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Sergey Shavlo

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Sergey Shavlo
Personal information
Full name Sergey Dmitriyevich Shavlo
Date of birth (1956-09-04) 4 September 1956 (age 68)
Place of birth Nikopol, Ukrainian SSR
Height 1.81 m (5 ft 11 in)
Position(s) Midfielder
Youth career
Trubnik Nikopol
Senior career*
Years Team Apps (Gls)
1974–1975 Elektrons Rīga
1975–1976 FK Daugava Rīga 64 (10)
1977–1982 FC Spartak Moscow 166 (34)
1983 Iskra Smolensk 40 (9)
1984–1985 FC Spartak Moscow 57 (11)
1986–1987 FC Torpedo Moscow 45 (1)
1987–1989 SK Rapid Wien 22 (2)
1989–1990 Favoritner AC
1990–1992 Eintracht Wien
1992–1993 SV Gerasdorf
1993–1997 Laxenburg
International career
1979–1985 USSR 19 (0)
Managerial career
1994–2000 SK Rapid Wien (staff)
1999–2002 SK Rapid Wien (staff)
2000–2001 FC Brunn (Austria)
2003 Torpedo-Metallurg (staff)
2004–2005 FC Spartak Moscow (scout)
2005–2008 FC Spartak Moscow (staff)
*Club domestic league appearances and goals
Olympic medal record
Representing  Soviet Union
Men's Football
Bronze medal – third place 1980 Moscow Team Competition
Sergey Shavlo in 1982

Sergey Dmitriyevich Shavlo (Template:Lang-ru; born 4 September 1956) is a former Soviet and Ukrainian/Russian footballer.

Playing biography

Shavlo made his name as a footballer in Latvia – at first he played for Elektrons Rīga but soon he caught the eye of FK Daugava Rīga management and transferred to the top Latvian team. For Daugava he played two years and then he moved to Spartak Moscow which was then playing together with Daugava in the first Soviet league and was undergoing a hard time with generation of players change. The mobile midfielder with a good pass came in handy for the Konstantin Beskov side and in 1977 with Shavlo Spartak returned to the top division and in 1979 – won the Soviet championship. In 1986 Shavlo moved to Torpedo Moscow with which he won the Soviet Cup.

Shavlo also played in the Soviet national football team capping 19 appearances. With the Soviet Olympic football team he won a bronze medal at the 1980 Summer Olympics.

Despite his already veteran age in 1987 Shavlo moved to Rapid Vienna thus becoming one of the first Soviet footballers to play abroad. After a couple of seasons he went on to coach different Austrian and Russian teams.

In 2004 Shavlo returned to Spartak, first working as a scout but in September 2005 he was appointed director of the club.[1] He worked in that capability till 7 August 2008 when his contract ran out and he decided not to renew it.[2]

Achievements

References