Dmitri Galiamin

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Dmitri Galiamin
Personal information
Full name Dmitri Aleksandrovich Galiamin
Date of birth (1963-01-08) 8 January 1963 (age 59)
Place of birth Moscow, Soviet Union
Height 1.80 m (5 ft 11 in)
Position(s) Defender
Youth career
Spartak Moscow
Senior career*
Years Team Apps (Gls)
1980 Spartak Moscow 0 (0)
1981–1991 CSKA Moscow 292 (3)
1991–1994 Español 56 (0)
1994–1995 Mérida 8 (0)
Total 356 (3)
National team
1990–1991 Soviet Union 12 (0)
1992 CIS 1 (0)
1993–1994 Russia 6 (0)
Teams managed
1996–1999 Espanyol (assistant)
1999–2000 Palamós
2002 Dynamo St. Petersburg (director of sports)
2002 Dynamo St. Petersburg
2002–2003 Kristall Smolensk
2003 Khimki
2003 CSKA Moscow (assistant)
2003–2004 Tom Tomsk
2004–2006 Anzhi
2006 Spartak Nizhny Novgorod
2007–2008 UOR Master-Saturn Yegoryevsk (deputy director)
2008 Saturn Moscow Oblast (caretaker)
2008–2009 Saturn Moscow Oblast (director of sports)
2009–2010 Zenit St. Petersburg (head analyst)
2011–2012 Dynamo Moscow (academy director of sports)
2012–2013 Dynamo Moscow (director of sports)
2015–2016 Kairat (director of sports)
2016–2018 Kairat (academy director)
* Senior club appearances and goals counted for the domestic league only

Dmitri Aleksandrovich Galiamin (Russian: Дмитрий Александрович Галямин; born 8 January 1963) is a Russian football coach/official and a former player who played as a defender.

Club career[]

Galiamin was born in Moscow. He started playing with hometown's PFC CSKA Moscow, being an automatic first-choice from his second season onwards and helping the team to the double in his final year, 1991.

Aged 28, Galiamin moved abroad, signing with Spanish club RCD Español,[1] managing to appear sparingly during two La Liga seasons and being relegated in his second – he became a starter in 1993–94, helping the Catalans immediately return to the top level.

In the 1995 summer, due to constant injuries, Galiamin retired from the game at 32, after one season with CP Mérida (Spain, second level). In the following decade, already back in his country, he took up coaching, starting with FC Dynamo Saint Petersburg then successively managing FC Kristall Smolensk, FC Khimki, FC Tom Tomsk, FC Anzhi Makhachkala, FC Spartak Nizhny Novgorod and UOR Master-Saturn Yegoryevsk; in 2002, he served as Saint Petersburg's director of football, occupying that position six years later at FC Saturn Moscow Oblast.

International career[]

During four years, Galiamin represented three national teams – Soviet Union, CIS and Russia – earning a total of 19 caps. With the latter, he was picked for the 1994 FIFA World Cup, playing in the second half of the 1–3 group stage defeat against Sweden.[2]

References[]

  1. ^ "Desde Rusia con amor" [From Russia with love] (in Spanish). Fútbol de Primera. 16 December 2011. Retrieved 4 July 2016.
  2. ^ "World Cup 1994". RSSSF. Retrieved 5 October 2015.

External links[]

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