Vasyl Rats

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Vasyl Rats
Personal information
Full name Vasyl Karlovych Rats
Date of birth (1961-03-25) 25 March 1961 (age 63)
Place of birth Fanchykovo, Ukrainian SSR, Soviet Union
Height 1.75 m (5 ft 9 in)
Position(s) Midfielder
Youth career
1976 LDUFK Lviv
Senior career*
Years Team Apps (Gls)
1979–1980 FC Karpaty Lviv 5 (0)
1980–1981 Lokomotiv Vinnytsia 39 (4)
1981–1989 FC Dynamo Kyiv 164 (22)
1989 RCD Espanyol 10 (0)
1989–1990 FC Dynamo Kyiv 21 (2)
1991–1993 Ferencvárosi TC 7 (1)
International career
1979 Ukrainian SSR
USSR U-21 1 (0)
1986 USSR Olympic 1 (0)
1986 USSR 'B' 5 (1)
1986–1990 USSR 47 (4)
Managerial career
1996–1997 Ferencvárosi TC (assistant)
2007 FC Dynamo Kyiv (assistant)
2011 Obolon Kyiv (U-21)
2011 Obolon Kyiv
Medal record
Men's football
Representing  Soviet Union
UEFA Euro
Runner-up 1988 West Germany
*Club domestic league appearances and goals

Vasyl Karlovych Rats (Ukrainian: Василь Карлович Рац; Hungarian: Rácz László) (born 25 March 1961) is a Ukrainian former football midfielder. He participated in two World Cups with the Soviet Union national football team.

Club career[edit]

After the seventh grade (around age 14), Rats enrolled into a sports vocational school (boarding school) and later a sports university (both in Lviv).[1] At the same time Rats was playing for Karpaty reserves. His first coach was Ernest Yust.[1] Rats considered that it was difficult to gain adequate playtime along with such players like Susloparov, Bal, Brovarskyi, Dumanskyi, Dubrovnyi. So, when in 1979 a manager of Nyva Vinnytsia Ivan Terletskyi offered him to join, he agreed gladly and was happy to play at the third tier consistently rather than to remain a substitute at the top tier.[1] In 1981 Rats was receiving invitations from Tashkent, Zaporizhia, Donetsk, but Terletskyi was not let him go by telling that those team are not for him.[1] Soon there appeared a scout from Dynamo Kyiv and Rats was transferred out.[1]

Rats had some difficulties at first to make the first team and was trying to return to Vinnytsia. He finally made his debut at the Soviet Top League on 8 November 1981 in away game against Dynamo Moscow which the Kyiv team lost, but the team already secured the championship title.[1] In 1983 Valeriy Lobanovskyi was replaced by Yuriy Morozov and Rats only played one match for the first team and was thinking to leave the club. Around that time a manager of Spartak Moscow Konstantin Beskov offered him to move to Spartak and Rats was about to do so, but Lobanovskyi who just returned talked him out of it by saying that he may also stay on bench at the new club.[1] Also in convincing Rats to stay in Kyiv, a native of Zakarpattia Oblast Mykhaylo Koman played an important role.[1]

Rats played several seasons with FC Dynamo Kyiv, where he won the Soviet Top League four times.[2]

The most notable was the 1986 season when Dynamo Kyiv managed to out-play Dynamo Moscow which then was coached by Eduard Malofeyev. The goal of Rats in Moscow in last 15 minutes of play tied the game and at home the Kyiv team beat Muscovites 2-1.[1]

Before moving to Ferencvaros in 1991, Rats had a medical emergency when his whole left side of body became incapacitated. He eventually spoke about his condition to the Hungarian club administration, and they helped out with medical treatment and Rats was ready for the season.[1]

International career[edit]

Rats earned 47 caps and scored 4 goals for the USSR, from 1986 to 1990.[3] He played in two World Cups, in 1986 and 1990. In the 1986 World Cup he scored a goal with a 27-meter shot against France in a 1–1 draw in the first round: a headed clearance by France was picked up by Ihor Belanov and laid off to Rats, who on the first touch, struck the ball powerfully from several yards outside the area past French goalkeeper Joël Bats and into the top right corner of the net. During Euro 1988 his goal secured USSR a 1–0 victory in the group stage over eventual champions The Netherlands. USSR reached the final, but were unable to repeat their achievement in the group stage and lost 2–0.

Honours[edit]

Personal life[edit]

Vasyl Rats was growing up as a Hungarian-speaking person in the Soviet Union and experienced some difficulties integrating in Russian culture which dominated in the Ukrainian SSR. In interview to Dmytro Gordon Vasyl Rats said that Andriy Bal who was a native of Lviv region helped him with integration in FC Dynamo Kyiv.

Vasyl Rats was married to a daughter of Ishtvan Sekech.

Andriy Bal gave Rats a nickname "Klyushka" (bandy).[1] Rats was a fan of French footballer Michel Platini.[1]

References[edit]

  1. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l Василий Рац: «Врачи не верили, что смогу ходить, а я ещё дважды становился чемпионом Венгрии». Fakty (footballfacts.ru). 6 June 1999
  2. ^ "Rats Vasiliy Karlovich". KLISF. Retrieved 26 August 2009.[dead link]
  3. ^ Arnhold, Matthias (2 April 2006). "Vasiliy Karlovich Rats – International Appearances". Rec.Sport.Soccer Statistics Foundation. Retrieved 26 August 2009.

External links[edit]

External videos
video icon Vasyl Rats. «visiting Dmytro Gordon» on YouTube // У гостях у Дмитра Гордона. — 2015. — 1/2. (in Russian)