Jørn Andersen

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Jørn Andersen
SVA00 - Jørn Andersen 6422a.jpg
Jørn Andersen (2015)
Personnel
birthday 3rd February 1963
place of birth FredrikstadNorway
size 185 cm
position striker
Juniors
Years station
0000-1982 Østsiden IL
Men's
Years station Games (goals) 1
1982-1984 Fredrikstad FK 64 (25)
1985 Vålerenga IF 22 (23)
1985-1988 1. FC Nuremberg 78 (28)
1988-1990 Eintracht Frankfurt 54 (21)
1990-1991 Fortuna Dusseldorf 41 0(5)
1991-1994 Eintracht Frankfurt 44 (13)
1994 Hamburger SV 18 0(1)
1995 Dynamo Dresden 7 0(0)
1995-1997 FC Zurich 52 0(2)
1997-1999 FC Lugano 39 0(2)
1999-2001 FC Locarno
National team
Years selection Games (goals)
1985-1990 Norway 27 0(5)
Stations as a trainer
Years station
2001-2003 FC Luzern
2003-2004 Rot-Weiß Oberhausen
2005-2006 Borussia M'gladbach (assistant coach)
2007-2008 Kickers Offenbach
2008-2009 1. FSV Mainz 05
2010-2011 AE Larisa
2011–2012 Karlsruher SC
2015 SV Austria Salzburg
2016-2018 North Korea
2018-2019 Incheon United FC
1 Only league games are given.

Jørn Andersen (born February 3, 1963 in Fredrikstad ) is a former Norwegian national soccer player with German citizenship and current soccer coach . With Fredrikstad FK he won the Norwegian Cup in 1984 , at Vålerenga IF he was the league shooter king. In the Bundesliga he first played for 1. FC Nuremberg . During his subsequent engagement at Eintracht Frankfurt , he became the first foreign top scorer in the Bundesliga.

As a coach, he led 1. FSV Mainz 05 to return to the Bundesliga in 2009 . His dismissal shortly before the start of the season caused a stir at the time. In 2015 he was coach at SV Austria Salzburg , with whom he was promoted to the second highest Austrian division (first league) at the end of the 2014/15 season.

Player career

society

The son of the 143-time Norwegian national handball player and three-time World Cup participant Bjørg Andersen played in the youth from the mid-1970s at the suburban club Østsiden IL in Fredrikstad and came in 1980 to two appearances in the Norwegian youth national team. In 1981 he established himself in the combat team of the lower class club. In 1982 he moved to the first division club Fredrikstad FK , with whom he was relegated from the first division and immediately rose again. For the club he scored 25 goals in 64 league games between 1982 and 1984. The highlight here was winning the Norwegian Cup in 1984 in the finals against Viking FK from Stavanger . After the final had ended 3: 3 after extra time - Andersen had scored the goal to equalize 1: 1 in the meantime - a replay followed. Andersen scored the 1-0 lead after four minutes in Fredrikstad's 3-2 win.

Andersen moved to the reigning Norwegian champions, the Oslo club Vålerenga IF , for the 1985 season . This season, the club secured third place in the league to participate in the UEFA Cup . Andersen was the top scorer with 23 goals in 22 games. After the end of the Norwegian season in October 1985, 1. FC Nürnberg Andersen signed for 200,000 DM. Andersen made his debut there in November 1985. By the end of the 1987/88 season he had scored 28 goals in 78 league games for FCN. In 1988 he finished fifth in the Bundesliga with the club - the club's best Bundesliga placement since the 1968 championship - and qualified for participation in the UEFA Cup. Andersen scored nine goals in 27 games.

Then he moved to the cup winners Eintracht Frankfurt . For Hessen he scored two goals in 20 games in his first season. The club, which was coached by Karlheinz Feldkamp , Pál Csernai and Jörg Berger that season , ended the season in 16th place and only secured relegation in the relegation games against the third of the second division, 1. FC Saarbrücken : after one 2-0 defeat in Saarbrücken, Andersen scored the first goal in the 2-0 second leg at the Waldstadion in Frankfurt . In the following season 1989/90 the Frankfurters were at the beginning of the season for a few game days in first place. At the end of the season, Eintracht, which started with goalkeeper Uli Stein , who was part of the national team at the time , defensive veteran Charly Körbel and Uwe Bein , was in third place, together with the placements of 1964 and 1974 the best final result in the league the Frankfurter. Andersen played through the season and was the first foreign Bundesliga top scorer with his 18 goals .

