Åge Hareide

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Åge Hareide (2014)

Åge Fridtjof Hareide (born September 23, 1953 in Hareid ) is a Norwegian football coach .

Career

Hareide began his active career in Hareid . From 1970 he played for IL Hødd ; Then he moved to Molde FK in 1976 and stayed there until 1981. Three years followed in the first English division : From 1981 to 1982 Hareide ran for Manchester City , then until 1984 for Norwich City . He then returned to Molde, where he ended his career in 1987.

As an active player, Hareide took over the coaching position in Molde in 1985, which he held until 1991. In 1993 and 1997 he returned to this club for one season each. From 1998 to 1999 he was responsible for the Swedish club Helsingborgs IF ; it followed two years in Denmark with Brøndby IF , before he took over the Norwegian record champions Rosenborg Trondheim .

However, Hareide only exercised this function from January to December 2003, before the Norwegian Federation promoted him as the successor to Nils Johan Semb to coach the national team, which had recently missed qualification for the 2004 European Championship . But even under Hareide, the team did not succeed in qualifying for the next major event: In the qualifying group for the 2006 World Cup in Germany , Norway finished second behind Italy and then failed in the play-off games against the Czech Republic . On December 8, 2008, Hareide resigned.

From June 2009, Hareide looked after the Gothenburg club Örgryte IS in the Allsvenskan, which was in the relegation battle . After missing relegation, he took over the Norwegian club Viking Stavanger at the end of the year as the successor to Uwe Rösler . In September 2011, after the resignation of sports director Egil Østenstad, he was promoted to manager based on the English model, while Spaniard Josep Clotet Ruiz was hired as executive coach. After poor results, he was dismissed in tenth place in the table in June 2012. A few days after his resignation in Norway he returned to Helsingborgs IF, where he inherited the resigned Conny Karlsson until the end of the season.

When the multiple Swedish champions Malmö FF changed his sporting direction in January 2014 and Daniel Andersson took over the post of sporting director, Hareide received the coaching position at the club that had been vacant since the departure of master trainer Rikard Norling . Under his direction, the team around Markus Rosenberg , Markus Halsti , Emil Forsberg , Ricardinho and Filip Helander were again in the championship race from the start of the season and qualified in particular with a 3-0 return win after a 1-2 away defeat against FC Red Bull Salzburg in the play-off games for the first time in club history for the group stage of the UEFA Champions League . While she was the last in the group to be eliminated from the European competition, she defended her title in the Swedish championship and also won the second title in a row in the Supercup . In the following period, Hareide Malmö FF led again into the group stage in the UEFA Champions League , where they faced Shakhtar Donetsk , Real Madrid and Paris Saint-Germain . On December 2, 2015, Hareide announced his retirement at the end of the year. In their last game on 8 December 2015, Malmö FF lost 8-0 away to Real Madrid in their last group match in the UEFA Champions League.

Two days later, Hareide was introduced as the coach of the Danish national team; he is the successor to Morten Olsen . With the Danes, Hareide qualified for the 2018 World Cup .

Web links

Commons : Åge Hareide  - collection of images, videos and audio files

Individual evidence

  1. Jan Holm: Åge Hareide . In: Store norske leksikon . February 26, 2020 ( snl.no [accessed May 31, 2020]).
  2. vg.no: "Spanske Josep Clotet Ruiz (34) Skal trene i Viking neste sesong" (accessed on August 8, 2014)
  3. hif.se: "Conny slutar och Åge Hareide tar över för Hösten" ( Memento from December 9, 2012 in the web archive archive.today ) (accessed on August 8, 2014)
  4. mff.se: "Ny sportslig ledning i MFF" ( Memento from January 20, 2015 in the Internet Archive ) (accessed on August 8, 2014)
  5. Hareide som ny landstræner: Vi Skal til VM i 2018 website of the Danish Football Association, accessed on December 10, 2015 (Danish)
  6. Norwegian becomes Denmark's new national coach spiegel.de, accessed on December 10, 2015