Jevgeņijs Miļevskis Explained

Jevgeņijs Miļevskis
Fullname:Jevgeņijs Miļevskis
Birth Date:15 August 1961
Birth Place:Riga, Latvian SSR, Soviet Union
Years1:1980
Years2:1981–1984
Years3:1984
Years4:1985–1988
Years5:1989–1991
Years6:1991–1994
Clubs6:VSE Sankt Pölten
Caps1:?
Caps2:90
Caps3:6
Caps4:170
Caps5:49
Caps6:93
Goals1:22
Goals2:28
Goals3:0
Goals4:74
Goals5:15
Goals6:13
Nationalyears1:1994
Nationalteam1:Latvia
Nationalcaps1:3
Nationalgoals1:1

Jevgeņijs Miļevskis (born 15 August 1961) is a former Latvian football striker of Jewish origin, together with Aleksandrs Starkovs he was the main goal scoring force of FK Daugava Rīga.

In 2006 Miļevskis was selected by the Latvian Football Federation as one of the 11 best Latvian footballers of the first 100 years of football in Latvia.[1]

Playing career

Miļevskis started playing under the best Latvian youth football coach Krišs Maisītājs in the Riga football school, later he played with FK Progress under Jānis Skredelis. In 1981 Miļevskis joined Daugava Rīga and with his smart and elegant playing style soon attracted the interest of both fans and specialists. He got invitations to play for several top Soviet clubs including FC Dynamo Kyiv, FC Dynamo Moscow and PFC CSKA Moscow but eventually he joined Spartak Moscow. After having played several games for Spartak but not having been selected to participate in European competitions Miļevskis returned to Daugava. In the mid-1980s together with Starkovs Miļevskis made up one of the best attacks in the first Soviet league.[2] For Daugava he scored more than 100 goals in official games.[3]

In 1988 Miļevskis decided to emigrate to United States. However, he was contacted by FK Austria Wien officials and played there for two seasons (20 goals in 64 matches). With Austria Wien he became champion of Austrian Bundesliga, won the Austrian Cup and the Austrian Supercup (2 times). His last professional club was VSE Sankt Pölten where he played until 1994.[4]

Miļevskis also played 3 games for Latvia in Euro 1996 qualifiers and scored the single Latvia goal in a 1:3 defeat against Portugal.[5]

Notes and References

  1. http://www.lff.lv/lv/news/2006/12/29/ Latvian top footballers of 2006 and of the century (in Latvian)
  2. Miķelis Rubenis. History of Latvian football, 2000, pp. 153–154 (in Latvian)
  3. http://klisf.info/numeric/index.app?cmd=ln&lang=en&id=539116648433516 Stats in official games
  4. http://www.legioner.kulichki.com/index.php?id=11&lang=en&player=158 Player stats in Austrian clubs
  5. http://www.srcf.ucam.org/~nfm24/football/1994e2.html European football results from 1994