For the 1990/91 season Andersen moved to the then Bundesliga club Fortuna Düsseldorf , but returned to Frankfurt after the first nine match days of the 1991/92 season. In total, he only scored five goals in 42 Bundesliga games for Düsseldorf.

By the end of the season, he scored nine goals for Eintracht, which played for the championship until the last matchday. If Frankfurt had not lost 1: 2 at Hansa Rostock on the last match day , but won, they would have become champions for the second time in the club's history. The Frankfurters were only again third in the league. That also succeeded in the following season, but Andersen was, as in the previous season, in the shadow of the Ghanaian international striker Anthony Yeboah , who was the second foreign Bundesliga top scorer in 1993 and 1995.

During the winter break of 1993/94 Andersen moved to Hamburger SV for a year . From the winter break of 1994/95 he played for Dynamo Dresden , where his career as a Bundesliga player came to an end with the club's relegation. He was only set up irregularly and was usually only used as a substitute in the second half. He scored one goal in 25 games.

Andersen moved from Dresden in mid-1995 to the Swiss National League (now Super League ) for FC Zurich , where he, converted into a defender, scored two goals in 52 games. In 1996, FC Zurich narrowly escaped relegation as the penultimate and did not go beyond mediocrity in the following seasons. From the winter break of 1997/98 he joined the second division club FC Lugano , with whom he rose to the first division in the same year and played 13 first division games.

From 1999 to 2001 he let his playing career end at the third division club FC Locarno , where he also acted as an assistant coach. In 2000 it was promoted to the second division.

His Bundesliga record is 243 games in which he scored 67 goals.

National team

In April 1985 Andersen made his debut in the Norwegian national team in Frankfurt (Oder) . Norway lost 1-0 in a friendly against East Germany . In October 1990 he played with the national team, where he could never really establish himself, his 27th and last international match. In a friendly game against Hungary in Budapest, which ended 0-0, he was used again in the last 18 minutes. In total, he scored five times for the national team, with which he missed the qualification for the World Championships in 1986 and 1990 as well as participation in the European Championship in 1988.

Coaching career

Andersen initially worked as a coach in Swiss youth football at FC Luzern . For the 2003/04 season he returned to Germany for the then second division club Rot-Weiß Oberhausen . For a long time he was at the top of the 2nd Bundesliga with RWO and became autumn champion, but after a slump in the second half of the season he missed promotion to the Bundesliga with only one point behind a promotion place in fifth place, the best placement for Oberhausen since their Bundesliga relegation 1973. In the following season, RWO was after ten match days in the penultimate place, which led to Andersen's dismissal.

This was followed by an engagement as Horst Köppel's assistant coach at Borussia Mönchengladbach . The duo led Borussia to tenth place, up to that point Borussia's best placement since 1996. However, the club refrained from employing both in the following season and canceled the existing contracts. The club hoped for more from the former Borussia coach and master coach Jupp Heynckes , who was fired himself in February 2007 and was replaced by Jos Luhukay . Nevertheless, Borussia rose from the bottom of the table.

For the 2007/08 season Andersen was signed by the Greek first division club Skoda Xanthi for two years, but the contract was terminated for personal reasons before he took office. On November 6, 2007 he took over as the successor to Wolfgang Frank the coaching position at the second division Kickers Offenbach , who was in the relegation battle, but lost the decisive game at VfL Osnabrück with 0: 3 on the last day of the game , so that the team because of the bad goal difference in the 3. League had to relegate.

At the beginning of the 2008/09 season, he replaced Jürgen Klopp , who had taken over Borussia Dortmund after narrowly missing out on promotion to the Bundesliga , as coach of the then second division club 1. FSV Mainz 05 . With the club, he was promoted to the 1st Bundesliga and moved into the DFB Cup semi-finals, which the Mainz team lost 4-1 to Bayer 04 Leverkusen after extra time. On August 3, 2009, after a defeat in the DFB Cup at the regional league club VfB Lübeck, he was dismissed before the start of the league season due to internal disagreements. In October 2013, four years after the dismissal, the manager of Mainz 05, Christian Heidel , explained: "Andersen and Mainz, the philosophy did not go together." It was added that Andersen with the team too little have spoken.

