Mirnel Sadović
Mirnel Sadović | ||
Mirnel Sadović (2017)
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Personnel | ||
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birthday | May 25, 1984 | |
place of birth | Sarajevo , SFR Yugoslavia | |
size | 175 cm | |
position | striker | |
Juniors | ||
Years | station | |
1994-2001 | Floridsdorfer AC | |
2000 | → FC Admira Wacker Mödling (co-op) (loan) | |
2000-2002 | FK Austria Wien (partial co-op.) | |
Men's | ||
Years | station | Games (goals) 1 |
2001-2002 | FK Austria Vienna | 0 | (0)
2001-2002 | FK Austria Vienna II | |
2002-2004 | Arminia Bielefeld | 2 | (0)
2002-2004 | Arminia Bielefeld II | 46 | (9)
2004-2005 | FK Sarajevo | 4 | (0)
2005 | SC Untersiebenbrunn | 15 | (1)
2005-2006 | SC Austria Lustenau II | 4 | (1)
2006 | Kremser SC | 12 | (4)
2006-2007 | VfB Admira Wacker Mödling II | 13 | (3)
2007-2009 | SKN St. Pölten | 61 (39) |
2009-2011 | SC Magna Wiener Neustadt | 45 (13) |
2011–2012 | SCR Altach | 17 | (4)
2012-2014 | SKN St. Pölten | 68 (17) |
2014-2016 | Floridsdorfer AC | 45 | (4)
2017– | ASK-BSC Bruck / Leitha | 15 | (7)
National team | ||
Years | selection | Games (goals) |
2002-2006 | Bosnia and Herzegovina U-21 | 10 | (0)
1 Only league games are given. As of June 15, 2017 |
Mirnel Sadović (born May 25, 1984 in Sarajevo , SFR Yugoslavia ) is a football player of Bosnian-Herzegovinian origin.
Career
Youth and amateur football
Sadović began his active career as a football player in the 21st Viennese district of Floridsdorf with the local Floridsdorfer AC . He later moved to Südstadt, where he was active in the youth teams of FC Admira Wacker Mödling . His last youth station was FK Austria Wien , where he also played in the amateur team, which played in the third- tier Regionalliga Ost , until 2002 .
Club career
In 2002 he moved to Germany in the 2nd Bundesliga to Arminia Bielefeld , where he made two short appearances in the 2003/04 season . His professional debut was Sadović when he was substituted on August 3, 2003 in the 3-1 home defeat against Rot-Weiß Oberhausen in the 77th minute of play for Patrick Owomoyela . In 2004 he moved to his home country for FK Sarajevo for half a season . At the club from the Bosnian-Herzegovinian capital, he came increasingly to missions and won with the team the Kup Bosne i Hercegovine of the 2004/05 season.
At the beginning of 2005 Sadović moved to Austria to SC Untersiebenbrunn in the second-class first division . For the club from the small Lower Austrian community of Untersiebenbrunn , he came to three missions in the 2004/05 season . When the club was in eighth place in the table at the end of the season, the club's economic end soon followed. After the license refusal for the next season by the Bundesliga and the announced relocation of the club to the third-tier Regionalliga Ost, the club was finally dissolved. Sadović was forced to look for another club, which he also found with SC Austria Lustenau . From July 2005 to January 2006 he was in the squad of the Vorarlberg club, which also played in the second-rate first division.
At the beginning of 2006, the then 21-year-old Sadović transferred to the fifth largest Lower Austrian city of Krems to play there Kremser SC . At the end of the season he rose with the club from the Regionalliga Ost in the fourth-class Lower Austrian regional league . For the summer break before the 2006/07 season , another change from Sadović followed. This time he went back to the Regionalliga Ost to the amateurs of FC Admira Wacker Mödling, for whom he made 13 championship appearances until his departure at the beginning of 2007 and scored three goals.
In 2007 he moved to the SKN St. Pölten within the league . Still goalless in the first two rounds of the 2007/08 season , Sadović's peat festival began in the third round. After a total of 30 completed championship games, Sadović had a record of 19 goals scored. He also performed well in the 26th round of this season against SC Neusiedl am See , when he came on in the 76th minute and scored a brace with goals in the 87th and 97th minute. With his total of 19 goals scored, Sadović was the top scorer in the Regionalliga Ost and was one of the main people responsible for the rise of Sankt Pölten to the second-rate first division.
In the 2008/09 season he was in 18 games for the club from the Lower Austrian capital and scored eleven goals. During the season he moved after a total of 61 championship appearances and a goal balance of 39 goals for SKN St. Pölten for a transfer fee of 30,000 euros within the first division to SC Magna Wiener Neustadt. To his first appearance for the SC Magna came Sadović on March 13, 2009 in the 2-0 away win over the Red Bull Juniors , in which he also scored his first goal for the Wiener Neustädter. After ten games and four goals, Sadović became champions in the first division with the team and thus secured promotion to the Austrian Bundesliga.
International
With ten appearances for the Bosnian-Herzegovinian U-21 national team , Sadović already gained some international experience.
titles and achievements
- 1 × Bosnian-Herzegovinian cup winner : 2004/05
- 1 × top scorer of the Regionalliga Ost (19 goals): 2007/08
- 1 × champion in the Regionalliga Ost: 2007/08 (promotion to the first division)
- 1 × champions in the first division: 2008/09 (promotion to the Bundesliga)
Web links
- Mirnel Sadović in the database of weltfussball.de
- Player profile at fussballoesterreich.at
- Interview with the soccer magazine IM NETZ
personal data | |
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SURNAME | Sadović, Mirnel |
BRIEF DESCRIPTION | Bosnian-Herzegovinian soccer player |
DATE OF BIRTH | May 25, 1984 |
PLACE OF BIRTH | Sarajevo , SFR Yugoslavia |