Edisson Jordanov

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Edisson Jordanov
Personnel
birthday June 8, 1993
place of birth RostockGermany
size 172 cm
position midfield player
Juniors
Years station
SV Holdenstedt
0000-2006 FC Eintracht Schwerin
2006–2012 FC Hansa Rostock
Men's
Years station Games (goals) 1
2012-2013 Hansa Rostock 26 (1)
2012-2013 Hansa Rostock II 2 (0)
2013-2015 Borussia Dortmund II 67 (8)
2015-2016 Stuttgart Kickers 26 (1)
2015 Stuttgart Kickers II 3 (0)
2016 Prussia Munster 12 (0)
2017-2019 F91 Dudelange 43 (4)
2019– Royal Excelsior Virton 24 (2)
National team
Years selection Games (goals)
2008 Germany U-15 1 (0)
2008 Germany U-16 2 (0)
2012 Germany U-19 2 (0)
2013 Bulgaria U-21 6 (2)
1 Only league games are given.
Status: February 28, 2020

Edisson Jordanov ( Bulgarian Едисон Йорданов , born June 8, 1993 in Rostock ) is a Bulgarian - German football player who can be used as a right foot in the central midfield in particular , but can also take the outer positions. At the beginning of his career he played for Hansa Rostock in the 2nd Bundesliga and the 3rd league . Although he has also played five games for the youth national teams of the DFB , Jordanov decided to play for Bulgaria in the future.

Career

Childhood and youth

Edisson Jordanov was born in Rostock in 1993 as the son of his father Latchezar, who immigrated to Germany from Bulgaria, and his mother Carina. However, he grew up in Uelzen , Lower Saxony , where he joined the sports club in the Holdenstedt district at the age of seven . Jordanov later returned to Mecklenburg by moving to FC Eintracht Schwerin and temporarily living in its boarding school . In 2006, Jordanov moved to FC Hansa Rostock in his native city at the beginning of his C-youth period .

In Rostock, too, Jordanov initially lived in the club's boarding school and attended the CJD Christophorus School . In addition, he soon became the captain of his team and in the spring of 2008 finally came into the focus of the German Football Association . On June 11, 2008 Jordanov then made his debut with a substitution against Poland for the German U-15 selection , which was the only game of the selection in this season. In September 2008 Jordanov then played in the games of the U-16 selection against Belgium and Macedonia, before he was initially no longer used in the youth national teams.

In the club Jordanov had meanwhile moved up to the B-Jugend, in which he scored a total of eleven goals in 48 appearances under coach Roland Kroos in the 2008/09 and 2009/10 seasons of the U-17 Bundesliga , but only that with the team took fourth place. He then moved up in June 2010 to the A-Jugend Hansas, trained by Michael Hartmann , who took first place in their U-19 Bundesliga relay in the 2009/10 season and thus entered the final round of the German A-Youth Championship had qualified. Jordanov came into play both in the semifinals against Mainz and in the final against Leverkusen by substitution and thus had a share in the championship that was finally won.

In 2010/11 the Rostock A-Jugend, now playing under Roland Kroos, could no longer build on the success of the previous year and only occupied fifth place in the final table of their season, but Jordanov was able to establish himself as the team's top performer with three goals in 26 appearances. In the DFB Junior Club Cup , the team also reached the 2011 final , but lost to SC Freiburg on penalties.

Beginnings at Hansa Rostock

In the 2011/12 season Jordanov first ran as captain for Rostock's A-Jugend and scored seven goals in twelve appearances during the first half of the season. At the same time, he was also involved in training and in friendly matches in the Rostock professional team under coach Peter Vollmann , which had previously been promoted to the 2nd Bundesliga after a year in the 3rd division . In the second division season 2011/12 , however, the team was in renewed risk of relegation, which is why Vollmann was replaced by Wolfgang Wolf in December 2011 .

