Jan Koller

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Jan Koller
Personal information
Date of birth March 30, 1973 (1973-03-30) (age 35)
Place of birth    Smetanova Lhota, Czechoslovakia
Height 2.02 m (6 ft 7+12 in)
Playing position Striker
Club information
Current club 1. FC Nuremberg
Number 19
Youth clubs
1978–1989
1989–1994
TJ Smetanova Lhota
ZVVZ Milevsko
Senior clubs1
Years Club App (Gls)*
1994–1996
1996–1999
1999–2001
2001–2006
2006–2008
2008-
Sparta Prague
Lokeren
RSC Anderlecht
Borussia Dortmund
AS Monaco
1. FC Nuremberg
029 0(5)
097 (43)
065 (43)
137 (59)
051 (12)
014 0(2)   
National team2
1999– Czech Republic 086 (54)

1 Senior club appearances and goals
counted for the domestic league only and
correct as of June 1, 2008.
2 National team caps and goals correct
as of May 27, 2008.
* Appearances (Goals)

Jan Koller (born March 30, 1973 in Smetanova Lhota, Czech Republic, then Czechoslovakia) is a Czech football player, who currently stars as a striker for the Czech Republic national team and the Bundesliga club 1. FC Nuremberg in Germany. He is the all-time leading goal scorer for either the Czech Republic or the former Czechoslovakia, with 50 goals in 80 caps as of September 13, 2007.

Koller has an impressive physical presence (height: 2.02 m, nearly 6'8" and weight 100 kg, about 220 pounds). Borussia Dortmund's physio refused to comment on this phenomenon. Koller started his football training as a goalkeeper, but was converted to striker by the time he started his professional career. His training as a keeper saw some use in the 2002-03 season. In one Bundesliga match at Bayern Munich, Borussia Dortmund's keeper Jens Lehmann was sent off about midway through the second half, and Koller moved from striker to keeper after he had already scored once in the first half. He kept a clean sheet for the rest of the match against good opportunities by Michael Ballack and others, and was named the Bundesliga's top keeper of the week for his performance. Nevertheless Dortmund lost this important match.

He was bought from Anderlecht in 2001. He also played for Lokeren and finished the 1998-99 season as Jupiler League topscorer for that club. Playing at Anderlecht, he also won the Belgian Golden Shoe.

Koller suffered a minor thigh injury during a World Cup game against the United States on June 12, 2006, not long after the opening goal he scored. His injury was a major blow for the Czech Republic, who lost their next 2 matches without him. Koller moved to French side AS Monaco on a free transfer in June 2006.

He found it difficult to settle in France however, despite a respectable scoring record, and on January 6, 2008 he returned to Germany with 1. FC Nuremberg.[1]

Just about into his third month with Nuremberg, Koller announced that he will retire after EURO 2008.[citation needed]He currently has 194 goals in his professional carrer and 52 goals in his international career.

[edit] Career statistics

Club Performance League Cup Continental Total
Season Club League Apps Goals Apps Goals Apps Goals Apps Goals
Czech Republic League Czech Republic Football Cup Europe Total
1994-95 Sparta Prague Gambrinus liga 6 1 - - 6 1
1995-96 23 4 - - 23 4
Belgium League Belgian Cup Europe Total
1996-97 Lokeren Oost-Vlaanderen Belgian League 31 8 - - 31 8
1997-98 33 11 - - 33 11
1998-99 33 24 5 3 - 38 27
1999-00 Anderlecht Belgian League 33 20 12 10 - 45 30
2000-01 32 22 5 2 13 4 50 28
Germany League DFB-Pokal Europe Total
2001-02 Borussia Dortmund Bundesliga 32 11 1 0 13 6 46 17
2002-03 34 13 - 12 8 46 21
2003-04 32 16 - 3 0 35 16
2004-05 30 15 - - 30 15
2005-06 9 4 - - 9 4
France League Coupe de France Europe Total
2006-07 Monaco Ligue 1 32 8 - - 32 8
2007-08 18 4 - - 18 4
Germany League DFB-Pokal Europe Total
2007-08 Nuremberg Bundesliga
Total Czech Republic 29 5 - - 29 5
Belgium 162 85 22 15 13 4 197 104
Germany 137 59 1 0 28 14 166 73
France 50 12 - - 50 12
Career Total 378 161 23 15 41 18 442 398
Preceded by
Branko Strupar
Belgian League top scorer
24 goals

1998-99
Succeeded by
Ole Martin Årst and Toni Brogno
Preceded by
Lorenzo Staelens
Belgian Golden Shoe
2000
Succeeded by
Wesley Sonck

[edit] References

  1. ^ Club vor Verpflichtung von Koller (German). fcn.de (2006-01-06). Retrieved on 2008-03-05.

[edit] External links


Persondata
NAME Koller, Jan
ALTERNATIVE NAMES Koller, Jan
SHORT DESCRIPTION footballer
DATE OF BIRTH 1973-3-30
PLACE OF BIRTH Smetanova Lhota, Czechoslovakia
DATE OF DEATH
PLACE OF DEATH