Denis Omerbegović

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Denis Omerbegović
Personnel
birthday March 11, 1986
place of birth ZvornikSFR Yugoslavia
size 180 cm
position striker
Juniors
Years station
TSG Wörsdorf
SpvGG Oelde
Red and white awls
Men's
Years station Games (goals) 1
2004-2007 Rot Weiss Ahlen II 35 0(7)
2004-2007 Red and white awls 26 0(0)
2007-2009 Borussia Dortmund II 59 (12)
2009-2011 SV Elversberg 47 (10)
2011 Karlsruher SC 2 0(0)
2011 Karlsruher SC II 3 0(0)
2011 Ceahlăul Piatra Neamț 7 0(0)
2012 CSCA-Rapid Chișinău 11 0(2)
2012-2013 ASC 09 Dortmund 17 0(9)
2013 Westfalia Herne 1 0(0)
2014 DSC Wanne-Eickel 8 0(1)
2014-2015 TuS Bövinghausen
2015-2016 AS Calcio Kreuzlingen
2017 FC Weinfelden-Bürglen
2017– FC St. Otmar
Stations as a trainer
Years station
2017 FC Weinfelden-Bürglen (assistant coach)
2018– FC St. Otmar (player-coach)
1 Only league games are given.
Status: end of season 2013/14

Denis Omerbegović (born March 11, 1986 in Zvornik , SFR Yugoslavia ) is a German - Bosnian football player . He can be used both as a center forward and as an attacking winger.

Career

Omerbegović went through the youth department of the then LR Ahlen , today Rot Weiss Ahlen . Noteworthy are his over 100 goals in the A-Jugend-Bundesliga, which made him the top scorer in this league three times in a row. As an 18-year-old A-Junior, he made his professional debut in the second Bundesliga match between RW Ahlen and Erzgebirge Aue in March 2004 when he came on for Petar Đenić in the 74th minute .

While he played no role in the further course of the 2003/04 season, he came to ten missions in the following season, but he was only on the field in one encounter from the start, he experienced all of the remaining games as a substitute. In the 2005/06 season, nothing changed in this status, again at the end of the season there were ten completed games for him. At this point, the relegation of LR Ahlen to the then third-class Regionalliga Nord was sealed. When Omerbegović was unable to increase his playing times in the new league and was eventually even deported to the second team, he switched to league rivals Borussia Dortmund II during the winter break of the 2006/07 season , where he signed a contract until June 2009.

In his third appearance for the new club, the striker managed to score his first goal in the senior division, which he had six more follow in the remaining half-series. He made a significant contribution to the fact that the team, which was still in danger of relegation during the winter break, managed to stay up. His first full season in the service of the Black and Yellows, 2007/08, was mixed and was characterized by a constant commuting between the bench and the starting XI. The German-Bosnian scored two goals in 25 appearances. After Omerbegović only scored three goals in his 17 appearances in the newly created fourth-class Regionalliga West in the 2008/09 season and he missed the leap into the starting eleven, he left the second BVB team after his contract expired in summer 2009 and moved within the Regionalliga West to SV Elversberg .

Although Omerbegović only played a few games over the full distance - 14 substitutions are 15 substitutions - he finally scored eight goals in 33 appearances, which made him SV Elversberg's top scorer in the 2009/10 season. At the beginning of the 2010/11 season he experienced the surprising victory after a penalty shoot-out in the DFB Cup over Bundesliga club Hannover 96 as part of the starting line-up.

In January 2011 his contract in Elversberg was terminated by mutual agreement; Omerbegović moved with immediate effect to the second division Karlsruher SC , where he was no longer committed to KSC after only two second division substitutions over the season. He then moved to the Romanian first division promoted Ceahlăul Piatra Neamț in the summer . There, his contract was terminated after six months and seven missions.

In March 2012 he signed with the Moldovan first division club CSCA-Rapid Chișinău . He came to eleven missions and scored two goals.

In the summer of 2012 Omerbegović decided to return to Germany. At the end of August 2012, he moved to the Westphalia division ASC 09 Dortmund , for whom he scored nine goals in 17 games. His coach Jörg Silberbach took him to the upper division Westfalia Herne in the summer of 2013 . There he suffered a knee injury on the first day of the game and was no longer used in the first half of the season. In the 2013/14 winter break, he decided to move to the Westphalia division, DSC Wanne-Eickel . In the summer of 2014 he joined the Dortmund district division TuS Bövinghausen . In 2015 he moved to AS Calcio Kreuzlingen in Switzerland . In January 2017 he went to FC Weinfelden-Bürglen , ten months later to FC St. Otmar from St. Gallen . At the beginning of 2018 he was promoted to player-coach there.

Web links

Individual evidence

  1. Denis alone at home ' , Saarbrücker Zeitung, accessed on January 12, 2011
  2. reviersport.de: Omerbegovic strengthens Aplerbeck , August 31, 2012, accessed on October 20, 2012
  3. SC Westfalia signs Denis Omerbegovic | WAZ.de , June 27, 2013
  4. http://www.reviersport.de/277009---tus-boevinghausen-neue-trainer-da.html
  5. Internal coaching solution in the 1st team. December 2, 2017, accessed on 25 May 2018 .