Alfred Riedl

Alfred Riedl (2 November 1949 – 8 September 2020[2][3]) was an Austrian football player and manager. As a player he was a striker.

Alfred Riedl
Riedl in 2010
Personal information
Date of birth(1949-11-02)2 November 1949
Place of birthVienna, Austria
Date of death8 September 2020(2020-09-08) (aged 70)
Place of deathPottendorf (Niederösterreich), Austria
Height1.84 m (6 ft 0 in)[1]
Position(s)Striker
Youth career
1961–1967ATSV Teesdorf
Senior career*
YearsTeamApps(Gls)
1967–1972Austria Wien98(58)
1972–1974Sint-Truiden56(33)
1974–1976FC Antwerp54(34)
1976–1980Standard Liège106(53)
1980Metz19(6)
1981–1982Grazer AK42(11)
1982–1984Wiener Sport-Club52(15)
1984–1985VfB Mödling0(0)
Total427(210)
International career
Austria U185(0)
Austria U236(0)
1975–1978Austria4(0)
Managerial career
1989–1990Wiener Sport-Club
1990–1991Austria
1991–1993Favoritner AC
1993–1994Olympique Khouribga
1994–1995El Zamalek
1997–1998Liechtenstein
1998–2000Vietnam
2001Khatoco Khánh Hòa
2001–2003Al Salmiya
2003–2004Vietnam
2004–2005Palestine
2005–2007Vietnam
2008–2009Hải Phòng
2009–2010Laos
2010–2011Indonesia
2010–2011Indonesia U23
2011–2012Laos (technical director)
2012–2013Visé (head of youth development)
2013–2014Indonesia
2015PSM Makassar
2016Indonesia
Medal record
Men's football
Representing  Vietnam (as manager)
AFF Championship
Runner-up1998
Representing  Indonesia (as manager)
Runner-up2010
Runner-up2016
*Club domestic league appearances and goals

Playing career

Club career

Riedl first played for Austria Wien from 1967 to 1972, before leaving Austria to play for the Belgian club Sint-Truiden at the age of 22. After he played eight seasons in the Belgian First Division (two with Sint-Truiden, two with Royal Antwerp and four with Standard Liège), Riedl enjoyed a brief spell at FC Metz in France. He came back to Austria after a single season there, to play for Grazer AK, and then at Wiener Sportclub and VfB Admira Wacker Mödling.[citation needed]

International career

Riedl was capped four times for the Austria national football team, making his debut in April 1975 against Hungary.[citation needed]

Coaching career

As a manager, Riedl coached Olympique Khouribga (Morocco, 1993–94), Al-Zamalek (Egypt, 1994–95), Al Salmiya (Kuwait, 2001–03), and many national teams, including Austria (1990–92), Liechtenstein (1997–98), Palestine (2004–05), Vietnam (1998–2001, 2003–04, 2005–07), and Laos (2009–10). In the 2007 AFC Asian Cup, he coached Vietnam to a 2–0 victory over UAE and help the team to get to the quarterfinal for the first time in history. Unfortunately, in late 2007, after the team's disappointing performance in the SEA Games 2007 competition, he was fired and replaced by the Portuguese coach Henrique Calisto. In October 2008, he returned to Vietnam to coach Hải Phòng. However, after only three matches with poor performance, he was dismissed.[4] On 9 July 2009, he signed a contract as head coach of Laos, the contract was for two years.[5]

Indonesia

On 4 May 2010, Riedl was named the new coach of Indonesia's national and under-23 sides.[6][7] He led the Indonesian national team to the 2010 AFF Suzuki Final but lost to Malaysia on 4–2 aggregate score. Then suddenly, on 13 July 2011, he lost his job because of a "contract dispute",[8] after a highly publicized political power struggle within the Football Association of Indonesia (PSSI), and was replaced by Wim Rijsbergen.[9][10]

After a return to Laos as technical director and Belgian club Visé as head of youth development, Riedl was reappointed as Indonesia national team head coach in December 2013, signing a three-year contract.[11][12][13][14] His contract was terminated by mutual consent at the end of 2014, after Indonesia failed to qualify for the knockout stages of the 2014 AFF Suzuki Cup.[15] Riedl then accepted the head coach job of PSM Makassar in early 2015, but resigned in April the same year before the league even started.[16]

Rield returned as the head coach of Indonesia in 2016 on a one-year contract, and guided Indonesia to the finals of 2016 AFF Suzuki Cup. After Indonesia lost to Thailand 3–2 on aggregate in the finals, his contract was not renewed by PSSI.[17][18]

Death

Riedl died on 8 September 2020 in Austria due to cancer.[19][20][21][22][23]

Honours

Player

Austria Wien

Grazer AK

  • Austrian Cup: 1980–81

Individual

Manager

Olympique Club de Khouribga (Morocco)

Vietnam

Vietnam Olympic

  • Southeast Asian Games runner-up: 2003, 2005

Indonesia

References