Kostyantyn Fomin
Personal information
Full name Kostyantyn Vasyliovych Fomin
Date of birth (1903-12-19)December 19, 1903[1][2]
Place of birth Kharkiv, Kharkov Governorate, Russian Empire
Date of death January 16, 1964(1964-01-16) (aged 60)
Place of death Moscow, Soviet Union
Height 1.67 m (5 ft 6 in)[1]
Position(s) Defender
Youth career
1913–1914 Shtandart Kharkiv
Senior career*
Years Team Apps (Gls)
1922 OLS Kharkiv
1923–1925 KFK Kharkiv
1925–1928 Dynamo Kharkiv
1929–1930 Dynamo Moscow 14 (1)
1930–1934 Dynamo Kharkiv
1935–1936 Dynamo Kyiv 3 (0)
1937–1938 Lokomotyv Kyiv 22 (0)
International career
1932–1935 USSR 9 (0)
1924–1935 Ukrainian SSR
1922–1928 Kharkiv city
1929–1930 Moscow city
1931–1934 Kharkiv city
1935–1936 Kyiv city
*Club domestic league appearances and goals

Kostyantyn Vasyliovych Fomin (Ukrainian: Костянтин Васильович Фомін, Russian: Константи́н Васи́льевич Фоми́н; 19031964) was a Soviet-Ukrainian footballer, football functionary and war veteran. He was a brother of Volodymyr Fomin and Mykola Fomin.

Kostyantyn Fomin also was a member of OGPU/KGB.[3] He was among the first players of Dynamo Kharkiv along with Mykola Kazakov back in 1925.[3]

Playing career

Kostyantyn started out by playing for the Kharkiv team "Shtandart" in early 1910s when he was 10.[1] In 1920 he volunteered to the Soviet Red Army and participated in fighting the "gangs of Antonov"[1] (by the Soviet propaganda verbiage).

In 1922 he joined a Kharkiv football team of the Society of Sports Amateurs (OLS). Next year Kostyantyn joined another Kharkiv team "Physical Culture Club" (KFK), for which he played next three seasons. In 1926 in Kharkiv was reorganized the local Dynamo football team which gathered under its banner the best city team players of "Shturm" (RabIs, in 1925) as well as most of Kharkiv city football team players who in 1924 won the Soviet football championship. Among those footballers appeared to be and Kostyantyn becoming the first of three Fomins who joined the Kharkiv Dynamo. In his interview Kostyantyn indicated that during 1928 season Dynamo Kharkiv did not have own head coach and that role was performed by the team's captain.[4] He also indicated that the first game of tournament for his team was against Belarus national football team on 19 August 1928.[4]

In 1929 he was invited to Moscow for the local Dynamo where he played for a season and half. In summer of 1930 Kostyantyn returned to Dynamo Kharkiv. In 1932 he was called to the Soviet national football team, for which he actively played until 1935. Soon after capital of Ukraine was moved from Kharkiv to Kyiv, Kostyantyn also moved to Dynamo Kyiv in 1935, with which in 1936 started to play in the newly formed Soviet professional championship in Group A (top tier, a progenitor of the Soviet Top League). In 1936 he was awarded the Merited Master of Sport of the USSR.[1] In 1937 he moved to Lokomotyv Kyiv, with which in 1938 ended his playing career.

During the so-called "Great Patriotic War" (Eastern Front of World War II), Fomin fought at frontlines and earned a battle order of Red Star.[1]

In 1959-64 Kostyantyn Fomin worked as an inspector and a senior methodical adviser at the Tsentralny Stadion imeni V.I.Lenina (Luzhniki Stadium).[1]

Honours

  • Soviet Union[1]
    • Champion (1): 1924
    • Runner-up (2): 1928, spring 1936 (for Dynamo Kyiv)
  • Ukrainian SSR[1]
    • Champion (4): 1924, 1927, 1928, 1933
  • Kharkiv[1]
    • Champion: multiple times
  • Moscow[1]
    • Champion: 1930[5]

Career statistics

Club

Club Season League Cup Europe Other Total
DivisionAppsGoalsAppsGoalsAppsGoalsAppsGoalsAppsGoals
Dynamo Moscow 1929 Dynamo sports society ????
1930 Moscow ????
Total 141000000141
Dynamo Kyiv 1936 spring Gruppa A 3030
Total 3000000030
Lokomotyv Kyiv 1937 Gruppa V 7070
1938 Gruppa A 150150
Total 220000000220
Career total (accounted games only) 391000000391

International

National team Year
AppsGoals
Soviet Union 193240
193310
193410
193530
Career total 90
  • Note: Due to sanctions against the Soviet Union, its early games are not recognized by the FIFA.

References

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