Marek Čech (football player, 1976)

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Marek Čech
Cech2009.JPG
Personnel
birthday April 8, 1976
place of birth OstravaCzechoslovakia
position goal
Juniors
Years station
1984-1990 Slavia Orlová
1990-1996 FC Baník Ostrava
Men's
Years station Games (goals) 1
1996 VTJ Hranice
1997 FC Baník Ostrava 0 (0)
1998 VP Frýdek-Místek 3 (0)
1999-2000 NH Ostrava 32 (0)
2000 Fotbal Třinec 14 (0)
2001-2002 MŠK Žilina 15 (0)
2003 Fotbal Třinec
2003-2004 Spartak Trnava 36 (0)
2004-2006 FC Slovan Liberec 58 (0)
2007-2008 Lutsch-Energija Vladivostok 43 (0)
2008-2010 Moscow locomotive 24 (0)
2011 Shemchushina Sochi 19 (0)
2011–2012 Viktoria Plzen 15 (0)
2012-2014 Sparta Prague 0 (0)
2014– Delhi Dynamos FC 0 (0)
National team
Years selection Games (goals)
2006 Czech Republic 1 (0)
1 Only league games are given.
As of January 5, 2016

Marek Čech (born April 8, 1976 in Ostrava ) is a Czech football player on the position of goalkeeper .

Career

Marek Čech came into contact with football very early on. His father Oldřich Čech was a goalkeeper at the fourth division Slavia Orlová and took him not only to home but also to away games. Marek Čech began his career at the age of eight in the same club and in the same position. In 1990 he moved to Baník Ostrava , where he did not make the transition from the juniors to the men's team. At the age of 18 he got a contract as groundskeeper with a minimal salary and played for the B-team in the third division. He completed his military service at VTJ Hranice in 1996 , then was loaned to the second division clubs VP Frýdek-Místek , NH Ostrava and Fotbal Třinec .

In Frýdek-Místek he was on the bench, only at NH Ostrava he played regularly. After the bankruptcy of the club Čech moved within the league to Třinec . In the spring of 2001 he was surprisingly obliged by the Slovak first division club MŠK Žilina , but was only number two there. In the 2001/02 championship season he came on eight missions.

In the 2002/03 season he was briefly loaned to his former club Fotbal Třinec. He then moved to Spartak Trnava , where he was the undisputed goalkeeper and performed well. In 2004 he was signed by the Czech first division club Slovan Liberec , with the Czech sports daily Deník Sport erroneously writing that Marek Čech was a Slovak. In the following years, the Czech public believed that Čech was a citizen of the neighboring country, and on television he was also referred to as a Slovak.

In Liberec Čech first sat on the bench, only after Zbyněk Hauzr had been suspended after being sent off, he made his debut on matchday 13 on November 15, 2004 in the Gambrinus League . In the next few years, Čech did not give up the regular place and developed into one of the best goalkeepers in the league. In 2006 he stayed 720 minutes without conceding a goal. On November 15, 2006 he made his debut in the 1-1 draw against Denmark in the Czech national team . In early 2007 he was number three behind Petr Čech and Jaromír Blažek .

On January 5, 2007 he signed a two-year contract with the Russian first division club Lutsch-Energija Vladivostok . The transfer fee was not published, but according to the daily Deník Sport , which cited Russian media, it was around 12 million crowns.

At the end of August 2008, Čech switched to Lokomotiv Moscow . In the middle of the 2008/09 season, however, he lost his regular place there and was only used once in the cup in the following season. At the beginning of the 2010/11 season he moved to Shemchushina Sochi on a free transfer , where he played 19 games before moving to Viktoria Pilsen the following season . A year later he moved to Sparta Prague .

Private life

Marek Čech is married and has one son. He is not related to Petr Čech .

successes

  • Slovak football champion: 2002
  • Czech football champion: 2006

Web links

Individual evidence

  1. http://fotbal.idnes.cz/brankar-cech-podepsal-smlouvu-na-dva-roky-f1m-/fot_zahranici.asp?c=A070105_174439_fot_zahranici_ot
  2. http://www.deniksport.cz/clanek484875.htm
  3. Чао, Марек! Report on the website of Luch-Energia Vladivostok dated August 28, 2008, accessed August 28, 2008, in Russian