Vitaliy Cherniy

Vitaliy Cherniy (born 1971) is a Ukrainian basketball coach and former player. Today he is the coach of BC Kyiv, a member of the Ukrainian Basketball SuperLeague, and a former head coach of Ukraine national basketball team.

Vitaliy Cherniy
BC Lietkabelis
PositionHead coach
Personal information
Born1971
Career history
As coach:
Budivelnyk Kyiv
BC Lietkabelis

Career

Vitaliy Cherniy was born in Kiev, in the Ukrainian SSR of the Soviet Union (in present-day Ukraine). He played for 13 years in Ukrainian Superleague clubs. After finishing his playing career, he was the assistant of the well-known Lithuanian coach Rimantas Endrijaitis in the Ukrainian BC Sumy. He left the club in 2007 and became a temporary assistant coach of the Ukraine national basketball team. In 2008, he was the head coach of Ukraine U-16 basketball team and reached 9th place in the European Championship.[1]

After the Championship, he signed a long-term contract with BC Kyiv as the general manager of junior teams. At 2009, when BC Kyiv sacked all of their foreign players due to financial problems, the young players of academy took the lead and BC Kyiv reached 4th place in the Ukrainian Superleague with Ukrainian players only.[2]

Cherniy was named new BC Kyiv coach in September 2009 and led this young all-Ukrainian team to the playoffs semifinal. In April 2010, he was named as new Head Coach of Ukraine national basketball team, the youngest national coach in the history of Ukrainian basketball.[2]

Sources

gollark: But they're pretty much all contradictory.
gollark: And some of the time it's just fixed on night.
gollark: I mean, you'd have to fit all your prayers into a few minutes if the day was that short.
gollark: And if you're in (the) (Ant)[Aa]rctic(a), you run into similar problems because of the broken daynight cycle.
gollark: And prayers take place at certain times of day, which of course causes problems with no real day/night cycle available.

References

  1. basket.com.ua/index.php?option=com_content&task=view&id=12379&Itemid=41
  2. basketball.sport.ua


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