Albert Bunjaku Explained

Albert Bunjaku
Birth Date:29 November 1983
Birth Place:Gjilani, SFR Yugoslavia
Height:1.80 m
Position:Striker
Currentclub:Bonner SC
Youthyears1:1996–1998
Youthclubs1:FC Schlieren
Youthyears2:1998–2000
Youthclubs2:Grasshoppers
Youthyears3:2000–2003
Youthclubs3:Young Fellows Juventus
Years1:2003–2005
Caps1:39
Goals1:3
Years2:2006
Caps2:10
Goals2:1
Years3:2006–2009
Caps3:74
Goals3:34
Years4:2009–2012
Clubs4:1. FC Nürnberg
Caps4:55
Goals4:14
Years5:2012–2014
Clubs5:1. FC Kaiserslautern
Caps5:31
Goals5:13
Years6:2014–2017
Clubs6:St. Gallen
Caps6:51
Goals6:9
Years7:2017–2018
Caps7:23
Goals7:1
Years8:2018–2022
Caps8:89
Goals8:34
Years9:2022
Clubs9:Bonner SC
Caps9:0
Goals9:0
Nationalyears1:2004–2006
Nationalteam1:Switzerland U21
Nationalcaps1:15
Nationalgoals1:7
Nationalyears2:2009–2010
Nationalteam2:Switzerland
Nationalcaps2:6
Nationalgoals2:0
Nationalyears3:2014–2016
Nationalteam3:Kosovo
Nationalcaps3:6
Nationalgoals3:3
Club-Update:13:18, 1 February 2022 (UTC)

Albert Bunjaku (born 29 November 1983)[1] is a Kosovar former professional footballer who plays as a striker. Having previously represented Switzerland, participating at the 2010 FIFA World Cup, he switched to the newly formed Kosovo national team.

Club career

When Bunjaku was eight years old, he moved with his mother and two brothers to Switzerland, where his father was already working. Bunjaku joined his first club at 13 – unusually late for a future professional. Before starting out with FC Schlieren, he only played football in the schoolyard or on the five-a-side court. At that stage he was also very keen on basketball.

Bunjaku's first step on the professional ladder was at FC Schaffhausen in the Challenge League, Switzerland's second division. The team won promotion to the Super League in 2003–04 and over the course of the next 18 months the young forward made 39 top-flight appearances.

In January 2006, the 23-year-old Bunjaku left Schaffhausen for 2. Bundesliga side SC Paderborn. His first staging post in Germany was destined to last just six months however, as he failed to establish himself under then-coach Jos Luhukay. "At the time I didn't have the feeling he was Bundesliga material", Luhukay says now. As a result, Bunjaku found himself unemployed in the summer of 2006.

Then however, a chance conversation turned Bunjaku's fortunes around. His wife Arieta worked in a boutique in Paderborn frequented by the wife of former Paderborn coach Pavel Dochev. They struck up a conversation and it transpired that Dotchev, now in charge of Rot-Weiß Erfurt, was on the lookout for a striker. No sooner said than done, and Bunjaku was on the move to third-division Erfurt.

He first came to the attention of the wider footballing public when Rot-Weiß Erfurt took on Bayern Munich in a DFB Cup tie on 10 August 2008. Coming on as a second-half substitute in what was Jürgen Klinsmann's competitive debut as Bayern coach, Bunjaku put two goals past the record champions, who eventually squeezed past their lower-league opponents 4–3.

International career

On 14 November 2009, Bunjaku made his international debut for Switzerland in the 1–0 home loss to Norway in a friendly match after coming on as a substitute for Alexander Frei at half time. He was part of the Swiss squad for the 2010 FIFA World Cup, playing the last 13 minutes of the group match against Chile after coming on for Gelson Fernandes.[2] Bunjaku played in Kosovo's first FIFA-approved match, against Haiti in a 0–0 home friendly on 5 March 2014.[3] Bunjaku played for Kosovo against Turkey on 21 May 2014 and scored its first international goal.

International goals

Scores and results list Kosovo's goal tally first, score column indicates score after each Bunjaku goal.

List of international goals scored by Albert Bunjaku
No.DateVenueCapOpponentScoreResultCompetition
121 May 2014Adem Jashari Olympic Stadium, Mitrovica, Kosovo21–21–6Friendly
225 May 2014Stade de Genève, Genève, Switzerland31–11–3
33 June 2016Stadion am Bornheimer Hang, Frankfurt, Germany41–02–0

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Sportal.ch. Hitzfeld: "Bunjaku ist ein Thema". de. 5 November 2009. 17 June 2012. https://web.archive.org/web/20200113123644/http://www.sportalplus.com/sportch/generated/article/fussball/2009/11/05/10108400000.html. 13 January 2020. dead.
  2. News: Chile 1–0 Switzerland. 14 April 2014. BBC Sport.
  3. Web site: Kosovo 0–0 Haiti. FootballDatabase.eu. 14 April 2014.