Anatoli Bashashkin

Anatoli Bashashkin

Bashashkin heading away in a friendly between Moscow and Poland
Personal information
Full name Anatoli Vasilievich Bashashkin
Date of birth 23 February 1924
Place of birth Reutov, Moscow Governorate, Soviet Union
Date of death 27 July 2002(2002-07-27) (aged 78)
Place of death Moscow, Russia
Playing position Defender
Senior career*
Years Team Apps (Gls)
1946 DO Tbilisi 14 (0)
1947–1952 CDKA Moscow 99 (1)
1953 FC Spartak Moscow 12 (0)
1954–1958 CDSA Moscow 73 (0)
Total 198 (1)
National team
1952–1956 USSR 21 (0)
Teams managed
1976 FC Pakhtakor Tashkent
Krasnaya Presnya Moscow
1981 FC Spartak Moscow (assistant)

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


Olympic medal record
Representing  Soviet Union
Men's Football
1956 Melbourne Team Competition
This name uses Eastern Slavic naming customs; the patronymic is Vasilievich and the family name is Bashashkin.

Anatoli Vasilievich Bashashkin (Russian: Анатолий Васильевич Башашкин; 23 February 1924, Reutovo, Moscow Governorate, Russia – 27 July 2002, Moscow, Russia) was a Russian footballer in the 1940s and 1950s and a football coach later. He played as a central defender.

He was captain of the Soviet Union at the 1952 Olympics, but following their politically embarrassing defeat to Yugoslavia he was stripped of the captaincy.

In 1947–1953 Bashashkin was a member of the CDKA team that won four domestic titles in the 1940s and earlier 1950s (1947, 1948, 1950, 1951), but following the 1952 Olympics the team was disbanded by Joseph Stalin. After that he moved to Spartak Moscow in 1953. After Stalin's death he returned to CDKA (renamed CDSA at that time) in 1954 and played there until 1958. Bashashkin was part of the USSR team which won the 1956 Olympic football title. He won USSR Gold medals five times (four times with CDKA in 1947, 1948, 1950, 1951 and once with Spartak in 1953) and Soviet Cup three times (1948, 1951, 1955).

He was noted for his ability on the ball, physical strength and his long-range passing, which started countless counterattacks.

After retirement from football Bashashkin graduated from the Military Academy of Armored Forces and served in Ukraine as a tank military officer of the Soviet Army. Later he returned to football as a coach. Bashahkin was the main coach of FC Pakhtakor Tashkent in 1976 and he was an assistant coach (under Konstantin Beskov) of FC Spartak Moscow in 1981. According to journalist Pavel Alyoshin, Bashashkin was not very successful as a coach, spending much time telling the players of the 1970s and 80s how inferior they were compared to the footballers of the 1950s.[1]

References

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