Rizvan Utsiev. International career of Rizvan Utsiev

"Olympiastadion" (Munich, Germany). Opened in 1972. Accommodates 69,250 spectators.

The final match of the first UEFA Champions League in the 1992/93 season took place at the Munich Olympic Stadium. Marseille and Milan competed for the trophy. The meeting, which took place on May 23, 1993, ended in victory for the French team with a score of 1:0.

The Munich Arena hosted the second final of the main European club tournament in 1997. In that match, Borussia Dortmund beat Juventus 3:1.

Olympic Stadium (Athens, Greece). Opened in 1982, reconstructed in 2002-2004. Accommodates 69,618 spectators.

The Olympic Stadium in the capital of Greece can be called happy for Milan. After losing in the final of the 1992/93 season, the Italian club again reached the decisive stage of the tournament the following year, where they defeated Barcelona with a score of 4:0.

Thirteen years later, the Rossoneri returned to the Athens Olympic Stadium as trophy contenders and again managed to win, this time over Liverpool 2-1.

"Ernst Happel Stadion" (Vienna, Austria). Opened in 1931, reconstructed twice - in 1986 and 2008. Accommodates 55,665 spectators.

The arena in the Austrian capital hosted the final of the Champions League of the 1994/95 season, and Milan participated in it for the third time in a row. Like two years earlier, the Italians lost with a score of 0:1, but this time to Ajax.

Stadio Olimpico (Italy, Rome). Opened in 1937, the last reconstruction was carried out in 1989-1990. Accommodates 72,698 spectators.

In the 1995/96 season, Ajax came to Rome as the reigning Champions League winner, but the Dutch club failed to defend its title. Already in the first half of the match with Juventus, the teams exchanged goals, after which they brought the matter to a penalty shootout. The Bianconeri were more accurate and won the main European club trophy.

The Olympic Stadium in Rome received the right to once again host the Champions League final of the 2008/09 season, but this time the local teams failed to make it to the decisive stage of the tournament. The trophy was won this year by Barcelona, ​​beating Manchester United 2:0.

Amsterdam Arena (Amsterdam, Netherlands). Opened in 1996. Accommodates 54,990 spectators.

The stadium, which now bears the name of Johan Cruyff, hosted the Champions League final just two years after it opened. In May 1998, Real Madrid and Juventus met on the field of the Amsterdam Arena. The match ended with a score of 1:0 in favor of the Madrid club.

Camp Nou (Barcelona, ​​Spain). Opened in 1957, it was reconstructed twice - in 1995 and 2008. Accommodates 99,354 spectators.

The Barcelona stadium has seen many memorable matches, but the 1998/99 Champions League final stands apart. Without exaggeration, that meeting between Bayern and Manchester United can be called legendary. The Germans took the lead in the 6th minute and controlled the game until the last minutes, but two goals scored by the Mancunians in stoppage time of the second half brought victory to Manchester United.

"Stade de France" (Saint-Denis, France). Opened in 1998. Accommodates 81,338 spectators.

The arena, built on the outskirts of Paris, hosted the Champions League final for the first time in the 1999/2000 season. The meeting between Real Madrid and Valencia ended with a confident victory for the Madrid club with a score of 3:0. This was the first time in the history of the Champions League that clubs from the same country played in the final.

6 years later, in the 2005/06 season, Barcelona and Arsenal competed for the trophy on the Stade de France field. The Londoners, who played in the minority from the 18th minute after goalkeeper Jens Lehmann was sent off, opened the scoring 10 minutes before the break, but in the second half goals from Samuel Eto'o and Juliano Belletti brought victory to the Catalans - 2:1.

"San Siro" (Milan, Italy). Opened in 1926. The last reconstruction was carried out in 1989. Accommodates 80,018 spectators.

The San Siro Stadium was renamed in honor of Giuseppe Meazza in 1979, but the historical name of the arena is still the most popular and recognizable throughout the world. The Champions League final has been held here twice.

In the 2000/01 season, Bayern and Valencia played a dramatic match in Milan in which penalty kicks played a major role. Already in the 2nd minute, Gaizka Mendieta brought the Spaniards ahead from the penalty spot, and 4 minutes later, the Bats goalkeeper Santiago Canizares saved a penalty kick from Mehmet Scholl. At the beginning of the second half, Stefan Effenberg equalized the score from the penalty spot, and the fate of the match was decided in a series of post-match strikes, in which the Bayern players were more accurate.

