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Frode Johnsen

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Norwegian footballer (born 1974)

Frode Johnsen
Johnsen withRosenborg in 2006
Personal information
Date of birth (1974-03-17)17 March 1974 (age 51)
Place of birthSkien, Norway
Height1.88 m (6 ft 2 in)
Position(s)Forward
Youth career
Skotfoss TIF
Senior career*
YearsTeamApps(Gls)
1993–2000Odd113(24)
2000–2006Rosenborg145(80)
2006–2008Nagoya Grampus77(35)
2009–2010Shimizu S-Pulse62(17)
2011–2015Odd121(40)
Total518(196)
International career
2000–2013Norway35(10)
*Club domestic league appearances and goals

Frode Johnsen (born 17 March 1974) is a Norwegian former professionalfootballer who played forOdd andRosenborg in theTippeligaen and forNagoya Grampus andShimizu S-Pulse in Japan. He played in severalpositions, but was preferred as astriker ormidfielder. Johnsen is 188 cm tall, and was a good header of the ball.

In his final season forOdds BK in 2015, Johnsen won theKniksen's Honour Award for his long career as a footballer. He retired in the age of 41. In 2013, he became the topscorer inTippeligaen, which also made him the oldest topscorer in a European league ever.

Club career

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Early years

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Johnsen began his career with minnowsSkotfoss TIF, but did not make hisTippeligaen debut until a switch toOdd Grenland where he made his debut in theNorwegian Premier League in 1999 at the age of 25.

Rosenborg

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2000

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He was transferred to Rosenborg mid-season in 2000, as a replacement forJohn Carew. Johnsen previously studied to be a police officer during his time inOdd Grenland, but quit school to play forRosenborg. He played fifteen games for Rosenborg in his first season, scoring nine goals – 12 in total, as he scored three goals for Odd before the switch.[1] His new club and he won the championship. Rosenborg narrowly missed out on qualifying from the group stage of the Champions League. Johnsen did very well, scoring five goals in six games – includinga hat-trick againstHelsingborg. As they finished third, they advanced to the UEFA Cup where they crashed out in the first round toAlavés, Johnsen scored the goal in the 1–1 away leg, but could not prevent Rosenborg from losing 3–1 at home.

2001

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In his first full season he became joint top-scorer with 17 goals (shared withThorstein Helstad andClayton Zane), playing in all games but one. Rosenborg won the league again by a single point ahead ofLillestrøm. In the Champions League Rosenborg finished fourth in their group. Johnsen played in all six games but one and did not score any goals, though he netted one in the qualifiers.

2002

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Johnsen won his third championship in a row in 2002. He only played in 17 out of 26 games due to injury, scoring seven goals. In the Champions League he scored twice in the qualification round, but did not score any in the group stages as Rosenborg only got four points and finished last, despite losing only two games.

2003

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He was involved in every game in the 2003 season as Rosenborg cruised through the championship, winning by 14 points. Johnsen scored 15 goals, only beaten with two by teammateHarald Brattbakk. He also won the cup with Rosenborg overBodø/Glimt, scoring the equaliser as Rosenborg eventually won 3–1. He was the top scorer of the cup, scoring 11 goals in seven games. In the Champions League, Rosenborg and Johnsen failed to reach the group stage, losing narrowly toDeportivo in the qualifiers. They still got to play UEFA Cup, and had a good run before losing on away goals to Benfica. Johnsen played in all but one game in Europe this season, scoring two goals in nine games.

2004

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The 2004 season was dramatic and very memorable season for Frode Johnsen. Rosenborg fought withVålerenga for the championship, and before the last game of the season, Rosenborg was in the lead, but only on more scored goals. Seven minutes from time in Rosenborg's game againstFC Lyn, Vålerenga made it 3–0 in their league game. Rosenborg was leading 3–1 at the time and needed one more to win the league, and in stoppage time Frode Johnsen scored his third of the game with a diving header, winning the championship .[2] Johnsen played in all game and was named top scorer that year, notching up 19 goals in the process. He did not score as many in Europe, but nevertheless, Rosenborg was back in the Champions League. Only two points this time, and Johnsen scored two goals in total (w/ Q-rounds).

2005

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After winning five championships in a row, the 2005 season was a devastating one as his team only finished 7th. Johnsen scored only seven goals in his 23 games that season. In 2005, bothRCD Mallorca andAC Sparta Prague were interested in signing Johnsen, but nothing happened. He was involved in all Champions League games, but did not score. They finished third in a group which containedReal Madrid,Lyon andOlympiacos, but was eliminated in the first UEFA Cup round againstFC Zenit St. Petersburg.

2006

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Frode Johnsen started the season well, and halfway through the season he had scored six goals in 13 games beforeNagoya Grampus Eight came knocking. Johnsen could not resist the chance of going to play abroad and after serving Rosenborg faithfully for a number of years, they let him go and sold him in July 2006.

In all competitions, Johnsen played 234 games and scored 125 goals for Rosenborg.

