Valeri Shantalosau

This name uses Eastern Slavic naming customs; the patronymic is Dzmitryevich and the family name is Shantalosau.
Valerij Shantalosau
Personal information
Full name Valerij Dzmitryevich Shantalosau
Date of birth (1966-03-15) 15 March 1966
Place of birth Mogilev, Belarusian SSR
Height 1.93 m (6 ft 4 in)
Playing position Goalkeeper
Club information
Current team
FC Baltika Kaliningrad (GK coach)
Youth career
1984 Dinamo Minsk
Senior career*
Years Team Apps (Gls)
1985–1986 Dnepr Mogilev 24 (0)
1988 Zvejnieks Liepāja 18 (0)
1988–1989 Daugava Rīga 40 (0)
1990–1995 Lokomotiv Nizhny Novgorod 157 (0)
1996–1997 Baltika Kaliningrad 31 (0)
1998 Torpedo Moscow 2 (0)
1999–2000 Lokomotiv Nizhny Novgorod 38 (0)
2001 Belshina Bobruisk 25 (0)
2002 Torpedo-MAZ Minsk 25 (0)
2003–2005 Tobol Kostanay 74 (0)
National team
1992–2002 Belarus 26 (0)
Teams managed
2008 Sibir Novosibirsk (assistant)
2010–2011 Krylia Sovetov Samara (assistant)
2011–2013 Fakel Voronezh (assistant)
2013–2014 Sibir-2 Novosibirsk (assistant)
2015 Sokol Saratov (assistant)
2015–2016 Khimki (GK coach)
2016– Baltika Kaliningrad (GK coach)

* Senior club appearances and goals counted for the domestic league only.


Valerij Dzmitryevich Shantalosau (Belarusian: Валерий Дзьмітрыевіч Шанталосаў; Russian: Валерий Дмитриевич Шанталосов; born 15 March 1966 in Mogilev) is a Belarusian professional football coach and a former player. He is the goalkeepers coach with FC Baltika Kaliningrad.

He made his professional debut in the Soviet Second League in 1985 for FC Dnepr Mogilev.[1]

On 19 December 2008, the Football Federation of Belarus declared Shantalosau persona non grata and disqualified him for trying to fix two UEFA Euro 2004 qualification games of Belarus national football team - against the Czech Republic and Moldova. Federation also asked FIFA to extend his disqualification worldwide.[2]

International career

Shantalosau has been capped for Belarus 26 times between 1992 and 2002. Before that, he been called up for Russia once, but did not debut.[3]

Honours

Belshina Bobruisk

References


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