Ole Tobiasen

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Ole Tobiasen
Personal information
Date of birth (1975-07-08) 8 July 1975 (age 48)
Place of birth Amager, Denmark
Height 1.90 m (6 ft 3 in)
Position(s) Defender
Team information
Current team
Heerenveen (assistant manager)
Youth career
B 1908
Fremad Amager
KB
Senior career*
Years Team Apps (Gls)
1992–1995 FC Copenhagen 46 (0)
1996–1997 Heerenveen 34 (1)
1997–2002 Ajax 24 (2)
2002 AZ 13 (1)
2003–2005 F.C. Copenhagen 61 (4)
2005AaB (loan) 13 (1)
2006 Sandefjord 24 (1)
2007–2010 MVV 84 (10)
2010–2011 EHC Hoensbroek
Total 316 (20)
International career
1992–1993 Denmark U19 5 (0)
1994–1997 Denmark U21 19 (0)
1997–1998 Denmark 6 (1)
Managerial career
2010 MVV (youth)[1]
2011–2012 Roda (youth)[2]
2012–2014 EHC Hoensbroek[3]
2015–2016 NAC Breda U19[4]
2016–2018 Sparta Rotterdam (assistant)[5][6]
2018–2019 Almere City (assistant)
2019–2021 Almere City
2021–2022 Heerenveen (assistant)
2022 Heerenveen (caretaker)
2022– Heerenveen (assistant)
*Club domestic league appearances and goals

Ole Tobiasen (born 8 July 1975) is a Danish football manager and former player. He is an assistant manager with the Dutch club Heerenven.

As a player, Tobiasen played as a right-back or centre-back for a number of clubs in Denmark, the Netherlands, and Norway. He most prominently won the Eredivisie championship with Ajax and the Danish Superliga championship with F.C. Copenhagen. Tobiasen was capped six times for the Denmark national team.

Club career[edit]

Tobiasen started his career with lower-league clubs B 1908, Fremad Amager, and KB in the Copenhagen area,[7] before joining Danish Superliga club F.C. Copenhagen (FCK) in 1992.[8] He made his senior debut for FCK in a June 1993 match against Pogoń Szczecin in the 1993 Intertoto Cup, and made his Superliga debut in April 1994. He was praised for his marking of Mark Strudal in FCK's 2–1 victory against Brøndby IF on 24 April,[9][10] and Tobiasen established himself as a central defender in the 3–5–2 formation of manager Benny Johansen.

In February 1996, Tobiasen moved on to the Dutch Eredivisie club SC Heerenveen, as he hoped to emulate the success of fellow Dane Jon Dahl Tomasson.[7] Tobiasen had initially agreed a free transfer move effective from his contract expiry in summer 1996. Following FCK director Karsten Aabrink's public outrage that FCK was not informed of the deal beforehand,[11] FCK and Heerenveen agreed a transfer fee in excess of DKK500,000 to allow Tobiasen an immediate transfer.[12] At Heerenveen, he adapted to a new position as a right full back.[13] After one-and-a-half years and 34 matches for Heerenveen, fellow Eredivisie team Ajax Amsterdam spotted his talent.

Ajax' Danish manager Morten Olsen brought Tobiasen into his squad for the 1997–98 Eredivisie season. He joined the club in June 1997, as Ajax reportedly paid a DKK7.5 million transfer fee.[14] Having immediately established himself in the starting line-up, Tobiasen suffered a knee injury in November 1997,[15] and did not return to fitness until July 1998.[16] He managed to play 13 games and score two goals as Ajax won the 1997–98 Eredivisie championship that season. He also won the 1998 and 1999 Dutch Cup trophies with the club. In November 1998, Tobiasen suffered another knee injury,[17] and following several recurring knee problems, he would not play another Eredivisie game for Ajax.

Tobiasen underwent a long period of injury lay-off, sitting in the stands for three full seasons, from 1999 to 2002. When his contract ran out in summer 2002, Tobiasen moved to Eredivisie rivals AZ Alkmaar on a one-year contract. He established himself in the right back position,[18] and played 13 matches in the first half of the 2002–03 Eredivisie season. In January 2003, he returned to his former club F.C. Copenhagen.[8]

Back at FCK, he was set to compete with Swedish international Tomas Antonelius for the right back position.[19] Following new injury problems, Tobiasen eventually found centre back Bo Svensson had taken over the right back position for the remaining 2002–03 Danish Superliga season,[20] as FCK won the championship. For the following season, Tobiasen reclaimed the right back position, but as FCK brought in new right back Lars Jacobsen in January 2004, Tobiasen eventually settled as a central defender.[21] Tobiasen played 26 of 33 games as FCK won the 2003–04 Danish Superliga championship, and he also helped the club win the 2004 Danish Cup Final by beating AaB 1–0.[22]

In the summer 2005 transfer window, Tobiasen was loaned out to AaB for six months, where he played regularly in the central defender position through the first half of the 2005–06 Danish Superliga season. When his FCK contract expired in January 2006, Tobiasen signed a one-year contract with newly promoted Norwegian Premier League team Sandefjord. He played 24 games, as Sandefjord finished the 2006 Norwegian Premier League season in 9th place. Tobiasen left Sandefjord as his contract ran out in December 2006.

