Albert Bunjaki

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Albert Bunjaki
Personnel
birthday 18th June 1971
place of birth PristinaSocialist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia
size 186 cm
position Storm
Juniors
Years station
1977-1988 KF Prishtina
Men's
Years station Games (goals) 1
1988-1991 KF Prishtina
1991-1992 Skövde AIK
1992-1997 IFK / MBK Mariestad
1997-1998 Törboda IK
1998-1999 Hassle / Torsö GoIF
Stations as a trainer
Years station
1998-1999 Hassle / Torsö GoIF
2000-2002 Tidavads IF
2003 Örebro SK Ungdom
2004 Tidaholms GoIF
2005 Degerfors IF (assistant trainer)
2006-2007 Kalmar FF (assistant coach)
2009-2017 Kosovo
2012 Örebro SK (U 21)
2012 Örebro SK (assistant)
1 Only league games are given.

Albert Bunjaki (born June 18, 1971 in Pristina , Socialist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia ) is a former Swedish-Kosovar football player and current coach. Between July 2009 and October 2017 he was the coach of the Kosovar national soccer team .

Career

Bunjaki played with KF Prishtina from the age of 6 until he was 20 . After the outbreak of the Yugoslav wars , he left his home country in 1991 and moved to Sweden. There he continued his career at Skövde AIK . As champions of the 1991 spring series, the club was promoted to the second division, in which the team played against relegation. He then played for the amateur clubs IFK / MBK Mariestad and Törboda IK , before he took up a job as a player- coach at the lower-class Hassle / Torsö GoIF in 1998 .

After Bunjaki ended his active career in late 1999, he coached Tidavads IF for three seasons . At the same time, he worked from 2000 for Federata e Futbollit e Kosovës as a talent scout and contact person abroad. In 2003 he took over the training of Örebro SK Ungdom , the sixth class junior team of Örebro SK . After only one season he left the club to look after the third division team Tidaholms GoIF . The engagement was unsuccessful, however, at the end of the season the club was relegated to the fourth division. In the same year, Bunjaki had increased his commitment at association level and until 2007 worked for the Kosovar association as well as for the Albanian association FSHF , for which he worked as a talent scout and as an official representative in Scandinavia.

From 2005 Bunjaki worked mainly as a co-coach in Swedish football. Initially assistant to Tony Gustavsson at Degerfors IF in the Superettan , in 2006 he moved to Kalmar FF , which was supervised by Nanne Bergstrand . He won the Swedish National Cup with the club in 2007 when the champions IFK Göteborg were defeated 3-0 by goals from Patrik Ingelsten and two-time goalscorers César Santin .

In November of that year, Bunjaki Kalmar left FF to devote himself entirely to the work of the association. On the one hand, he worked from then on as the national coach of the Kosovar national team. In December of that year, the Fotbollsakademin Degerfors hired him to be responsible for international project work. In December 2011 he returned to Örebro SK as coach of the U-21 team. In the summer he moved up to the competition team as assistant coach from Per-Ola Ljung, who replaced Sixten Boström , but after six months his engagement with the club ended at the turn of the year.

Bunjaki is in possession of the UEFA Pro license . He also obtained a trainer diploma from Örebro University .

Successes and awards as a trainer

  • FFK Prize for Sport Development in Kosovo : 2003, 2004, 2005, 2006, 2008
  • Prize for Sport Development in Kosovo from the Kosovar Ministry of Culture, Youth and Sport: 2003, 2008
  • Second in the cup with the ÖSK-U football club: 2003
  • Regional cup winner with Tidaholm GIF: 2004
  • Regional cup winner with Degerfors IF: 2005
  • Silver medal winner in small football: 2005
  • Winner of the Swedish National Cup with Kalmar FF : 2007
  • Second of the Allsvenskan with Kalmar FF

Web links

Individual evidence

  1. barometern.se: "Bunjaki blir förbundskapten för Kosovo" ( Memento from June 16, 2008 in the Internet Archive ) (accessed on July 5, 2010)
  2. Kosovos fцrbundskapten instead of av Fotbollsakademin ( Memento of September 8, 2012 in the web archive archive.today ) (accessed on July 5, 2010)
  3. na.se: "Förbundskapten tar över ÖSK" (accessed on July 9, 2013)
  4. na.se: "Bunjaki lämnar ÖSK" (accessed on July 9, 2013)