Oleg Blokhin


Oleg Vladimirovich Blokhin, or Oleh Volodymyrovych Blokhin is a former Ukrainian football player and manager. Blokhin was formerly a standout striker for Dynamo Kyiv and the Soviet Union.
He holds the all-time top goalscorer record for both Dynamo Kyiv and the Soviet Union national team, as well as being the overall top goalscorer in the history of the Soviet Top League. He is also the only player to have been capped over 100 times for the Soviet Union and holds Dynamo's appearance record with 582 appearances during his 18-year spell at the club. With Dynamo, Blokhin won eight Soviet league titles, five national cups and two European Cup Winners' Cups. He also competed for the Soviet Union at the 1972 and 1976 Olympic Games and 1982 and 1986 FIFA World Cups. During his playing career he won the Soviet Footballer of the Year award three times and the Ukrainian Footballer of the Year award nine times. In 1975, he was named European Footballer of the Year, winning the Ballon d'Or, becoming the second Soviet and the first Ukrainian player to achieve such a feat.
As a coach, he has had two spells in charge of the Ukrainian national team, managing the team at the 2006 FIFA World Cup and UEFA Euro 2012.
In 2011, Blokhin, together with Igor Belanov and Vitaliy Starukhin were named as "the legends of Ukrainian football" at the Victory of Football awards.

Career

Blokhin was born in Kiev, the capital of the Ukrainian SSR, in 1952 to a Russian father from Moscow and Ukrainian mother.

Playing

Blokhin was one of the greatest forwards in the world throughout the 1970s, hitting the target regularly through a period of great success at his hometown club Dynamo Kyiv and becoming the greatest goalscorer in the history of the Soviet League, which was one of Europe's strongest. Normally a forward or winger, Blokhin was most renowned for possessing exceptional pace.
Blokhin played during most of his career for Dynamo Kyiv, becoming the USSR national championship's all-time leader and goalscorer with 211 goals, as well as making more appearances than any other player with 432 appearances. He won the championship 8 times. He led Dynamo to the UEFA Cup Winners' Cup in 1975 and 1986, scoring a goal in each final. Blokhin is also the USSR national football team's most capped player with 112 caps, as well as their all-time leading goalscorer with 42 goals; he played in the 1982 and 1986 FIFA World Cups where he scored 1 goal in each. He was one of the first Soviet players to play abroad, signing for Austria's Vorwärts Steyr in 1988, he also played in Cyprus with Aris.
In 1979 Blokhin played a couple of games for the Ukraine at the Spartakiad of the Peoples of the USSR.

Coaching

After retiring as a player, Blokhin coached Greek clubs Olympiacos, PAOK, AEK Athens, and Ionikos.
He began serving as the head coach of the Ukrainian national team in September 2003. Under his leadership, Ukraine qualified for a major tournament for the first time as an independent nation, reaching the 2006 FIFA World Cup in Germany. Ukraine reached the quarter-finals of the tournament, losing to eventual champions Italy. Following the side's failure to reach UEFA Euro 2008, Blokhin stepped down as coach on 6 December 2007.
On 14 December 2007, he was named head coach of FC Moscow. The club finished 9th and after the season ended Blokhin was fired from the club. At the end of the season, Blokhin announced that if he knew how things would go in FC Moscow, he would have never signed there. This was because the club released many important players without Blokhin's permission yet still had many high expectations. Others said that the reason Blokhin failed in FC Moscow was that he and the press didn't have a friendly relationship, and because of that the press was constantly attacking Blokhin and that damaged his status among the players.
On 21 April 2011 Blokhin was again appointed head coach of the Ukrainian national team. He led the team in UEFA Euro 2012 on home soil, beating Sweden but exiting at the group stage after defeats to France and England.
On 25 September 2012, Dynamo Kyiv signed Blokhin to lead the club for the next four years. His final matches in charge of Ukraine were World Cup qualifiers against Moldova and Montenegro in October 2012. Blokhin was dismissed as Dynamo's manager by the club's President Ihor Surkis on 17 April 2014 because of the "unsatisfactory results of the team". The day before, in a press conference after Dynamo had lost a match against Shakhtar Donetsk, Blokhin had already stated that he had decided to resign. Under his leadership Dynamo never qualified for the UEFA Champions League and performed poorly in the UEFA Europa League. In his first year his team finished third in the Ukrainian Premier League and in his second year Dynamo was seven points behind Ukrainian Premier League leaders Dnipro Dnipropetrovsk and Shakhtar Donetsk.