In mid-December 2010 Andersen was introduced as the new coach of the Greek first division club AE Larisa . He received a contract that was valid until the end of the season. He was released in January 2011 after just 22 days. AE Larisa retired under his leadership from the cup competition and suffered three defeats in a row in the league, which the club remained behind the table. Larisa also didn't score a single goal under Andersen's leadership.

Jørn Andersen 2017.jpg

On November 6, 2011, Karlsruher SC signed Andersen as the new head coach. Andersen signed a success-related contract valid until the end of the season, but was already on leave at the end of March 2012 due to unsuccessfulness.

For the second half of the 2014/15 season, Andersen was the new coach of the Austrian regional league club SV Austria Salzburg . He led Salzburg into the first division (second highest division). At the beginning of December 2015, SV Austria Salzburg - meanwhile insolvent - agreed with him to terminate his contract. Andersen cited the lack of athletic perspective as the reason; he does not want to burden Austria further financially.

From May 2016 he was the coach of the North Korean national team . His contract ran until March 31, 2018.

In June 2018 Andersen took over the South Korean first division club Incheon United FC . By the end of the season he managed to stabilize the team again and lead it out of the table basement. At the end of the season, relegation was certain after the Derby win against FC Seoul . In 2019, the club started the season well. Until the 4th matchday the club was in a single-digit position in the table, but then slipped to last place and did not make the turn there. In mid-April, the club dismissed Andersen.

Private

Jørn Andersen is married to a French woman and has a son and a daughter. His son Niklas Andersen is also a soccer player and plays for SSVg Velbert . Andersen has had German citizenship since 1993.

successes

As a player
As a trainer
  • Promotion to the Bundesliga: 2009

Web links

Commons : Jørn Andersen  - collection of images, videos and audio files

Individual evidence

  1. Bjørg Andersen , Store Norske Leksikon
  2. Landslagsspillere ( memento from July 16, 2012 in the web archive archive.today ) , Østsiden idrettslag
  3. ^ A b c Matthias Arnhold: Jørn Andersen - Matches and Goals in Bundesliga , RSSSF archive, May 2, 2011
  4. ^ Lars Aarhus: League goals and top scorers (1963-2010) , RSSSF Norway, November 8, 2010
  5. Andersen has to go , kicker.de, January 10, 2011
  6. Marcel Friedrich: "Job guarantee for Tuchel" . Ed .: Sport Bild. No. 41 , 2013, p. 28 .
  7. Jörn Andersen takes over Larissa , nachrichten.ch, December 16, 2010
  8. Jörn Andersen released after 24 days . spiegel.de. January 9, 2010. Retrieved July 1, 2011.
  9. David Ruf: Andersen: 'I'm very proud to be the new trainer' ( Memento from November 8, 2011 in the Internet Archive ) , Karlsruher SC, November 6, 2011
  10. The KSC gives Andersen the pass , kicker.de, March 26, 2012
  11. Jørn Andersen new trainer at Salzburger Austria ( Memento from January 2, 2015 in the Internet Archive ) austria-salzburg.at, accessed on January 2, 2015
  12. Jørn Andersen leaves Salzburger Austria ( Memento from March 31, 2016 in the Internet Archive ) austria-salzburg.at, accessed on December 3, 2015
  13. ^ Football International: Andersen is the new national coach of North Korea. (No longer available online.) In: www.handelsblatt.com. Archived from the original on May 11, 2016 ; accessed on May 11, 2016 .
  14. Sport1.de: Jörn Andersen extended as national coach in North Korea until 2018 . In: Sport1.de . ( Online [accessed December 14, 2016]).
  15. https://www.sport.de/news/ne3242834/ex-bundesliga-torjaeger-uebernehmen-suedkorea-klub/
  16. Report on naver.com, accessed April 20, 2019 (Korean)
  17. Report on incheonutd.com, accessed April 20, 2019 (Korean)
  18. ^ Portrait ( memento of September 24, 2015 in the Internet Archive ) on the SSVg Velbert website, accessed on December 21, 2014
  19. SID / Sports Information Service , accessed on May 11, 2016