Peter Bosz

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Peter Bosz
Rostov-Ajax (8) .jpg
Peter Bosz, 2016
Personnel
Surname Peter Sylvester Bosz
birthday November 21, 1963
place of birth Apeldoorn , the  Netherlands
size 178 cm
position midfield player
Juniors
Years station
OBV Apeldoorn
AGOVV Apeldoorn
Men's
Years station Games (goals) 1
1981-1984 Vitesse Arnhem 81 (2)
1984-1985 AGOVV Apeldoorn
1985-1988 RKC Waalwijk 105 (4)
1988-1991 Sporting Toulon 93 (0)
1991-1996 Feyenoord Rotterdam 155 (6)
1996-1997 JEF United 33 (1)
1998 Hansa Rostock 14 (0)
1998-1999 NAC Breda 26 (1)
1999 JEF United 15 (1)
National team
Years selection Games (goals)
1991-1995 Netherlands 8 (0)
Stations as a trainer
Years station
2000-2002 AGOVV Apeldoorn
2002-2003 BV De Graafschap
2004-2006 Heracles Almelo
2010-2013 Heracles Almelo
2013-2016 Vitesse Arnhem
2016 Maccabi Tel Aviv
2016-2017 Ajax Amsterdam
2017 Borussia Dortmund
2019– Bayer 04 Leverkusen
1 Only league games are given.

Peter Sylvester Bosz [ ˈpeːtər ˈbɔs ] (born November 21, 1963 in Apeldoorn , Netherlands ) is a Dutch soccer coach and former soccer player . As a player in the men's field, he was active for clubs in the Netherlands, France , Japan and Germany between 1981 and 1999 .

Subsequently, from 2000, he took on various coaching positions in his home country over the next 16 years. This was followed by arrangements in Israel and Germany as well as for one season at Ajax Amsterdam . Since January 4, 2019 he has been working as head coach for the German Bundesliga club Bayer 04 Leverkusen .

Player career

Bosz began playing football in his hometown with the amateur clubs OBV Apeldoorn and AGOVV Apeldoorn . In 1981 he moved to Vitesse Arnheim and made his debut in the Dutch second division at the age of 17 . After three years - he had been a regular player up until then - Bosz switched back to the amateur field in 1984 and played for one season with his youth club AGOVV Apeldoorn.

In 1985 he signed a contract with the RKC Waalwijk . The club succeeded in 1988 for the first time promotion to the first division , after which Bosz moved to Sporting Toulon . On the Mediterranean coast he had been relegated to Ligue 1 three times before he was signed by Feyenoord Rotterdam in 1991 . In his first year Bosz won the KNVB Cup there . In the following four years two more cup wins and a championship title in 1993 followed.

Peter Bosz in March 1988

In 1996 Bosz moved to the Japanese J. League to JEF United Ichihara . After the end of the 1997 season, which had been played in the calendar year, the defensive midfielder accepted an offer from German Bundesliga club Hansa Rostock during the winter break and reached sixth place with the Mecklenburgers at the end of the season.

He then returned to the Netherlands, played for NAC Breda for a year and relegated to the second division with the team. Then Bosz went back to Japan to JEF United and ended his active professional career there after half a year, 18 years after it had started.

Bosz played eight times for the Dutch national team from 1991 to 1995 and took part in the 1992 European Championship with her .

Coaching career

After his active career, Bosz took over the coaching position at his youth club AGOVV Apeldoorn in 2000 . With the amateur club, he won the national championship of amateurs in 2002 . In the same year he moved to the coaching bench of the honorary division De Graafschap . There he rose with the team as bottom of the table. In the following year Bosz was without a coaching activity; In 2004 he signed a contract with Heracles Almelo . With Heracles he rose to the first division in the first year and held the class in the second year.

From the 2006/07 season he was Technical Director at Feyenoord Rotterdam . In 2010 he returned to Heracles as a trainer. From June 2013 to January 2016 he coached Vitesse Arnhem , after which he coached Maccabi Tel Aviv in Israel until the summer . Then he took over the team from Ajax Amsterdam , reached the second place in the Eredivisie and the final of the Europa League 2016/17 with the team, which consisted mainly of young and talented players .

For the 2017/18 season , Bosz took over the Bundesliga team from Borussia Dortmund as Thomas Tuchel's successor . He received a two-year contract. Under Bosz, BVB were at the top of the table with 19 out of 21 possible points after seven match days, five points ahead of FC Bayern Munich . In the following eight games, the team only got three points and slipped to eighth place in the table. In addition, she was eliminated from the Champions League with two points won behind Tottenham Hotspur and Real Madrid and before APOEL Nicosia . After a total of nine competitive matches without a win, including a 4: 4 draw in the derby against FC Schalke 04 after a 4: 0 lead, Bosz was on 10 December 2017 to a week earlier when 1. FC Köln exempted Peter Stöger replaced.

Since January 4, 2019, Bosz has been the head coach of the German Bundesliga club Bayer 04 Leverkusen as the successor to Heiko Herrlich , who finished the first half of the 2018/19 season with 24 points in ninth place in the table and was then released. Bayer 04 Leverkusen scored 34 points under Bosz in the second half of the season, making them fourth in the table on the last matchday and qualifying for the group stage of the Champions League . During the winter break of the 2019/20 season , the Dutchman received a contract extension until June 2022. In his second Bundesliga season with Bayer 04 Leverkusen, he narrowly missed qualifying for the UEFA Champions League and ended the season in fifth place. Bayer 04 will therefore play in the Europa League next season. In the 2019/20 DFB Cup season , Bosz led the Werkself back to the final for the first time in eleven years, when they played defending champions FC Bayern Munich . The final against FC Bayern Munich was finally lost 2: 4. After retiring from the Champions League via third place in the group stage, the Europa League made it to the quarter-finals and thus for the first time since 2008 into the third-to-last round of a European Cup competition.

successes

As a player:

As a trainer:

  • UEFA Europa League finalist: 2016/17 with Ajax Amsterdam
  • DFB Cup finalist: 2019/20 with Bayer 04 Leverkusen

Web links

Commons : Peter Bosz  - collection of images, videos and audio files

Individual evidence

  1. ^ AFC Ajax NV (Ed.): Peter Bosz naar Borussia Dortmund. In: Ajax Amsterdam. June 6, 2017. Retrieved June 12, 2017 (Dutch).
  2. Dortmund brings Peter Bosz as the new coach. In: Süddeutsche Zeitung . June 6, 2017. Retrieved June 6, 2017 .
  3. Report on the BVB website, accessed on June 6, 2017
  4. Peter Stöger follows Peter Bosz , bvb.de, December 10, 2017, accessed on December 10, 2017.
  5. Borussia Dortmund separates from coach Bosz , kicker.de, December 10, 2017, accessed on December 10, 2017.
  6. Peter Bosz takes over coaching position from Heiko Herrlich ; bayer04.de, published and accessed on December 23, 2018
  7. Contract until 2022 - Bayer 04 extended with head coach Bosz , bayer04.de, accessed on January 17, 2020
  8. Welt.de: Leverkusen reaches cup final - Völler hopes for fans in the Olympic Stadium , accessed on June 23, 2020