In February 2007, Tobiasen returned to the Netherlands and joined MVV Maastricht in the second-tier Eerste Divisie league.[23] In September 2009, Tobiasen had a dispute with MVV coach Fuat Çapa, as he had arranged a vote of confidence in Çapa amongst the players, and Tobiasen was suspended from the team.[24] Even as Çapa was later fired, Tobiasen did not return to the first team.[25] MVV was contractually obligated to offer him a position in the technical staff upon the expiry of his playing contract in summer 2010, but did not honor the obligation. Instead, Tobiasen agreed to become youth team coach at Roda JC[26] and played in the 2010–11 season at Hoofdklasse side EHC Hoensbroek before retiring from the game.

International career[edit]

Following his breakthrough for FCK, Tobiasen was called up for the Denmark U21 national team in July 1994. He played a total 24 games for under-19 and under-21 teams, and also represented the Denmark XI for a single game in April 1996.

After his move to Ajax, Tobiasen was called up for the Denmark senior national team. He made his international debut against Croatia in September 1997, earning him rave reviews.[7] He featured in the Danish qualification campaigns for the 1998 FIFA World Cup and Euro 2000, but due to injury he missed out on both final tournaments. He was often seen raiding up the sideline from his right back position. He scored his only international goal in the 1–1 draw with Switzerland in October 1998, which was to be his last game for Denmark. Tobiasen earned a total six caps for his country, before his persisting injury problems saw him dropped from the team.

Coaching career[edit]

In the 2021–22 season, he started as the assistant manager at Heerenveen and was appointed interim manager for the remainder of the season on 4 February 2022, after the dismissal of Manager Johnny Jansen.[27] He returned to the assistant position for the 2022–23 season.

Honours[edit]

Copenhagen

Ajax

References[edit]

  1. ^ Tobiasen: Vil have afklaring, bold.dk, 30 March 2010
  2. ^ Tobiasen har fået trænerjob i Roda, bold.dk, 20 August 2011
  3. ^ De wegen van Ole Tobiasen en EHC/Heuts scheiden vroegtijdig Archived 19 March 2015 at the Wayback Machine, indewandelgangen.com, 29 January 2014
  4. ^ Tobiasen verbindingsstuk A1 en hoofdmacht, NAC, 16 June 2015
  5. ^ Ole Tobiasen ny assistent i Sparta, bold.dk, 8 June 2016
  6. ^ Ole Tobiasen færdig i Sparta Rotterdam‚ bold.dk, 31 January 2018
  7. ^ a b c (in Danish) Allan Pedersen, "En glad dreng", Ekstra Bladet, 14 September 1997
  8. ^ a b "Ole Tobiasen skifter til FCK". 19 January 2003.
  9. ^ (in Danish) Niels Rasmussen, "Tunge ben ingen hindring", Politiken, 25 April 1994
  10. ^ (in Danish) Jørgen Pihl, "Jeg er jo bare en glad dreng", B.T., 26 April 1994
  11. ^ (in Danish) Søren Olsen, "Vrede i FCK", Politiken, 25 February 1996
  12. ^ (in Danish) Per Steffensen, "FCK scorer kassen", B.T., 29 February 1996
  13. ^ (in Danish) Allan Pedersen, "Ung succes", Ekstra Bladet, 4 March 1996
  14. ^ (in Danish) Sten Henriksen, "Ajax køber Tobiasen fri", Ekstra Bladet, 26 June 1997
  15. ^ (in Danish) Allan Pedersen, "Tobiasen trues af lang pause", Ekstra Bladet, 1 December 1997
  16. ^ (in Danish) Peter Fredberg, "Fodboldlivet værd at leve", B.T., 24 July 1998
  17. ^ (in Danish) Troels Christensen, "Tobiasen knæskadet igen", Ekstra Bladet, 5 November 1998
  18. ^ (in Danish) Viggo Lepoutre Ravn, "Holland: Tobiasen sletter nullerne", Jyllands-Posten, 27 September 2002
  19. ^ (in Danish) "Tobiasen vil på landsholdet", De Bergske Blade, 21 January 2003
  20. ^ (in Danish) "Optakt: Ole Tobiasen sat af til kampen mod Esbjerg", onside.dk, 13 June 2003
  21. ^ (in Danish) Kim Mikkelsen, "Jeg har fundet mig selv", B.T., 23 May 2004
  22. ^ "www.haslund.info - Pokalturneringen 2003/2004 - Finale". Archived from the original on 23 October 2007. Retrieved 19 May 2007.
  23. ^ (in Danish) Kasper Hansen, Ole Tobiasen føler sig hjemme, TV 2, 19 March 2007
  24. ^ "Ole Tobiasen på kant med træneren - dr.dk/Sporten/Fodbold/Int. fodbold". Archived from the original on 3 October 2009.
  25. ^ "Tobiasen: Vil have afklaring".
  26. ^ "Tobiasen har fået trænerjob i Roda".
  27. ^ (in Dutch) Tobiasen maakt seizoen af als interim-hoofdtrainer, Heerenveen, 4 February 2022
  28. ^ "Wednesday 21/06 1995 at 20:00". fck.dk. Retrieved 4 January 2024.
  29. ^ "Tirsdag 20/07 2004 kl. 18:30". fck.dk. Retrieved 4 January 2024.

External links[edit]