Christian Bouckenooghe

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Kris Bouckenooghe
Personal information
Full name Christian Bouckenooghe
Date of birth February 07, 1977 (age 30)
Place of birth    , Cook Islands
Height 1,75 m.
Nickname Bouckie
Playing position defender or midfielder
Club information
Current club K.V. Red Star Waasland
Senior clubs1
Years Club App (Gls)*
1995-1996
1996-1997
1997-2000
2000-2001
2001-2002
2002-2003
2003-2006
2006-
Rotherham United
K.S.V. Waregem
K.S.V. Roeselare
S.V.D. Handzame
K.V. Oostende
K.S.K. Ronse
K.S.V. Roeselare
Red Star Waasland
0 (0)
0 (0)
82 (13)
8 (1)
27 (6)
27 (3)
57 (7)
6 (1)   
National team2
1998 - 2006 Flag of New Zealand New Zealand 33 (2)

1 Senior club appearances and goals
counted for the domestic league only and
correct as of 29 January 2007.
2 National team caps and goals correct
as of 29 January 2007.
* Appearances (Goals)

Christian "Kris" Bouckenooghe (born February 7, 1977) is a New Zealand/Belgium soccer player. He plays as a defender for Red Star Waasland in the Belgian Second Division.

He played 33 times (2 goals) for the New Zealand national soccer team, the All Whites.

He was born on the Cook Islands of a Cook Island (Polynesian) mother and a Belgian father, subsequently moving to New Zealand as a child, where he played his youth soccer. He has played for New Zealand at age-group level, including a play-off series against the South African under-23 team to qualify for the 2000 Sydney Olympics, scoring in the NZ team's narrow 3-4 and 0-1 losses in that series. All of his early career was spent as a midfielder or striker, until converting to defence at K.S.V. Roeselare in Belgium. His first professional club was Rotherham in England, who signed him as a teenager on the recommendation of former New Zealand national coach and ex Rotherham player, Kevin Fallon. From there he signed for KSV Roeselare in the 1990s, his first of two periods with the club. He is the first New Zealander to play in the Belgian First Division.

His career highlights include playing at both the 1999 and 2003 Confederations Cup in Mexico and France respectively, which New Zealand qualified for as Oceania champions after beating Australia, previously the dominant power in the region.

In other languages