Gennady Tumilovich

Gennady Anatolyevich Tumilovich (Russian: Геннадий Анатольевич Тумилович, born 3 September 1971) is a Belarusian football coach and a former player.

Gennady Tumilovich
Personal information
Full name Gennady Anatolyevich Tumilovich
Date of birth (1971-09-03) 3 September 1971
Place of birth Minsk, Belarusian SSR
Height 1.88 m (6 ft 2 in)[1]
Playing position(s) Goalkeeper
Youth career
SDYuShOR-5 Minsk
Senior career*
Years Team Apps (Gls)
1989–1990 Dinamo Brest 28 (0)
1991–1995 Dinamo Minsk 21 (0)
1992–1993Belarus Minsk (loan) 37 (0)
1996 Metallurg Krasnoyarsk 11 (0)
1997 Zarya Leninsk-Kuznetsky 21 (0)
1998–1999 Zhemchuzhina Sochi 33 (0)
2000 Hapoel Ironi Rishon LeZion 14 (0)
2000 Dynamo Moscow 9 (0)
2001–2002 Rostselmash 11 (0)
2003 Royal Antwerp 9 (0)
2004–2006 Luch-Energiya Vladivostok 25 (0)
2007 Dinamo Minsk 4 (0)
National team
1991 Soviet Union U20
1998–2004 Belarus 32 (0)
Teams managed
2007 Dinamo Minsk (GK coach)
2007 Dinamo Minsk (director of sports)
2011–2013 Piter Saint Petersburg (assistant)
2013–2014 Luch-Energiya Vladivostok (GK coach)
2014–2016 Tosno (GK coach)
* Senior club appearances and goals counted for the domestic league only

Career

Belarus

Tumilovich started his career at FC Dinamo Brest of Soviet Second League. He then moved to the only club in Soviet Top League from Byelorussian SSR, the capital's FC Dinamo Minsk. After the independence, he played the first ever Belarusian First League, and followed the reverse team Dinamo-2 Minsk promoted to Belarusian Premier League. After a season with second team, he joined the first team in 1993-94 season.

Russia

In 1996, Tumilovich joined Metallurg Krasnoyarsk of Russian First Division. He then played for Zarya Leninsk-Kuznetsky, also in First League. In 1998, he joined Russian Premier League side Zhemchuzhina Sochi, and also played with their reserve team at Russian Second Division.

Israel

In 2000, he joined Hapoel Ironi Rishon LeZion, but returned to Russia for Rostov in the summer.

Belgium

In 2003, he moved to Antwerp. He returned to Russia again for Luch-Energiya Vladivostok of Russian First Division in 2004.[2]

Belarus

In 2007, he moved back to FC Dinamo Minsk.

International career

He a part of Soviet squad at 1991 FIFA World Youth Championship. Between 1998 and 2004 he has been capped 32 times for Belarus.[3]

Honours

Dinamo Minsk

Individual

gollark: They aren't actually infinite. We managed to acquire one, and it failed after 10^104 operations.
gollark: I'm sure you'd like to think so.
gollark: Unfortunately, your proof required the axiom of determinacy, which is bad.
gollark: We could always deploy multiplication by -1™ technology.
gollark: Besides, you don't have infinite *computers*.

References

  1. Gennady Tumilovich at National-Football-Teams.com
  2. "Transfers: 16–22 February". UEFA.com. 2004-02-22. Retrieved 2008-03-01.
  3. "Belarus - Record International Players". RSSSF. Retrieved 2008-10-06.
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