Fangio Buyse

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Fangio Buyse
Personal information
Full name Fangio Buyse
Date of birth (1974-09-27) 27 September 1974 (age 49)
Place of birth Deinze, Belgium
Position(s) Midfielder
Youth career
KMSK Deinze
KSV Waregem
Belgium U17
Senior career*
Years Team Apps (Gls)
1993–1998 KSV Waregem 108 (9)
1998–1999 Niki Volou 25 (7)
1999–2002 Athinaikos 61 (16)
2002–2003 Kerkyra 24 (3)
2003–2004 Agios Dimitrios 42 (9)
2005–2006 Acharnaikos 38 (2)
2006–2008 Doxa Katokopia 52 (13)
2008–2010 APOP Kinyras Peyias 31 (9)
2010–2011 AEP Paphos 16 (1)
2011–2012 Akritas Chlorakas 25 (2)
2012–2013 AEK Kouklia 1 (0)
Managerial career
2012–2013 AEK Kouklia
2014–2017 Omonia Nicosia (Assistant Manager)
2017–2018 Niki Volou
2018–2019 Olympiakos Nicosia
2019–2020 Blue Boys Muhlenbach
2020–2021 Kmsk Deinze U21
2021– Abha Club
*Club domestic league appearances and goals

Fangio Buyse (born 27 September 1974) is a Belgian football midfielder and manager. Married with Nikolina Stevic and father of Lara Buyse

Career[edit]

Player[edit]

He played with Australian Aurelio Vidmar in K.S.V. Waregem and subsequently moved to Greece to play for Niki Volou, Athinaikos, Kerkyra, Agios Dimitrios and Acharnaikos. In 2006 he went to Cyprus to play for Doxa Katokopias for two seasons, and then from summer 2008 he played for APOP Kinyras Peyias. At APOP Kinyras Peyias he helped them win their first Cypriot Cup title in 2009 and scored in the final against AEL Limassol.

Manager[edit]

In his first year as a player/manager in 2012–13 he managed to get AEK Kouklia F.C. promoted for the first time in the team's history to the Cypriot First Division. In July 2013 he moved to AC Omonia Nicosia , first as coach of the U-21 team and later in a double role also as Assistant-coach after the team sacked Toni Savevski. In a 21-month period he worked together with 3 headcoaches; Nenad Starovlah, Miguel Angel Lotina and Costas Kaiafas. He also was care-taker for Omonia's win over EN Paralimni on 5 January 2014. After 3.5 years in Omonia Nicosia AC he moved back to Niki Volou (his first team as a player in Greece), and started first as technical director of the academy, as he was also in his last year in Omonia. Then in 2017-18 as the first team manager he won the local Thessaly Cup, and also took the team to the Football League II Cup final. In 2018-19 he became manager of Olympiakos Nicosia. When he started they were in last position with 0 points, but he managed to get them promoted to the first division. After this successful season he decided to leave Cyprus. He was close to signing for FC Lugano but at the last moment the deal fell through, so he then joined newly promoted Blue Boys Muhlenbach and he managed to keep them in the BGL League. Due to Corona and the stop of the Championship in Luxembourg he moved to his home country to join KMSK Deinze.

Technical Director[edit]

After a 1-year stay in Deinze he received an offer from Saudi Professional League Abha Club to become technical director. At his arrival on 15 October the team was in the last place with only 4 points in 7 games. Abha Club after all they remained in the highest league. Also for the season 2022-23 an easy stay in the league was secured fast.

Honours[edit]

Player[edit]

KSV Waregem

  • Belgian second division: 1994–95

Athinaikos

  • Greece second division: 2000–01

APOP Kinyras

Coach[edit]

Aek kouklia FC

  • Promotion to Premier League: 2013

Omonia Nicosia

  • Qualification round Europa league: 2014-2015-2016

Nikivolou

  • Thessalia Cup 2017
  • Qualification Greek Cup groups 2018

Olympiakos Nicosia

  • Promotion to Premier League: 2019

Managerial statistics[edit]

Team From To Competition Record
G W D L Win %
AEK Kouklia FC 1 July 2012 30 June 2013 League 32 21 2 9 065.63
AC Omonia Nicosia 1 July 2013 30 June 2014 League 26 17 4 5 065.38
AC Omonia Nicosia 1 July 2014 30 June 2015 League 26 18 3 5 069.23
Niki Volou FC 1 July 2017 30 June 2018 League 24 13 7 4 054.17
Olympiakos Nicosia 27 September 2018 30 May 2019 League 28 22 3 3 078.57
TOTAL League 136 92 19 25 067.65

References[edit]

  1. ^ "Cyprus 2008/09". Rec.Sport.Soccer Statistics Foundation. Retrieved 31 May 2022.

External links[edit]