Mark Strudal

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Mark Strudal
Personnel
Surname Mark Agner Boecking Strudal
birthday April 29, 1968
place of birth GlostrupDenmark
size 180 cm
position striker
Juniors
Years station
Holbæk B&I
Bramsnæs
FC Roskilde
Men's
Years station Games (goals) 1
1987 Hvidovre IF 23 0(7)
1988 Næstved BK 26 (14)
1989 Borussia Dortmund 12 0(1)
1989-1991 Grasshopper Club Zurich 54 (21)
1991-1993 Vejle BK 8 0(5)
1992 →  Næstved BK  (loan) 15 0(8)
1993 →  FC Copenhagen  (loan) 3 0(0)
1993 →  BK Frem København  (loan) 9 0(8)
1993-1995 Brøndby IF 58 (25)
1995-1996 Næstved BK 23 0(7)
1996 Skoda Xanthi 0 0(0)
National team
Years selection Games (goals)
1987 Denmark U-19 1 0(0)
1988-1989 Denmark U-21 11 0(3)
1988-1995 Denmark 9 0(3)
Stations as a trainer
Years station
2000–? Køge BK (youth coach)
2004-2006 FC Zulu
2006-2009 FC Nordsjælland U-19
2009-2015 FC Nordsjælland (offensive coach)
2015-2016 Brøndby IF (assistant coach)
2015-2017 Brøndby IF (offensive coach)
2018– Lyngby BK
1 Only league games are given.

Mark Agner Boecking Strudal (born April 29, 1968 in Glostrup ) is a former Danish soccer player and current coach who has played in German-speaking countries for Borussia Dortmund and the Swiss club Grasshopper Club Zurich . He is currently the head coach of Lyngby BK .

Career

society

Mark Strudal began his career back then in the youth of Holbæk B&I , then he made his professional debut in 1987 at Hvidovre IF in the highest Danish football league via the clubs Bramsnæs and FC Roskilde . However, his team could not hold the league and was relegated to the second division. He then moved to Næstved BK in 1988 , with which he finished second at the end of the season and thus qualified for the 1989/90 UEFA Cup . Strudal himself played a significant part in this season's placement with 14 league goals in 26 games.

Due to his good performance, other clubs became aware of him. So committed Borussia Dortmund the Danish shooting star in the winter break in 1988/89. However, the competition there was very fierce, as Borussia already had established strikers such as Frank Mill , Michael Rummenigge and Norbert Dickel in the squad. First Strudal therefore had to be satisfied with the role of substitute, so he made his debut on February 18, 1989 in the 3-1 away win of Borussia at VfB Stuttgart , when he came into the game for Günter Breitzke in the last twelve minutes . On May 20, he scored his first competitive goal for Dortmund when he scored the 2-0 lead in the 4-2 home win over Bayer Uerdingen . But with his storm competitor Norbert Dickel, who saw his regular place in danger from the young Dane, there was a long-term feud and repeated taunts among each other during training. The climax came before the 1989 DFB Cup final , when Dickel played despite a knee injury and Strudal took his place in the squad. Due to his personnel policy, he fell out with coach Horst Köppel after winning the cup final and turned his back on Borussia Dortmund in the summer of 1989.

For the 1989/90 season, Strudal moved to the then Swiss runner-up and reigning cup winner Grasshopper Club Zurich . With the Grasshoppers he first won the Swiss Supercup in 1989 against FC Luzern (4-2). This title was followed by the Swiss Cup in 1989/90 , in the final in Bern they beat Neuchâtel Xamax 2-1. In addition, they won the Swiss football championship in 1989/90 and 1990/91. With the championships won, the Grasshopper Club also took part in the European Champions Cup. However, there was against the teams FK Roter Stern Belgrade ( 1990/91 ) and RSC Anderlecht ( 1991/92 ) in the first round. After two years in Zurich, however, the club ran into financial difficulties and had to resort to a general 20 percent salary cut, which Strudal did not agree with. Thus, the capital Switzerland was over for him after 21 hits in 54 games and he returned to Vejle BK in his home country for over four million Danish kroner .