15 years later, in May 2016, Real Madrid and Atlético Madrid almost exactly repeated the scenario of the game between Bayern and Valencia in the same arena. Regular time also ended with the score 1:1, in extra time the teams failed to score, and the Royal Club won in the penalty shootout.

Hampden Park (Glasgow, Scotland). Opened in 1903. Reconstructed in 1999. Accommodates 51,866 spectators.

Real Madrid and Bayer 04 took to the Hampden Park pitch in the Champions League final in May 2002, and six months later the arena celebrated its 99th anniversary. The match itself ended with a score of 2:1 in favor of Real Madrid and was remembered for Zinedine Zidane's beautiful goal from the line of the penalty area.

Old Trafford (Manchester, England). Opened in 1910. The last reconstruction was carried out in 2006. Accommodates 74,879 spectators.

The second final in the modern history of the Champions League involving teams representing one country took place in the 2002/2003 season. In the decisive match of the tournament, which took place in Manchester, Milan and Juventus met. The main and extra time ended with the score 0:0, and in the penalty shootout the victory for Milan was brought by a precise shot from Andrei Shevchenko.

Veltins Arena (Gelsenkirchen, Germany). Opened in 2001. The stadium's capacity was last increased in 2015; today it is 62,271 people.

The arena has had its current name since the summer of 2005; previously it was called Arena AufSchalke. The stadium hosted matches of the World Football and Hockey Championships. Since 2002, the annual Christmas Biathlon Star Race has been held here.

The 2004 Champions League final, held in Gelsenkirchin, is one of the most memorable for Russian fans, as one of the goals was scored by Dmitry Alenichev. The Porto midfielder set the final score of the match against Monaco (3:0). The Portuguese team at that time was led by Jose Mourinho, who became the youngest head coach in history to win the main European club trophy.

Olympic Stadium (Istanbul, Türkiye). Opened in 2002. Accommodates 80,500 spectators.

The stadium in Istanbul was built to host the 2008 Summer Olympics, but Turkey's bid did not receive the required number of votes, and the Olympics took place in Beijing. Currently, the arena in Istanbul bears the name of the first president of Turkey, Mustafa Kemal Ataturk, and is the largest in the country.

The 2005 Istanbul Champions League final is arguably the greatest in the tournament's history. In the decisive match, Milan crushed Liverpool with a score of 3:0 after the first half, but in the second half of the meeting, goals from Gerrard, Smicer and Alonso turned everything upside down. There were no goals scored in extra time, and the British club was stronger in the penalty shootout.

"Luzhniki" (Moscow, Russia). Opened in 1956. The last reconstruction was carried out in 2017. Accommodates 81,000 spectators.

For the first time, Russia received the right to host the 2007/08 Champions League final, and this honorable mission was entrusted to the Luzhniki Grand Sports Arena. Chelsea and Manchester United competed for the trophy, marking the first time two English teams met in a Champions League decider.

The game caused a great stir among fans in both England and Russia; more than 67 thousand spectators were present in the stands. Midway through the first half, Cristiano Ronaldo put Manchester United ahead, but Frank Lampard equalized just before the break. The second half and extra time passed without any goals scored, and in the penalty shootout the Mancunians were more accurate.

Santiago Bernabeu (Madrid, Spain). Opened in 1947. The last reconstruction was carried out in 2001. Accommodates 81,044 spectators.

The home arena of one of the most successful clubs in modern football has hosted the Champions League final only once - in the 2009/10 season, but this only match has gone down in history.

Inter and Bayern met in the Madrid final. The match ended with a score of 2:0 in favor of the Italian club, and Jose Mourinho, who was working with the Nerazzurri at that moment, became the third coach in history who managed to win the Champions Cup with two different teams (there are now five of them: in addition to the Portuguese, this Ernst Happel, Ottmar Hitzfeld, Jupp Heynckes and Carlo Ancelotti).

An interesting fact is that in the Milanese squad in the 2010 final there was only one Italian - Marco Materazzi, and even he appeared on the field in the 90th minute of the match.

Wembley (London, England). Opened in 2007. Accommodates 90,000 spectators.

The new Wembley is built on the site of the legendary arena, which hosted matches of the World and European Championships, the Olympic Games and many European Cup finals.

The final match of the 2010/11 Champions League, which took place at the new Wembley, in a sense turned out to be a home match for Manchester United, but this did not help the Mancunians win the trophy. Barcelona, ​​led by the trio Xavi - Iniesta - Messi, won with a score of 3:1.

In 2013, Wembley hosted the first “German” Champions League final, in which Bayern and Borussia Dortmund met. The victory and the cup were brought to the Bavarians by a precise shot from Arjen Robben, who set the final score at 2:1 in the 89th minute.

