Mats Wejsfelt

Mats Anders Wejsfelt (born 5 December 1980 in Löddeköpinge) is a retired Swedish footballer who last played for Tennis Borussia Berlin.

Mats Wejsfelt
Personal information
Full name Mats Anders Wejsfelt
Date of birth (1980-12-05) 5 December 1980
Place of birth Löddeköpinge, Sweden
Height 1.86 m (6 ft 1 in)
Playing position(s) Defender
Youth career
IF Lödde
Senior career*
Years Team Apps (Gls)
2000–2001 Helsingborgs IF 0 (0)
2002 IFK Malmö 24 (0)
2003 SV Babelsberg 03 0 (0)
2003–2004 Trelleborgs FF 6 (0)
2004–2006 FC Sachsen Leipzig 52 (4)
2006–2009 1. FC Magdeburg 74 (3)
2010 VfB Germania Halberstadt 3 (0)
2010–2012 Schönebecker SC 1861 45 (8)
2012–2013 Haldensleber SC 25 (2)
2013–2014 Tennis Borussia Berlin 14 (2)
* Senior club appearances and goals counted for the domestic league only

Club career

Wejsfelt's first senior club was Helsingborgs IF in 2000. He was in the squad several times, but did not play a match in the Allsvenskan. He moved to second-tier club IFK Malmö where he got into the first team and played in 24 Superettan matches.[1]

In January 2003, Wejsfelt moved to Germany for the first time, spending half a year with SV Babelsberg 03. In June, Wejsfelt moved back to Sweden, where he made six Superettan appearances for Trelleborgs FF.[1] Wejsfelt moved to Germany again in 2004, to NOFV-Oberliga club FC Sachsen Leipzig where he spent the next two years. At the start of the 2006–07 season, Wejsfelt signed for 1. FC Magdeburg who had just been promoted to the third-tier Regionalliga Nord. He quickly became a regular starter for his new club, making 74 league appearances over three seasons, featuring in two DFB-Pokal games too. After three further years at lower-league Saxony-Anhalt teams, he signed for Tennis Borussia Berlin for the 2013–14 season,[2] making 14 appearances and scoring two goals in the first half of the season. After not playing a game in 2014 due to injury, he subsequently retired.

gollark: But what if the AIs colonize outer space? They can beat humans at it.
gollark: See, any game can be made more fun if you implement human-level intelligences which can create stuff like pyramid schemes.
gollark: Presumably if food is magically non-perishable, lots of people will just store it, and the price won't vary *that* much because the only extra cost is some storage.
gollark: But then they can't do fun stuff like run scams.
gollark: I have a better way. Make your game AIs have human-level intelligence, and have them communicate and trade items! That way you get all the nice emergent behavior with the simple ease of implementing human-level AI.

References

  1. "Mats Wejsfelt". svenskfotboll.se (in Swedish). Retrieved 26 November 2013.
  2. "Dann kommt der Fuss, ja und dann krachts". Tennis Borussia Berlin (in German). 2 August 2013. Archived from the original on 3 December 2013. Retrieved 6 August 2013.
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