- Dan Corneliusson
-
Dan Corneliusson Personal information Full name Mats Dan Erling Corneliusson Date of birth 2 October 1961 Place of birth Trollhättan, Sweden Height 1.82 m (5 ft 11 1⁄2 in) Playing position Striker Senior career* Years Team Apps† (Gls)† 1978–1983 IFK Göteborg 62 (29) 1983–1984 VfB Stuttgart 28 (12) 1984–1989 Como 112 (18) 1989–1990 FC Wettingen 93 1990–1992 Malmö FF 36 (9) 1993 Qviding FIF 0 (0) 1994–1995 Karlstad BK National team 1982–1990 Sweden 22 (12) * Senior club appearances and goals counted for the domestic league only.
† Appearances (Goals).Dan Corneliusson (born 2 October 1961) is a former Swedish footballer.[1] He had a major part in IFK Göteborg winning the 1982 UEFA Cup. The same year he became the top goal scorer in Allsvenskan.
Corneliusson also played for Qviding FIF, VfB Stuttgart, Como, and Malmö FF.
He was capped 22 times for Sweden, scoring 12 goals.
References
- ^ "Corneliusson, Dan" (in German). kicker.de. http://www.kicker.de/news/fussball/bundesliga/vereine/1-bundesliga/1983-84/vfb-stuttgart-11/10454/spieler_dan-corneliusson.html. Retrieved 9 April 2011.
External links
- Dan Corneliusson at worldfootball.net
- Dan Corneliusson at National-Football-Teams.com
Allsvenskan Top Scorers 1925: Johansson • 1926: Holmberg • 1927: Olsson • 1928: Holmberg • 1929: Lundahl • 1930: Lundahl • 1931: Nilsson • 1932: Holmberg • 1933: Bunke • 1934: Jonasson • 1935: Andersson • 1936: Jonasson • 1937: Zethlerlund • 1938: Hjelm • 1939: Andersson & Lindgren & Persson • 1940: Pålsson • 1941: Nyström • 1942: Jacobsson • 1943: Nordahl • 1944: Larsson • 1945: Nordahl • 1946: Nordahl • 1947: Gren • 1948: Nordahl • 1949: Franck • 1950: Rydell • 1951: Jeppson • 1952: Jacobsson • 1953: Jacobsson • 1954: Jacobsson • 1955: Hamrin • 1956: Bengtsson • 1957: Bild • 1958: Johansson & Källgren • 1959: Börjesson • 1960: Börjesson • 1961: Johansson • 1962: Skiöld • 1963: Heinermann & Larsson • 1964: Granbom • 1965: Larsson • 1966: Kindvall • 1967: Szepanski • 1968: Eklund • 1969: Almqvist • 1970: Larsson • 1971: Sandberg • 1972: Edström & Sandberg • 1973: Mattsson • 1974: Mattsson • 1975: Mattsson • 1976: Backe • 1977: Almqvist & Aronsson • 1978: Berggren • 1979: Werner • 1980: Ohlsson • 1981: Nilsson • 1982: Corneliusson • 1983: Ahlström • 1984: Ohlsson • 1985: Börjesson & Karlsson & Lansdowne • 1986: Ekström • 1987: Larsson • 1988: Dahlin • 1989: Hellström • 1990: Eskelinen • 1991: Andersson • 1992: Eklund • 1993: Bertilsson & Lilienberg • 1994: Kindvall • 1995: Skoog • 1996: Andersson • 1997: Lilienberg & Mattiasson & Sahlin • 1998: Stavrum • 1999: Allbäck • 2000: Berglund • 2001: Selakovic • 2002: Ijeh • 2003: Skoog • 2004: Rosenberg • 2005: Þorvaldsson • 2006: Ari • 2007: Berg & Omotoyossi • 2008: Ingelsten • 2009: Hysén & Wánderson • 2010: Gerndt • 2011: Ranégie
This biographical article related to an association football forward from Sweden is a stub. You can help Wikipedia by expanding it.