Henk Houwaart Explained

Henk Houwaart
Birth Date:31 August 1945
Birth Place:The Hague, Netherlands
Position:Midfielder
Years1:1966–1967
Years2:1967
Years3:1967–1969
Years4:1969–1972
Years5:1972–1976
Years6:1975–1976
Clubs6:Antwerp
Caps1:87
Caps2:12
Caps3:34
Caps4:81
Caps5:89
Caps6:3
Goals1:34
Goals2:9
Goals3:7
Goals4:11
Goals5:15
Goals6:0
Nationalyears1:1969
Nationalteam1:Netherlands
Nationalcaps1:1
Nationalgoals1:0
Manageryears1:1977–1978
Manageryears2:1978–1979
Manageryears3:1979–1983
Manageryears4:1983–1984
Manageryears5:1984–1989
Manageryears6:1989–1990
Manageryears7:1990–1991
Manageryears8:1991–1993
Manageryears9:1994
Manageryears10:1994–2000
Manageryears11:2000
Manageryears12:2000–2001
Manageryears13:2002–2003
Manageryears14:2003–2004
Manageryears15:2004–2005
Manageryears16:2006–2007
Manageryears17:2007
Managerclubs13:Antwerp
Managerclubs17:Aris Limassol

Henk Houwaart (born August 31, 1945) is a Dutch football manager and a former football player.

Playing career

Born in the Hague, Houwaart began his career in 1963 as a footballer playing for ADO Den Haag until 1967, when he left the club to play for FC Twente. After being selected once for the Dutch national team,[1] he continued his career in 1969 in Belgium to play for Club Brugge K.V. and in his first season his team won the Belgian Cup and the championship in 1973. He was transferred to Royal Antwerp F.C. in 1975 but six months later, he sustained an injury in a UEFA Cup match against Śląsk Wrocław that ended his career.

Coaching career

However, he did not stop his football career and began to work as a trainer. Beginning his career as a trainer of K.S.V. Roeselare in 1977, the following season he became trainer of Eendracht Aalst. K.V. Kortrijk was his next club in 1979 and after finishing second in Belgian Second Division his team promoted to First Division.

In 1983, he moved to Cercle Brugge K.S.V.; however, Houwaart's aim was to become trainer of Club Brugge and one year later he moved there. He won his first trophies with this club, the Belgian Cup in 1986 and the Belgian Supercup the same year. He also won his first Championship as a coach in the 1987–88 season and the same season his team played in UEFA Cup and reached the semi-finals, when they were eliminated by RCD Espanyol in extra time.

He was fired in 1989 after bad results and he returned to his former club K.V. Kortrijk. He then moved to Greece to be the coach of AO Xanthi. After one year in Greece, he returned to Belgium and returned for two years to Cercle Brugge until 1993. His next team was K.R.C. Harelbeke, and he helped them to promote to the first division. He stayed there six years, from 1994 until 2000. After six years coaching K.R.C. Harelbeke, he went to K.A.A. Gent, but few months after, he was fired after a home defeat of the team in UEFA Cup by AFC Ajax.

For the second time in his career he left Belgium, this time he moved to Cyprus in November 2000 and became coach of Omonia Nicosia. Despite that Omonia was the most successful team in Cyprus, they had not won the Cypriot First Division in eight years. Omonia were seven points behind Anorthosis Famagusta, who were champions the previous four years and another year seemed lost for Omonia. After Houwaart's departure, Omonia performance changed rapidly and they won the championship after 8 years and a few months later they won the Cyprus Super Cup. After a bad beginning in the 2001–02 season, Houwaart quit as coach and went back to Belgium and to Royal Antwerp for the remaining season. He coached Sporting West Ingelmunster-Harelbeke in 2002–03.

He moved to Cyprus again, this time for AEL Limassol during the middle of the season 2003–04. Since the day he began coaching AEL Limassol, his team was unbeaten and reached the Cypriot Cup final. The unbeaten record ended in that final against AEK Larnaca, when his team lost 2–1. Six months later, he returned to his first Cypriot team, AC Omonia and won the Cypriot Cup after beating Digenis Morphou in the final 2–0. A few months later, they won the Cyprus Super Cup again. In the Super Cup, Omonia beat Anorthosis Famagusta 5–4 on penal ties after a 2–2 result. The 2005–06, Omonia was contenter for the Championship title, however the team performed badly and he resigned again from Omonia. Since then, he moved to Sint-Truidense V.V. in February 2006, where he saved them from relegation. He is now Head Coach from Belgian lower division team Royal Knokke F.C.

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Interlands Henk Houwaart . 2009-01-21 . dead . https://web.archive.org/web/20080407235729/http://www.voetbalstats.nl/nedxi/sp218.html . 2008-04-07 .