Jan Hellström

Jan Hellström (born February 21, 1960 in Söderköping, Östergötland) is a former Swedish footballer, who played as a striker.

Jan Hellström
Personal information
Full name Jan Hellström
Date of birth (1960-02-21) February 21, 1960
Place of birth Söderköping, Sweden
Height 1.78 m (5 ft 10 in)
Playing position(s) Striker
Youth career
Örtomta GoIS
1973–1978 IF SAAB
Senior career*
Years Team Apps (Gls)
1978–1980 IF SAAB 40 (33)
1981–1984 Norrköping 80 (36)
1985–1987 Örgryte 47 (20)
1988–1994 Norrköping 185 (80)
1995–1996 Hagahöjdens 15 (8)
1998–1999 Åby IF 14 (NA)
National team
1986–1989 Sweden 6 (0)
* Senior club appearances and goals counted for the domestic league only

Football career

Hellström played Swedish top league football for IFK Norrköping (247 games, 102 goals) and Örgryte IS. He started his career in Örtomta GoIS as a youth, then moved, still in his teens, to IF SAAB from Linköping.

In 1977, his first season as a senior, in the second division, Hellström scored three goals in five games. SAAB was relegated and, in the following year, he had his real breakthrough as a senior playing, netting 25 goals. His achievements were soon recognised by clubs in the top level and, in 1981, he signed for Norrköping. Local rivals Åtvidabergs FF had tried to sign him since 1980, but nothing ever came of it.

After the season 1984 and numerous goals for Norrköping, Hellström suddenly left for Örgryte IS from Gothenburg. He commented the move in an interview to Norrköping's fansite gopeking.net:

"My decision to move was based on several factors. I did not feel the club was trying to invest in anything, the club only played the games, did not sign players and did not show any aspiration that they wanted anything. In addition, the football the coach at the time, Lars-Göran Qwist supported, was not a football I could support."

In 1988, even though his life was well both personally and at work, he eventually agreed on a return to Norrköping, with Tommy Wisell, manager/director at the club, playing an active role in convincing the player. Also during that year, Hellström had a breakthrough in his international career when he played for Sweden at the Seoul Olympic Games; he finished the tournament as the second best goalscorer in the group play with three goals,[1] only behind Brazil's Romário (four). Sweden got knocked out of the tournament in the quarterfinal 1–2 defeat against Italy. His total record for the Olympics (including the qualifiers) was eight goals in 15 games.

In the following year, Hellström was crowned the league's topscorer for the first and only time in his career, with 16 goals, as Norrköping won the league over Malmö FF. However, a severe leg injury in left him out of action for a lengthy period, although he continued to play with the club until 1994.

Subsequently, Hellström left for Hagahöjdens BK in the Swedish fourth division, where he remained until 1996. After two short half-season comebacks for Åby IF (in Norrköping), he ended his active career in 1999.

During his career he was linked to Real Zaragoza (Spain) and Iraklis Thessaloniki FC (Greece) but remained faithful to Norrköping. After retiring, Hellström (considered one of the best players in the club's history) joined the board of directors.

gollark: > Well, on the other hand, many problems in nature are so computationally brutally hard that we can never truly hope to compute them, which prevents us from building a true virtual universe. I would say that's something positive.How is this a *good* thing?
gollark: That's an HTTP header, not HTML.
gollark: Clock cycle, that is.
gollark: It can actually be more than that depending on what operations are done, since modern CPUs can do more than one instruction per clock.
gollark: Which your thing is not.

References

  1. "Jan Hellström Biography and Statistics". Sports Reference. Archived from the original on 24 October 2012. Retrieved 17 November 2009.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.