Template:Short description Template:Use dmy dates Template:Infobox football biography

Roald Jensen (11 January 1943 – 6 October 1987),<ref>Roald Jensen's headstone, Gravminner i Norge</ref> nicknamed "Kniksen", was one of Norway's most celebrated football players. He played for SK Brann and Heart of Midlothian F.C. ("Hearts"). Knicksen is a local Bergen word meaning "juggler".

From an early age, Jensen was interested in football. He made his senior-team debut with Brann in 1960, while still only 17. He made his debut for the Norway national team the same year. Brann, with Jensen, won the league in 1961–62 and in 1963. After Brann's relegation in 1964, Jensen transferred to professional football in Scotland as Heart of Midlothian's first non-British player. While he was in Scotland, Jensen was unable to play for Norway, as the national team did not allow professional players at that time.

In 1971 Jensen returned to Brann and won the Norwegian championship (cup) with the club in 1972. Jensen retired from football after the 1973 season, when he was 30 years old. Jensen died in 1987 while playing football for Brann's old-boys' team. The Kniksen award, a prize that acclaims the best players in Norwegian football, is named after Jensen. In 1995 a statue of Jensen was erected outside Brann Stadion in Bergen.

Early lifeEdit

Roald Jensen was born in Bergen, Norway and grew up at Eidsvågsneset, Bergen. He was the son of architect Karl Ingolf Jensen and Kirsten Alice Rokne.<ref name=nbl>Template:Cite encyclopedia</ref> His brother Kjell Jensen was also a footballer.<ref name=KJ>Template:Cite news</ref> As a child, Jensen played in the garden with a football for hours on end.<ref name=nbl/> In the SK Brann club biography, Gje meg en B - !, Boka om Brann, he describes a situation when he lost a small ball he got when he was four years old as the most unhappy time of his life.<ref name="SØ167">Sæter & Øiestad, p. 167</ref> When he was ten years old, he was a founding member of a football club called Dynamo. In a game Dynamo won 22–0, Jensen scored 15 goals.<ref name=nbl/> Jensen was also a member of the buekorps ("Archery Brigade") Nordnæs Bataillon.<ref name="btnordnes">Template:Cite news</ref>

Jensen joined Brann at age 13, and dominated on the club's youth teams.<ref name=nbl/> Even as a youth player, he was noticed for his extreme technical skills.<ref name="SØ167"/> In 1959, SK Brann's junior team won the National Championship. The final at Brann Stadion was attended by 16,000 people.<ref name=BA>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref>

Jensen finished high school and attended Bergen Technical School for two years, before he decided to concentrate on football.<ref name=nbl/>

Senior careerEdit

SK Brann (1960–1964)Edit

Jensen played his first senior match for Brann against Viking in April 1960.<ref name=Nielsen213>Nielsen, p. 213</ref> Because he was only 17, the club had to get a special permit in order to use him.<ref name=BA/> He played all six of the remaining games of the 1959–60 league season, scoring two goals.<ref name=Nielsen213/><ref name=norwleaguestats>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref> Despite Roald Jensen's early success, Brann was relegated to the regional league Landsdelserien ("Regional series").<ref>Nielsen, p. 73</ref> Roald Jensen played all eight games in the Landsdelserien in the fall of 1960.<ref name=Nielsen213/> Roald Jensen soon became famous for his ball control and his accurate shots and passes.<ref name=nbl/> He became Norway's biggest sports star and a darling of the media, and earned the moniker "Kniksen",<ref name=nbl/> which translates into "juggler" in English.

