Valér Švec
Slovak footballer and coach
Personal information | |||
---|---|---|---|
Date of birth | (1935-07-20) 20 July 1935 (age 88) | ||
Place of birth | Czechoslovakia | ||
Position(s) | Forward | ||
Senior career* | |||
Years | Team | Apps | (Gls) |
1955–1971 | FC Spartak Trnava | ||
Managerial career | |||
1970–1971 | Spartak Trnava | ||
1972–1978 | Inter Bratislava | ||
1978–1980 | Spartak Trnava | ||
1980–1981 | Zbrojovka Brno | ||
1982–1984 | Tatran Prešov | ||
1985–1986 | Slovan Bratislava | ||
–1988 | AEL Limassol | ||
1990–1992 | Spartak Trnava | ||
1996 | FC Nitra | ||
*Club domestic league appearances and goals |
Valér Švec (born 20 July 1935) was a Slovak football player and coach.[1] He played for FC Spartak Trnava.
He coached Spartak Trnava, Inter Bratislava,[2] Zbrojovka Brno, Tatran Prešov, Slovan Bratislava, FC Nitra[3][4] and AEL Limassol.[5]
References
- v
- t
- e
AEL Limassol – managers
- Tsiepis (1930–32)
- Gavalas (1932–46)
- Vasiliou (1946–48)
- Gavalas (1948–56)
- Elia ()
- Ceplar ()
- Christodoulou ()
- Fitz ()
- Eisaggeleas ()
- Mavrokolos ()
- Reindreich ()
- Tourbeik ()
- Moustakas ()
- Simatoc (1962–63)
- Reiner ()
- Pantelidis ()
- Chachevski ()
- Krystallis ()
- Tomov ()
- McParland ()
- Havránek (1984–86)
- Švec (19XX–88)
- Uhrin (1988–89)
- Dunaj (1989–90)
- Cipro (1990–92)
- Byshovets (1992–93)
- Sankovic ()
- Kaloperović ()
- Kissonergis ()
- Ferner (1995–96)
- Farkaš ()
- Orphanides (–2000)
- Kalman Missi ()
- Mavroudis (2000)
- Michaelides (2000–02)
- Mantzourakis (2002–03)
- Mavroudis (2003)
- Houwaart (2003–04)
- Protasov (2004–05)
- Mavroudis (2005)
- Prašnikar (2005–06)
- Mavroudis (2006–07)
- Guttman (2007)
- Barreto (2007–08)
- Michaelides (2008–09)
- Stoichiță (2009)
- Klinger (2009)
- Uhrin Jr. (2009–10)
- Stoichiță (2010–11)
- Atteveld (2011)
- Christodoulou (2011–12)
- Costa (2012–13)
- Vidigal (2013)
- Petev (2013–14)
- Christoforou (2014–15)
- Chavos (2015–16)
- Christodoulou (2016–17)
- Baltazar (2017–18)
- Kerkez (2018–21)
- Pantelidis (2021–22)
- Silas (2022)
- Janevski (2022–23)
- Charalabous (2023)
- Koskela (2023–)
This biographical article relating to Slovak football is a stub. You can help Wikipedia by expanding it. |
- v
- t
- e