Langbahn Team – Weltmeisterschaft

Nikolay Dementyev

Nikolay Dementyev
Personal information
Full name Nikolay Timofeyevich Dementyev (Russian: Николай Тимофеевич Дементьев)
Date of death (1994-06-05)5 June 1994
Place of death Moscow
Position(s) Forward
Senior career*
Years Team Apps (Gls)
S. Khalturin Factory
Dynamo Leningrad
Spartak Leningrad
DKA
1940–1945 Dynamo Moscow
1946–1954 Spartak Leningrad
International career
1952 USSR National Team 8
Managerial career
1956–1959 FSzM Moscow
1959–1965 Spartak Moscow
1965–1966 Karpaty Lviv
1967–1968 Shinnik Yaroslavl
*Club domestic league appearances and goals

Nikolay Timofeyevich Dementyev (Russian: Николай Тимофеевич Дементьев; 27 July 1915 – 5 June 1994) was a Soviet and Russian football striker and a coach.

Career

In 1929, he began his playing career in the team works S. Khalturin Factory in Leningrad. Then he performed in Leningrad clubs Dynamo, Spartak and DKA.[1] In 1940 he moved to Dynamo Moscow.[2] After the Great Patriotic War in 1946 he was a player of Spartak Leningrad. In 1954 he finished his playing career.

On 24 May 1952, he debuted in the representation of the Soviet Union in an unofficial match against Hungary (1–1). He played a total of 8 unofficial games for the USSR.

In 1956 he started his coaching. He first worked with youth in FSzM Moscow. From 1959, he helped train Spartak Moscow. In the years 1965–66 he managed Karpaty Lviv. Then again he helped train Spartak Moscow and Karpaty Lviv. In the years 1967–68 he led FC Shinnik Yaroslavl. From 1969 to 1983 he coached a club in Moscow. He was Champion of the USSR (1940, 1952, 1953) and USSR Cup winner (1946, 1947, 1950). In the USSR championships held 273 matches and scored 89 goals.[1] He died on 5 June 1994 in Moscow.

Pyotr (Peka) Dementyev, also a footballer, was a brother of Nikolay.[3]

References

  1. ^ a b ДЕМЕНТЬЕВ Николай Тимофеевич (in Russian). dic.academic.ru. Retrieved 5 May 2012.
  2. ^ Николай Тимофеевич Дементьев (in Russian). FC Dynamo. Retrieved 5 May 2012.
  3. ^ "Дементьев Пётр Тимофеевич (1913–1998)". Международный объединенный биографический центр (in Russian). Легенды отечественного футбола.