Andrei Kanchelskis

Player

Birthday January 23, 1969

Birth Sign Aquarius

Birthplace Kirovohrad, Ukrainian SSR, Soviet Union (now Kropyvnytskyi, Ukraine)

Age 55 years old

Nationality Ukraine

Height 5 ft

#20837 Most Popular

1969

Andrei Antanasovich Kanchelskis (Андрій Антанасович Канчельскіс; Андрей Антанасович Канчельскис; born 23 January 1969) is a professional football manager and former player.

He currently manages Kyrgyz Premier League side FC Muras United.

During his playing career he won two Premier League titles, the FA Cup, the Football League Cup, two FA Charity Shields and the European Super Cup with Manchester United, before going on to win the Scottish Premier League, Scottish Cup and Scottish League Cup twice each with Glasgow Rangers.

1986

Kanchelskis began his career with his hometown team Zirka Kropyvnytskyi in 1986, before transferring to Dynamo Kyiv in the Soviet Top League, and later to rivals Shakhtar Donetsk.

He then moved abroad, signing for English club Manchester United, where he helped the team win their first league championship in 26 years.

1988

In 1988, he was called up to the army, and had the choice of two teams to transfer to - Dynamo Kyiv and Dnipro.

Choosing Dynamo, he received a salary of 250 rubles per month, and described his time in the army as a "good school of life".

At Dynamo, Kanchelskis was coached by the legendary Valeriy Lobanovskyi, who he believes is the best manager he played for.

Lobanovskyi favoured a 4–4–2 formation, a system which focussed on getting the ball to the flanks and crossing into the penalty box, which Kanchelskis describes as an "English style of play".

Kanchelskis had decided to become a winger having seen Brazilian Jairzinho playing in his youth.

His first goal for Dynamo came on 4 November 1988 at the Republican Stadium, scoring the equalising goal against Dynamo Moscow in a 2–1 victory.

Kanchelskis eventually decided to leave Dynamo due to lack of game time, causing upset to his mentor Lobanovskyi, who he admired and respected greatly.

1989

He first played for the Soviet Union in 1989, and scored the nations' last ever goal before the dissolution of the Soviet Union in 1991.

1990

In his youth career for the Soviet Union U21 team, he won the European U21 Championship in 1990.

Kanchelskis was born in Kirovohrad in the Soviet Union's Ukrainian Soviet Socialist Republic to a Lithuanian father, Antanas, and a Ukrainian mother.

Kanchelskis started his career with hometown team Zirka Kropyvnytskyi, known at the time as Zirka Kirovograd.

He then transferred to Shakhtar Donetsk in 1990, where his salary was increased to 700 rubles per week.

He made his United debut in the penultimate league game of the 1990–91 season, a match which United lost 3–0 to Crystal Palace at Selhurst Park, with Ferguson resting several first team players due to their participation in the European Cup Winners' Cup Final.

During his time with United, he received help settling in from George Scanlan, employed by the club as an interpreter, who he became close friends with and who later helped write his first autobiography.

Kanchelskis came into a United squad who finished the season in 6th position, with Ferguson under increasing pressure to win the league championship.

1991

Kanchelskis signed for Manchester United in a £650,000 deal on 26 March 1991, with United manager Alex Ferguson describing it as a "justifiable risk".

Ferguson had discovered Kanchelskis through a VHS tape sent to him by Norwegian agent Rune Hauge, and had been able to personally scout him during a Soviet Union match against Scotland.

At the time, Kanchelskis was a rarity in English football, being one of just 11 players in the First Division from outside the British Isles.

Kanchelskis won the 1991 European Super Cup with United, defeating European Cup winners Red Star Belgrade 1–0.

He established himself as a regular member of the United team, playing in 34 out of 42 league games in the 1991–92 season, as United finished second to Leeds United in a title race that they had led for most of the season, before being overhauled during the final few weeks.

His first United goal was against Sheffield United in a 2–0 league win at Old Trafford on 2 November 1991.

On the opening day of the new Premiership season, Kanchelskis was one of just 11 foreign players starting in the league.

1992

During 1992, he played for the CIS, a brief association of former Soviet republics, who he represented at UEFA Euro 1992.

Following the tournament, he elected to represent Russia rather than Ukraine, the country of his birth.

However, compensation for Kanchelskis and his teammates had come at Wembley Stadium on 12 April 1992 when a 1–0 win over Nottingham Forest gave them their first ever Football League Cup triumph.

Kanchelskis scored five league goals that season, finding the net eight times in all competitions.

1994

After boycotting the team for the 1994 FIFA World Cup, he returned and played for Russia during Euro 1996, and won his last cap in 1998.

Overall, Kanchelskis was capped 59 times, scoring seven goals.

1995

He moved to Everton in 1995 where he spent 18 months, before transferring to Italian club Fiorentina for a record fee for a Soviet-born player.

Following an injury-marred spell in Italy, Kanchelskis moved to Scottish club Rangers, where he won a domestic treble in his first season.

2007

After falling out of favour, his career became nomadic, playing for Manchester City and Southampton in England, and Saudi club Al Hilal, before playing in Russia for the first time for Saturn Ramenskoye and Krylia Sovetov, where he played his last games before retiring in 2007.

Kanchelskis is the only player to have scored in each of the Manchester, Merseyside, and Glasgow derbies.

2008

After his playing career had finished, Kanchelskis became the general director of Nosta Novotroitsk in 2008, before moving into club management in 2010, managing Torpedo-ZIL Moscow and Ufa in Russia, and then Latvian team Jūrmala in 2014 for three months.

2016

In 2016, Kanchelskis returned to management with Solyaris Moscow, and between 2018 and 2020, he had two spells in charge of Navbahor Namangan in Uzbekistan.

Internationally, Kanchelskis represented three different teams.