Azzedine Aït Djoudi

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Azzedine Aït Djoudi
Personal information
Full name Azzedine Aït Djoudi
Date of birth (1967-01-24) January 24, 1967 (age 54)
Place of birth Tébessa, Algeria
Position(s) Midfielder
Senior career*
Years Team Apps (Gls)
1977–1987 JS Kabylie
1987–1989 Hydra AC
1989–1991 ES Ben Aknoun
Teams managed
1998–1999 Olympique de Médéa
2000–2001 USM El Harrach
2001 Algeria
2001–2002 USM Annaba
2002–2003 USM Alger
2003–2004 JS Kabylie
2004–2005 MC Oujda
2005 CA Bordj Bou Arreridj
2006 CR Belouizdad
2006–2007 JS Kabylie
2007–2008 HUS d'Agadir
2008–2009 ES Sétif
2009 CS Sfaxien
2009 ES Zarzis
2010 AS Khroub
2010–2011 Algeria U23
2012 AS Khroub
2012–2013 Maghreb de Fès
2013–2014 JS Kabylie
2014 NA Hussein Dey
2014–2015 MC El Eulma
2015–2017 MC Oujda
2017 Olympique Club de Khouribga
2017–2018 JS Kabylie
2018 MO Béjaïa
2019 AS Aïn M'lila
2020 NA Hussein Dey
2021 US Biskra
2021 MC Oran
* Senior club appearances and goals counted for the domestic league only

Azzedine Aït Djoudi (born January 24, 1967) is an Algerian football manager.[1][2][3]

Managerial career[]

From a young age (10 years), he began a football career at JS Kabylie in which he moved up the levels to reach the status of the ISTS professionnel. Diplômé opted for an early coaching career at the age 24 years at Sidi Aich SS, ESM Boudouaou, JS Bordj Menaiel, USM El Harrach, JSM Bejaia, MSP Batna which has been fairly successful, since he won the trust of several major Algerian club USM Alger, JS Kabylie, CR Belouizdad, ES Setif. He was then recruited by CS Sfaxien, to a friendly separation with the club in late September 2009. In early October 2009, he was appointed as coach of the Hope sports Zarzis. In January 2010, he returned to the country to train Khroub> He has worked in national team in 2001 as an assistant to Abdelhamid Kermali in a duo with Abdelhamid Zouba.

ES Sétif[]

Aït Djoudi, In September 2008, was contacted by President Serrar to make the team in hand with that has won over 35 games and finished champions Algeria and semifinalist cutting Arabic Écouter Lire phonétiquement[4]

CS Sfaxien[]

June 2009 was contacted by the club president with Moncef Sellami who met in Paris to conclude until late September was an amicable separation was made.[5]

Algeria Under 23s[]

On September 13, 2010, Aït Djoudi was appointed as manager of the Algeria national under-23 football team.[6] He signed a two-year contract with the Algerian Football Federation, with his main objective being to qualify the team for the 2012 Summer Olympics in London.[7] Under his guidance, he led the team to the 2010 UNAF U-23 Tournament title in Morocco with 3 wins in 3 games.[8] He then qualified the team to the 2011 CAF U-23 Championship, beating Madagascar and Zambia in the qualifiers.[9]

Honours[]

Algerian Ligue Professionnelle 1 (3)[]

  • Winner: 2003 USM Alger
  • Winner: 2004 JS Kabylie
  • Winner: 2009 ES Setif

Algerian Cup (3)[]

  • Winner: 2003 USM Alger
  • Finalist: 2004 JS Kabylie
  • Finalist: 2014 JS Kabylie

References[]

  1. ^ Azzedine Aït Djoudi at WorldFootball.net
  2. ^ "Ait Djoudi nouvel entraineur". Africasport.dz. 8 September 2021. Retrieved 4 December 2021.
  3. ^ "Algérie - Ligue 1 : Azzedine Ait Djoudi, nouvel entraîneur de l'US Biskra". Africafootunited.com. Retrieved 4 December 2021.
  4. ^ "Engineering Industry: Creation of Two Algerian-Emirati-German Companies". اEchoroukonline.com. 5 October 2011. Retrieved 4 December 2021.
  5. ^ "Sfaxien Coach Azzedine Ait Djoudi Resigns - Report". Goal.com. Retrieved 4 December 2021.
  6. ^ Azzedine Aït Djoudi nommé sélectionneur; DZFoot, September 13, 2010.
  7. ^ Aït Djoudi: «Qualifier l'Algérie pour les JO»; DZFoot, September 15, 2010.
  8. ^ Algérie 4-0 Libye (tournoi UNAF); DZFoot, December 18, 2010.
  9. ^ Les Verts qualifiés au tournoi pré-olympique Archived November 29, 2011, at the Wayback Machine; DZFoot, June 16, 2011.
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