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Stanimir Stoilov (Bulgarian: Станимир Стоилов; born 13 February 1967) is a former Bulgarian footballer and current manager of Levski Sofia. He was the manager of Litex Lovech, the Bulgarian national team, FC Astana and the national team of Kazakhstan.

Stanimir Stoilov
Stoilov in 2022
Personal information
Full name Stanimir Kolev Stoilov
Date of birth (1967-02-13) 13 February 1967 (age 55)
Place of birth Haskovo, Bulgaria
Position(s) Midfielder / Defender
Club information
Current team
Levski Sofia (manager)
Youth career
1977–1986 Haskovo
Senior career*
Years Team Apps (Gls)
1987–1990 Haskovo 101 (61)
1990–1992 Levski Sofia 56 (18)
1992–1993 Fenerbahçe 8 (3)
1994 CSKA Sofia 12 (4)
1994–1995 Levski Sofia 27 (13)
1995–1997 Campomaiorense 52 (19)
1997–1998 Slavia Sofia 29 (12)
1998–2003 Levski Sofia 111 (6)
Total 396 (136)
National team
1992–2000 Bulgaria 14 (3)
Teams managed
2004–2008 Levski Sofia
2007 Bulgaria
2008–2009 Litex Lovech
2009–2010 Bulgaria
2011 Anorthosis Famagusta
2013–2014 Botev Plovdiv
2014–2018 Astana
2018–2019 Kazakhstan
2021– Levski Sofia
*Club domestic league appearances and goals

Career



Player


Stoilov began his career at the local club FC Haskovo, where he stayed until 1990. His first spell at Levski Sofia spanned for 2 years, between July 1990 and June 1992, when he moved to the Turkish club Fenerbahçe and then played shortly for Levski rival CSKA Sofia only to return to Levski Sofia for another year between July 1994 and June 1995. He then spent some time playing in Portugal and then for PFC Slavia Sofia before returning again to Levski Sofia for a third spell since July 1998 as a captain and assistant manager since July 2000.


Coach


In 2004, he became the manager of Levski, most notably leading the team to the UEFA Cup 2005-06 quarter final stage and then becoming the first Bulgarian club to ever reach the group stage of the UEFA Champions League during the 2006–07 season.[1] He has also led the team to winning the national cup in 2005 and 2007, Bulgarian Supercup in 2005 and 2007 and the 2005/2006 and 2006/2007 national championship.

Stoilov briefly coached the Bulgarian national under-19 side (2003–2004). In April 2007, Stanimir Stoilov was assigned as caretaker manager of the Bulgarian national football team for the matches against Belarus in June from the Euro 2008 qualification campaign. His side won the first match against Belarus in Minsk 2–0 on 2 June 2007 and the second in Sofia 2–1 on 6 June 2007.

On 7 May 2008, Stoilov was sacked from Levski Sofia together with his friend and colleague Nasko Sirakov. Before the 2008–09 season he took over at Litex Lovech. He led them to winning the Bulgarian cup in 2009, but quit after the club failed to reach the group stage of the Europa League.[2]

In the beginning of 2009, Stanimir was announced as the manager of Bulgaria.[3]

Stoilov didn't manage to qualify Bulgaria to the World Cup. After two draws with the main rival for the play-offs Ireland and a 2–0 victory against Cyprus Bulgaria's job became even harder. During the summer and autumn of 2009 Bulgaria won against Latvia 1–0 in a friendly and against Montenegro with 4–1, but then Stoilov suffered his first loss with the national team against Italy with 2–0. From that moment on everything for Stoilov stopped going according to plan and he recorded a disappointing loss from Cyprus with 4–1. Bulgaria finished the campaign with a 6–2 win against Georgia. The draw for the UEFA Euro 2012 resulted in Bulgaria finding itself in a qualifying group with England, Switzerland, Wales and Montenegro.

2010 was a very disappointing year for Stoilov and Bulgaria. He recorded a series of weak results, including 5 losses and only 1 draw with South Africa in 6 games. On 7 September 2010, Bulgaria lost for the first time in 5 years in Sofia from Montenegro in a UEFA Euro 2012 qualifier with a score of 0–1. After this match Stoilov announced his resignation from his position as coach of the national team.

In 2011 he was coaching Anorthosis Famagusta, where he banned two players, Mark Fotheringham and Giannis Skopelitis, to train at the club's training ground.[4]

In the winter of 2012 Stoilov was appointed as the new manager of Botev Plovdiv. His official debut was on 1 March 2013 against Slavia Sofia in a 2:2 draw. In the 2013–14 UEFA Europa League, Botev eliminated 2 teams, before losing to Stuttgart on away goals. On a domestic level, Botev became only 2014 cup runner-up.

