Aleksandr Vladimirovich Mostovoi ( ; born 22 August 1968) is a Russian former professional footballer who played as an attacking midfielder.
Known as O Zar de Balaídos ("The Tsar of Balaídos") from his lengthy spell at Celta de Vigo, he was often referred to as a 'genius playmaker' during his time there, in addition to a volatile temperament. He also played professionally in his own country, Portugal and France.
Mostovoi earned 50 caps for Russia in a 12-year international career, being chosen for two World Cups and as many European Championships. He previously represented the Soviet Union and the CIS.
Club career
Spartak and first abroad spell
Born in Lomonosov, Russia, Soviet Union, Mostovoi signed for national giants FC Spartak Moscow from second division club FC Presnya Moscow. In January 1992, he joined compatriots Vasili Kulkov and Sergei Yuran at S.L. Benfica; months before arriving, he was controversially awarded Portuguese citizenship through marriage, but never imposed himself in the first team. However, he could not help the freefall that hit the team in the 2003–04 season, relegating it to the second division after the player appeared in a career-worst (in his Celta career) 24 matches. His top-flight tally of 235 games for Celta was a club record until Hugo Mallo broke it in 2021.
Alavés
Having not played for over eight months, and at the age of 36, Mostovoi signed a contract with Dmitry Pietrman's Deportivo Alavés in early March 2005, initially until the end of the second level campaign. His first, and only, game came in a league game against Cádiz CF in which he came on as a substitute, in the 78th minute – he scored the Basques' only goal (and nearly added a second) in an eventual 1–3 defeat.
Having been with the club for only 30 days, Mostovoi told the club directors of his intention to retire claiming he was suffering from back problems.
Mostovoi's exclusion from Euro 2004's national squad happened after the 0–1 group stage loss to Spain. Supposedly, the player talked with the media after the match and gave an interview saying that Yartsev was not a good coach, this was later proven false, after Mostovoi gave another interview and explained he merely said that Yartsev overworked the players during practice, so they didn't have the necessary energy to play well in matches. Group morale dropped after the incident, and Russia lost the second game to hosts Portugal.
In 2009, Mostovoi was part of the Russia squad that won the Legends Cup.
Style of play
An attacking midfielder, Mostovoi was known for his technical ability as well as his character. An advanced playmaker, Mostovoi was tactically versatile, and capable of playing in several midfield and offensive positions. His preferred position was in a free role as a classic number 10, but he was also used in central midfield and as a winger. Mostovoi was renowned for his first touch and speed on the ball, as well as his timing, interpretation of space and dribbling skills, which enabled him to get past defenders; he was regarded for his vision and precise passing.
Retirement
After retiring as a player, in 2005 Mostovoi was persuaded by the then Russian Tennis Federation president Shamil Tarpishchev to play for the Russia national beach soccer team.
Mostovoi has repeatedly stated his desire and willingness to lead a football club as a manager. However, Mostovoi does not have the necessary UEFA coaching licences, which he does not want to obtain. Since 2011, he has expressed various versions of this decision: from doubts about obtaining new knowledge in coaching courses to corrupt schemes to obtain this licence by other specialists.
Personal life
thumb|upright|Mostovoi (right) and musician [[Igor Butman at a celebrity ice hockey match in 2017]]
Mostovoi graduated from college as an electrician, and later joined a sports academy in Moscow, which provided coaching to young players with a university education.
After losing the 2001 Copa del Rey Final, a group of Celta supporters raised four million pesetas to commission a statue of Mostovoi. The player approved and Maxín Picallo was chosen as the sculptor, but the project was never finished; he believed that his dip in form in 2003 affected enthusiasm in the endeavour.
He was in a relationship with Stéphanie, whom he met in Strasbourg. The couple have two children, Alexander (born 1996) and Emma. His son of the same name, known by the hypocorism Sacha, trialled with S.L. Benfica B in 2016.
Career statistics
Club
{| class="wikitable" style="text-align:center"
|+ Appearances and goals by club, season and competition
|-
!rowspan="2"|Club
!rowspan="2"|Season
!colspan="3"|League
!colspan="2"|National cup
!colspan="2"|Continental
!colspan="2"|Total
|-
!Division||Apps||Goals||Apps||Goals||Apps||Goals||Apps||Goals
|-
|Krasnaya Presnya
|1986
|Soviet Second League
|19||7||1||0||colspan="2"|–||20||7
|-
|rowspan="6"|Spartak Moscow
|1987
|rowspan="5"|Soviet Top League
|18||6||4||0||4||3||26||9
|-
|1988
|27||3||4||2||4||0||35||5
|-
|1989
|11||3||2||0||2||0||15||3
|-
|1990
|23||9||3||5||4||0||30||14
|-
|1991
|27||13||2||1||7||3||36||17
|-
!colspan="2"|Total
!106||34||15||8||21||6||142||48
|-
|rowspan="3"|Benfica
|1992–93
|rowspan="2"|Primeira Liga
|9||0||3||2||3||0||15||2
|-
|1993–94
|0||0||1||0||0||0||0||0
|-
!colspan="2"|Total
!9||0||4||2||3||0||16||2
|-
|Caen (loan)
|1993–94
|Division 1
|15||3||0||0||colspan="2"|–||15||3
|-
|rowspan="3"|Strasbourg
|1994–95
|rowspan="2"|Division 1
|29||6||4||1||colspan="2"|–||33||7
|-
|1995–96
|32||9||3||1||6||2||41||12
|-
!colspan="2"|Total
!61||15||7||2||6||2||74||19
|-
|rowspan="9"|Celta
|1996–97
|rowspan="8"|La Liga
|31||5||6||1||colspan="2"|–||37||6
|-
|1997–98
|34||8||3||1||colspan="2"|–||37||9
|-
|1998–99
|33||6||1||0||7||3||41||9
|-
|1999–2000
|26||6||1||0||7||2||34||8
|-
|2000–01
|30||9||6||2||9||2||45||13
|-
|2001–02
|30||10||0||0||11||3||31||13
|-
|2002–03
|27||5||0||0||4||1||31||6
|-
|2003–04
|24||6||2||0||8||2||34||8
|-
!colspan="2"|Total
!235||55||19||4||36||13||290||72
|-
|Alavés
|2004–05
|Segunda División
|1||1||0||0||colspan="2"|–||1||1
|-
!colspan="3"|Career total
!446||116||42||14||64||20||552||150
|}
International
|}
Honours
Spartak Moscow
- Soviet Top League: 1987, 1989
Benfica
- Taça de Portugal: 1992–93
Strasbourg
- UEFA Intertoto Cup: 1995
Celta
- UEFA Intertoto Cup: 2000
- Copa del Rey runner-up: 2000-01
Soviet Union
- UEFA European Under-21 Championship: 1990
Russia
- Legends Cup: 2009
Individual
- ADN Eastern European Footballer of the Season: 2001
References
External links
- Izvestia profile
- RussiaTeam biography and profile
- Stats at LegionerKulichki
