Dmitri Alenichev

Dmitri Alenichev
Dmitri Alenichev
D-Alenichev.jpg
Personal information
Full name Dmitri Anatolievich Alenitchev
Date of birth 20 October 1972 (1972-10-20) (age 39)
Place of birth Velikie Luki, Soviet Union
Playing position Wide Attacking Midfielder
Club information
Current club Russia U-18 (manager)
Senior career*
Years Team Apps (Gls)
1989 SKIF-Express Velikie Luki ? (?)
1990–1991 Mashinostroitel Pskov 38 (7)
1991–1993 Lokomotiv Moscow 69 (6)
1994–1998 Spartak Moscow 122 (18)
1998–2000 AS Roma 28 (2)
1999–2000 Perugia (loan) 15 (0)
2000–2004 FC Porto 84 (12)
2004–2006 Spartak Moscow 21 (3)
National team
1996–2005 Russia 55 (6)
Teams managed
2010– Russia U-18
* Senior club appearances and goals counted for the domestic league only.
† Appearances (Goals).

Dmitri Anatolievich Alenitchev (Russian: Дмитрий Анатольевич Аленичев; 20 October 1972, Velikie Luki, Russia) is a professional association football coach and a former player and politician. Currently, he is managing the Russia Under-18 national football team.

Contents

Biography

Despite being a Spartak Moscow fan, Alenichev debuted 1991 for Moscow rivals Lokomotiv, where he played during four years before moving to Spartak, where in five years he won three Russian leagues and two cups, and was also elected Russian player of the year in 1997. He won a transfer to Serie A side AS Roma, played 21 matches in the first season, but after only seven matches played, he moved to AC Perugia in December 1999. His stint in Italy overall proved to be unsuccessful and he was eventually considered to be one of Italian football's biggest foreign flops.[1]

In 2000 he was bought by FC Porto, where he made a good first impression (scored the tying against Sporting in the Portuguese Super Cup), and made a good first season where Porto captured the Portuguese cup 2–0 against CS Marítimo, Alenichev scoring the second goal. In the following season, Alenichev suffered some animosity from new Porto coach Octávio Machado (the same happened with compatriot Sergei Ovchinnikov) and spent most of the first half of the season sidelined, under the shadow of Deco. As soon as Octávio was fired and replaced with José Mourinho, Alenichev's luck changed. Although he still didn't play in the starting eleven, he was usually the first player to jump from the bench, especially when Mourinho passed from a 4–3–3 to a 4–4–2 formation. A starting player in the UEFA Cup final and mid-game substitute in the Champions League final, Alenichev scored on both: against Celtic he scored the second goal, following a pass from Deco, and against AS Monaco he closed the scoreline with a powerful volley shot following a deflected through cross from Derlei. This made him one of only three players to score goals in two consecutive Cup Finals of different European competitions, the others being Ronald Koeman and Ronaldo.

During Euro 2004, where he played the whole three matches Russia disputed, he announced his desire to return to Spartak Moscow, and in appreciation for the services done for the club, the FC Porto board made no objections to a transfer.

On 8 April 2006 Sport-Express published Alenichev's interview containing severe criticism of Aleksandr Starkov, Spartak's head coach at the time.[1][2] Following that, Alenichev was fined, dismissed from the first team, transfer listed 14 April [3] and on 10 September his contract was finally terminated by mutual agreement [4]. This became the end of Alenichev's football career.

Alenichev then joined the United Russia party. On 14 June 2007 he was voted the representative of the Omsk Oblast in the Federation Council of Russia.[5] He represented it until 2010, when he accepted the position of the head coach with the Russian national under-18 team.[2]

In 2009 he was part of the Russia squad that won the 2009 Legends Cup.

His older brother Andrei Alenichev also played football professionally.

Honours

Spartak Moscow

Porto

Country

Russia Russia

  • Legends Cup: 2009

Career statistics

Club performance League Cup League Cup Continental Total
Season Club League Apps Goals Apps Goals Apps Goals Apps Goals Apps Goals
Soviet Union League Cup League Cup Continental Total
1991 Lokomotiv Moscow Top League 16 0
Russia League Russian Cup League Cup Europe Total
1992 Lokomotiv Moscow Premier League 24 2
1993 29 4
1994 Spartak Moscow Premier League 17 3
1995 27 4
1996 32 7
1997 33 2
1998 13 2
Italy League Coppa Italia League Cup Europe Total
1998–99 Roma Serie A 21 1
1999–00 7 1
1999–00 Perugia Serie A 15 0
2000–01 0 0
Portugal League Taça de Portugal Taça da Liga Europe Total
2000–01 Porto Portuguese Liga 28 3
2001–02 20 3
2002–03 18 4
2003–04 17 2
Russia League Russian Cup League Cup Europe Total
2004 Spartak Moscow Premier League 13 3
2005 8 0
Total Soviet Union 16 0
Russia 196 27
Italy 43 2
Portugal 83 12
Career total 338 41

References

External links


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