Personal information | ||||||||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Full name | Sergei Vadimovich Gorlukovich | |||||||||||
Date of birth | 18 November 1961 | |||||||||||
Place of birth | Boruny, USSR | |||||||||||
Height | 1.85 m (6 ft 1 in) | |||||||||||
Playing position | Defender | |||||||||||
Club information | ||||||||||||
Current team
|
FC Baikal Irkutsk (manager) | |||||||||||
Youth career | ||||||||||||
SDYuShOR-7 Mogilev | ||||||||||||
Senior career* | ||||||||||||
Years | Team | Apps | (Gls) | |||||||||
1980 | Torpedo Mogilev | |||||||||||
1981–1984 | Gomselmash Gomel | 112 | (21) | |||||||||
1985–1986 | Dinamo Minsk | 22 | (0) | |||||||||
1986–1989 | Lokomotiv Moscow | 114 | (11) | |||||||||
1989–1992 | Borussia Dortmund | 44 | (1) | |||||||||
1992–1995 | Bayer Uerdingen | 80 | (6) | |||||||||
1995 | Spartak-Alania Vladikavkaz | 5 | (0) | |||||||||
1996–1998 | Spartak Moscow | 83 | (5) | |||||||||
1999 | Torpedo-ZIL Moscow | 42 | (5) | |||||||||
2000 | Chkalovets-Olimpik Novosibirsk | 22 | (0) | |||||||||
2001 | Lokomotiv Nizhny Novgorod | 18 | (0) | |||||||||
2002 | Mika | 2 | (0) | |||||||||
Total | 544 | (49) | ||||||||||
National team | ||||||||||||
1988 | Soviet Union Olympic | 9 | (0) | |||||||||
1988–1991 | Soviet Union | 21 | (1) | |||||||||
1993–1996 | Russia | 17 | (0) | |||||||||
Teams managed | ||||||||||||
2002–2004 | Spartak Moscow (scout) | |||||||||||
2004 | Saturn Ramenskoye (assistant) | |||||||||||
2005–2006 | SKA-Energia Khabarovsk | |||||||||||
2007 | Avangard Kursk | |||||||||||
2008 | Vityaz Podolsk | |||||||||||
2009–2010 | SKA-Energiya Khabarovsk | |||||||||||
2013 | Baikal Irkutsk | |||||||||||
Honours
|
||||||||||||
* Senior club appearances and goals counted for the domestic league only. |
Sergei Vadimovich Gorlukovich (Russian: Серге́й Вадимович Горлукович; born 18 November 1961 in Boruny, Hrodna Voblast, Belarussian SSR) is an association footballer who played manager and former international player.
In the last years of the Soviet Union transfer rules softened and Gorlukovich was allowed to move to West Germany in the winter of 1989/90. His first club in the Bundesliga was Borussia Dortmund.
In international football, Gorlukovich played at the 1990 and 1994 FIFA World Cups, and also in Euro 1996. He made his debut for USSR on 19 October 1988 in a 1990 FIFA World Cup qualifier against Austria. He scored his only national goal in a friendly against Syria on 21 November 1988.
He is also known for ruining the career of Marcel Peeper after a leg-breaking foul in a 1990 friendly with The Netherlands in Kiev.
Soviet Union
Borussia Dortmund
Spartak-Alania Vladikavkaz
Spartak Moscow