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'''Boris Ilyich Sokolovsky''' ({{lang-ru|Борис Ильич Соколовский}}, born 9 December 1953) is a [[Russia]]n professional [[basketball coach]] and former [[basketball]] player. Since 1986, he has worked as an assistant coach, first with the Soviet, and then with the Russian men's and women's national basketball teams. In 2009, he was named [[Russian Gold Basket awards|the best women's basketball coach in Russia]].<ref name=r2/>
'''Boris Ilyich Sokolovsky''' ({{lang-ru|Бори́с Ильи́ч Соколóвский}}, born 9 December 1953) is a [[Russia]]n professional [[basketball coach]] and former [[basketball]] player. Since 1986, he has worked as an assistant coach, first with the Soviet, and then with the Russian men's and women's national basketball teams. In 2009, he was named [[Russian Gold Basket awards|the best women's basketball coach in Russia]].<ref name=r2/>


==Club playing career==
==Club playing career==

Revision as of 06:15, 15 January 2019

Boris Sokolovsky
Sokolovsky in 2012
Personal information
Born9 December 1953 (1953-12-09) (age 71)
Penza, Russia
Sport
SportBasketball
ClubPlayer: Dynamo Kuibyshev (1971–73)
Azov Tolyatti (1973–75)
Pamir Dushanbe (1975–79)
Coach: SKA Kiev (1979–81)
DAAZ Ulyanovsk (1982–83)
Tajikistan SSR team (1983–87)
BC Donetsk (1987–90)
BC Avtodor Saratov (1991–92)
BC Aleskram Kiev (1992–93)
BC Donetsk (1993–94)
BC Kiev-Basket (1994–95)
BC Avtodor Saratov (1995–96)
CSK VVS Samara (1996–2002)
EVRAZ Yakterinburg (2002–03)
BC UNICS (2003–05)
Dynamo Moscow (2005–06)
Chevakata Vologda (2006–09)
WBC Dynamo Novosibirsk (2009–14)
BC Krasnye Krylia (2014–15)
Burevestnik Yaroslavl (2015–)

Boris Ilyich Sokolovsky (Template:Lang-ru, born 9 December 1953) is a Russian professional basketball coach and former basketball player. Since 1986, he has worked as an assistant coach, first with the Soviet, and then with the Russian men's and women's national basketball teams. In 2009, he was named the best women's basketball coach in Russia.[1]

Club playing career

Sokolovsky played basketball with several Soviet clubs, from 1971–1979.

Coaching career

Sokolovsky started working as a coach in 1979, in Kiev, Ukraine. Between 2010 and 2012, he was the head coach of the Russian women's national basketball team.[2][3]

Personal

In 1983, Sokolovsky moved to Tajikistan, where he married Valentina, a national team basketball player. They have a son, Aleksei, and daughters Irina and Olga. Aleksei works as a basketball coach, while Irina and Olga are international basketball players.[2]

References

Template:Russia Women Basketball Squad 2012 Summer Olympics