Allianz Arena (Munich, Germany). Opened in 2005. Accommodates 67,812 spectators.

The decisive match of the 2011/12 Champions League season was the first final of the tournament, which was held at the home stadium of one of the participants in the meeting - Bayern hosted Chelsea in Munich. The scoring was opened only in the 83rd minute after a shot by the hosts' forward Thomas Muller, but five minutes later the leader of the Londoners' attack, Didier Drogba, restored the balance.

The fate of the trophy was decided in a penalty shootout. Bayern again took the lead after Philipp Lahm's accurate shot and Juan Mata's miss, but then the visiting players converted all their attempts, while the German team's players made two misfires. Thus, Chelsea won the Champions League for the first time in their history.

"Millennium" (Cardiff, Wales). Opened in 1999. Accommodates 73,930 spectators.

The home arena of the Wales national team was opened at the turn of the millennium, having received the appropriate name, but in 2016 the stadium received a new name - Principality Stadium, which, with a certain amount of imagination, can be translated simply as "Princely Stadium", since Wales is part of the United Kingdom, and the Queen's son Elizabeth II Charles bears the title Prince of Wales.

But let's return to the Champions League. The final of the main European club tournament took place here in 2017, and the participants in that match were Real Madrid and Juventus. The Madrid team won with a score of 4:1 and won their second Champions League title in a row, and football fans remembered that meeting for the super goal of Turin striker Mario Mandzukic.

"Metropolitano" (Madrid, Spain). Opened in 1994. Reconstructed in 2017. Accommodates 67,700 spectators.

Liverpool and Tottenham met in the 2019 Champions League final. The final was the first in Tottenham's history, and the first since the 2013 final, where at least one Spanish club did not play. Liverpool, reaching the final for the second time in a row, won the match 2-0. In his third Champions League final as head coach, Jurgen Klopp won the trophy.

Number 40 Career Youth clubs Vainakh KAMAZ ?-2005 Terek Club career* 2005-present Terek 154 (6) 2007 → Kavkaztransgaz-2005 13 (2) National team** 2011 Russia 2 0 (0) State awards

* The number of games and goals for a professional club is calculated only for the various national championship leagues, corrected as of October 30, 2016.

** Number of games and goals for the national team in official matches.

Rizvan Rashitovich Utsiev(February 7, 1988, Argun) - Russian football defender, captain of the Terek club.

Career

Club

Achievements

"Terek"
  • 2nd place in the First Division of Russia ( promotion to the Premier Division):

Awards

Write a review of the article "Utsiev, Rizvan Rashitovich"

Notes

Links

  • Online Sportbox.ru
  • (English)

Grozny "Terek" is considered a team with one of the best defensive lines in the Russian Premier League. One of the pillars of the defense is Rizvan Utsiev, a defender who has been playing for the team from Grozny since the beginning of his professional career.

Arrival at Terek

Utsiev Rizvan Rashitovich was born in 1988 in the city of Argun, Chechen Republic. As a child, his parents sent him to a football school at the Vainakh club, from where the athlete, due to martial law, temporarily moved with his brother to the Chelny KAMAZ. Returning to his native land, Utsiev signed a contract with the youth team of the Grozny Terek, and in 2005 he was invited to play for the main team.

Premier League debut

The young defender's debut in the Premier League took place in November of the same year - in a match against the capital's Lokomotiv, the footballer received 20 minutes of playing time. Following the results of the 2005 championship, Terek was relegated to the First Division, where, despite being relegated to the league, Rizvan Utsiev also appeared very rarely, coming on as a substitute twice during only the second season.

As a result, in the summer of 2007, the Russian went on loan to Kavkaztransgaz-2005, which played in the Second Division of the Russian Championship, where he was able to get a sufficient amount of playing practice, even scoring two goals in 13 matches for the new club. At this time, according to the results of the championship, Terek took second place, regaining its place in the elite of Russian football, where the young defender also ended up.

Return to the elite

With the return to the Premier League, the period of formation of the defender himself began. The coaching staff, led by him, believed in the football player’s talent, and even after the departure of the Ukrainian coach, under the leadership of Shahin Diniev and Anatoly Baidachny, Rizvan Utsiev remained in the main group of players. As a result, the 2010 season became a real breakthrough in the back's career - having secured a place in the starting lineup, the defender took part in 25 meetings, scoring his first two goals in the Premier League, upsetting the capital's Spartak and Vladikavkaz Alania.

