Henrik Jensen (footballer, born 1959)

Multi tool use
Henrik Jensen
 Henrik Jensen coaching BK Frem on 18/7/12
|
Personal information |
Date of birth |
(1959-10-25) October 25, 1959 (age 59)
|
Place of birth |
Copenhagen, Denmark
|
Height |
178 cm (5 ft 10 in) |
Playing position |
Forward |
Club information |
Current team |
BK Frem
|
Number |
Head coach |
Senior career* |
Years |
Team
|
Apps
|
(Gls)
|
|
Vanløse IF
|
|
|
– |
Hvidovre IF
|
|
|
– |
Brøndby IF
|
278 |
(?) |
National team |
1975–1976 |
Denmark U-17 |
6 |
(1) |
1975–1977 |
Denmark U-19 |
25 |
(9) |
1978 |
Denmark U-21
|
1 |
(0) |
1982 |
Denmark
|
1 |
(0) |
Teams managed |
1997–1999 |
Brøndby IF (asst) |
1999–2003 |
Køge Boldklub
|
2003–2005 |
Akademisk Boldklub
|
2005–2007 |
Brøndby IF (women)
|
2007–2008 |
Brøndby IF (asst) |
2009 |
AC Horsens
|
2010–2011 |
Brøndby IF
|
2012–2014 |
BK Frem
|
* Senior club appearances and goals counted for the domestic league only |
Henrik Jensen (born 25 October 1959) is a Danish former Association football player and former manager of Brøndby IF in the Danish Superliga championship. He was most recently the manager of Boldklubben Frem.
Henrik Jensen is the father of Rosenborg BK player Mike Jensen.[1]
Career
Jensen spent his active career with Danish clubs Vanløse IF, Hvidovre IF, and Brøndby IF, winning the Danish championship with Brøndby. He played one game for the Denmark national football team in June 1982.
Jensen has managed Superliga clubs Køge Boldklub, Akademisk Boldklub, and AC Horsens, being relegated with all three clubs. On 26 March 2010 Brøndby IF officials hired the coach to replace Kent Nielsen, who had been dismissed following the 1–3 home defeat against HB Køge the day before.
He was sacked as manager of Brøndby on 24 October 2011 following a miserable start of the 2011-12 season.[2]
In June 2012 he was named new manager of Boldklubben Frem in the Danish 2nd Divisions. He left the club by mutual consent on 29 April 2014.[3]
References
^ Mike Jensen: Derfor har jeg succes BT, 3 August 2010
^ Henrik Jensen fyret i Brøndby Jyllands-Posten, 24 October 2011
^ Henrik Jensen stopper i Frem nu bold.dk, 29 April 2014
External links
(in Danish) Danish national team profile
(in Danish) Superliga manager statistics
(in Danish) Superliga player statistics
Køge BK – managers
|
- Young (1946–47)
- Baumgarten (1948–5?)
- Madsen (195?–53)
- Szendrődi (1953–56)
- Young (1957–6?)
- Astorri (196?–65)
- Chekerdemian (1966–67)
- Hugger (1968)
- Pilmark (1969)
- Schøne (1970–74)
- Hansen (1974–78)
- Bjerre (1978–79)
- Sørensen (1980–83)
- J. Poulsen (1983–87)
- P. Poulsen (1987–88)
- Hildebrandt (1988–90)
- Jakobsen (1990–91)
- Hansen (1991)
- Sørensen (1991–92)
- Gynild (1992)
- Rasmussen (1992–1997)
- Johansen (1997–99)
- Jensen (1999–2003)
- Kristiansen (2003–04)
- Rioch (2004–06)
- Larsen (2006–08)
- Kastrup (2008–09)
|
Akademisk Boldklub – managers
|
- Jessen (1963–65)
- Soo (1965)
- Astorri (1966–68)
- Netuka (1968–69)
- K. Hansen (1970)
- Hvidemose (1970–71)
- K. Hansen (1972)
- Cummings (1973–75)
- Rasmussen (1975)
- Borsdal (1976–77)
- C. Andersen (1978–83)
- J. Andersen (1983)
- Dahl (1984)
- C. Andersen (1985–86)
- H. Kurland (1986)
- Bjerre (1987)
- C. Hansen (1988–90)
- H. Kurland (1990)
- Larsen (1990–91)
- P. Jensen (1991–92)
- Petersen (1993–95)
- C. Andersen (1995)
- Nielsen (1996)
- C. Andersen (1996–98)
- P. Frandsen (1998)
- Mørk (1998–2000)
- P. Frandsen & F. Christensen (2000–2001)
- O. Christensen (2001–03)
- P. Frandsen (2003)
- H. Jensen (2003–05)
- Michaelsen (2005–06)
- C. Andersen (2006–07)
- Petersen (2007)
- F. Christensen (2007–10)
- K. Kurland (2010–12)
- Lehm (2012–13)
- Nørgaard (2013–15)
- P. Frandsen (2015–16)
- Bjerg (2017)
- Madsen (2018–)
|
AC Horsens – managers
|
- Bie (1994)
- Møller (1994–96)
- Poulsen (1996–97)
- Bech (1998–99)
- Poulsen (1999)
- Pedersen (1999–2001)
- Nielsen (2001–08)
- Jensen (2009)
- Mølby (2009–14)
- Henriksen (2014–)
|
Brøndby IF – managers
|
- Knudsen (1964–67)
- Andersen (1967–69)
- I. Jensen (1969–70)
