Krasimir Balakov Explained

Krasimir Balakov
Fullname:Krasimir Genchev Balakov
Birth Date:29 March 1966
Birth Place:Veliko Tarnovo, Bulgaria
Height:1.76 m
Position:Attacking midfielder
Years1:1983–1990
Clubs1:Etar Veliko Tarnovo
Caps1:142
Goals1:35
Years2:1991–1995
Clubs2:Sporting CP
Caps2:138
Goals2:43
Years3:1995–2003
Clubs3:VfB Stuttgart
Caps3:236
Goals3:54
Years4:2005
Clubs4:VFC Plauen
Caps4:1
Goals4:0
Totalcaps:517
Totalgoals:132
Nationalyears1:1984–1987
Nationalteam1:Bulgaria U21
Nationalcaps1:29
Nationalgoals1:3
Nationalyears2:1988–2003
Nationalteam2:Bulgaria
Nationalcaps2:92
Nationalgoals2:16
Manageryears1:2003–2005
Managerclubs1:VfB Stuttgart (assistant)
Manageryears2:2005
Managerclubs2:VFC Plauen (player-manager)
Manageryears3:2006–2007
Managerclubs3:Grasshoppers
Manageryears4:2007–2008
Managerclubs4:St. Gallen
Manageryears5:2008–2010
Managerclubs5:Chernomorets Burgas
Manageryears6:2011–2012
Managerclubs6:Hajduk Split
Manageryears7:2012
Managerclubs7:1. FC Kaiserslautern
Manageryears8:2014–2015
Managerclubs8:Litex Lovech
Manageryears9:2018–2019
Managerclubs9:Etar Veliko Tarnovo
Manageryears10:2019
Managerclubs10:Bulgaria
Manageryears11:2020–2021
Managerclubs11:CSKA 1948
Manageryears12:2023–2024
Managerclubs12:Septemvri Sofia
Manageryears13:2024
Managerclubs13:Lokomotiv Sofia

Krasimir Genchev Balakov (Bulgarian: Красимир Генчев Балъков, in Bulgarian pronounced as /krɐsiˈmir bɐˈɫɤkof/; born 29 March 1966). A former attacking midfielder, he was a key member of the Bulgaria national team that finished fourth in the 1994 FIFA World Cup.[1] He is considered as second only to Hristo Stoichkov among Bulgarian men's footballers of his generation.

Club career

Balakov began his club career at the local Etar Veliko Tarnovo, before transferring to Sporting Clube de Portugal in 1990, playing alongside future Ballon d'Or recipient Luís Figo, his compatriot Yordanov, and future two-time Champions League winner Paulo Sousa. Though Sporting Clube de Portugal had a quality squad, Balakov only won the 1994–95 Portuguese Cup during his time at the club. In 1995, he transferred to Germany's VfB Stuttgart where he won two UEFA Intertoto Cups (2000 and 2002) and a DFB-Pokal (1997), before retiring in 2003 - the same year that he called time on an international career which had spanned 15 years and 92 caps. As an attacking midfielder Balakov formed a successful attacking partnership with strikers Fredi Bobic and Giovane Élber at Stuttgart. The trio were known as the "magic triangle". He stayed at Stuttgart until retiring as a player in 2003, although he did make a comeback as a player two years later when he made a single appearance as player-manager of VFC Plauen.[2]

Coaching career

The year after he retired, Krasimir became assistant coach of the club he had just retired from, VfB Stuttgart. He stayed in this position for two years before deciding to become a player-manager at VFC Plauen, where he remained for just a short time.

He had been appointed on 16 January 2006 as a manager of Grasshopper Club Zürich to replace Hanspeter Latour who left for 1. FC Köln. Balakov won the Intertoto Cup, thus qualified the club to the UEFA Cup for 2006–07 season.

He had been appointed on 29 October 2007 as a manager of FC St. Gallen to replace Rolf Fringer.[3] Three days before the season ended, he was fired by the club management.

In December 2008, he became manager of PFC Chernomorets Burgas in his homeland, taking over from Dimitar Dimitrov, after also having considered an offer to coach the national team of his country.[4] On 6 December 2010, he was released from PFC Chernomorets Burgas after mutual consent, following a change in the long-term vision for the club by the owner Mitko Sabev.[5]

On 27 May 2011, it was announced that Balakov would take over the helm of Croatian club Hajduk Split.[6]

On 22 March 2012, Balakov was appointed the manager of 1. FC Kaiserslautern.[7] He was sacked on 17 May 2012, after being unable to prevent Kaiserslautern's relegation to the 2. Bundesliga.[8] He subsequently continued his career as manager in his country.