Under Wolf, Jordanov then completed the preparation for the second half of the season with the professional team and was finally on the starting line-up for the second half of the season opener on February 5, 2012 in Bochum . In the further course of the season Jordanov came to another eleven appearances in Rostock's professional team, although he also played for the reserve team and also continued to play for the youth team. This also the Football Association's attention again Jordanov, so this April 17, 2012 for the German U-19 selection denied for more than three years against the Czech Republic his first international match and subsequently also for the qualifiers for the U-19 European Championship in 2012 nominated has been.

Meanwhile, with Rostock Jordanov was relegated to the 3rd division, whereupon VfB Stuttgart showed interest in signing Jordanov. In media reports, a possible transfer payment in the amount of 200,000 euros was suspected and, in the further course, a possible move by Jordanov to Werder Bremen was reported. Ultimately, however, Jordanov stayed in Rostock, where he was first under coach Wolf, then from the ninth matchday under Marc Fascher a regular player until he tore a cruciate ligament on the eleventh matchday . It was not until April 2013 that Joradanov ran again for Rostock, initially in the reserve team and finally on three of the last four game days of the third division season 2012/13 in the professional team. Jordanov, whose contract with Hansa expired at the end of the season, was then courted again by VfB Stuttgart and Werder Bremen as well as Hamburger SV . At the end of May 2013, however, he decided to move to Borussia Dortmund .

Shortly beforehand, Jordanov had already decided to play for the Bulgarian Football Association's selection teams in the future. A first nomination to participate in the European Championship qualifiers of the Bulgarian U-21s in June 2013 , however, Jordanov canceled due to deadlines.

Jordanov at BVB

Jordanov received a two-year contract in Dortmund and was initially intended for the reserve team, which , like Hansa, will play in the third division in the 2013/14 season .

Change to the Stuttgarter Kickers

On May 12, 2015 it was announced that Jordanov will play for the Stuttgarter Kickers from the 2015/16 season .

Change to Prussia Münster

After relegating to the Regionalliga with Kickers, he moved to Preußen Münster in the summer of 2016 .

F91 Dudelange & Europa League

In the winter break of 2016/17 Jordanov joined the Luxembourg first division club F91 Dudelange . With the club he has so far celebrated the championship three times and the cup win twice and took part in the group stage of the 2018/19 Europa League .

Belgium

He has been under contract with the Belgian second division club Royal Excelsior Virton since summer 2019 .

successes

Web links

Individual evidence

  1. a b c DFB.de : U-15 , U-16 , U-19 international Jordanov , accessed on May 22, 2013
  2. de.uefa.com : Edisson Jordanov , accessed October 31, 2013
  3. a b c FC-Hansa.de, May 28, 2008: Edisson Jordanov before the first international match , accessed on February 4, 2012
  4. a b FC-Hansa.de, October 7, 2011: Deserved success: 3-0 victory in the friendly against FC Midtjylland , accessed on February 4, 2012
  5. FC-Hansa.de, February 3, 2012: Wolfgang Wolf specifies the route: “If you don't go with you, you will fly” , accessed on February 4, 2012
  6. Liga-Zwei.de Hansa Rostock: Youngster Edisson Jordanov on the way to VfB Stuttgart? May 29, 2017. Retrieved May 30, 2012
  7. NNN.de , August 7, 2012: Clarified: Edi Jordanov stays , accessed on August 8, 2012
  8. FC-Hansa.de, October 12, 2012: Diagnosis confirmed: Edisson Jordanov suffers a cruciate ligament tear , accessed on May 22, 2013
  9. a b Bild.de , May 22, 2013: The Bundesliga is chasing Jordanov , accessed on May 22, 2013
  10. a b BVB.de, May 31, 2013: David Solga returns from Dresden: Four new ones for Borussia Dortmund's U23 , accessed on May 31, 2013
  11. http://www.kicker.de/news/fussball/3liga/startseite/626797/artikel_nach-gewaltigem-stufe_kickers-haben-zwei-neue.html
  12. Edisson Jordanov moves to Hammer Straße scpreussen-muenster.de, on June 3, 2016, accessed on July 9, 2016