COACH

Adrie Koster

1954 - Today

Photo of Adrie Koster

Icon of person Adrie Koster

Adrianus Cornelis "Adrie" Koster (Dutch pronunciation: [aːdriˈjaːnʏs kɔrˈneːlɪs ˈaːdri ˈkɔstər]; born 18 November 1954) is a Dutch football manager who was most recently the manager of Willem II. He is a former winger and former manager of Ajax, Club Brugge and the Netherlands U21 team. Read more on Wikipedia

His biography is available in different languages on Wikipedia. Adrie Koster is the 289th most popular coach (down from 210th in 2019), the 919th most popular biography from Netherlands (down from 713th in 2019) and the 21st most popular Dutch Coach.

Memorability Metrics

Loading...

Page views of Adrie Koster by language

Loading...

Among COACHES

Among coaches, Adrie Koster ranks 289 out of 471Before him are José Carlos Serrão, Pepe Mel, Tomás Boy, Norio Sasaki, Stuart Baxter, and Nicanor de Carvalho. After him are Italo Galbiati, John Jensen, Júlio César Leal, René Simões, Bill Belichick, and Willi Multhaup.

Most Popular Coaches in Wikipedia

Go to all Rankings

Contemporaries

Among people born in 1954, Adrie Koster ranks 477Before him are José Diego, Silvio Micali, Gerónimo Barbadillo, Yuji Takada, Verner Lička, and Raymond T. Odierno. After him are Donald Gibb, Tamara Lazakovich, Jürgen Trittin, Renuka Chowdhury, Augustus Pablo, and Thomas Mavros.

Others Born in 1954

Go to all Rankings

In Netherlands

Among people born in Netherlands, Adrie Koster ranks 919 out of 1,646Before him are Tijjani Reijnders (1998), Sofyan Amrabat (1996), Johan van der Velde (1956), Kees Broekman (1927), Ans Schut (1944), and Chris Berger (1911). After him are Frits Kuipers (1899), Dido Havenaar (1957), Xavi Simons (2003), Jan Poortvliet (1955), Bas Rutten (1965), and Remko Pasveer (1983).

Among COACHES In Netherlands

Among coaches born in Netherlands, Adrie Koster ranks 21Before him are Wim Rijsbergen (1952), Henk ten Cate (1954), Martin Jol (1956), Jan Zwartkruis (1926), Sef Vergoossen (1947), and Han Berger (1950). After him are Alfred Schreuder (1972), Jos Luhukay (1963), Gertjan Verbeek (1962), and Wim Koevermans (1960).