Mats Werner Explained

Mats Werner
Fullname:Mats Rune Werner
Birth Date:1 June 1953
Birth Place:Värnamo, Sweden
Position:Forward / Defender
Youthclubs1:Hammarby IF
Years1:1971–1984
Clubs1:Hammarby IF
Caps1:251
Goals1:46
Years2:1984
Clubs2:Vasalunds IF
Caps2:14
Goals2:5
Totalcaps:265
Totalgoals:51
Nationalyears1:1970–1971
Nationalteam1:Sweden U19
Nationalcaps1:7
Nationalgoals1:0
Nationalyears2:1972–1979
Nationalteam2:Sweden U21
Nationalcaps2:7
Nationalgoals2:1
Nationalyears3:1978
Nationalteam3:Sweden B
Nationalcaps3:1
Nationalgoals3:0
Nationalyears4:1976–1979
Nationalteam4:Sweden
Nationalcaps4:6
Nationalgoals4:1

Mats Rune "Matte" Werner (born 1 June 1953) is a Swedish former professional footballer. He played for Hammarby IF throughout most of his career.[1]

Club career

Trained in the youth ranks of Hammarby IF, Werner made his debut in Allsvenskan, the domestic top tier, for the club in 1971, at age 17.[1]

Between 1971 and 1976, Hammarby consistently finished mid-table, being unable to produce any sort of challenge for the Swedish champion title. During this period, Werner became one of Hammarby's most important players, together with experienced Tom Turesson and other younger talents like Jan Sjöström, Kenneth Ohlsson and Ronnie Hellström.[2]

Hammarby reached the final of Svenska Cupen in 1977, the main domestic cup, but lost 0–1 to Östers IF.[3]

In 1979, Werner had re-positioned himself from a tough defender to a physical forward, a move that proved highly successful. The same season, he became the first ever top scorer in Allsvenskan to represent Hammarby, scoring 14 goals in 26 league games.[4]

The highlight of Werner's career came in 1982 when Hammarby finished second in the table, going unbeaten the whole season. In the following playoff to decide the Swedish champion, the club went on to beat Örgryte in the quarter-finals and Elfsborg in the semi-finals. In the finals against IFK Göteborg, Hammarby won 2–1 in the first leg away, but lost 1–3 in the home game at Söderstadion to a record crowd, missing out on the gold medal.[5] [6] [7]

Throughout his time at Hammarby, Werner went on trial with German giants Bayern Munich and reportedly attracted interest from Standard Liège, Kaiserslautern and Toronto Blizzard.[8] [1] However, he remained with the club for the most of career, making 251 league appearances and scoring 46 goals in total.[9] [1]

Halfway through 1984, Werner joined fellow Stockholm-based club Vasalunds IF in Division 1, Sweden's second tier. He played the remainder of the season with the club before retiring from football at the end of the year, aged 31.[10] [1]

In 2004, Werner was voted as Hammarby's eleventh biggest profile throughout its history.[11]

International career

In a period of three years, Werner won 6 caps for Sweden.[12] He scored his only international goal in a 6–0 friendly win against Finland on 11 August 1976, home at Malmö Stadion.[13]

Personal life

He is married to Yvonne Werner, who has been the long-term head chef at Hammarby's training ground Årsta IP.[9] [8]

Honours

Individual

Hammarby IF

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Hårdingen – om livet efter fotbollen, domare och kost. HIF Historia. 1 February 2021. Swedish.
  2. Web site: Den störste. Hammarby Fotboll. 15 November 2020. sv.
  3. Web site: Historik. Swedish. Hammarby Fotboll. dead. https://web.archive.org/web/20110326220649/http://www.hammarbyfotboll.se/se/omhammarbyfotboll/historik/. 26 March 2011.
  4. Web site: 1979. HIF Historia. 1 February 2021. sv.
  5. Web site: 1982. HIF Historia. 16 November 2020. Swedish.
  6. Web site: SM-finalen 1982. Hammarby Fotboll. 16 November 2020. Swedish.
  7. Web site: Laget som fick Söder att skratta. 20 October 2001 . Aftonbladet. 16 November 2020. Swedish.
  8. Web site:
    1. 40 - Mats "Matte" Werner
    . Grönvita Profiler. 1 February 2021. Swedish.
  9. Web site: Mats Werner snackar derby. Mitt I. 1 February 2021. Swedish.
  10. Web site: 1984. HIF Historia. 1 February 2021. Swedish.
  11. Web site: 11- Mats Werner. Swedish. Hammarby Fotboll. dead. https://web.archive.org/web/20110508230530/http://www.hammarbyfotboll.se/se/omhammarbyfotboll/historik/?playerid=657&teamId=177. 8 May 2011. 1 February 2021.
  12. Web site: Landslagsdatabasen: Mats Werner. Swedish Football Association. 1 February 2021. Swedish.
  13. Web site: Sverige 6 – 0 Finland. Swedish Football Association. 1 February 2021. Swedish.