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Worrawoot Srimaka

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Worrawoot Srimaka
Personal information
Full name Worrawoot Srimaka
Date of birth (1971-12-08) 8 December 1971 (age 52)
Place of birth Songkhla, Thailand
Height 1.94 m (6 ft 4+12 in)
Position(s) Striker
Youth career
1987–1989 Suankularb Wittayalai School
1989–1990 Thai Farmers Bank
Senior career*
Years Team Apps (Gls)
1991–1995 Thai Farmers Bank 71 (24)
1996–2004 BEC Tero Sasana 119 (55)
2004–2005 Topenland Binh Đinh 12 (4)
2005–2006 Kelantan FA 29 (7)
2007 Chonburi 14 (1)
2008 Customs Department 18 (3)
2009 Chula United 5 (0)
Total 256 (90)
International career
1991–2002 Thailand 63 (29)
Managerial career
2010 Pathum Thani
2011 Songkhla
2012 Suphanburi
2013–2014 Chonburi (first team coach)
2015 Suphanburi (interim)
2017 Suphanburi (interim)
2016 Thailand U21
2016–2017 Thailand U23
2017 Thailand (assistant)
2017–2018 Thailand U23 (assistant)
2018 Thailand U21
2018 Thailand U23
2019 Kasetsart
2020 MOF Customs United
2021 Sisaket
2021–2022 Thailand U23
2022– Kasetsart
Medal record
Representing  Thailand
SEA Games
Silver medal – second place Manila 1991 Team
Gold medal – first place Chiang Mai 1995 Team
Gold medal – first place Jakarta 1997 Team
Gold medal – first place Bandar Seri Begawan 1999 Team
AFF Championship
Gold medal – first place Singapore 1996 Team
Gold medal – first place Thailand 2000 Team
Gold medal – first place Indonesia-Singapore 2002 Team
*Club domestic league appearances and goals

Worrawoot Srimaka (Thai: วรวุฒิ ศรีมะฆะ) is a Thai football coach and former player. He was a striker who scored 29 goals for the Thailand national football team. He is currently the head coach of Kasetsart.

Club career

His career began in 1991 with Thai Farmers Bank. He won the Thai League three times, AFC Champions League twice and the Queen's Cup once. In 1996, he moved to BEC Tero Sasana and won two Thai League titles. In 2003, his team reached the final of the AFC Champions League, losing to Al Ain.[1] He was the top scorer in the 2001–02 Thai League. In the 2002–03 season, he went to Malaysia to play for Kelantan FA and then joined Bình Định in Vietnam in 2004. In the 2005 AFC Champions League, he scored a goal against a Thai club, Krung Thai Bank.[2] He returned to Thailand to play for Chonburi and left for Customs Department in the summer of 2008. He ended his career with Chula United, whom he joined in 2009.

International career

He won the 2000 Tiger Cup with Thailand and scored a hat-trick to clinch a decisive 4–1 win over Indonesia in the final. With 5 goals, he was also one of the tournament's two top scorers, along with Indonesia's Gendut Doni Christiawan.

International goals

# Date Venue Opponent Score Result Competition
1. 4 July 1996 Bangkok, Thailand  Maldives 8–0 Won 1996 AFC Asian Cup qualification
2. 9 September 1996 Singapore  Brunei 6–0 Won 1996 Tiger Cup
3. 9 September 1996 Singapore  Brunei 6–0 Won 1996 Tiger Cup
4. 13 September 1996 Singapore  Vietnam 4–2 Won 1996 Tiger Cup
5. 5 October 1997 Jakarta, Indonesia  Myanmar 2–1 Won 1997 Southeast Asian Games
6. 7 October 1997 Jakarta, Indonesia  Brunei 6–0 Won 1997 Southeast Asian Games
7. 27 August 1998 Ho Chi Minh City, Vietnam  Myanmar 1–1 Draw 1998 Tiger Cup
8. 29 August 1998 Ho Chi Minh City, Vietnam  Philippines 3–1 Won 1998 Tiger Cup
9. 5 September 1998 Ho Chi Minh City, Vietnam  Indonesia 4–5 (pen.) Lost 1998 Tiger Cup
10. 21 November 1998 Bangkok, Thailand  Turkmenistan 3–3 Drew Friendly
11. 2 December 1998 Bangkok, Thailand  Hong Kong 5–0 Won 1998 Asian Games
12. 4 December 1998 Bangkok, Thailand  Oman 2–0 Won 1998 Asian Games
13. 10 December 1998 Bangkok, Thailand  Lebanon 1–0 Won 1998 Asian Games
14. 30 July 1999 Bandar Seri Begawan, Brunei  Philippines 9–0 Won 1999 Southeast Asian Games
15. 10 June 2000 Bangkok, Thailand  Qatar 2–3 Lost Friendly
16. 10 November 2000 Chiang Mai, Thailand  Indonesia 4–1 Won 2000 Tiger Cup
17. 10 November 2000 Chiang Mai, Thailand  Indonesia 4–1 Won 2000 Tiger Cup
18. 18 November 2000 Bangkok, Thailand  Indonesia 4–1 Won 2000 Tiger Cup
19. 18 November 2000 Bangkok, Thailand  Indonesia 4–1 Won 2000 Tiger Cup
20. 18 November 2000 Bangkok, Thailand  Indonesia 4–1 Won 2000 Tiger Cup
21. 23 January 2001 Bangkok, Thailand  Kuwait 5–4 Won Friendly
22. 29 September 2001 Bangkok, Thailand  Oman 2–0 Won Friendly
23. 29 September 2001 Bangkok, Thailand  Oman 2–0 Won Friendly
24. 16 October 2001 Bangkok, Thailand  Bahrain 1–1 Draw 2002 FIFA World Cup qualification
25. 18 December 2002 Singapore  Laos 5–1 Won 2002 Tiger Cup
26. 18 December 2002 Singapore  Laos 5–1 Won 2002 Tiger Cup
27. 22 December 2002 Singapore  Singapore 1–1 Draw 2002 Tiger Cup
28. 27 December 2002 Jakarta, Indonesia  Vietnam 4–0 Won 2002 Tiger Cup

Managerial statistics

As of match played 26 November 2022
Managerial record by team and tenure
Team From To Record
G W D L GF GA GD Win %
Thailand U23 August 2017 August 2017 7 6 1 0 12 1 +11 085.7
Kasetsart 8 January 2019 30 November 2019 34 10 10 14 40 43 −3 029.4
MOF Customs United 18 November 2019 14 November 2020 14 4 4 6 14 19 −5 028.6
Sisaket 22 December 2020 21 July 2021 17 6 5 6 24 23 +1 035.3
Thailand U23 25 August 2021 30 June 2022 9 2 3 4 12 11 +1 022.2
Kasetsart 30 June 2022 Present 17 5 6 6 27 21 +6 029.4
Total 98 33 29 36 129 118 +11 033.7

Honours

Player

Thailand
Clubs
Thai Farmers Bank
BEC Tero Sasana
Chonburi FC

Manager

Thailand U23
Thailand U21
Suphanburi F.C.

Individual

References