Thom Åhlund Explained

Thom Åhlund
Fullname:Thom Alvar Ålund
Birth Date:17 February 1953
Birth Place:Stockholm, Sweden
Position:Defender
Youthclubs1:Djurgårdens IF
Youthclubs2:IF Brommapojkarna
Years1:1971–1972
Clubs1:IF Brommapojkarna
Caps1:40
Goals1:4
Years2:1973–1983
Clubs2:Hammarby IF
Caps2:228
Goals2:9
Years3:1984–1986
Clubs3:Skövde AIK
Caps3:19
Goals3:0
Nationalyears1:1970–1971
Nationalteam1:Sweden U19
Nationalcaps1:8
Nationalgoals1:3
Nationalyears2:1973–1979
Nationalteam2:Sweden U21
Nationalcaps2:12
Nationalgoals2:0
Nationalyears3:1979
Nationalteam3:Sweden
Nationalcaps3:4
Nationalgoals3:0
Manageryears1:1984-1986
Managerclubs1:Skövde AIK (player-coach)
Manageryears2:1987–1988
Managerclubs2:Friska Viljor
Manageryears3:1989–1990
Managerclubs3:Umeå FC
Manageryears4:1996–1998
Managerclubs4:Syrianska FC
Manageryears5:1999
Managerclubs5:FOC Farsta
Manageryears6:2000–2001
Managerclubs6:Syrianska FC
Manageryears7:2002–2006
Managerclubs7:Hammarby IF (assistant manager)
Manageryears8:2007
Managerclubs8:Syrianska FC (assistant manager)
Manageryears9:2008
Managerclubs9:IK Frej
Manageryears10:2009
Managerclubs10:Hammarby IF (interim manager)
Manageryears11:2011
Managerclubs11:Akropolis IF
Manageryears12:2012–2013
Managerclubs12:Nacka FF
Totalcaps:287
Totalgoals:13

Thom Alvar Ålund (born 17 February 1953) is a Swedish former football player and manager, best known for representing Hammarby IF. In 1979, he won four caps for the Sweden men's national football team.

Club career

Early career

Born in Stockholm, Åhlund started his career with Djurgårdens IF as a youngster.[1] He soon moved to IF Brommapojkarna, in the Swedish lower divisions, where he made his senior debut in 1971.[2]

Hammarby IF

In 1973, at age 19, Åhlund joined Hammarby IF in Allsvenskan, Sweden's first tier. He immediately broke into the squad and played 25 league games in his debut season, as Hammarby finished 8th in the table, scoring his first goal for the club in a 1–0 home win against IF Saab on 26 August.[3]

Manager Olle Nyström re-positioned Åhlund from a central midfielder to a libero in 1974. Known as an elegant player, he was soon compared with Franz Beckenbauer by supporters of the club.[1] [4]

In 1977, Hammarby reached the final of Svenska Cupen, the main domestic cup, but lost 0–1 to Östers IF.[5]

Åhlund was on the verge of becoming a professional abroad, attracting interest from clubs in both Belgium and Germany throughout his career. In 1980, he almost transferred to the competing Swedish club Mjällby AIF together with Sten-Ove Ramberg, a fellow teammate at Hammarby. Both players eventually decided to turn down the offer following outrage from the club's supporters.[1]

The highlight of Åhlund'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. Åhlund was sidelined due to a groin injury throughout most of the season, but took part in the finals.[6] [7] [8] [1] [9]

After the domestic success, Hammarby competed in the European Cup Winners' Cup the following year, ultimately getting knocked out by FC Haka in the second round (2–3 on aggregate). Åhlund decided to leave Hammarby after the loss on 2 November 1983, which coincidentally also was Kenneth Ohlsson's last game for the club.[1] In total, Åhlund made 228 league appearances for Hammarby and scored 9 goals.[4] [1]

Skövde AIK and retirement

In 1984, Åhlund joined Skövde AIK as a player-coach. He stayed with the club for three seasons, competing in Division 3, before definitely retiring from playing.[10]

International career

After competing with the Swedish U19's and U21's, Åhlund debuted for the Swedish senior national team in 1979 in a friendly 0–2 loss to Norway. In total, he won four caps the same year, competing in one competitive fixture (a 1–1 away draw against Luxembourg on 23 October 1979 in the UEFA Euro 1980 qualifying campaign).[11]

Managerial career

After his player-coach stint at Skövde AIK, Åhlund spent the later stages of the 1980s and the 1990s coaching Friska Viljor, Umeå FC, Syrianska FC and FOC Farsta in the domestic lower divisions.[12]

In 2002, Åhlund returned to Hammarby IF to work as the assistant coach of Anders Linderoth. The club went on to have several fruitful years in the Allsvenskan, being a consistent challenger for the Swedish league title. The duo left the club at the end of 2006.[13] [4]

On 31 August 2009, midway through the Allsvenskan season, he was appointed as the interim manager of Hammarby IF after the sacking of Tony Gustavsson. Åhlund was unable to save the club from a relegation to Superettan, the second tier, and left the position at the end of the year.[13] [14]

Honours

Player-coach

Skövde AIK

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Söderstadions Beckenbauer. Hammarby Fotboll. 13 February 2021. Swedish.
  2. Web site: IF Brommapojkarna – Klubbens samtliga landslagsspelare. IF Brommapojkarna. 13 February 2021. Swedish.
  3. Web site: 1973. HIF Historia. 13 February 2021. Swedish.
  4. Web site: Thom 20 år senare. Hammarbyiten. 13 February 2021. Swedish.
  5. Web site: Historik. Swedish. Hammarby Fotboll. dead. https://web.archive.org/web/20110326220649/http://www.hammarbyfotboll.se/se/omhammarbyfotboll/historik/. 26 March 2011.
  6. Web site: 1982. HIF Historia. 16 November 2020. Swedish.
  7. Web site: SM-finalen 1982. Hammarby Fotboll. 16 November 2020. Swedish.
  8. Web site: Laget som fick Söder att skratta. 20 October 2001 . Aftonbladet. 16 November 2020. Swedish.
  9. Web site: Thom Åhlund. Hammarby Fotboll. 13 February 2021. Swedish.
  10. Web site: Seniorlagshistorik. 13 February 2021. Skövde AIK. Swedish.
  11. Web site: Landslagsdatabasen: Thom Åhlund. Swedish Football Association.
  12. Web site: Thom Åhlund. Fotbolltransfers. 13 February 2021. Swedish.
  13. Web site: Åhlund om raset: Fördes bakom ljuset. 28 October 2009 . Aftonbladet. 13 February 2021. Swedish.
  14. Web site: Hammarby sparkar Tony Gustavsson. 31 August 2009 . Aftonbladet. 13 February 2021. Swedish.
  15. Web site: 1985 - Clas Glenning Football. 2021-02-14. sites.google.com.
  16. Web site: 1986 - Clas Glenning Football. 2021-02-14. sites.google.com.