Pär Bengtsson Explained

Pär Bengtsson
Birth Date:22 July 1922
Birth Place:Halmstad, Sweden
Position:Striker
Years1:1942–1946
Clubs1:Halmstads BK
Caps1:65
Goals1:18
Years2:1946–1948
Clubs2:IF Elfsborg
Caps2:59
Goals2:37
Years3:1949–1950
Clubs3:Torino
Caps3:29
Goals3:10
Years4:1950–1952
Clubs4:Nice
Caps4:53
Goals4:27
Years5:1952–1953
Clubs5:Toulouse
Caps5:18
Goals5:7
Years6:1953–1955
Clubs6:Rennes
Caps6:54
Goals6:29
Nationalyears1:1947–1948
Nationalteam1:Sweden B
Nationalcaps1:2
Nationalgoals1:0
Club-Update:7 May 2020
Totalcaps:278
Totalgoals:128

Pär Bengtsson (21 July 1922 – 23 October 2007) was a Swedish professional footballer who played as a striker.

Club career

Halmstads BK

Bengtsson began playing for his local team, Halmstads BK, who had just been promoted to the Allsvenskan, the highest level of football in Sweden. Although World War II was going on at the time, Sweden was neutral, though playing sports in wartime did mean that the roster had to be rotated more often than normal. Because Halmstad had just been promoted, they struggled in the Allsvenskan, and they never finished higher than 6th (out of 12) before being relegated in 1946.

IF Elfsborg

When Halmstad was relegated, Bengtsson was transferred to Elfsborg, who had been a strong team, finishing second for three straight seasons between 1942 and 1945. The year Halmstad was relegated, however, they had faltered and finished 7th. After signing Bengtsson, the rebounded slightly, finishing fourth in 1946–47, but they finished just one point above relegation in 1947–48, and only one place above relegation in 1948–49.[1]

Torino

Bengtsson was sold to Torino in Italy in 1949, just after the entire team had been killed in the Superga air disaster. He played for one season with the Italian club, who came in sixth that year, scoring ten goals.

Nice

Bengtsson went on to play for OGC Nice, with whom he won the Division 1 in 1950–51. He finished as the t-10th top goalscorer with 15 goals. He and his fellow attacker Jean Courteaux scored a total of 42 goals, which was then Nice's most prolific partnership of all time (Hervé Revelli and Dick van Dijk equalled the record in the 1972–73 season, but it has still never been beaten[2]). The following season, he scored twelve goals, and though he was Nice's top scorer,[3] and Nice won the Division 1 again,[4] he was sold to a mid-table team in Division 2, Toulouse.

Toulouse

In the 1952–53 season, Toulouse skyrocketed to the top of the Division 2, but Bengtsson only played slightly more than half their games: He was aging, and he was 31 at the end of the season.

Rennes

Toulouse was promoted to Division 1, but Bengtsson stayed in Division 2, being transferred to Stade Rennais. In his first year at Rennais, he became a star forward for the team, scoring 21 goals in 35 games. The next season, however, he floundered. He played in only half the games, and he scored a mere seven goals.[5]

International career

Bengtsson was part of Sweden's squad for the football tournament at the 1948 Summer Olympics, but he did not play in any matches.[6] He made two appearances for the Sweden B team in 1947 and 1948.[7]

After football

Bengtsson retired in 1955. He died in 2007 at the age of 85.

Honours

Nice

Toulouse

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Sweden Final Tables 1924-1997. RSSSF.
  2. Web site: La trentaine pour Balotelli et Plea. OGC Nice.
  3. Web site: Nice 1951/1952 - Effectif complet et statistiques par compétition. www.footballdatabase.eu.
  4. Web site: France - First Division Results and Tables 1932-1998. RSSSF.
  5. Web site: Pär Bengtsson - Stats - palmarès. www.footballdatabase.eu.
  6. Web site: Pär Bengtsson. 13 October 2021. Olympedia.
  7. Web site: Per Bengtsson - Spelarstatistik - Svensk fotboll. 2021-10-25. www.svenskfotboll.se.. sv.