On 4 January 2018, he was announced as the new manager of Etar Veliko Tarnovo with Stanislav Genchev, Iliyan Kiryakov and Kaloyan Chakarov as first team coaches.[9]

On 14 May 2019, he was named as the new manager of the Bulgaria national team.[10]

In October 2019, Balakov was replaced as manager of the national team by Georgi Dermendzhiev after resigning from his role following the backlash over his denial of alleged fan racism aimed at members of the England team in a Euro 2020 qualifying match as well as a continued string of unsatisfactory results.[11] He took over as manager of CSKA 1948 in June 2020.[12] In late August 2020, Balakov's duties were extended to cover the organizational management as well, with assistant Yordan Yurukov becoming more actively involved in the training process.[13] However, the latter resigned on 22 September,[14] leaving Balakov to be the sole one in charge of the team. In June 2021, Balakov parted ways with CSKA 1948, with the club's management thanking him for establishing the team among the stronger sides in the top division of Bulgarian football.[15] In May 2023, Balakov returned to coaching, being appointed as manager of relegation-threatened Septemvri Sofia.[16]

International career

Balakov made 92 appearances for Bulgaria, between 1988 and 2003 (one of the best totals in national history) and scored 16 goals. He made his debut on 2 November 1988, in the 1–1 draw with Denmark in a qualifying match for the 1990 FIFA World Cup, coming on as a late second half substitute for Hristo Stoichkov.[17] Other than the 1994 FIFA World Cup, he also played for his country at Euro 1996 and the 1998 FIFA World Cup. At age 37 he played in the qualifications for Euro 2004 to help his teammates qualify but retired from football before the final stage in Portugal.

International goals

Scores and results list Bulgaria's goal tally first, score column indicates score after each Balakov goal.[18] [19] [20] [21]

List of international goals scored by Krasimir Balakov
No.DateVenueOpponentScoreResultCompetition
1 14 May 1992 Olympiastadion, Helsinki, Finland 1–0 3–0 1994 World Cup qualifier
2 9 September 1992 Vasil Levski National Stadium, Sofia, Bulgaria 2–0 2–0 1994 World Cup qualifier
3 11 November 1992Saint-Ouen, Paris, France 1–1 1–2 Friendly match
4 19 January 1994 SDCCU Stadium, San Diego, United States 1–1 1–1 Friendly match
5 16 November 1994 Vasil Levski National Stadium, Sofia, Bulgaria 2–1 4–1 Euro 1996 qualifier
6 29 March 1995 Vasil Levski National Stadium, Sofia, Bulgaria 1–0 3–1 Euro 1996 qualifier
7 26 April 1995 Stadionul Republican, Chişinău, Moldova 1–0 3–0 Euro 1996 qualifier
8 1 September 1996 Ramat Gan Stadium, Ramat Gan, Israel 1–0 1–2 1998 World Cup qualifier
9 8 October 1996 Stade Josy Barthel, Luxembourg City, Luxembourg 1–0 2–1 1998 World Cup qualifier
10 14 December 1996 Tsirio Stadium, Limassol, Cyprus 2–1 3–1 1998 World Cup qualifier
11 8 June 1997 Neftochimik Stadium, Burgas, Bulgaria 3–0 4–0 1998 World Cup qualifier
12 28 March 2001 Balgarska Armia Stadium, Sofia, Bulgaria 1–0 4–3 2002 World Cup qualifier
13 15 August 2001 Balgarska Armia Stadium, Sofia, Bulgaria 1–0 1–0 Friendly match
14 21 August 2002 Georgi Asparuhov Stadium, Sofia, Bulgaria 2–1 2–2 Friendly match
15 16 October 2002 Vasil Levski National Stadium, Sofia, Bulgaria 2–0 2–1 Euro 2004 qualifier

Managerial statistics

TeamFromToCompetitionRecord
GWDLWin %GFGAGD
Grasshopper Club Zürich16 January 200621 May 2007Swiss Super League7154+17
UEFA Cup2118+3
Total9272+20
Chernomorets Burgas14 December 20086 December 2010Bulgarian A Professional Football Group7954+25
Bulgarian Cup52+3
Total8456+28
Hajduk Split31 May 201122 March 2012Prva HNL4217+25
Croatian Cup94+5
UEFA Cup02–2
Total5123+28
1. FC Kaiserslautern22 March 201217 May 2012Bundesliga718–11
Total718–11
Litex Lovech27 May 201411 July 2015Bulgarian A Professional Football Group4932+17
Bulgarian Cup97+2
Europa League86+2
Total6645+21
Etar Veliko Tarnovo4 January 201814 May 2019First Professional Football League6556+9
Bulgarian Cup61+5
Total7157+14
Bulgaria national football team14 May 201918 October 2019UEFA Euro 2020 qualifying Group A315align="left"-12
Friendly13align="left"-2
Total418align="left"-14
Career totalsLeague313231+82
National League Cup2914+15
European League Cup2926+3
Nation418align="left"-14
Total375289+86

