Kenneth Rosén

Swedish football manager
Kenneth Rosén
Personal information
Date of birth (1951-09-16)16 September 1951
Place of birth Sundsvall, Sweden
Date of death 27 December 2004(2004-12-27) (aged 53)
Place of death Gävle, Sweden
Position(s) goalkeeper
Senior career*
Years Team Apps (Gls)
Skellefteå
Örebro
Managerial career
1977 Laxå
1977-1978 Karlslund
1980-1982 Örebro
198 Falu
1984-1985 Brage
1986-1987 Halmstad
1988-1989 Kalmar AIK
1990 B68 Toftir
1990-1992 Skellefteå
1993-1994 Raufoss
1995–1996 Skjetten
1997–2000 Bryne
2001 Vålerenga (director of sports)
2001 L/F Hønefoss
2002 Kongsvinger
2003–2004 Gefle
*Club domestic league appearances and goals

Kenneth Rosén (16 September 1951 – 27 December 2004) was a Swedish football goalkeeper and later manager.

He was born in Sundsvall[1] and started his playing career in Skellefteå.[2] He also played for Örebro SK.[3]

He started his manager career in 1977 in Laxå IF.[2] He then managed seven Swedish clubs as well as Faroese B68 Toftir before moving to Norway.[4] After two season each in Raufoss and Skjetten he was hired as Bryne's manager ahead of the 1997 season.[3] He guided the team to the 2000 Eliteserien.

Ahead of the 2001 season he was hired as director of sports in Vålerenga, but he was sacked already in June 2001.[5] He took over as manager of L/F Hønefoss, but ahead of the 2002 season he was hired as manager of Kongsvinger.[6] His final club was Gefle, where he died after two seasons as manager and leading the team from 2004 Superettan to 2005 Allsvenskan.[1] He died of cancer at the hospital in Gävle.[2]

References

  1. ^ a b Kenneth Rosén at WorldFootball.net
  2. ^ a b c "Gefle IF:s tränare Kenneth Rosén död". Expressen (in Swedish). 28 December 2004. Retrieved 30 August 2021.
  3. ^ a b "Kenneth Rosén ny Bryne-trener". Jærbladet (in Norwegian). 21 October 1996. p. 7.
  4. ^ Majlard, Jan (29 December 2004). "Allsvensk tränare avliden". Svenska Dagbladet (in Swedish). Retrieved 30 August 2021.
  5. ^ "VIF sparker Rosén". Dagbladet (in Norwegian). 6 June 2001. pp. 30–31.
  6. ^ "'Klarer Sogndal og Bryne å skape et eliteserielag, er det ikke noe som tilsier at det ikke går i Kongsvinger'". Glåmdalen (in Norwegian). 15 November 2001. pp. 18–19.
  • v
  • t
  • e
Örebro SKmanagers
  • v
  • t
  • e
Halmstads BKmanagers
  • Helgesson (1928)
  • Olsson (1933–35)
  • Magnusson (1936)
  • F. Bengtsson (1936)
  • Bruce (1937–39)
  • Magnusson (1940)
  • Wiberg (1941)
  • Bercowics (1942–43)
  • Nilsson (1944)
  • Molnar (1945–46)
  • Wiberg (1947)
  • Simon (1948)
  • Persson (1949)
  • Eriksson & Svensson (1949–50)
  • Ericsson (1951–53)
  • Persson (1953–54)
  • Ahlström (1954–55)
  • Ericsson (1956–58)
  • Firics (1958)
  • Wampetits (1959)
  • Peterson (1960–62)
  • Ludvigsson & Vaide (1963)
  • Ståhl (1963)
  • Johansson & Ericsson (1964–65)
  • Kalmár (1966)
  • S. Bengtsson & Hallgren (1967)
  • G. Andersson (1968–70)
  • Holmberg (1971)
  • S. Bengtsson (1971)
  • B. Andersson (1972)
  • Larsson (1973–75)
  • Hodgson (1976–80)
  • R. Andersson (1980)
  • Mak (1981–84)
  • Lundin (1984–86)
  • Rosén (1986–87)
  • Baxter (1988–91)
  • Jingblad (1992–95)
  • Prahl (1996–2001)
  • Thern (2002–03)
  • J. Andersson (2004–09)
  • Jacobsson (2010)
  • Clotet (2011)
  • Gustafsson (2011–14)
  • Jönsson (2015–17)
  • Krulj (2017–19)
  • Haglund (2019–)
  • v
  • t
  • e
Kongsvinger IL Toppfotballmanagers
  • v
  • t
  • e
Gefle IFmanagers
Flag of SwedenSoccer icon

This biographical article related to an association football goalkeeper from Sweden is a stub. You can help Wikipedia by expanding it.

  • v
  • t
  • e