Career statistics

Club

International goals

#DateVenueOpponentScoreResultCompetition
1.1972-07-16Helsinki Olympic Stadium, Helsinki1–01–1Friendly
2.1972-08-06Råsunda Stadion, Stockholm4–34–4Friendly
3.1972-09-01Jahnstadion, Regensburg1–04–11972 Olympics
4.1972-09-01Jahnstadion, Regensburg2–04–11972 Olympics
5.1972-09-01Jahnstadion, Regensburg3–04–11972 Olympics
6.1972-09-05Rosenaustadion, Augsburg1–01–21972 Olympics
7.1972-09-08Rosenaustadion, Augsburg3–04–01972 Olympics
8.1972-09-10Olympic Stadium, Munich1–02–21972 Olympics
9.1973-05-26Central Lenin Stadium, Moscow1–02–01972 World Cup qualifier
10.1975-04-02Kiev Central Stadium, Kiev3–03–0Euro 1976 qualifier
11.1975-05-18Kiev Central Stadium, Kiev1–02–1Euro 1976 qualifier
12.1976-03-10Všešportový areál, Košice1–02–2Friendly
13.1976-03-24Vasil Levski National Stadium, Sofia3–03–0Friendly
14.1976-05-22Kyiv Central Stadium, Kyiv2–22–2Euro 1976 qualifier
15.1976-07-23Lansdowne Park, Ottawa3–03–01976 Olympics
16.1977-03-23JNA Stadium, Belgrade1–04–2Friendly
17.1977-03-23JNA Stadium, Belgrade3–14–2Friendly
18.1977-09-07Central Stadium, Volgograd3–14–1Friendly
19.1977-09-07Central Stadium, Volgograd4–14–1Friendly
20.1978-02-26Stade El Harti, Marrakech1–13–2Friendly
21.1978-04-05Hrazdan Stadium, Yerevan4–010–2Friendly
22.1978-04-05Hrazdan Stadium, Yerevan6–010–2Friendly
23.1978-04-05Hrazdan Stadium, Yerevan9–110–2Friendly
24.1978-05-14Stadionul 23 August, Bucharest1–01–0Friendly
25.1978-10-05Ankara 19 Mayıs Stadium, Ankara2–02–0Friendly
26.1979-03-28Lokomotiv Stadium, Simferopol1–03–1Friendly
27.1980-08-27Népstadion, Budapest1–14–1Friendly
28.1981-09-23Central Lenin Stadium, Moscow3–04–01982 World Cup qualifier
29.1981-10-07İzmir Atatürk Stadium, Izmir2–03–01982 World Cup qualifier
30.1981-10-07İzmir Atatürk Stadium, Izmir3–03–01982 World Cup qualifier
31.1981-11-18Dinamo Stadium, Tbilisi2–03–01982 World Cup qualifier
32.1981-11-29Tehelné pole, Bratislava1–01–11982 World Cup qualifier
33.1982-06-03Råsunda Stadion, Stockholm1–01–1Friendly
34.1982-06-19Estadio La Rosaleda, Málaga2–03–01982 World Cup
35.1983-04-13Stade Olympique de la Pontaise, Lausanne1–01–0Friendly
36.1983-05-17Praterstadion, Vienna2–12–2Friendly
37.1983-06-01Helsinki Olympic Stadium, Helsinki1–01–0Euro 1984 qualifier
38.1983-07-26Zentralstadion, Leipzig1–03–1Friendly
39.1983-10-09Central Lenin Stadium, Moscow2–02–0Euro 1984 qualifier
40.1984-08-19Kirov Stadium, Leningrad3–03–0Friendly
41.1986-06-09Estadio Sergio León Chavez, Irapuato1–02–01986 World Cup
42.1986-10-29Lokomotiv Stadium, Simferopol3–03–0Euro 1988 qualifier

Managerial statistics

Politics

In 1998 Blokhin was elected to Verkhovna Rada for Hromada. He joined Hromada while still being a member of the Communist Party of Ukraine. In 2002, Blokhin was elected to Verkhovna Rada for a second term. In October 2002, he joined the United Social Democratic Party of Ukraine.

Family

Blokhin's father, Vladimir Ivanovich Blokhin, is a native of Moscow, a veteran of the World War II, survivor of the Leningrad blockade, and a former Soviet law enforcement agent. Vladimir Blokhin later worked as a sports functionary for the Soviet Dynamo Society. Blokhin's mother Katerina Zakharivna is from a village in the Borodyanka Raion. She originally worked at a Kyiv sewing factory, but eventually discovered hidden athletic talents and became the Soviet champion in track and field as well as pentathlon. After retiring from sports, she became a staff member at one of Kyiv's universities.
Blokhin was married to Irina Deriugina, a top coach and former world champion in rhythmic gymnastics, but the couple divorced in the early 1990s. Blokhin and Deriugina have a daughter, singer Iryna Blokhina, who wrote and performed the Euro 2012 anthem.
Blokhin and his second wife, Angela, have two daughters, Hanna and Katerina.

Honours

Club

Dynamo Kyiv