Zdeněk Ščasný

Zdeněk Ščasný
Personal information
Full nameZdeněk Ščasný
Date of birth9 August 1957
Place of birthBrno, Czechoslovakia
Playing positionDefender, Midfielder
Youth career
1969–1975Spartak Roudnice nad Labem
Senior career*
YearsTeamApps(Gls)
1975–1978Dukla Prague
1978–1985Sparta Prague
1985–1989Bohemians 1905
1989–1991Agro Slušovice
1991–1993Anagennisi Dherynia
1993–1995SK Roudnice n.L.
National team
1979Czechoslovakia U215(0)
1983–1984Czechoslovakia4(0)
Teams managed
1992–1993Anagennisi Dherynia (Youth)
1993–1995SK Roudnice n.L. (Youth)
1995–1996Chmel Blšany
1996FK GGS Arma Ústí n.L.
1996–1997Sparta Prague (Assistant)
1998–1999Sparta Prague
1999–2002FK Viktoria Žižkov
2002–2003OFI Crete
2004–2005Panathinaikos
2005–2007FK SIAD Most
2007–2008Mladá Boleslav
2008–2009FK Viktoria Žižkov
2011–2012Debreceni VSC
2012–2015FK Teplice
2015–Sparta Prague
* Senior club appearances and goals counted for the domestic league only.
† Appearances (Goals).

Zdeněk Ščasný (born 9 August 1957) is a Czech football manager and former player. He currently manages Sparta Prague.

Ščasný has won the Czech league championship five timesthree times as a player and twice as a coachand the Czech Cup three timestwice as a player and once as a coach.

He is best known for his years with Sparta Pragueboth as a player and a manager. He played as a defender and also in midfield.[1] He has also coached Greek giants Panathinaikos.

Playing career

Early career, Dukla Prague and first title

Zdenek Ščasný in his youth played for Spartak Roudnice nad Labem. At 17 years old he moved to Dukla Prague, where he made his Czechoslovak First League debut. Ščasný spent four years with Dukla Prague, and won the Czechoslovak First League in 1976-77.

Sparta Prague and more titles

In 1978 Ščasný moved to Sparta Prague, where he remained until 1985. With Sparta, Ščasný won the Czechoslovak Cup in 1979-1980, a Czechoslovak League and Cup double in 1983-84, and the league again in 1984-85.

Late career

In 1985 Ščasný joined Bohemians, playing there for four and a half seasons. After Bohemians Ščasný played with Agro Slušovice for a short time and then moved to Cyprus to play for Anagennisi Dherynia before ending his playing career.

International career

During his career Ščasný earned four caps as a Czechoslovakia national team player, making his debut against Cyprus on 27 March 1983.[2] He also made five appearances for the Czechoslovakia national under-21 football team in 1979.[1]

Managerial career

Early career

Ščasný began his coaching career by acting as a player-coach at Anagennisi Dherynia, and he later supervised the youth there.

Ščasný returned to his homeland in 1993, and, after working with some smaller clubs, he became an assistant coach at Sparta Prague in 1996.

Sparta Prague

In the middle of the 1997-98 season Ščasný took over as Sparta's head coach and led the team to the 1. Liga championship. The following season Ščasný and Sparta repeated as league champions.

FK Viktoria Žižkov

After his second league championship with Sparta, Ščasný took over Viktoria Žižkov in 1999-00. Ščasný spent three seasons with Žižkov, guiding them to great improvement year after year, as the team finished 9th-place in 1999-00, 5th-place in 2000-01, and 3rd-placethe club's highest-ever finishin 2001-02. In 2000-01 Ščasný led Žižkov to win the Czech Cup in 2000-01the club's first title since 1993-94.

Greece: OFI Crete and Panathinaikos

After leaving Žižkov, Ščasný moved to Greece to be the head coach of OFI Crete. Ščasný led OFI to an 8th-place finish in his first season with the club. Scasny had very poor relations with many of the players at OFI and by the time he left the club the situation between him and many of the players was terrible.

His work at OFI led Greek giants Panathinaikos to hire him early in the 2004-05 season to replace Itzhak Shum. Ščasný took over in the middle of Panathinaikos' UEFA Champions League campaign, and with two impressive draws against Arsenal, another draw in Norway against Rosenborg and a resounding win over PSV Eindhoven in Athens, Ščasný guided the Greek side to finish 3rd in a difficult group, thus moving them to the UEFA Cup. Before Panathinaikos began the UEFA Cup competition later that season though, Ščasný was replaced in favor of Alberto Malesani.

FK SIAD Most

In the middle of the 2005-06 season modest Czech side FK SIAD Most was in its first-ever season in the Czech top flight, and was in danger of being relegated right back to the second division. Most turned to Ščasný during the winter break, Ščasný helped Most stay in the top flight that season, boosting the team to a surprising 10th-place finish. In the 2006–07 Gambrinus liga Ščasný's Most finished 12th and again remained in the first division. However, Ščasný left Most at the end of the season by mutual consent.[3]

Mladá Boleslav

After leaving Most, Ščasný took over at Mladá Boleslav early in the 2007-08 season.[4] Boleslav was competing in the UEFA Cup that season, and in the first round of the competition Ščasný helped Boleslav pull off a stunning elimination of Italian club Palermo by winning 1-0 in the second leg of the tie in Italy. In the group stage of the competition, Boleslav finished 4th, behind Villarreal, Fiorentina and AEK Athens. Boleslav parted ways with Ščasný before the end of the season.

Return to FK Viktoria Žižkov

In the middle of the 2008-09 season Žižkov were bottom of the table and likely to be relegated. Žižkov turned to Ščasný for help for the final 16 matches of the season, but it was too late - Ščasný could not save the club and they were relegated to the second division.

Debreceni VSC

On 30 December 2010 Ščasný signed a 2-year contract with Hungarian champions, Debreceni VSC. On the 16th of April, 2011 he left the Hungarian club, after he failed to deliver sufficient wins.

Return to Czech football

In October 2012 Ščasný returned to Czech football after a three-year absence, taking over at FK Teplice.[5]

Other

Zdenek's son Michal and daughter Pavlína are both professional footballers.[1]

Honours

Player

Dukla Prague

Sparta Prague

Managerial

Sparta Prague

FK Viktoria Žižkov

References

  1. 1.0 1.1 1.2 Ceský a ceskoslovenský fotbal - lexikon osobností a klubu; by Luboš Jeřábek; Grada Publishing; Prague; 2007; ISBN 978-80-247-1656-5; via Google Books
  2. Zdeněk Ščasný international stats at the Football Association of the Czech Republic website (Czech)
  3. "Potvrzeno. Ščasný odchází z Mostu" (in Czech). idnes.cz. 29 May 2007. Retrieved 1 January 2012.
  4. "Kouč Ščasný povede tým Mladé Boleslavi" (in Czech). idnes.cz. 4 September 2007. Retrieved 4 February 2012.
  5. "Teplice mají nového trenéra, Ščasný se do ligy vrací po třech letech" (in Czech). idnes.cz. 2 October 2012. Retrieved 16 November 2012.