Marc Grosjean
Marc Grosjean | ||
Personnel | ||
---|---|---|
birthday | September 11, 1958 | |
place of birth | Liege , Belgium | |
position | Defense | |
Juniors | ||
Years | station | |
1971-1978 | Standard Liege | |
Men's | ||
Years | station | Games (goals) 1 |
1978-1989 | RFC seraing | |
1989-1991 | KRC Mechelen | |
1991-1993 | RUS Andenne-Seilles | |
1993-1995 | FC Wiltz 71 | |
Stations as a trainer | ||
Years | station | |
1994-1995 | FC Wiltz 71 (player-coach) | |
1995-1996 | FC Wiltz 71 | |
1996-1998 | UR Namur | |
1998-2001 | RAA La Louvière | |
2001-2002 | RFC Liege | |
2002-2003 | RAEC Mons | |
2004 | Royal Antwerp | |
2004-2008 | KAS Eupen | |
2008 | RFC seraing | |
2008-2009 | FC Brussels | |
2009-2011 | F91 Dudelange | |
2011 | RCS Visé | |
2012-2014 | Al-Shabab (U23) | |
2015-2018 | Union Saint-Gilloise | |
2018– | Royal Excelsior Virton | |
1 Only league games are given. |
Marc Grosjean (born September 11, 1958 in Liège ) is a Belgian football coach and former player.
Career
Grosjean comes from Sprimont in the Liège Ardennes , where he made his first football experiences at Sprimont Sport as a child. At the age of 13 he switched to the youth of the provincial capital club Standard Liège . Here he went through the other youth teams and was later used in the second team. In 1978 he went to RFC Seraing . With the Club von der Maas, the defender was champion of the second division in 1982 and was promoted to the first division . In 1984, the RFC narrowly missed the UEFA Cup places as fifth. Five years after the promotion, the Serainger had to return to the 2nd division. Grosjean played in Seraing for eleven years until 1989 and made 157 games for the club - a club record. In his last season he celebrated the runner-up in the second division with the club and just missed promotion.
Grosjean moved to the first division club KRC Mechelen , with whom he again had to say goodbye to Belgium's top division in 1990. After two seasons in Mechelen , he went to RUS Andenne-Seilles in 1991 and in 1993/94 he let his career end across the border with the Luxembourg club FC Wiltz 71 . There he took over in the following season as a player- coach and in the 1995/96 season only as responsible for his first coaching position. With Union Royale Namur he was a season later champion of the “D” league in Belgium. After the 1996/97 season he moved to RAA La Louvière in the Second Division. After a fourth place in 1999, the club was third under him in 2000 and rose in relegation to the first division . However, Grosjean was fired in January 2001 and joined RFC Liège in April that year . He stayed here for a year before moving to RAEC Mons in Bergen in Hainaut , with whom he was promoted to the First Division a few weeks later . At the beginning of the 2003/04 season he was released in Mons; In spring 2004 he found a new job at KAS Eupen , where he stayed until the 2006/07 season. After another year in which he worked for RFC Seraing , the first division relegated FC Brussels brought him into its ranks. After the missed recovery, Grosjean went to Luxembourg to F91 Dudelange for the 2009/10 season . With the team that had become Luxembourg champions five times in a row since 2005, he missed defending his title in 2010 in second place. In 2011, however, he won the title with the Luxembourgers. In July 2011 Grosjean moved briefly to the Belgian second division club RCS Visé , in order to then take over the U23s from Al-Shabab in Saudi Arabia from 2012 . From 2015 to 2018 Grosjean looked after the Belgian second division club Union Saint-Gilloise and then moved to third division Royal Excelsior Virton .
Web links
- Marc Grosjean in the database of weltfussball.de
- Portrait at KMSK Deinze
personal data | |
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SURNAME | Grosjean, Marc |
ALTERNATIVE NAMES | hard dog |
BRIEF DESCRIPTION | Belgian soccer player |
DATE OF BIRTH | September 11, 1958 |