Nagoya Grampus

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He signed an 18-month contract and started his Nagoya career by scoring twice in an away match againstJEF United Chiba on 29 July 2006. Nagoya won the match 3–2. He scored eight more times finishing with ten goals in 18 games as Nagoya Grampus finished in 7th place.

In his first full season in 2007, Nagoya only managed an 11th place. He scored 13 goals in 26 games.

In 2008, Johnsen and Nagoya fought for the J1 League championship until the final day, but ended up in third place, qualifying for an Asian Champions league spot.

On 28 October 2008, Frode Johnsen stated that he would stay in Japan for at least one more year, either for Nagoya or another Japanese club.[3]

Shimizu S-Pulse

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On 18 November 2008, Frode Johnsen announced that he would be leaving Nagoya after this season, and that he was only a medical away from securing a move to another Japanese club. He did not reveal which club it was until the 2008 season was over.[4] It was eventually known that he would joinShimizu S-Pulse for the 2009 season.

Shimizu S-Pulse finished in 7th place in his first season and five points from anAFC Champions League place, as Johnsen scored nine league goals.

On 1 August Johnsen scored his firsthat-trick in theJ-League in a 6–3 win againstShonan Bellmare.

On 14 November 2010, Johnsen scored one goal in a 5–0 win againstShonan Bellmare in what will be his last league game in Japan. He has announced that he will return to Norway after this season.

International career

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Johnsen won 34caps and scored 10 goals for theNorwegian national team.[5] He made his debut againstFinland on 16 August 2000 coming on forSteffen Iversen 20 minutes from time.

His first international goal came against Wales in a2002 FIFA World Cup qualifier. He remained a regular member of the Norway squad until 2007, but lost his place after moving to Japan. The long flight distance between Europe and Japan was cited as one of the reasons why he did not play in more games after joining Nagoya Grampus.

On 1 September 2013, Johnsen was recalled to the national team squad, more than six years after his last cap, ahead of the2014 World Cup qualifying matches againstCyprus andSwitzerland. He did not play in either match, but kept his place in the squad for the matches againstSlovenia andIceland in October 2013. In the match against Slovenia on 11 October 2013, Johnsen came on as a late substitute, becoming the oldest player ever to play for the Norwegian national team. He repeated the feat in the home match against Iceland four days later, at the age of 39 years, 212 days.

Career statistics

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Club

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Appearances and goals by club, season and competition[6]
ClubSeasonLeagueCupContinentalTotal
DivisionAppsGoalsAppsGoalsAppsGoalsAppsGoals
Odd Grenland1993Second Division0000
19940000
1995Adeccoligaen8080
1996203203
1997242242
1998267267
1999Tippeligaen259523011
2000103103
Total11324520011826
Rosenborg2000Tippeligaen159101262815
2001251733713521
20021773082289
20032615711924228
20042619562075132
2005237241003511
200613623159
Total1458023276618234125
Nagoya Grampus2006J1 League1710221912
2007261320213014
2008341232624316
Total773574839242
Shimizu S-Pulse2009J1 League33941824512
201029833804011
Total6217741628523
Odd2011Tippeligaen23741278
20122943400328
2013301642003418
2014301166003617
2015924511148
Total1214021181114359
Career total51819663559124672275

Note: Europe continental also includes Royal League (2004 season)

International goals

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Scores and results list Norway's goal tally first, score column indicates score after each Johnsen goal.
List of international goals scored by Frode Johnsen
No.DateVenueOpponentScoreResultCompetition
124 January 2001Hong Kong Stadium, Hong Kong South Korea3–2Friendly match
2
35 September 2001Ullevaal Stadion, Oslo Wales3–22002 FIFA World Cup qualification
418 August 2004Ullevaal Stadion, Oslo Belgium2–2Friendly match
522 January 2004Hong Kong Stadium, Hong Kong Sweden3–0Friendly match
625 January 2004Hong Kong Stadium, Hong Kong Honduras3–1Friendly match
720 April 2005A. Le Coq Arena,Tallinn Estonia2–1Friendly match
824 May 2005Ullevaal Stadion, Oslo Costa Rica1–0Friendly match
924 May 2006Ullevaal Stadion, Oslo Paraguay2–2Friendly match
10

Honours

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Rosenborg[7]

Individual

References

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  1. ^"VG Nett - Frode Johnsen".www.vg.no. Archived fromthe original on 7 March 2007. Retrieved12 January 2022.
  2. ^"VG Nett - Eliteguiden".www.vg.no. Archived fromthe original on 28 November 2008. Retrieved12 January 2022.
  3. ^"Johnsen stays in Japan". VG Nett. 28 October 2008.
  4. ^"Johnsen swaps club in Japan". Nettavisen. 18 November 2008. Archived fromthe original on 12 November 2013. Retrieved18 November 2008.
  5. ^"Frode Johnsen". Archived fromthe original on 26 July 2010.
  6. ^Single source here, if player is inactive. If player has not retired, move source next to "Updated" template.
  7. ^"Mestvinnende" (in Norwegian).Norwegian Broadcasting Corporation. 19 October 2006. Retrieved2 November 2009.

External links

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Retrieved from "https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Frode_Johnsen&oldid=1250266112"
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