2007–08 PSV Eindhoven season

PSV Eindhoven
2007–08 season
Manager Netherlands Ronald Koeman (until 5 November)
Netherlands Jan Wouters (caretaker manager)
Netherlands Sef Vergoossen (interim manager)
Stadium Philips Stadion
Eredivisie 1st
KNVB Cup Second round
Johan Cruyff Shield Runners-up
Champions League Group stage
UEFA Cup Quarter-finals
Top goalscorer Danny Koevermans (14)

During the 2007–08 Dutch football season, PSV Eindhoven competed in the Eredivise.

Season summary

The 2007-08 season was a turbulent one for PSV. Ronald Koeman left in early November to take charge at Valencia. Jan Wouters took charge as caretaker for the next month, before Sef Vergoossen was appointed interim manager for the rest of the season. Vergoossen guided the club to the UEFA Cup quarter-finals and won PSV's fourth successive Dutch title before stepping down at the end of the season.

PSV were disqualified from the KNVB Cup after fielding Manuel da Costa, who was suspended.

Kit

PSV's kits were manufactured by Nike and sponsored by Philips.

First-team squad

Squad at end of season[1]

Note: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.

No. Position Player
1 Brazil GK Heurelho Gomes
2 Netherlands DF Jan Kromkamp
3 Mexico DF Carlos Salcido
5 Netherlands DF Mike Zonneveld
6 Belgium MF Timmy Simons (captain[notes 1])
7 Finland MF Mika Väyrynen
8 Ecuador MF Édison Méndez[notes 2]
9 Serbia FW Danko Lazović
10 Netherlands FW Danny Koevermans
13 Brazil DF Alcides (on loan from Chelsea)
14 Serbia DF Slobodan Rajković (on loan from Chelsea)
15 Australia MF Jason Culina[notes 3]
16 Netherlands MF Ismaïl Aissati[notes 4]
17 Peru FW Jefferson Farfán
18 Ghana DF Eric Addo
19 Brazil FW Jonathan Reis
20 Netherlands MF Ibrahim Afellay
21 Netherlands GK Bas Roorda
22 Hungary MF Balázs Dzsudzsák
23 Brazil DF Fagner
24 Netherlands DF Dirk Marcellis
25 Netherlands MF John de Jong
26 Netherlands MF Tommie van der Leegte
No. Position Player
28 Netherlands MF Otman Bakkal
29 Netherlands FW Género Zeefuik
31 Brazil GK Cássio
34 Morocco DF Rochdi Achenteh[notes 5]
35 Netherlands DF Bart van Berlo
36 Netherlands MF Rob van Boekel
37 Suriname DF Ridny Cairo
38 Netherlands DF Rens van Eijden
39 Netherlands DF Jahmill Flu
40 Netherlands DF Freek Heerkens
41 Netherlands FW Ronald Hikspoors
42 Netherlands DF Olivier ter Horst
43 Netherlands DF Eelco Horsten
44 Netherlands MF Lars Hutten
45 Netherlands GK Gino Mommers
46 Netherlands FW Nicky Munz
47 Belgium DF Yannick Rymenants
48 Netherlands MF Romario Sabajo
49 Netherlands DF Martijn Thomassen
51 Netherlands FW Paul Voss
52 Netherlands MF Jasper Waalkens
53 Belgium MF Stijn Wuytens

Left club during season

Note: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.

No. Position Player
4 Portugal DF Manuel da Costa[notes 6] (to Fiorentina)
10 Ivory Coast FW Arouna Koné (to Sevilla)
11 Denmark FW Kenneth Perez (to Ajax)
No. Position Player
22 Hungary DF Csaba Fehér (to NAC Breda)
31 Belgium GK Ruud Boffin (on loan to FC Eindhoven)

Results

Champions League

Group stage

References

Notes

  1. Vederson also holds Turkish citizenship.
  2. Kazim-Richards was born in Waltham Forest, England, but also qualified to represent Antigua and Barbuda through his father and Turkey through his mother and made his international debut for Turkey in March 2007.
  3. Aurélio was born in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil, but also qualified to represent Turkey internationally and made his international debut for Turkey in August 2006.
  4. Aissati was born in Utrecht, Netherlands, and represented them at U-21 level, but also qualified to represent Morocco internationally through his parents and would make his international debut for Morocco in August 2011.
  5. Achenteh was born in Eindhoven, Netherlands, but also qualified to represent Morocco internationally and represented them at U-23 level before making his international debut for Morocco in November 2014.
  6. Da Costa was born in Saint-Max, France, but also qualified to represent Morocco and Portugal internationally, and represented Portugal at U-20, U-21, and U-23 level, before making his international debut for Morocco in May 2014.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.