John Karelse

John Karelse
Personal information
Date of birth17 May 1970
Place of birthWemeldinge, Netherlands
Height1.81 m (5 ft 11 12 in)
Playing positionGoalkeeper (retired)
Club information
Current team
free agent
Youth career
VV Wemeldinge
AGOVV Apeldoorn
Senior career*
YearsTeamApps(Gls)
1986–1999NAC Breda382(0)
1999–2003Newcastle United3(0)
2003–2004AGOVV Apeldoorn36(0)
Total421(0)
Teams managed
2006NAC Breda (caretaker)
2006–2011NAC Breda (assistant manager)
2011–2012NAC Breda
* Senior club appearances and goals counted for the domestic league only.
† Appearances (Goals).

John Karelse (born 17 May 1970 in Wemeldinge) is a retired Dutch football goalkeeper and unemployed manager after being fired by NAC Breda.

He played for AGOVV Apeldoorn in his native country for a few years before moving to NAC Breda. It was here that he caught the attention of then Newcastle United manager Ruud Gullit, who signed him for an undisclosed fee (thought to be in the region of £800,000) in August 1999. His time at Newcastle was largely unsuccessful, as he endured a terrible start to his career at the club, losing 4-2 to Southampton on his debut. He found his first team opportunities very limited after this, not helped by the competition for his position being very high with the reliable Shay Given and Steve Harper also at the club. Tony Caig was also ahead of him as third choice backup. He did, however, manage to keep a clean sheet against Arsenal at Highbury, in what proved to be his third and final game for the club.[1]

A proposed move to Turkey broke down in 2000, but a year later a move back to the Netherlands seemed likely, with Feyenoord rumoured to be interested. No move materialised and the former Dutch Under-21 international had no choice but to stay in the Newcastle reserves. He retired in 2004 after one final season at AGOVV Apeldoorn.

In 2006 he became interim manager of NAC and led the team successfully through the relegation play-offs. Karelse became manager of NAC in 2011.

References

  1. "Magpies deny goal-shy Gunners". BBC. 30 October 1999. Retrieved 19 April 2012.