On 22 June 2014, Stoilov signed with FC Astana of the Kazakhstan Premier League.[5] In the 2014–15 UEFA Europa League, Astana eliminated three teams to reach the play-offs, where they lost to Villarreal. The club won its maiden title in the 2014 season, despite being in third place when Stoilov had become its manager. Astana was entitled to play in the second qualifying round of the 2015–16 UEFA Champions League, where Stoilov's team eliminated NK Maribor.[6] Astana beat HJK Helsinki in the third qualifying round and APOEL Nicosia in the play-off round. Thus, Stanimir Stoilov became the first Bulgarian to coach two teams in the group stage of the Champions League.[7] On 9 December 2015, Stoilov extended his Astana contract for another two years.[8] On 8 January 2018, Astana announced they had agreed a new contract with Stoilov.[9]

On 1 September 2021, Stoilov took over the team of Levski Sofia for the second time in his career. He was appointed as a manager in one of the worst moments in the club's history, ranking 10th in the league standings after the first 6 games with 4 losses and just 2 wins and in a very bad financial state. A few days after his appointment he released three players – Simeon Slavchev, Valeri Bojinov and Hristofor Hubchev and signed two younger – José Córdoba from Etar and Dimitar Kostadinov from Septemvri Sofia. Under his management, the team managed to improve promptly, earning 20 points by the end of the half-season with 5 wins, 5 draws, and 3 losses and qualifying for the Bulgarian Cup quarter-finals, eliminating Marek Dupnitsa and Septemvri Simitli. The better results of the team were completely justified as Stoilov managed to dramatically improve the team's style of play, with Levski dominating in most of the games. Thus, at the time of the winter break, the team had climbed to 6th place in the league standings. In the upcoming transfer window, Stoilov released 6 players – Gjoko Zajkov, Christos Shelis, Ivaylo Naydenov, Borislav Tsonev, Georgi Aleksandrov and Martin Petkov, and signed just as many – defenders Kellian van der Kaap and Noah Sonko Sundberg, Bulgarians Iliyan Stefanov from Beroe and Filip Krastev (on loan from Belgian Lommel), both attacking midfielders. The other new additions were Brazilians Wenderson Tsunami (a left-back) and Welton (a forward). All of the newcomers became a key part of Stoilov's squad and were relatively young (all of them signed as free agents except Welton). In the second half of the season the team showed tremendous improvement winning 11 league games, drawing 2 and losing 2 finishing 4th in the final standings. In addition, Stoilov's Levski won the Cup, securing the first trophy for the team since 2009 and participation in European tournaments. In the quarter-finals, the team eliminated Septemvri Sofia with a 2–0 home win, and then faced Ludogorets in the semis, knocking them out with 4–2 aggregate score. The Cup final was against Levski's biggest rival – CSKA Sofia. Stoilov's team won 1–0, with the only goal scored by Iliyan Stefanov from long range. Throughout the whole tournament, Stoilov gave chance to the reserve goalkeeper of Levski – born in 2004 – Plamen Andreev, who started in each of the six matches, conceding only 2 goals (both in the first leg game against Ludogorets).


Coaching philosophy


Stoilov's teams tend to emphasize possession football and good ball control and he has been praised for his openness to promoting young players from the junior squads to the senior team. He also played a part in reinvigorating the career of Hristo Yovov, who subsequently established himself as one of the key players for Levski Sofia in the mid-2000s.[10]


Career statistics



Club


Club performanceLeagueCupContinentalTotal
ClubLeagueSeasonAppsGoalsAppsGoalsAppsGoalsAppsGoals
Haskovo B Group 1987–88 3211??3211
1988–89 3323??3323
1989–90 3627??3627
Total 10161??0010161
Levski Sofia A Group 1990–91 3011823813
1991–92 26797103614
Total 5618179107427
Fenerbahçe Süper Lig 1992–93 830030113
Total 830030113
CSKA Sofia A Group 1993–94 1240000124
Total 1240000124
Levski Sofia A Group 1994–95 271321213115
Total 271321213115
Campomaiorense Primeira Liga 1995–96 317??317
LigaPro 1996–97 2112??2112
Total 5219??005219
Slavia Sofia A Group 1997–98 2912??2912
Total 2912??002912
Levski Sofia A Group 1998–99 2513130312
1999–00 2535050353
2000–01 1522210184
2001–02 3007080450
2002–03 1605080290
Total 11162232501589
Career statistics3961364113311468150

