Arie Haan

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Arie Haan
Arie Haan Copenhagen 1 april 2009.jpg
Personnel
Surname Arend Haan
birthday November 16, 1948
place of birth FinsterwoldeNetherlands
position midfield player
Men's
Years station Games (goals) 1
1969-1975 Ajax Amsterdam 132 (23)
1975-1981 RSC Anderlecht 199 (35)
1981-1983 Standard Liege 65 (12)
1983-1984 PSV Eindhoven 18 0(0)
National team
Years selection Games (goals)
1972-1980 Netherlands 35 0(6)
Stations as a trainer
Years station
1984-1985 Royal Antwerp
1986-1987 RSC Anderlecht
1987-1990 VfB Stuttgart
1990-1991 1. FC Nuremberg
1991-1993 Standard Liege
1994-1995 PAOK Thessaloniki
1995-1997 Feyenoord Rotterdam
1997-1998 RSC Anderlecht
1999 PAOK Thessaloniki
2000 Omonia Nicosia
2001 FK Austria Vienna
2002-2004 China
2006 Persepolis Tehran
2006-2007 Cameroon
2008-2009 Albania
2009 Chongqing Lifan
2010-2011 Tianjin Teda
2012 Shenyang Zhongze
2014-2015 Tianjin Teda
1 Only league games are given.

Arend "Arie" (according to other sources Adrianus ) Haan (born November 16, 1948 in Finsterwolde , Groningen province ) is a former Dutch football player and coach .

Player career

society

Arie Haan joined Ajax Amsterdam's professional squad in 1969 . With football greats like Johan Cruyff and Johan Neeskens , the club should develop into the best club in Europe and one of the best in the world over the next few years. After completing his first year as a professional, Haan was able to win the double (championship and cup) with Ajax. His greatest club success was winning the European Cup three times with the traditional Amsterdam club. 1971 was Panathinaikos Athens defeated, 1972 Inter Milan and in 1973 Juventus . Haan never missed any of these finals. Only in the final of 1971 he was substituted only at half time. Winning the UEFA Super Cup and the World Cup in 1972 even made the international triple perfect. After six years in Amsterdam and two years without a title, Haan moved to Belgium to the RSC Anderlecht . Between 1975 and 1981 he established himself as an important pillar in the team and won the European Cup Winners' Cup with the club in 1976 and 1978 . In his last year with Anderlecht he won the Belgian championship. Haan was able to defend this with his new employer Standard Lüttich in 1982 and 1983. For the 1983/84 season, the defensive player moved back to the Netherlands, where he joined PSV Eindhoven . At the end of the season, Haan ended his career.

Together with Gianluca Vialli, Haan is the player with the third most appearances in the European Cup finals (a total of seven times, in addition to five wins, two defeats in 1977 with RSC Anderlecht and 1982 with Standard Liège ). Francisco Gento tops this list with nine European Cup finals ahead of Paolo Maldini (eight European Cup finals).

Haan was primarily known for his dreaded hard (long) shots.

National team

Haan was a regular in midfield for the Dutch national team in the 1970s. With her he became vice world champion twice in 1974 and 1978 , in 1974 he played the entire World Cup tournament (under his former Ajax club coach Rinus Michels) in the libero position. He played a total of 35 international matches and scored six goals.

His goals from a long distance in the second round of the Football World Cup 1978 in Argentina against Germany and Italy , with which he overcame world-class goalkeepers Sepp Maier and Dino Zoff and thus made a significant contribution to the progression of his team to the World Cup final, are unforgettable.

See also:

Success as a player

society

National team

Records

Coaching career

After finishing his active career, Haan became a trainer. In July 1984 he was introduced as the person in charge of Royal Antwerp . The new coach looked after this until December 1985, before he switched to league rivals RSC Anderlecht . Haan celebrated his first and so far only success at club level there in the summer. After the end of the season, his team secured the Belgian championship. After another six months, he was released in the winter of 1986/87. The former midfielder then moved to the Bundesliga , where he worked for VfB Stuttgart and 1. FC Nürnberg . With Stuttgart, he moved in 1989 into the final of the UEFA Cup, the VfB against with Diego Maradona playing Napoli lost. During the European Football Championship in 1988 he worked in the coaching staff of the victorious Dutch national football team, again as an assistant to his former club coach Rinus Michels . After three years in Stuttgart and one season in Nuremberg, Haan moved back to Belgium. New employer was Standard Liège , where he was already an active player. The two-year employment relationship was untitled and in December 1993 it was ended. From then on, Haan was drawn away from the Jupiler League and for the 1994/95 season he became the main person in charge at PAOK Thessaloniki in Greece . With the team, the coach scored 65 points, more than in 22 years. Nevertheless, it was only enough for third place. After a disappointing start in the following season, Haan was sacked in October. Feyenoord Rotterdam then secured the services of the Dutchman and lured him back to his home country for the first time. After two years without success, Haan returned to RSC Anderlecht and then went back to Thessaloniki. In November 2000 he was a brief coach at the Cypriot club Omonia Nicosia . After all, Haan took over the post of sporting director at FK Austria Wien in December . Vienna should also be Haan's next coaching station, where he replaced Heinz Hochhauser as head coach in March 2001 . After only half a year, however, the paths between the club and the coach separated again. A long coaching break followed, which lasted until December 2002. Between August and November 2002 there was a short interlude as the sporting director of the Stuttgarter Kickers .

From 2002 to 2004 Haan worked again as a trainer and from then on looked after the Chinese national team . After narrowly qualifying for the 2006 World Cup , Haan resigned from his post in December 2004.

After an engagement with the Iranian top club Persepolis Tehran , he became coach of the national team of Cameroon in August 2006 . On February 1, 2007, Arie Haan announced by email that he was giving up his work as a trainer in Cameroon and would no longer be available with immediate effect. From January 2008 to April 2009 he coached the national team of Albania .

For health reasons, Haan ended his coaching career in 2016.

Success as a trainer

Web links

  • Arie Haan in the database of fussballdaten.de
  • Arie Haan in the database of weltfussball.de

literature

  • Arie Haan, Genoeg laugh. Een Boekje open over Voetbal , Weert 1989.
  • Ingo Schiweck, kicking the enemy? The everyday peace behind the German-Dutch football war , Düsseldorf 2006, pp. 111–120. ISBN 3-9810957-4-X

swell

  1. ^ Arie Haan new trainer at Austria Wien on March 13, 2001 on shortnews.de
  2. ^ Coup of the Stuttgarter Kickers: Arie Haan sports director from August 1st, 2002 on shortnews.de
  3. Arie Haan is China's new soccer team boss from November 22, 2002 on news.at
  4. Haan will be coach at Persepolis Tehran ( memento from April 19, 2016 in the Internet Archive ) from February 1, 2006 on fussball.com
  5. Haan resigns as a coach in Cameroon on February 1, 2007 on focus.de
  6. Albania's football selection coach Haan resigns from April 15, 2009 on transfermarkt.de
  7. ^ Arie Haan no longer national coach in Albania , from April 15, 2009 on Focus Online
  8. ↑ Heart problems: Haan ends career sport1.de April 29, 2016