Haris Bukva

from Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Haris Bukva
SV Mattersburg vs.  SK Sturm Graz 20130217 (07) .jpg
Personnel
birthday March 15, 1988
place of birth FočaBosnia and Herzegovina
size 185 cm
position midfield player
Juniors
Years station
1998-2001 ASKÖ Doppl-Hart 74
2000-2006 ASKÖ Pasching (partial co-op.)
2003-2005 LASK Linz (cooperation)
Men's
Years station Games (goals) 1
2006-2007 ASKÖ Pasching 10 (0)
2007-2008 FC Carinthia 16 (0)
2008 →  SK Austria Kärnten  (loan) 2 (1)
2008-2009 SK Austria Carinthia 24 (1)
2009-2013 SK Sturm Graz 73 (5)
2011 →  LASK Linz  (loan) 15 (0)
2013-2014 HNK Hajduk Split 11 (0)
2014-2015 FC Rot-Weiß Erfurt 25 (1)
2015-2016 SV Austria Salzburg 7 (0)
2016 BV Cloppenburg 0 (0)
2016 ATSV Stadl-Paura 14 (0)
2017 WSC Hertha Wels 19 (4)
2018 Union Peuerbach (player-coach) 0 (0)
National team
Years selection Games (goals)
Austria U-19 4 (0)
Austria U-20 4 (0)
2009 Austria U-21 9 (0)
Stations as a trainer
Years station
2018 Union Peuerbach (player-coach)
2018– Union Schlierbach
1 Only league games are given.
As of March 10, 2018

Haris Bukva (born March 15, 1988 in Foča ) is an Austrian football player and coach of Bosnian origin.

Career

Bukva has Austrian and Bosnian-Herzegovinian citizenship. He began his career in the youth of LASK Linz and came to AKA Linz. In 2005 he made the leap into the squad of a first team. Bukva played for one year at FC Wels in the Regionalliga Mitte . In 2006 he moved to ASKÖ Pasching in the Bundesliga . In the same year he also made his debut with the Pasching team.

In 2007 he went to Carinthia with the club and signed a contract with the newly founded SK Austria Kärnten . Bukva was also a cooperation player for FC Kärnten until it was dissolved in 2009. The flank player took part in the U-19 European Football Championship in Austria in 2007 and was eliminated with the team in the preliminary round. On June 1, 2009 he moved to SK Sturm Graz until the end of the 2013 season . Bukva made nine games for the Austrian U-21 national team during this time . During the 2010/11 winter break, Bukva was awarded to LASK Linz until the end of the season. At the end of the season, Bukva was relegated and Austrian champion at the same time, after his then parent club Sturm Graz had won the Austrian championship.

From 2014 to 2015 he played for the third division club FC Rot Weiß Erfurt. During the 2015 summer break, Bukva moved to SV Austria Salzburg and will be back in Austria from the 2015/16 season, this time in the first division . In mid-January 2016, he terminated his contract with the Salzburg team. On February 4, 2016, BV Cloppenburg , at that time still active in the fourth-class German regional soccer league North , announced the commitment of the winger. Bukvas left just a few hours after signing the contract, preferring to return to his Austrian homeland. His long-time advisor Thomas Dorawa, with the agency's headquarters in Braunschweig , blamed those responsible for the club in Cloppenburg for the rapid departure of Bukva, who was the bearer of hope for the club in danger of relegation. After another four months without a club, the Upper Austrian joined the Austrian third division ATSV Stadl-Paura at the beginning of July 2016, who played in the Regionalliga Ost, where he was from then on under coach Christian Mayrleb .

He then played his first competitive game on July 16, 2016, when he was on the pitch for the full game when his team lost 1-0 in the first round match of the 2016/17 ÖFB Cup against FC Blau-Weiß Linz . Under Mayrleb, Bukva was used in 14 of the 16 possible league games until the winter break. A game he failed due to a Yellow-Red-barrier, another due to a yellow ban . He was mostly used in central midfield, but also played games in central defense ; in his 14 league appearances, he himself remained goalless and contributed a single assist. During the winter break, Bukva moved down a league and deposited his player pass with the Upper Austrian national division WSC Hertha Wels .

For this he was used in various midfield positions from spring 2017. At the time of the change still on a relegation place, the Welser lost only one of their 15 league games in the spring. The former professional was initially used as a regular, but was then not available to the squad for a period of six championship games. Only in the 28th round he returned to the team, played over half of the game in this encounter and completed the following league game in full before the season final game was again absent. In the final ranking he and the team finally took a place in the middle of the table. He scored three goals in eight league appearances.

In the following 2017/18 season he continued to play as a regular under coach Stephan Kuranda. After eight championship games had one goal and four assists to book; Furthermore, he had remained unbeaten with his team up to this point and ranked second in the table behind ASKÖ Oedt . In the first three games in October Bukva was then not in the squad and did not return to it until the end of October. After two league games he missed one again due to a yellow card suspension and was used again in the last championship game before the winter break. In December 2017 he inherited the former goal-scoring national league striker and now football coach Werner Topf and began working as a player- coach at Union Peuerbach . At the beginning of May 2018, Union Peuerbach announced that it would part ways with him because, from their point of view, he had acted too little as a player-coach.

In July 2018, Union Schlierbach announced that it had hired Bukva as a new trainer.

successes

with SK Sturm Graz
  • Austrian Cup Winner 2009/10
  • Austrian champion: 2010/11

Web links

Individual evidence

  1. kleinezeitung.at : The SK Sturm hit the transfer market. ( Memento from September 29, 2014 in the Internet Archive ), January 28, 2009
  2. Sturm12.at: Bukva changes to LASK - Hassler stays
  3. orf.at: Austria Salzburg brings ex-storm player Bukva on 25 June 2015
  4. Austria Salzburg terminates contract with winger Bukva on salzburg.com, on January 15, 2016, accessed on January 15, 2016
  5. Haris Bukva tries again in Germany , accessed on July 6, 2016
  6. Confusion about Haris Bukva's short guest performance , accessed on July 6, 2016
  7. Bukva consultant criticizes those responsible for BVC , accessed on July 6, 2016
  8. Bukva ends up in Austria's lower house , accessed on July 6, 2016
  9. Ex-professional Bukva becomes player-coach in the district league , accessed on March 10, 2018
  10. Haris Bukva, new player-coach , accessed March 10, 2018
  11. Ex-professional Haris Bukva takes over Schlierbach Fußballer , accessed on July 30, 2018