Aleksandr Filimonov Explained

Aleksandr Filimonov
Александр Филимонов
Fullname:Aleksandr Vladimirovich Filimonov
Birth Date:15 October 1973
Birth Place:Yoshkar-Ola, USSR
Height:1.95m (06.4feet)
Position:Goalkeeper
Youthyears1:–1990
Youthclubs1:Burevestnik Yoshkar-Ola
Years1:1990
Clubs1:Stal Cheboksary
Caps1:2
Goals1:0
Years2:1991
Caps2:38
Goals2:1
Years3:1992–1993
Clubs3:Fakel Voronezh
Caps3:67
Goals3:0
Years4:1994–1995
Caps4:53
Goals4:0
Years5:1996–2001
Clubs5:Spartak Moscow
Caps5:147
Goals5:0
Years6:1996–2000
Clubs6:Spartak-2 Moscow
Caps6:2
Goals6:0
Years7:2001
Clubs7:Dynamo Kyiv
Caps7:4
Goals7:0
Years8:2001
Clubs8:Dynamo-2 Kyiv
Caps8:1
Goals8:0
Years9:2002–2003
Clubs9:Uralan Elista
Caps9:39
Goals9:0
Years10:2004–2006
Clubs10:Moscow
Caps10:26
Goals10:0
Years11:2007–2008
Clubs11:Nea Salamis
Caps11:12
Goals11:0
Years12:2008
Clubs12:Kuban Krasnodar
Caps12:16
Goals12:0
Years13:2009–2010
Caps13:47
Goals13:0
Years14:2012–2015
Clubs14:Arsenal Tula
Caps14:75
Goals14:0
Years15:2015–2018
Clubs15:Dolgoprudny
Caps15:28
Goals15:0
Totalcaps:557
Totalgoals:1
Nationalyears1:1995
Nationalcaps1:5
Nationalgoals1:0
Nationalyears2:1998–2002[1]
Nationalteam2:Russia
Nationalcaps2:16
Nationalgoals2:0
Nationalyears3:2004
Nationalcaps3:1
Nationalgoals3:0
Nationalyears4:2011–2012
Nationalteam4:Russia (beach soccer)

Aleksandr Vladimirovich Filimonov (Russian: Александр Владимирович Филимонов; born 15 October 1973) is a former association football goalkeeper from Russia. He won the 2011 FIFA Beach Soccer World Cup with the Russia national beach soccer team.[2]

During his professional career, he was best known for playing for Spartak Moscow and the Russia national football team, as well as for the accidental goal he conceded in Euro 2000 qualifying playoffs from Andriy Shevchenko.

Early life and career

Born in Yoshkar-Ola, Filimonov spent his early years elsewhere in the USSR. He was interested in football from an early age since his father was a football coach.

After finishing with the Burevestnik football academy in Yoshkar-Ola, he moved to his first adult football team in summer 1990 – Stal Cheboksary, from the Soviet Second League B. As a seventeen-year-old, he was only able to make two appearances in the season. That winter, he returned to Yoshkar-Ola and joined local team Druzhba Yoshkar-Ola to take part in the 1991 Soviet Second League B tournament. Soon Filimonov established himself as the first-choice goalkeeper for Druzhba and started 38 matches. He also scored a goal, which would prove to be the only one of his adult career.

As the 1991 season neared its end, the Soviet Union disbanded. At the beginning of 1992 Filimonov joined Fakel Voronezh, which unexpectedly joined the newly formed Russian Premier League, despite having finished mid-table in the Soviet First League. Despite his efforts, Fakel were relegated in their first season. Filimonov spent another season with Fakel in the Russian First League before moving to the Russian Premier League top-half team Tekstilshchik Kamyshin, having achieved 20 clean sheets in 37 matches in 1993, and a total of 71 appearances for Fakel.

At Tekstilshchik, Filimonov quickly established himself as first-team keeper and played his first European club tournament matches in 1994 in the UEFA Cup, against Nantes and Békéscsaba. Over the course of two seasons with Tekstilshchik, Filimonov became regarded as one of the most promising Russian keepers, and on 6 June 1995, he debuted for the Russian U23 national team against San Marino and earned three U23 caps in autumn 1995.

Spartak Moscow

Filimonov's contract with Tekstilshchik expired in 1996, and the club's financial situation prevented them from renewing it. At the time, Spartak Moscow was looking for a new keeper to replace Stanislav Cherchesov, who had left for Wacker Innsbruck. Spartak had signed Ruslan Nigmatullin but also signed Filimonov to increase their squad's depth. Initially, Filimonov acted as backup for Nigmatullin and missed the opportunity to play in the UEFA Champions League, but over the course of his first season there, Filimonov became first-choice keeper again, as Georgi Yartsev preferred Filimonov's demonstrated consistency.

For most of the remainder of his career with Spartak, Filimonov was preferred for the club's starting XI. When he left the club in summer 2001, he had won six league titles, played in numerous Champions League games (including a 4–1 win over Arsenal), and became an established member of the Russian national team. By that time, Maksym Levytsky had become the club's preferred starting keeper.

Later career

After leaving Spartak, Filimonov was transferred to Dynamo Kyiv to cover for Oleksandr Shovkovskyi, who had picked up a serious injury. He made few appearances, as Vitaliy Reva became the preferred replacement for Shovkovskyi. Immediately after his Dynamo contract ended, he returned to Russia to play for Uralan Elista. After two seasons with Uralan, he was signed by Moscow. During the first half of the 2004 season, he featured regularly for Moscow, but by 2005, he was the club's third choice keeper and made no appearances.

