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  1. Vladimir Petrovich Kondrashin (Russian: Владимир Петрович Кондрашин; 14 January 1929 in Leningrad, Soviet Union – 23 December 1999 in Saint Petersburg, Russia) was a Soviet and Russian professional basketball player and coach. He was inducted into the FIBA Hall of Fame in 2007.

  2. Champion of the 1971 European Championship in Germany. Silver medalist in the 1975 European Championship in Belgrade. Bronze medalist in the 1973 European Championship in Barcelona. Gold medalist in the 1970 World University Games in Turin.

  3. Dec 25, 1999 · Vladimir Kondrashin, the coach who masterminded the Soviet Union's controversial last-second upset of the United States men's basketball team for the gold medal at the...

  4. Inside a small office in a deserted gym outside St. Petersburg, Russia, Vladimir Kondrashin has built a shrine to Alexander Belov, who scored the winning points in the Soviet Union’s historic...

  5. Jan 11, 2018 · To learn more about their case, Meduza spoke to Alexandra Ovchinnikova (the widow of Alexander Belov, who scored the game-winning shot in 1972 and died at 26 of cardiac sarcoma) and Evgeniya Kondrashina (who was married to Vladimir Kondrashin, the Olympic team’s coach, who lived until 1999).

  6. Sep 24, 1989 · Vladimir Petrovich Kondrashin relives the remarkable triumph of his 1972 Olympic basketball team each September. He celebrates in sadness.

  7. Sep 29, 2020 · But there is one coach with a very impressive triple crown of his own: Vladimir Kondrashin. This great Russian coach, who lived his best years on the bench with the USSR, was an Olympic champion at Munich in1972, EuroBasket champion in 1971 and World Cup champion in 1974, all of them with Team USSR.