Every year the player’s progress was noticeable, and his position in the starting lineup soon became unshakable. In August 2011, Rizvan Utsiev’s talent was also appreciated by the coaches of the second Russian national team, inviting him to the training camp for a friendly match with Belarus, but the player never took the field. In the Russian Championship, R. Utsiev was recognized several times as a player of the tour, and at Terek, for his confident play, he was soon chosen as team captain, which he still is.

In total, during his career for the Grozny club at the time of the winter break in the championship of the 2016/17 season, Rizvan Utsiev has 173 official matches, being the leader in this indicator in the entire history of the team, as well as 11 assists and 8 goals scored, two of which were sent into the gates of Krasnodar "Kuban" and helped "Terek" snatch a draw in the match with a score of 2:2. This season, the defender has no goals scored yet, but he played all 17 matches of the Russian championship, scoring one assist in the match against Orenburg, which allowed the Grozny team to win three points.

Rizvan Utsiev
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general information
Full name Rizvan Rashitovich Utsiev
Was born
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Height 173 cm
Weight 68 kg
Position defender
Number 40
Career
Youth clubs
Flag of Russia Vainakh
Russian flag KAMAZ
?-2005 Flag of Russia Terek
Club career*
2005-present Flag of Russia Terek 154 (6)
2007 → Russian flag Kavkaztransgaz-2005 13 (2)
National team**
2011 Russian flag Russia-2 0 (0)
State awards

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* The number of games and goals for a professional club is calculated only for the various national championship leagues, corrected as of October 30, 2016.

** Number of games and goals for the national team in official matches.

Rizvan Rashitovich Utsiev(February 7, 1988, Argun) - Russian football defender, captain of the Terek club.

Career

Club

Achievements

Russian flag "Terek"
  • 2nd place in the First Division of Russia ( promotion to the Premier Division):

Awards

Write a review of the article "Utsiev, Rizvan Rashitovich"

Notes

Links

  • Online Sportbox.ru
  • (English)

Rizvan Utsiev is a Russian football player, full back and captain of Terek. He has been playing for the Grozny club since 2005, during which time he has played more than 150 matches. In 2007, he won silver medals in the second division with the team and qualified for the RFPL; in 2010, he was recognized as the club's best player of the season. In 2011, he played in the second Russian national team in a match against the Belarusian national team.

  • Full name: Rizvan Rashitovich Utsiev
  • Date and place of birth: February 7, 1988, Argun (Russia)
  • Role: full back

Club career of Rizvan Utsiev

He is a student of the Chelny KAMAZ club. At the age of 14 he joined Terek, where he began his professional career in 2005. At the end of the 2005 season, he made his debut in the Russian top league in a match against Lokomotiv. The following season he played in the second division, playing in 7 championship matches. In 2007, Terek won silver medals in the first division and returned to the Premier League. Rizvan played only two matches, as he spent most of the season on loan at the Kavkaztransgaz-2005 club.

In 2008, he continued to play in the youth team of the “white-greens”, playing 25 matches in the reserve tournament. In 2010, he became involved in games for the main team, played 25 matches and scored 2 goals. Was recognized as Terek's best player of the season. He scored his debut goal against Alania, and the second in the won match against Spartak (2-0). Subsequently, he was a player in the starting lineup, most often playing on the right flank, several times moving to the supporting zone and to the center of defense.

At the start of the 2011/12 season, he was seriously injured and underwent surgery in Germany. He returned to action only in the spring of 2012, but on March 12 he suffered a shoulder injury in a match against Rostov. In September 2012, he collided with his teammate Ferreira, suffering a concussion. In the 2013/14 season, he managed to return to his previous level, although he was injured in the first match against Rostov. Utsiev missed only one match from August to May and was awarded the captain's armband. Together with the club he reached the quarterfinals of the Russian Cup.

In the first half of the 2014/15 season, he played 15 matches and took second place in the voting for the best player of the first round. Rizvan scored two goals, which brought victories over Mordovia (1-0) and Rostov (2-1). In addition, he scored two assists, and Terek managed to finish at the equator of the standings. In 2015, the footballer began to be plagued by injuries again. He suffered a thigh muscle injury during a routine warm-up, and also injured his knee in a fight on the eve of the start of the championship. He played his first match in the 2015/16 season on August 7 against Mordovia (0-0). He scored his first goal in the match against Kuban (2-2).

International career of Rizvan Utsiev

In 2011, he took part in the match of the second Russian national team against the Olympic team from Belarus. Subsequently, he was called up to this team twice more, but did not appear on the field.

Achievements of Rizvan Utsiev

  • Vice-champion of the First Division 2007
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