearer · Shevchenko · Stoichkov · Šuker · Thuram · Totti · Trésor · Trezeguet · van Basten · R. van de Kerkhof · W. van de Kerkhof · Van der Elst · van Nistelrooy · Vieira · Vieri · Zidane · ZoffCONMEBOL Carlos Alberto · Batistuta · Cafu · Crespo · Cubillas · Di Stéfano · Falcão · Figueroa · Francescoli · Júnior · Kempes · Maradona · Passarella · Pelé · Rivaldo · Rivelino · Roberto Carlos · Romário · Romerito · Ronaldinho · Ronaldo · Djalma Santos · Nílton Santos · Saviola · Sívori · Sócrates · Valderrama · Verón · Zamorano · Zanetti · ZicoCAF CONCACAF AFC IFFHS World's Best Goalkeeper 1987: Pfaff | 1988: Dasaev | 1989: Zenga | 1990: Zenga | 1991: Zenga | 1992: Schmeichel | 1993: Schmeichel | 1994: Preud'homme | 1995: Chilavert | 1996: Köpke | 1997: Chilavert | 1998: Chilavert | 1999: Kahn | 2000: Barthez | 2001: Kahn | 2002: Kahn | 2003: Buffon | 2004: Buffon | 2005: Čech | 2006: Buffon | 2007: Buffon | 2008: Casillas | 2009: Casillas | 2010: Casillas1964: Voronin | 1965: Voronin | 1966: Biba | 1967: Streltsov | 1968: Streltsov | 1969: Muntyan | 1970: Shesternyov | 1971: Rudakov | 1972: Lovchev | 1973: Blokhin | 1974: Blokhin | 1975: Blokhin | 1976: Astapovsky | 1977: Kipiani | 1978: Shengelia | 1979: Starukhin | 1980: Chivadze | 1981: Shengelia | 1982: Dasayev | 1983: Cherenkov | 1984: Lytovchenko | 1985: Demyanenko | 1986: Zavarov | 1987: Protasov | 1988: Mykhaylychenko | 1989: Cherenkov | 1990: Dobrovolski | 1991: KolyvanovCategories:- 1957 births
- Living people
- People from Astrakhan
- 1982 FIFA World Cup players
- 1986 FIFA World Cup players
- 1990 FIFA World Cup players
- FC Spartak Moscow players
- FIFA 100
- Association football goalkeepers
- Footballers at the 1980 Summer Olympics
- La Liga footballers
- Olympic footballers of the Soviet Union
- Olympic bronze medalists for the Soviet Union
- Russian Tatar people
- Sevilla FC footballers
- Soviet footballers
- Soviet Union international footballers
- Soviet expatriate footballers
- UEFA Euro 1988 players
- Expatriate footballers in Spain
- FC Volgar-Gazprom Astrakhan players
- Olympic medalists in football
- Spartak Moscow
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