Patrick Alphonse Bengondo

from Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Patrick Bengondo
Personnel
Surname Patrick Alphonse Bengondo
birthday September 27, 1981
place of birth AkonolingaCameroon
size 180 cm
position striker
Men's
Years station Games (goals) 1
2000-2001 Olympic Mvolye 20 (16)
2001-2002 Etoile Carouge 14 0(2)
2002-2003 AC Bellinzona 26 0(8)
2003-2004 FC Universitatea Craiova 5 0(0)
2004-2005 GC Biaschesi 10 0(3)
2005-2006 FC Winterthur 31 (18)
2006-2007 FC Aarau 9 0(0)
2007 Servette Genève 17 0(5)
2007-2008 FC Winterthur 25 0(7)
2008-2011 FC Aarau 80 (17)
2011-2016 FC Winterthur 147 (50)
2016-2017 FC Le Mont-sur-Lausanne 29 0(5)
1 Only league games are given.
As of December 30, 2017

Patrick Alphonse Bengondo (born September 27, 1981 in Akonolinga , Center region ) is a Cameroonian football player .

He was born the son of the mayor of Akonolinga .

In addition to his football career, Bengondo has his own small business and sells shin guards , among other things .

Club career

Bengondo began his career in his native Cameroon , where he was the top scorer in 2001 as a player for Olympique Mwolye .

In February 2002 he moved to Switzerland to Étoile Carouge and at the end of the season moved on to AC Bellinzona . After a year in the capital of Ticino, he switched to the Romanian top club FC Universitatea Craiova . After five appearances in Romania, he is called up for the U23 national team of Cameroon for the Africa Cup. The club officials in Craiova did not want to let him go, but since Bengondo was still traveling to the Africa Cup, he was subsequently excluded from the team's training sessions, no longer received wages and his rent in Romania was no longer paid. He returns to Switzerland and plays at GC Biaschesi in the third class first division . Meanwhile, after three months, FIFA declared the contract with the Romanian football club to be invalid.

After a season in Ticino, after trial training in Sion and Winterthur, he switched to FC Winterthur for the first time and formed a successful strike duo there with Pascal Renfer , Bengondo scored 18 goals in 31 games and took part in the 4-2 cup win with a hat trick against the Grasshoppers.

He then moved to FC Aarau in the National League A for the 2006/07 season , where he only made nine goalless appearances and was awarded to Servette Geneva after an injury for the second half of the season . For the 2007/08 season, the crowd favorite from Winterthur returned to the Eulach town for the second time on loan, where he made 25 appearances and scored seven goals. Then he was brought back from Aarau and played in Aargau for three seasons.

At the beginning of the 2011/12 season, Bengondo moved to the Schützenwiese for the third time after an engagement in Iran failed due to a medical test , where he was promoted to captain. Again he helped throw the Young Boys and FC St. Gallen out of the cup with his goals in the 2011/12 season. In the coming season he remained one of the most important team pillars and in spring 2013 he was named player of the second half of the season, according to Landbote, with a school grade of 5.5 thanks to many decisive goals and his “good work ethic”. Bengondo remained captain of the Winterthur team for several years until the 2015/16 winter break, although towards the end he was only used as a joker. After his farewell game on May 27, 2016, Bengondo, who recently became a “cult striker”, was described as a “monument” in an article by the Winterthurer Landbote . For Winterthur he scored 50 goals in 147 games in five years from 2011 to 2016.

After he no longer received a contract in Winterthur, he moved to FC Le Mont-sur-Lausanne in June 2016 and stayed there for one season until the first team withdrew from the Challenge League.

U23 national team

He won 2003 U23 International with Cameroon , the U-23 African Cup of Nations .

literature

  • Matthias Erzinger: “Bengo” - toujours de nous! In: Gesellschaft Winterthurer Jahrbuch (Ed.): Winterthurer Jahrbuch 2016 . Winterthur 2015, ISBN 978-3-9524286-4-1 , p. 97-103 .

Web links

Individual evidence

  1. Thomas Schifferle: Made for Winterthur . In: Tages-Anzeiger . September 20, 2014 ( online [accessed October 22, 2016]).
  2. Alexandra Stark: Footballer Bengondo's future as an entrepreneur . In: The Landbote . December 22, 2015 ( online [accessed October 22, 2016]).
  3. Hansjörg Schifferli: No closer to the Super League . In: The Landbote . June 4, 2013 ( fcwinterthur.ch [accessed June 24, 2017]).
  4. Hansjörg Schifferli: Memorial celebrated without a gate . In: The Landbote . May 28, 2016 ( online [accessed October 22, 2016]).
  5. The FC Le Mont presents itself sfl.ch June 20, 2016