In January 2007, Filimonov joined Cypriot side Nea Salamina. Before retiring from professional football, he also played for Kuban Krasnodar in Russia and Lokomotiv Tashkent in Uzbekistan.

In 2009, he was part of the Russia squad that won the 2009 Legends Cup, a tournament for retired players 35 and older.

In 2011, Filimonov switched to beach soccer and joined Lokomotiv Moscow, with whom he won a national title and super cup. His success in beach soccer earned him an invitation to the national team, with whom he won the 2011 FIFA Beach Soccer World Cup.

He subsequently returned to the Russian Football Premier League in the 2014–15 season at the age of 41 with Arsenal Tula, a team managed by his former Spartak and Russia teammate Dmitri Alenichev, after achieving three consecutive promotions from the fourth tier to the top tier. However, he lost his starting spot for Arsenal in the second half of the season and signed with the third-tier PFL team Dolgoprudny for the 2015–16 season. He retired as a player upon the conclusion of the 2017–18 season, being the last active player of Soviet Union Football Championship.

International career

Filimonov gained his first cap for the Russian national team on 25 March 1998 in a friendly match against France.[3] He played four friendlies in 1998 but was not the main national keeper under managers Boris Ignatyev and Anatoly Byshovets. This changed when Oleg Romantsev, who had managed him at Spartak, became the national manager. Filimonov was the primary keeper of the Russian squad during Euro 2000 qualifying, where the team had an impressive run, including a 3–2 victory against France at the Stade de France on 5 June 1999.

A turning point in Filimonov's career occurred during Russia's match against Ukraine on 9 October 1999, where a win for Russia would qualify them for the Euro 2000 playoffs. Post-Soviet rivalry between Russia and Ukraine made this a highly anticipated match, resulting in Luzhniki Stadium being sold out for the first time in fifteen years. During the match, Russia dominated possession, but no goals came until the 75th minute, when Valery Karpin scored for Russia from a free kick. But at the 88th minute, Ukraine were awarded a free kick far from goal at the left edge of the field. Andriy Shevchenko kicked the ball straight at the hands of Filimonov, but Filimonov was not ready for the kick and conceded a goal.[4] The match ended 1–1, and France qualified from the group while Ukraine went to the playoffs at Russia's expense.

Subsequently, Filimonov won another four caps for Russia, but only in friendlies. He did not play for Russia in any other competitive game. He was named in Russia's 2002 World Cup squad, but was not used in favor of his former Spartak teammate Ruslan Nigmatullin.

Honours

1996, 1997, 1998, 1999, 2000, 2001

1998

2009

2011

Career statistics

ClubSeasonLeagueCupContinentalOtherTotal
DivisionAppsGoalsAppsGoalsAppsGoalsAppsGoalsAppsGoals
Stal Cheboksary1990Soviet Second League B2020
Druzhba Yoshkar-Ola1991Soviet Second League B38100381
Fakel Voronezh1992Russian Premier League30020320
1993Russian First League37020390
Total670400000710
Tekstilshchik Kamyshin1994Russian Premier League2302040290
1995Russian Premier League30010310
Total530304000600
Spartak Moscow1996Russian Premier League2603040330
1997Russian Premier League3304080450
1998Russian Premier League29050120460
1999Russian Premier League28010100390
2000Russian Premier League2303080340
2001Russian Premier League801040130
Total1470170460002100
Spartak-2 Moscow1996Russian Third League1010
2000Russian Second League1010
Total2000000020
Dynamo Kyiv2001–02Ukrainian Premier League401050100
Dynamo-2 Kyiv2001–02Ukrainian First League1010
Uralan Elista2002Russian Premier League23010240
2003Russian Premier League1600010170
Total390100010410
Moscow2004Russian Premier League26060320
2005Russian Premier League000000
2006Russian Premier League00100010
Total260700000330
Nea Salamis2006–07Cypriot First Division4040
2007–08Cypriot First Division8080
Total120000000120
Kuban Krasnodar2008Russian First League16000160
Lokomotiv Tashkent2009Uzbekistan Super League25000250
2010Uzbekistan Super League22020240
Total470200000490
Arsenal Tula2011–12LFL100
2012–12Russian Second League28010290
2013–14Russian First League3001020330
2014–15Russian Premier League17020190
Total750400020810
Dolgoprudny2015–16Russian Second League11000110
2016–17Russian Second League15000150
2017–18Russian Second League200020
Total280000000280
Career total5571390550306541

External links

Notes and References

  1. News: Aleksandr Vladimirovich Filimonov - International Appearances. Rec.Sport.Soccer Statistics Foundation. 8 January 2013.
  2. Web site: FIFA. FIFA Beach Soccer World Cup Ravenna/Italy 2011 final game report. https://web.archive.org/web/20120125043714/http://www.fifa.com/beachsoccerworldcup/matches/round=258278/match=300166605/report.html. dead. 25 January 2012. 5 August 2012.
  3. Web site: Aleksandr Vladimirovich Filimonov - International Appearances . Matthias . Arnhold . 15 July 2011 . 20 July 2011 . Rec.Sport.Soccer Statistics Foundation.
  4. News: Andriy Shevchenko's seven greatest career moments . 7 July 2012 . Goal.com.