Gösta Sandberg Explained

Gösta Sandberg
Birth Name:Oskar Gösta Leonard Sandberg
Birth Date:6 August 1932
Birth Place:Knivsta, Sweden
Death Place:Stockholm, Sweden
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Position:Striker
Youthclubs1:Knivsta IK
Years1:–1950
Clubs1:Knivsta IK
Years2:1951–1966
Clubs2:Djurgårdens IF
Caps2:322
Goals2:77
Nationalteam1:Sweden B[1]
Nationalcaps1:2
Nationalgoals1:1
Nationalyears2:1951–1961
Nationalteam2:Sweden[2]
Nationalcaps2:52
Nationalgoals2:10
Manageryears1:1959–1961
Manageryears2:1967–1971
Manageryears3:1968
Manageryears4:1972–1978
Manageryears5:1979
Managerclubs5:Djurgårdens IF
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Played For:Spånga IS
Djurgårdens IF
Career Start:1957
Career End:1963
Ntl Team:SWE

Oskar Gösta Leonard "Knivsta" Sandberg (6 August 1932 – 27 April 2006) was a Swedish football, ice hockey, and bandy player who is best remembered for representing Djurgårdens IF. He was capped 52 times for the national team in football, eight times in ice hockey, and three times in bandy.

In 1991, he was voted "Djurgårdare of the century".[3]

Football career

Gösta Sandberg joined Djurgården before the 1951–52 Allsvenskan season and stayed with the team throughout the rest of his career, until 1966, winning four Swedish titles. During his debut season in Allsvenskan, he played all 22 matches and six goals. Except for a one-year spell in second tier Division 1, Sandberg played all his Djurgården football in Allsvenskan, and there making 298 appearances and scoring 70 goals.[4] As of 2023, he is the player who have scored the most goals in Allsvenskan for Djurgårdens IF.[5]

A full international between 1951 and 1961, Sandberg won 52 caps and scored 10 goals for the Sweden national team and represented his country at the 1952 Summer Olympics where they won the bronze medal.[6] [7] He made his international debut in a friendly against Yugoslavia on 2 September 1951[8]

In 1956, he received the Guldbollen as Sweden's best footballer of the year.[3]

Ice hockey career

Sandberg first represented IK Sirius, then Spånga IS.Gösta Sandberg joined Djurgården from Spånga IS in 1957 and played with the team for six seasons in Division 1 until 1963, winning the Swedish title all six seasons.[9]

Sandberg won eight caps for the Sweden national ice hockey team.[10] Sandberg debuted for the national team on 23 November 1958 in a 8–2 win over Finland, where he was part of line together with fellow Djurgården player Hans Mild and Uno Öhrlund of Västerås IK.[9] He represented Sweden at the 1961 World Ice Hockey Championships where Sweden finished fourth, as well as the 1961 Ice Hockey European Championships where Sweden finished third.[3]

Bandy career

Gösta Sandberg played with Djurgårdens IF bandy team in the 1961–66 seasons.

Sandberg represented the Sweden national bandy team a total of three times during his career.[11] [12]

Managerial career

During and after his active career, Gösta Sandberg managed IF Brommapojkarna 1959-61 and 1972-78, and Djurgården 1967–71 and in 1979.[11] Sandberg managed Djurgården's women's team in 1968.[13]

Personal life

Sandberg's nickname derives from the town he was born and grew up in, Knivsta. Sandberg died on his way home from the derby between the archrivals AIK and Djurgårdens IF on 27 April 2006.[14]

Gösta Sandberg had four children and nine grandchildren.[15] One son, Lars played Allsvenskan football for Djurgården, one daughter, Anna, represented IF Brommapojkarna, and two of his grandchildren, and Anna's children together with Brommapojkarna footballer and Swedish junior international Berndt Magnusson, Gustav Sandberg Magnusson and Anton Sandberg Magnusson, both played Allsvenskan football for IF Brommapojkarna.[16] [17] [18]

Honours

Ice hockey

Djurgårdens IF

Sweden

Football

Djurgårdens IF

Sweden

Individual

Notes and References

  1. Book: Frantz . Alf . Glanell . Tomas . Persson . Gunnar . Det svenska fotbollslandslaget 1908–2008 . CA Strömberg AB . 2008 . Vällingby . Swedish . The Swedish National Football Team 1908–2008 . 978-91-86184-69-8.
  2. Web site: Sweden men's national football team stats . https://web.archive.org/web/20010609200325/http://hem.passagen.se/fotbollslandslaget/statistiktest.htm . dead . 2001-06-09 . Swedish . passagen.se.
  3. Web site: Gösta "Knivsta" Sandberg . 2022-11-07 . DIF Hall of Fame . sv-SE.
  4. Web site: Gösta Sandberg (Player) .
  5. Web site: FAQ - Djurgården Fotboll. När, var, hur, vem? . 11 August 2021 .
  6. Web site: Gösta Sandberg - Spelarstatistik - Svensk fotboll . 2022-11-07 . www.svenskfotboll.se. . sv.
  7. Web site: Gösta Sandberg - Sveriges Olympiska Kommitté . 2022-11-07 . sok.se . sv.
  8. Web site: Gösta Sandberg - Spelarstatistik - Svensk fotboll .
  9. https://www.eliteprospects.com/player/36771/gosta-sandberg
  10. Web site: 2019-04-15 . "Knivsta" platsade i tre olika landslag . 2022-11-07 . sv-SE.
  11. Web site: Gösta "Knivsta" Sandberg – DIF Historia . 2022-11-07 . sv-SE.
  12. Web site: 2016-11-11 . Gösta "Knivsta" Sandberg . 2022-11-07 . Knivstas historia . sv-SE.
  13. Web site: 1968-1969 . 18 March 2022 .
  14. Web site: "Knivsta" Sandberg död. 28 April 2006.
  15. Web site: "Knivsta" Sandberg död . 28 April 2006 .
  16. Web site: Ordförandebloggen #12: BP-familjen – BP .
  17. Web site: Sweden - G. Magnusson - Profile with news, career statistics and history - Soccerway .
  18. Web site: Sweden - A. Sandberg-Magnusson - Profile with news, career statistics and history - Soccerway .
  19. http://www.difarkivet.se/dif_sm_guld_seniorer.pdf