Alexander Bugera

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Alexander Bugera
Co-trainer-alexander-bugera.jpg
Alexander Bugera (2019)
Personnel
birthday August 8, 1978
place of birth AmbergGermany
size 180 cm
position Left full defense
Juniors
Years station
0000-1986 SV Inter Bergsteig Amberg
1986-1995 1. FC Amberg
1995-1997 FC Bayern Munich
Men's
Years station Games (goals) 1
1997-1998 FC Bayern Munich amateurs 43 (19)
1997-1998 FC Bayern Munich 3 0(0)
1999-2000 MSV Duisburg 25 0(2)
2000-2002 SpVgg Unterhaching 32 0(4)
2002-2003 FC Bayern Munich amateurs 12 0(3)
2003-2007 MSV Duisburg 123 (13)
2007-2015 1. FC Kaiserslautern 106 0(2)
2008-2015 1. FC Kaiserslautern II 60 0(1)
National team
Years selection Games (goals)
1995 Germany U-17 3 0(0)
1998-1999 Germany U-21 6 0(2)
Stations as a trainer
Years station
2016-2017 1. FC Kaiserslautern (U-16)
2017 1. FC Kaiserslautern (U-19)
2017-2019 1. FC Kaiserslautern (assistant coach)
1 Only league games are given.

Alexander Bugera (born August 8, 1978 in Amberg ) is a former German soccer player and current coach .

Career

societies

Alexander Bugera got to the C-Juniors of FC Bayern Munich through the youth clubs SV Inter Bergsteig Amberg and 1. FC Amberg . After receiving a licensed player contract, he was eligible to play for the professional squad in 1997 and made his Bundesliga debut in the 1997/98 season on April 4, 1998 (29th matchday) - in the 87th minute for Mehmet Scholl - as Bayern Munich won 3-0 at Werder Bremen . In the following season he was on December 16 and 19, 1998 at Borussia Mönchengladbach and against VfL Wolfsburg . But mainly he played for the amateurs of the club in the Regionalliga Süd . Due to a lack of prospects - whether the strong professional squad - he moved to MSV Duisburg at the beginning of 1999 , for whom he played his first game on February 20, 1999 in the 3-0 home defeat against FC Bayern Munich.

After two seasons in which he scored two goals in 25 games, Bugera moved to SpVgg Unterhaching , which he left after four goals in 32 games. He initially returned to Bayern Munich and played twelve regional league games for the second team.

Until then , he played in the attack from 2003 to 2007 (including promotion to the Bundesliga in 2005 and 2007 and relegation from the Bundesliga in 2006 ) again for MSV Duisburg (first in midfield , later as left full-back ). During this time he played 123 games (all 34 in his last season) and scored 13 goals.

For the 2007/08 season , Bugera moved to the second division club 1. FC Kaiserslautern , where he initially signed a contract until 2010. In his first year with the Palatinate , he only played eleven games due to an injury; in the following season there were 21 missions. He also played five times for the second team in the fourth-class Regionalliga West . During the winter break of the 2009/10 season he extended his contract with 1. FC Kaiserslautern until 2012 with an option for a further year and from the 2010/11 season - thanks to the promotion - played in the Bundesliga again. Set in the promotion year as a left defender, Leon Jessen, a competitor, was committed to this position for the 2010/11 season , who ousted him in the second half of the season at the latest. In the 2011/12 season Bugera had more playing times again, but the season ended with relegation to the 2nd Bundesliga. His expiring contract was extended by one year by option.

After the 2012/2013 season , Bugera extended his expiring contract for another two years in order to be available as a "back-up" for the licensed team and to take on responsibility as a leading player for the second team. At the same time he completed the trainer training of the DFB and took over the task of the technical trainer in the youth center of the 1. FC Kaiserslautern. He ended his active career in summer 2015. From April 2016 Bugera coached the U-17 team of 1. FC Kaiserslautern . For the 2017/18 season he took over as coach of the FCK U-19 team. On September 20, 2017, he was appointed assistant coach of the professional team, initially with interim coach Manfred Paula and, since September 27, under the newly appointed head coach Jeff Strasser . Due to Strasser's illness and the resulting obligation from Michael Frontzeck , Bugera also worked as his assistant coach and as assistant coach of Frontzeck's successor Sascha Hildmann . After Sascha Hildmann was dismissed and Boris Schommers was signed on September 19, 2019 as his successor, Bugera was replaced by Kevin McKenna .

National team

Bugera took part in the U-17 World Cup in Ecuador from August 3 to 20, 1995 , was used in group D in three games and was eliminated with the team as third party from the tournament. He played six times for the U-21 national team . On his debut on November 17, 1998 in Aachen in the 2-2 draw against the Netherlands , he also scored his first goal; his second (in his second game) was the winning goal on February 6, 1999 in Jacksonville at 1-0 over the United States' U-23 selection. This was followed by missions against Northern Ireland (0: 1 on March 26; in Belfast), Scotland (2: 1 on April 27; in Meppen), Moldova (2: 0 on June 3; in Wuppertal) and Finland (1: 3 on September 3rd; in Lahti).

successes

Web links

Individual evidence

  1. Article on oberpfalznetz.de
  2. Press release on the club's website
  3. http://www.kicker.de/news/fussball/regionalliga/startseite/630065/artikel_glatzel-wechselelt-zu-kaiserslautern-ii.html
  4. Bugera: "Promotion is the next step". In: DFB - Deutscher Fußball-Bund eV. Retrieved on April 5, 2016 .
  5. der-betze-brennt.de: The search for a coach is ongoing: Meier's successor is approaching
  6. der-betze-brennt.de: Officially: Jeff Strasser is the new FCK trainer
  7. Fix! Frontzeck becomes the new FCK trainer , swr.de, accessed on March 21, 2020
  8. Sascha Hildmann new FCK trainer , fck.de, accessed on March 21, 2020
  9. Boris Schommers is the new FCK trainer , fck.de, accessed on March 21, 2020