Patrick Zwaanswijk

Patrick Zwaanswijk (born 17 January 1975) is a Dutch ex-professional who is retired from professional football. A product of the Ajax Youth Academy, Zwaanswijk retired from professional football in 2013 following a successful career with Ajax FC, FC Utrecht, Oita Trinita, NAC Breda and Central Coast Mariners FC. He has played predominantly as a central defender throughout his career. After his career he played for and captained Southern & Ettalong United in Australia's Central Coast Premier League and Terrigal United.[1] He is married to Leah Maree Zwaanswijk and has two children (Dominique Louise Zwaanswijk and Angelo Zwaanswijk) from his first marriage. He lives in Australia, North Avoca since 2015.

Patrick Zwaanswijk
Personal information
Full name Patricius Josef Zwaanswijk
Date of birth (1975-01-17) 17 January 1975
Place of birth Haarlem, Netherlands
Height 1.90 m (6 ft 3 in)
Playing position(s) Centre Back
Club information
Current team
Hills United (head coach)
Youth career
1980–1983 TYBB
1983–1988 VV Schoten
1988–1991 DCO
1992–1995 VV Schoten
1995–1998 Ajax FC
Senior career*
Years Team Apps (Gls)
19982004 FC Utrecht 214 (27)
20042005 Oita Trinita 32 (1)
20052010 NAC Breda 161 (10)
20102013 Central Coast Mariners 87 (11)
Teams managed
2013–2014 Central Coast Mariners Academy
2018– Hills United
* Senior club appearances and goals counted for the domestic league only and correct as of 1 November 2014

Club career

Zwaanswijk played for 11 seasons in the Dutch Eredivisie 6 years with FC Utrecht and 5 years with NAC Breda.

His professional career started with FC Utrecht where he debuted in the ERE-Divisie against Willem II. (1-0 loss) After 6 years at Utrecht, (4 years UEFA Cup, 3 Amstel Cup Finals and 2 KNVB Cup thropies) he joined Oita Trinita Japan After playing under manager Han Berger in the J-League for 14 months made the family miss Europe. He moved back to Holland NAC Breda where he played in the ERE-Divisie until 2010. With NAC Breda he achieved a 3rd Place in 2008 qualifying for Champions League football. He played 189 games for NAC Breda (UEFA Cup, ERE-Divisie and Amstel Cup).

In 2010, Zwaanswijk moved to Australia to join A-League club Central Coast Mariners.[2] He scored his first goal for the Mariners on 2 October 2010 – a late winner against North Queensland Fury.[3]

Zwaanswijk signed a one-year contract extension with the Mariners for the 2012–13 season in May 2012.[4] He scored the opening goal of the 2013 A-League Grand Final on 22 April 2013, heading in a corner to open the scoring against Western Sydney Wanderers. The Mariners went on to win the game 2–0, with Zwaanswijk suggesting after the match that he was considering retirement.[5]

In May 2013, Zwaanswijk announced he would be retiring from football after the club's 2013 AFC Champions League Round of 16 tie against Guangzhou Evergrande, but would be staying on with the Mariners as coach of the Mariners' youth team in the National Youth League.[6]

Managerial career

The Mariners terminated Zwaanswijk's contract after his side finished last in the 2013–14 National Youth League.[7] Zwaanswijk pursued legal action against the Mariners for wrongful dismissal.[8]

In November 2018, Zwaanswijk was appointed head coach of Hills United in National Premier Leagues NSW 2.[9]

Club statistics

Club performance League
Season Club League AppsGoals
Netherlands League
1998/99FC UtrechtEredivisie111
1999/00263
2000/01313
2001/02315
2002/03290
2003/04316
Japan League
2004Oita TrinitaJ1 League1701
2005150
Netherlands League
2005/06NAC BredaEredivisie311
2006/07321
2007/08303
2008/09343
2009/10302
Australia League
2010/11Central Coast MarinersA-League333
2011/12298
2012/13251
CountryNetherlands 31628
Japan 321
Australia 9912
Total 44741

Honours

FC Utrecht

Central Coast Mariners

References

  1. "Central Coast Mariners Home". Central Coast Mariners.
  2. "Dutch veteran joins Mariners". The World Game. Retrieved 25 November 2018.
  3. "Last-gasp Zwaanswijk sinks Fury". FIFA. 2 October 2010. Retrieved 25 November 2018.
  4. "Mariners hang onto Rogic and Zwaanswijk". ftbl.com.au. 24 May 2012. Retrieved 25 November 2018.
  5. "Patrick's Zwaan song". MyFootball.com.au. 23 April 2013. Retrieved 25 November 2018.
  6. "Zwaanswijk to retire but stay as coach". ftbl.com.au. 10 May 2013. Retrieved 25 November 2018.
  7. "Zwaanswijk loses NYL job". FourFourTwo.
  8. Vice, Mary-Louise (3 November 2014). "Patrick Zwaanswijk suing Central Coast Mariners over wrongful dismissal in June". ABC News. Retrieved 25 November 2018.
  9. "Patrick Zwaanswijk appointed Hills United FC head coach". Football NSW. 22 November 2018. Retrieved 25 November 2018.
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