    International



    International statistics

    Bulgaria national team
    YearAppsGoals
    199232
    199300
    199420
    199510
    199600
    199700
    199800
    199950
    200021
    Total143

    International goals

    [11]

    #DateVenueOpponentScoreResultCompetition
    1.26 August 1992Hüseyin Avni Aker Stadium, Trabzon Turkey1–02–3Friendly
    2.2–3
    3.12 February 2000Estadio Playa Ancha, Valparaíso Chile2–32–3Friendly

    Manager


    As of match played 12 November 2022
    Team Nat From To Record
    GWDLFAWin %
    Levski Sofia1 June 2004165 109 31 25 531 234 066.06
    Bulgaria10 April 20072 2 0 0 4 1 100.00
    Litex Lovech1 July 200823 11 6 6 32 23 047.83
    Bulgaria1 January 200914 3 4 7 18 22 021.43
    Anorthosis Famagusta27 December 201024 15 4 5 36 17 062.50
    Botev Plovdiv1 January 201359 31 16 12 60 18 052.54
    Astana23 June 2014169 100 38 31 289 156 059.17
    Kazakhstan1 January 20189 3 3 3 15 11 033.33
    Levski Sofia1 September 202152 28 14 10 76 32 053.85
    Total |517 302 116 99 1,061 514 058.41

    Honours



    Player


    Levski Sofia
    Individual

    Manager


    Levski Sofia
    Litex Lovech
    Astana

    Individual

    Football manager of the year in Bulgaria – 2017.[12]


    International competitions


    UEFA Cup:

    UEFA Champions League

    UEFA Europa League


    References


    1. "Archived copy". UEFA. Archived from the original on 10 December 2006.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link)
    2. "Bulgaria coach Stoilov quits Litex after European exit". Reuters. 28 August 2009. Retrieved 28 August 2009.
    3. "Briefs 4-Stoilov set to return as Bulgaria's soccer coach". Reuters. 30 January 2009.
    4. Mark Fotheringham shocked as Cypriot side Famagusta ban Scots star from training
    5. "New coach of FC Astana named". inform.kz. 22 June 2014. Retrieved 27 June 2014.
    6. "Astana oust Maribor, BATE, Steaua, Celtic go on". UEFA. 22 July 2015.
    7. "Мъри за втори път влезе през парадния вход в ШЛ" (in Bulgarian). gong.bg. 26 August 2015.
    8. "Официально: ФК "Астана" продлил контракт со Станимиром Стойловым". fca.kz/ (in Russian). FC Astana. 9 December 2015. Retrieved 10 December 2015.
    9. "Астана продолжит сотрудничество со Станимиром Стойловым!". fca.kz (in Russian). FC Astana. 8 January 2018. Retrieved 8 January 2018.
    10. "Методите на Станимир Стоилов". topsport.bg. 1 August 2013. Retrieved 30 November 2013.
    11. "Stanimir Stoilov". EU-Football.info.
    12. Yotova, Ralitsa (7 January 2018). "Ивелин Попов е "Футболист на годината" за трети пореден път!" (in Bulgarian). topsport.bg. Retrieved 16 January 2018.



    На других языках


    [de] Stanimir Stoilow

    Stanimir Stoilow (bulg.: Станимир Стоилов; * 13. Februar 1967 in Chaskowo) ist ein bulgarischer Fußballtrainer und ehemaliger Spieler.
    - [en] Stanimir Stoilov

    [fr] Stanimir Stoilov

    Stanimir Kolev Stoilov, surnommé Murray (bulgare : СтанимирСтоилов, Мъри) (née le 13 février 1967) est un footballeur bulgare reconverti en entraîneur.

    [it] Stanimir Stoilov

    Stanimir Stoilov soprannominato Murray (in bulgaro: Станимир Стоилов?; Haskovo, 13 febbraio 1967) è un allenatore di calcio ed ex calciatore bulgaro, di ruolo difensore o centrocampista, tecnico del Levski Sofia.

    [ru] Стоилов, Станимир

    Станимир Стоилов (также встречается написание Стойлов; болг. Станимир Колев Стоилов; 13 февраля 1967, Хасково, Болгария) — болгарский футболист, главный тренер болгарского клуба «Левски». Выступал за сборную Болгарии.



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