Honours

Etar Veliko Tarnovo

1990–91

Sporting CP

VfB Stuttgart

Bulgaria

Individual

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Balakov: "Vivi ao lado da Luz e espiei muitos treinos do Benfica" . maisfutebol.iol.pt . 28 March 2019 . Pedro Jorge . da Cunha . pt . 7 December 2020.
  2. Web site: Stevenson. Jonathan. Bulgarians remain in shadow of class of '94. BBC.co.uk. BBC. 30 June 2014 . 2 September 2010.
  3. Web site: Krassimir Balakov neuer Cheftrainer . https://web.archive.org/web/20080214235605/http://www.fcsg.ch/newsdetails.asp?kid=5&id=887 . dead . 14 February 2008 . fcsg.ch . 29 October 2007 . de . dmy-all .
  4. Web site: 7sport.net. Балъков между Бургас и националния отбор. Бившият играч на Щутгарт преговаря с Черноморец. 11 December 2008. 19 June 2015. dead. https://web.archive.org/web/20160304101432/http://www.7sport.net/archive7ds/2008/12/11/fb_1footbg/d5246_9.htm. 4 March 2016.
  5. News: Красимир Балъков се раздели с Черноморец (Бургас). 8 December 2010. burgas-top.com. bg. 24 March 2012. dead. https://web.archive.org/web/20110712112348/http://www.burgas-top.com/news/balakov-napusna-chernomoretz.html. 12 July 2011.
  6. News: Krasimir Balakov novi trener Hajduka . Jurišić . Bernard . 27 May 2011 . Sportnet.hr . hr . 27 May 2011 . 31 May 2011 . https://web.archive.org/web/20110531104719/http://www.hrsport.net/vijesti/418405/nogomet-1-hnl/krasimir-balakov-novi-trener-hajduka . dead .
  7. News: Balakov više nije trener Hajduka . 22 March 2012 . Hajduk Split . hajduk.hr . hr . 22 March 2012.
  8. News: Aus für Balakov nach 57 Tagen . 18 May 2012 . Die Rheinpfalz . de . 18 May 2012 . dead . https://web.archive.org/web/20130613012634/http://www.rheinpfalz.de/cgi-bin/cms2/cms.pl?cmd=showMsg&tpl=rhpMsg_thickbox.html&path=%2Frhp%2Fsport%2Ffck&id=9004006 . 13 June 2013.
  9. Web site: Революция в Търново: Балъков е новият мениджър на Етър, Генчев остава, Деко е аут . bg . sportal.bg . 4 January 2018 . 5 January 2018.
  10. Web site: Balakov appointed as head coach of Bulgaria national squad . rfi.fr . 14 May 2019 . 9 September 2019.
  11. Web site: Bulgaria soccer coach resigns following racist abuse of England team. Ben Church. CNN. 18 October 2019 . 23 October 2019.
  12. Web site: Красимир Балъков е новият треньор на ЦСКА 1948. gong.bg. 2 June 2020. 5 June 2020.
  13. Web site: ЦСКА 1948 с официална позиция за Красимир Балъков. gong.bg. 31 August 2020. 28 October 2020.
  14. Web site: Йордан Юруков напуска ФК ЦСКА 1948!. topsport.bg. 22 September 2020. 28 October 2020.
  15. Web site: Официално: Балъков се раздели с ЦСКА 1948 . monitor.bg . Bulgarian . 6 December 2021 . 14 June 2021.
  16. Web site: Красимир Балъков се завърна в българския футбол като треньор на "Септември". bg . Kichukov, Simeon . dnevnik.bg. 5 May 2023. 7 May 2023.
  17. Web site: Match log for Krasimir Balakov . eu-football.info . 20 October 2020 . en.
  18. Web site: Krasimir Balakov - matches and goals for Bulgaria . national-football-teams.com . 16 October 2020.
  19. Web site: Portugal v Bulgaria, 11 November 1992 . 11v11.com. 16 October 2020.
  20. Web site: България би Андора с измамното 2:1 . Bulgarian. segabg.com. 17 October 2002. 16 October 2020.
  21. Web site: Балъков подари вратовръзка на бившия си шеф в Щутгарт. Bulgarian. blitz.bg. 27 March 2013. 16 October 2020.
  22. Web site: Bundesliga Historie 1995/96. de. kicker.
  23. Web site: Bundesliga Historie 1996/97. de. kicker.
  24. Web site: Bundesliga Historie 1997/98. de. kicker.
  25. Web site: FIFA XI's Matches – Full Info . RSSSF . 20 October 2015 . 26 October 2015 . Marcelo . Leme de Arruda.