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Anton Ondruš

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Anton Ondruš
Personal information
Date of birth (1950-03-27) 27 March 1950 (age 74)
Place of birth Solčany, Czechoslovakia
Position(s) Sweeper
Youth career
1959–1970 Slovan Bratislava
Senior career*
Years Team Apps (Gls)
1970–1977 Slovan Bratislava 210 (38)
1977–1978 Dukla Banská Bystrica
1978–1980 Slovan Bratislava
1981–1982 Club Brugge 7 (0)
1983–1987 CS Thonon 116 (6)
1988–1989 FC Biel
International career
1974–1980 Czechoslovakia 58 (9)
Medal record
Representing  Czechoslovakia
UEFA European Championship
Winner 1976 Yugoslavia
*Club domestic league appearances and goals

Anton Ondruš (born 27 March 1950 in Solčany, Czechoslovakia) is a former Slovak football player and considered one of the best defenders of the seventies.[citation needed]

Early club career

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He started to play regularly for Slovan Bratislava in the fall of 1970. With this club, he won the Czechoslovak League in 1974 and 1975, and he later become the captain of this team, playing in total in 210 matches and scoring 38 goals. The team won the Czechoslovak Cup in 1974.

International career

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Ondruš played 58 matches for Czechoslovakia and scored 9 goals. As a captain, he led the national team in the 1976 UEFA European Championship. His superb performance against Cruyff's Netherlands in semi-finals where he scored twice (one own goal) opened his team the door to the final match where Czechoslovakia won the gold medal in the famous Belgrade Night game against the then world champion West Germany. At the 1980 UEFA European Championship, he contributed to the national team's bronze medal.

Later career

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1981 Ondruš changed to Club Brugge K.V. to Belgium, but he played only nine games. From 1983 till 1987 he played in the French club CS Thonon-les-Bains and towards the end of his career at FC Biel-Bienne, Switzerland.

1997 he was a president of Slovan Bratislava for a short period. Currently he works in Switzerland.

Honours

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Czechoslovakia
Individual

References

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  1. ^ "1976 team of the tournament". UEFA.com. 21 March 2016. Retrieved 2 January 2015.
  2. ^ "Sport 1976". BigSoccer. Retrieved 4 June 2024.