Peter Van Houdt

from Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Peter Van Houdt
Peter van houdt-1480114163.JPG
Personnel
birthday 4th November 1976
place of birth HasseltBelgium
size 176 cm
position striker
Juniors
Years station
1982-1991 Herk Sport
1991-1994 VV St. Truiden
Men's
Years station Games (goals) 1
1994-1996 VV St. Truiden 61 (12)
1996-2000 Roda JC Kerkrade 122 (34)
2000-2004 Borussia M'gladbach 83 (20)
2004-2006 MSV Duisburg 71 0(8)
2006-2009 VV St. Truiden 43 (12)
2009 RFC Liege 8 0(2)
2009-2011 KSK Hasselt
2011-2014 Herk Sport
National team
Years selection Games (goals)
1992-1993 Belgium U-16 10 0(2)
1992-1993 Belgium U-17 5 0(1)
1994 Belgium U18 1 0(1)
1995-1997 Belgium U-21 16 0(3)
1999-2002 Belgium 6 0(0)
Stations as a trainer
Years station
2011-2014 Herk Sport (player-coach)
2014-2016 KVK waves
2016– RC Hades
1 Only league games are given.

Peter Van Houdt (born November 4, 1976 in Hasselt ) is a former Belgian football player and current coach .

Career

Club soccer

Van Houdt started playing football in his hometown Hasselt and eventually rose to the professional level at the nearby VV St. Truiden . There twice reached a middle place in the table and in his last season the cup semi-final against Club Bruges . St. Truiden lost 3-1 in each leg, with Van Houdt scoring his team's first leg. After two years he finally went to the Netherlands and joined Roda Kerkrade there. With the Dutch, he mostly ended up in the middle of the table, but was able to win the KNVB Cup twice (1997, 2000) and twice took part in the European Cup. In 2000 he moved from Kerkrade to Borussia Mönchengladbach in the 2nd Bundesliga . From there he was promoted to the Bundesliga in Van Houdt's first season and was second best goalscorer in Borussia behind the Dutchman Arie van Lent . In the German upper house of football he was initially twelfth with Gladbach and scored six goals. When he noticeably lost his regular place next to van Lent in the next two seasons and even had to play with the amateurs, he went to MSV Duisburg in early 2004 . In Duisburg, he was initially seventh and made promotion to the Bundesliga in the following season. After the Meidericher had to go to the 2nd Bundesliga as bottom of the table, Van Houdt left the club and returned to the Belgian VV St. Truiden. After his return he was promptly the club's top scorer with ten goals and barely escaped relegation as fifteenth. This could not be prevented in the following season and so he spent his last professional season in the second division . From 2009 to 2011 he was a player in Belgian amateur football and from 2011 to 2014 he was a player-coach . Since 2014 he has only been active as an amateur trainer.

National soccer team

Van Houdt took part in the U-16 European Championship in Turkey in 1993 and was eliminated there in the quarter-finals against the eventual title holder Poland. As a result, he ran for other U-national teams, but did not take part in any tournament with these. He made his senior national team debut on March 27, 1999 in a friendly against Bulgaria , where he played nine minutes. Then he came to another brief assignment and then paused until 2001, where he was substituted again in the World Cup play-off against the Czech Republic . Belgium was able to prevail there, but Van Houdt did not take part in the 2002 World Cup. It was only shortly after the World Cup that he returned to a total of three missions under the new national coach Aimé Anthuenis and then never played for the national team again.

titles and achievements

Web links