Foeke Booy

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Foeke Booy
Foeke Booy.jpg
Personnel
birthday April 25, 1962
place of birth Leeuwarden , the  Netherlands
position midfield player
Juniors
Years station
SC Leeuwarden
Men's
Years station Games (goals) 1
1980-1984 Cambuur Leeuwarden 72 0(8)
1984-1985 De Graafschap 34 (20)
1985-1987 PEC Zwolle 67 (37)
1987-1988 FC Groningen 29 (10)
1988-1989 KV Kortrijk 31 0(8)
1989-1993 Club Bruges 117 (49)
1993-1994 KAA Gent 28 (11)
1994-1996 FC Utrecht 26 0(4)
Stations as a trainer
Years station
2000-2002 FC Utrecht (assistant coach)
2002-2007 FC Utrecht
2007 Al-Nasr
2007-2009 Sparta Rotterdam
2009–2012 FC Utrecht (Sports Director)
2012-2013 Cercle Bruges
2013-2015 Go Ahead Eagles Deventer
1 Only league games are given.

Foeke Booy (born April 25, 1962 in Leeuwarden ) is a Dutch former football player , coach and current official.

Player career

The former midfielder began his professional career in 1980 with the then second division club SC Cambuur-Leeuwarden . After four years, Booy moved to league rivals De Graafschap . There he played a good season, scored twenty goals and thus had a large share in third place in the Eerste Divisie. Because of these achievements, first division teams became aware of him and so Booy moved to Eredivisie relegated PEC Zwolle after only one year and managed to get promoted again with this. After a year in the top Dutch league, the midfielder moved to FC Groningen . With the Pride of the North , Booy was only one season and he decided to go to KV Kortrijk in Belgium for the 1988/89 season . In the Belgian First Division , he finished eighth with his new team, better than it has been since 1981. His continued good performances were eventually by the Belgian giants Club Brugge noticed so Booy in the summer of 1989 by the Royal has been committed. In his first year with the black and blue , he became national champion with the club. The following year the Beker van België was won and in 1992 the championship again. In his final season for Bruges, Booy remained untitled. In 1993/94 the offensive player signed with competitor KAA Gent , before moving back to the Netherlands just a year later and joining FC Utrecht . In the summer of 1996, Booy retired from his active career after previously struggling with knee problems.

Coaching career

After his career as an active player, Booy immediately decided on a career as a coach and switched to the youth division of FC Utrecht to train youth teams there. He later looked after the Jong Utrecht , the club's reserve team, before he became assistant coach of the professional team under Frans Adelaar in 2000 . After Adelaar left, he took over the club for five years in 2002 and won the KNVB Cup with him in 2003 and 2004 . In addition, the Johan Cruyff Schaal was brought in 2004 after they beat Ajax Amsterdam 4-2. The best league placement under his leadership reached the team in 2005/06, when sixth place was achieved. In 2007 Booy briefly took up a coaching position at the Arab club Al-Nasr . However, this connection was short-lived and the football teacher was drawn back home, where he was signed by Sparta Rotterdam in December 2007 . In two and a half years there were only two unsatisfactory thirteenth places and Booy resigned from the post in the summer of 2009.

For the following season, his former employer, FC Utrecht, hired him as sporting director, where he stayed until May 2012. The subsequent engagement with the Belgian football club Cercle Bruges , followed the coaching position with the Go Ahead Eagles Deventer . There he was sacked on March 22, 2015 after the club slipped to 17th place in the table after a home loss to Vitesse Arnheim .

successes

As a player

As a trainer

Web links

Individual evidence

  1. Beijen.net - CV Foeke Booy
  2. Foeke Booy technical director FC Utrecht from March 27, 2009 on volkskrant.nl (Dutch)
  3. Booy is no longer a trainer in Deventer on transfermarkt.de