- Sinding (1970–72)
- Johansen (1973)
- F. Laudrup (1973)
- Møller (1974)
- Sinding (1975)
- Hvidemose (1975–80)
- Køhlert (1981–85)
- Skovdahl (1986)
- Peitersen (1987–88)
- Skovdahl (1988–89)
- Olsen (1990–92)
- Skovdahl (1992–99)
- Køhlert (1999)
- Hareide (2000–02)
- Køhlert (2002)
- M. Laudrup (2002–06)
- Meulensteen (2006–07)
- Køhlert (2007–08)
- Nielsen (2009–10)
- H. Jensen (2010–11)
- Skarbalius (2011–13)
- Frank (2013–16)
- Skarbalius (2016)
- Zorniger (2016–)
|
Boldklubben Frem – managers
|
- Johansen (1940–43)
- Jørgensen (1943–45)
- Mountford (1945–52)
- L. Nielsen (1952–56)
- J. Hansen (1956–57)
- Frederiksen (1958)
- L. Nielsen (1959–60)
- Pilmark (1961)
- C. Hansen (1962)
- E. Sørensen (1963–66)
- Jessen (1967–70)
- Kramer (1971–73)
- Larsen (1973)
- Olsen (1974–75)
- Strain (1975–78)
- F.W. Sørensen (1979–80)
- Poulsen (1981–82)
- Larsen (1983–86)
- Månsson (1986–87)
- Poulsen (1987–89)
- Mørk (1990–93)
- Wind & Bøje (1993)
- Thomsen (1994–96)
- Kristiansen (1996–98)
- Petersen (1998–2001)
- Mørk (2001–03)
- Skovdahl (2003–05)
- Theil (2005–09)
- Andersen (2009–10)
- Heitmann (2010)
- Kristiansen (2010–11)
- P. Hansen (2012)
- H. Jensen (2012–14)
- Gundersen (2014–16)
- Henriksen & M. Nielsen (2016)
- Jung (2017)
- M. Jensen (2017–18)
- Holmgaard (2018–)
|
Authority control 
|
- WorldCat Identities
- ULAN: 500256733
- VIAF: 173292746
|
M8gpEwh,tVPF,1xaO1kMBYOOF3TryrTWkansFUak x,eL
Popular posts from this blog
"Italian restaurant" redirects here. For the television series, see Italian Restaurant. Some typical Italian gastronomic products in a window display in Imola Pizza is one of the world's most popular foods and a common fast food item Part of a series on the Culture of Italy History People Languages Traditions Mythology and folklore Mythology folklore Cuisine Festivals Religion Art Literature Music and performing arts Music Media Television Cinema Sport Monuments World Heritage Sites Symbols Flag Coat of arms Italy portal v t e Italian cuisine History Ancient Roman cuisine Medieval cuisine Early modern cuisine Contemporary cuisine Regional cuisines Apulian cuisine Lombard cuisine Neapolitan cuisine Roman cuisine Sicilian cuisine Venetian cuisine Cuisine of Abruzzo Cuisine of Sardinia Lists Chefs Dishes Pas...
Part of a series on Bulgarians .mw-parser-output .nobold{font-weight:normal} българи Culture Literature Music Art Cinema Names Cuisine Dances Costume Sport Public holidays in Bulgaria By country Albania Australia Canada Czechoslovakia Greece New Zealand Romania Serbia South America Turkey Ukraine United States Bulgarian citizens France Germany Hungary Italy Lebanon Lithuania Macedonia Spain United Kingdom Subgroups Anatolian Balkanian Banat Bulgarians Bessarabian Bulgarian Dobrujans Macedonian Ruptsi Balkandzhii Pomaks (Bulgarian Muslims) Thracian Shopi/Torlaks Şchei Religion Bulgarian Orthodox Church Islam Catholic Church Protestant denominations Language Bulgarian Dialects Banat Bulgarian Other List of Bulgarians People of Bulgarian descent v t e Tarator is a cold soup made of yogurt, water, minced cucumber, dill, garlic, and sunflower or olive oil (Chips are...
This article is about the men's Ashes cricket contest. For the women's Ashes series, see Australian women's cricket team in England in 2005. 2005 Ashes series Part of the Australian cricket team in England in 2005 A ticker-tape reception for the victorious England players Date 21 July 2005 – 12 September 2005 Location England Result England won the five-Test series 2–1 Player of the series Andrew Flintoff (Eng) and Shane Warne (Aus) Compton–Miller Medal: Andrew Flintoff (Eng) Teams England Australia Captains Michael Vaughan Ricky Ponting Most runs Kevin Pietersen (473) Marcus Trescothick (431) Andrew Flintoff (402) Justin Langer (394) Ricky Ponting (359) Michael Clarke (335) Most wickets Andrew Flintoff (24) Simon Jones (18) Steve Harmison (17) Shane Warne (40) Brett Lee (20) Glenn McGrath (19) ← 2002–03 2006–07 → The 2005 Ashes series was that year's edition of...