Pierre-André Schürmann

Pierre-André Schürmann (born 5 July 1960[1] in Port-Valais, Switzerland) is a Swiss football manager and former footballer.

Pierre-André Schürmann
Personal information
Date of birth (1960-07-05) 5 July 1960
Place of birth Port-Valais, Switzerland
Height 1.70 m (5 ft 7 in)
Position(s) Midfielder
Senior career*
Years Team Apps (Gls)
1979–1980 FC Sion 1
1981–1983 FC Monthey 59 (21)
1983–1984 FC Chiasso 29 (2)
1984–1986 FC Vevey 58 (23)
1986–1992 Lausanne Sports 164 (37)
1992–1993 FC Basel 34 (6)
1994–1995 FC Wil 37 (7)
Teams managed
1994–1997 FC Wil
1998–2001 FC Lausanne-Sport
2001–2009 Switzerland (Youth teams)
2009–2010 Neuchâtel Xamax
2012 Tavriya Simferopol Reserves (Youth teams)
2012–2013 FC Sion
2014–2016 Algeria U23
2018–2019 Zamalek (assistant)
* Senior club appearances and goals counted for the domestic league only

Career

Playing

During his playing career, Schürmann played for FC Sion, FC Monthey, FC Chiasso, Vevey-Sports, Lausanne-Sport, FC Basel and FC Wil.[2]

Schürmann advanced to FC Sion's first team during the 1979–80 Nationalliga A season, but he made only two appearances in that season, so he moved on to Monthey in the second tier of Swiss football for the following two seasons. He then played one seasons for Chiasso and two for Vevey-Sports before he moved on to Lausanne-Sport. He stayed with LS for six seasons.

Schürmann joined FC Basel's first team for their 1992–93 season under head-coach Friedel Rausch. After playing in five test games Schürmann played his domestic league debut for the club in the away game on 18 July 1992 as Basel were defeated 0–1 by Grenchen.[3] He scored his first goal for his club one week later on 21 July in the home game in the Stadion Schützenmatte. It was the first goal of the game as Basel won 2–0 against Etoile Carouge.[4]

During Basel's 1993–94 season, under head-coach Claude Andrey, his teammates were the likes of Swiss international goalkeeper Stefan Huber, defenders Massimo Ceccaroni, Marco Walker and Samir Tabakovic, the midfielders Mario Cantaluppi, Martin Jeitziner, Admir Smajić and Ørjan Berg and the Swiss international strikers Dario Zuffi and Philippe Hertig. Together they won the Promotion/Relegation group and became Nationalliga B champions and thus won promotion to the top flight of Swiss football. This after six seasons in the second tier.[5]

Schürmann stayed with the club for two seasons. During this time Schürmann played a total of 59 games for Basel scoring a total of eight goals. 34 of these games were in the Nationalliga B, six in the Swiss Cup and 19 were friendly games. He scored six goals in the domestic league and the other two were scored in the cup.[6]

Following his time with Basel, Schürmann moved on to play for Wil.

Managerial

Schürmann became player-manager of FC Wil in 1994. He played with them in that position for four seasons and then ended his playing career. He then went on to coach Lausanne Sports. He has been working in the SFV's youth set-up since 2000. He was part of the coaching staff behind Switzerlands victory in the 2002 UEFA European Under-17 Championship. He helped the Switzerland U19s reach the semi-finals in Switzerland in 2004.[2]

Schürmann was appointed as manager of the Switzerland national under-21 team on 18 July 2007.[2]

In June 2009, he joined Neuchâtel Xamax[7] and on 14 April 2010 after four consecutive league defeats, Neuchatel Xamax officials sacked and replaced him with the club's junior squad coach Jean-Michel Aeby.[8]

In April 2018 he was one of 77 applicants for the vacant Cameroon national team job.[9]

References

  1. http://www.football.ch/sfl/777840/fr/Kader.aspx?pId=0&tId=431062
  2. "Switzerland turn to Schürmann". UEFA. 18 July 2007. Archived from the original on 3 March 2008. Retrieved 18 July 2007.
  3. Verein "Basler Fussballarchiv". "FC Grenchen - FC Basel 1:0 (0:0)". Verein "Basler Fussballarchiv". Retrieved 16 November 2020.
  4. "FC Basel - Etoile Carouge FC 2:0 (1:0)". Verein "Basler Fussballarchiv". Retrieved 16 November 2020.
  5. Erik Garin, Luc Nackaerts. "Nationalliga A+B Promotion/Relegation 1993/94". Rec.Sport.Soccer Statistics Foundation. Retrieved 16 November 2020.
  6. Verein "Basler Fussballarchiv". "Pierre-André Schürmann - FCB-Statistik". Verein "Basler Fussballarchiv". Retrieved 16 November 2020.
  7. http://www.tsr.ch/tsr/index.html?siteSect=800001&sid=10822788
  8. Xamax entmachtet Coach Schürmann - Aeby übernimmt
  9. Oluwashina Okeleji (23 April 2018). "77 applicants for vacant Cameroon coaching position". BBC Sport. Retrieved 27 April 2018.

Sources

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