Ingemar Ingevik

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John Ingemar Ingevik (born June 26, 1931 in Borlänge ; † October 8, 2012 ) was a Swedish bandy , ice hockey and football player and coach. He also worked as a football official at AIK and at Svenska Fotbollförbundet and as a local politician in Stockholm .

Career

Ingevik initially played for Enebybergs IF . In 1949 he moved to Årsta AIK , for which he played both in the bandy and in the fourth-rate football team. In 1952 his talent in playing bandy was discovered by Torsten Tegbäck , the head of the bandy department at AIK, and Ingevik moved to the club in Solna. While he ran up on the one hand in the first bandy team, he had to be satisfied in football with the reserve team supervised by Eric Persson . It was not until May 26, 1957 that he made his debut in the Fotbollsallsvenskan under coach Henry Carlsson , when they parted away with Halmstads BK in Örjans vall 1-1 draw. Since bandy and now ice hockey were in the foreground, he was only used irregularly in football until the end of his career in 1962 and made 51 top division games.

After the end of his career, Ingevik went to Svenska Fotbollförbundet in 1963. Here he supported the national team coach Lennart Nyman as part of the technical committee . After failing to qualify for the 1966 World Cup , he returned to AIK. In 1967 he took over the coaching post of the club, which he gave up again after his second season when the club had found itself in relegation battle. He then looked after IK Sirius for two years .

Ingevik returned to AIK as an official and served on the club's board in the 1970s. At the same time he was a member of the Swedish Association's training committee between 1971 and 1976. He also worked as a local politician. He became Socialborgarråd in 1985 under Stockholm Mayor John-Olof Persson . Between 1991 and 1998 he was a member of the city council.

From 1999 Ingevik returned to AIK. At first he became a simple member of the supervisory board, from 2000 its chairman.

Web links

Individual evidence

  1. Ingemar Ingevik. In: pressreader.com. Svenske Dagbladet, November 2, 2012, accessed June 8, 2018 (Swedish).