But his return to Denmark turned out to be very slow at the beginning. In 1991 he was injured only eight times in the league for Vejle, but he scored five goals. In addition, the club rose from the highest Danish league. A total of three loan deals followed in 1992 and 1993, including at his old club Næstved BK (15 games / 8 goals) as well as at FC Copenhagen (3/0) and at BK Frem København (9/8). In 1993 Strudal then moved to the Danish top club Brøndby IF , where he probably experienced his most productive time as a goalscorer. In the 1993/94 and 1994/95 seasons he was third in the goalscorer list with 13 and twelve hits respectively. He could not win the championship with Brøndby, but they won the Danish Football Cup in 1994. After it was 0-0 against Strudal's former club Næstved BK after the end of regular time, they were able to secure the title after a 3-1 on penalties.

In 1995 he returned to Næstved BK for one season , but was out for five months due to a knee joint injury . A year later, Strudal dared to move abroad again , signing a four-year contract with Skoda Xanthi . However, this was canceled shortly after an injury in the preparation for the season. In August 1997 there was a short comeback in the Danish amateur field for a club in Hagested , but ended his active career shortly afterwards due to his injury history.

National team

Strudal played from 1987 to 1989 for the U-19 and U-21 national teams of Denmark . With the U-21 he took part in the qualification for the U-21 European Football Championship in 1990 . As part of the qualification, Strudal was used in all six games, in the 3-0 win over Greece he even scored a goal. In the end, Denmark was only third in the group behind Bulgaria and Romania and missed qualifying for the finals.

He made his debut for the senior national team on May 18, 1988 in a qualifying game against Poland (3-0), where he came into play in the 57th minute for Bent Egsmark Christensen . Strudal had to wait five years for his first international goals, in 1993 he scored one goal each in the friendlies against the USA (2-2) and Latvia (2-0). In 1995, Denmark took part in the King Fahd Cup , a predecessor to today's FIFA Confederations Cup . This took place in Saudi Arabia , Strudal's team prevailed in the group stage against Mexico (4: 2 nE ) and the host's team (2: 0) as group winners. In the final they beat the team from Argentina to players like Javier Zanetti and Gabriel Batistuta 2-0. Strudal himself was only used in the group game against Saudi Arabia, which in retrospect was his last international match. From 1988 to 1995 he was able to show nine international appearances and three goals.

Trainer

After his playing career, Mark Strudal began working as a coach in 2000, initially as a youth coach at Køge BK . From 2004 to 2006 he coached FC Zulu , before coaching the U-19s of FC Nordsjælland for three years . From 2009 he was a member of the professional coaching staff at FC Nordsjælland. In the summer of 2015, Strudal moved to the coaching staff at Brøndby IF , where he was also assistant coach and individual coach of the offensive players . He left Brøndby in 2017 and has been the head coach of Lyngby BK since 2018 .

titles and achievements

Borussia Dortmund
Grasshopper Club Zurich
Brøndby IF
Danish national football team

Web links

Individual evidence

  1. a b c d Mark Strudal - Legends of the Bundesliga , bundesligalegenden.de
  2. 1988/1989, 18th matchday, VfB Stuttgart versus Borussia Dortmund , fussballdaten.de
  3. 1988/1989, 30th matchday, Borussia Dortmund versus Bayer Uerdingen , fussballdaten.de
  4. Danmark - Grækenland 3-0 , dbu.dk
  5. ^ Danmark - Poland 3-0 , dbu.dk
  6. ^ Danmark - USA 2-2 , dbu.dk
  7. Danmark - Letland 2-0 , dbu.dk
  8. ^ Danmark - Saudi Arabia 2-0 , dbu.dk
  9. Mark Strudal træner i Køge , bold.dk
  10. Zulu mister træner til SAS Liga-klub , bold.dk
  11. Mark Strudal from FC Zulu til FC Nordsjælland , tipsbladet.dk
  12. FCN forfremmer Mark Strudal , bold.dk
  13. Mark Strudal shall give all Brøndby- Mål, brondby.com
  14. Strudal: Har nydt min tid i Brøndby , bold.dk
  15. Mark Strudal er ny cheftræner i Lyngby , dr.dk