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Heimir was born on 10 June 1967, and grew up in a family of six children on the island of Heimaey.His father ran a business repairing fishing nets. [3] Heimir originally studied computer science at Reykjavik University with the aim of becoming a software engineer, [4] but later qualified in dentistry, working as a dentist in Heimaey.
Between 1921 and 1969, a committee of selectors chose the team, on occasions a coach or team manager was appointed; Mick Meagan was the first manager to actually select the team. [132] Managers from the periods in which the national side was known as the Irish Free State or simply Ireland are obscure and many are not currently known, however it ...
Hallgrim Eagle Hallgrimsson, fictional police officer from the Danish TV Series The Eagle: A Crime Odyssey; Heimir Hallgrímsson, an Icelandic football manager and former player; Matthías Hallgrímsson (born 1946), Icelandic footballer
Heimir Guðjónsson (born 3 April 1969) is an Icelandic football manager and a former player. As a player, he was deployed in midfield and represented the Iceland national team . [ 1 ] As a manager, he won the Icelandic championship five times with Fimleikafélag Hafnarfjarðar .
This was later confirmed by the club who announced Mike Phelan would act as caretaker manager. [2] On 13 October 2016, Phelan became the head coach. [3] He was sacked on 3 January 2017. [4] On 5 January 2017, the club announced the appointment of Marco Silva as the new head coach until the end of the 2016–17 season. [5]
Manager Years Played Won Win % 1 Frank Brettell [citation needed] 1898–1899: 63 37 58.73 2 Arthur Turner [citation needed] 1942–1946 49 27 55.10 3 André Villas-Boas [10] 2012–2013 80 44 55.00 4 Mauricio Pochettino [11] 2014–2019 293 159 54.27 5 Antonio Conte [12] 2021–2023: 77 41 53.25 6 John Cameron [citation needed] 1899–1907 570 ...
On 1 February 2017, Lagerbäck was announced as the new manager for Norway, signing a contract lasting until the end of 2019. [13] On 26 March, Lagerbäck took charge of his first game as manager of Norway, which resulted in a 2–0 defeat to Northern Ireland in Belfast. [14] His tenure as manager was considered somewhat mixed in terms of success.