After the 1961 spring season, Brann were promoted from Landsdelserien. The Norwegian League system was reorganized, and the autumn season was the start of a marathon campaign that lasted throughout 1962.<ref>Nielsen, pp. 76–77</ref> Ten out of 30 games were played that autumn, and Jensen was on the pitch in all of the games, scoring five goals.<ref>Nielsen, p. 214</ref> Jensen also played in all of Brann's games in the Norwegian cup in 1961, which ended in October when Fredrikstad FK defeated them in the semifinal at Brann Stadion. The attendance for that game, 24,800 people, is to this day the record at Brann stadium.<ref>Nielsen, p. 76</ref> Jensen was in and out of the national team in 1961,<ref name="SØ167"/> but played seven games.<ref name=nff/>

In the 1961–62 season, Jensen helped Brann win their first ever League Championship.<ref name=snl/> In the book Godfoten, Nils Arne Eggen describes a situation where Jensen and Rolf Birger Pedersen, in the next-to-last game of the season against Rosenborg, took off their football shoes and humiliated their opponents by playing in their socks in a demonstration of superiority.<ref name="godfoten">Template:Cite book</ref> However, the fact is disputed, and Pedersen denied that it ever happened.<ref>Nielsen, p. 77</ref> Brann won the game 4–1, with Jensen scoring one goal.<ref>Nielsen, p. 215</ref> Following that season, Jensen was named "striker of the year" by the newspaper Verdens Gang, and "player of the year" in Sportsboken, a sports yearbook published in Norway.<ref>Sæter & Øiestad, p. 166</ref>

Brann repeated their success and won the Norwegian First Division in 1963.<ref>Sæter & Øiestad, p. 168</ref>

Hearts (1965–1970)Edit

Template:Expand section Jensen transferred to Hearts after the 1964 season, while SK Brann was relegated, and debuted as the Jambo's first overseas international on 2 January 1965.<ref name="personal Hearts stats">{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref><ref name="heartshistory1">{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref> He stayed with Hearts until 1971. His Hearts career was plagued by injuries, but he still played 170 games and scored 31 goals.Template:Citation needed An important goal was the extra-time winner against Morton in the 1968 Scottish Cup semifinal; however, the Jam Tarts lost the resultant final 1–3 to Dunfermline Athletic.<ref name="heartshistory1"/>

Back in Brann (1971–1973)Edit

Jensen returned to Brann in the summer of 1971. He played the final nine games in the league that season, scoring two goals.<ref name=Nielsen89>Nielsen, p. 89</ref> Despite Jensen's return, Brann ended ninth—second from the bottom in the league. Usually this would mean relegation, but the league was expanded to 12 teams in 1972, and only one team was relegated.<ref name=Nielsen89/>

Controversy started in the pre-season during 1972, when Jensen ended up in a fight with the referee during an indoor tournament in Haukelandshallen.<ref name="Nielsen, p. 90">Nielsen, p. 90</ref> Jensen was suspended for six months, unable to play half the season. Jensen returned after the summer break, and Brann ended up in the cup final, beating Rosenborg 1–0, 47 years after Brann's last cup triumph.<ref name="Nielsen, p. 90"/> Despite his long suspension, Jensen was named "footballer of the year" in Norway<ref name="Nielsen, p. 90"/> after playing a total of ten games and scoring three goals in league and cup.<ref>Nielsen, p. 225</ref>

Jensen played regularly through the 1973 season, and at age 30, he was expected to play for many years to come. After a quarrel on the pitch, manager Ray Freeman took away Jensen's status as team captain. However, the club's board insisted that Jensen was to remain captain. When Jensen also ended up in conflict with new manager Billy Elliott, he and his brother Kjell chose to retire.<ref name="Nielsen, p. 93">Nielsen, p. 93</ref> His last game as a Brann player was in the European Cup Winners Cup, against Glentoran F.C., on 7 November 1973.<ref>Nielsen, p. 93, 226</ref>

In total, Jensen played 244 games for Brann, and is regarded as the club's greatest player ever.<ref name="Nielsen, p. 93"/>

National teamEdit

Jensen made his international debut for Norway in a friendly against Austria on 22 June 1960,<ref name=nff/> aged just 17 years and 161 days, which makes him the third-youngest player to have appeared for Norway's senior national team. Although the selection committee was skeptical of him, due to his young age, Jensen earned excellent reviews for his performance against Austria, and kept his place in the team.<ref name=BA/> Jensen scored his first international goal, becoming the Norway team's youngest-ever goalscorer, in his second game, against Finland on 28 August 1960 – a game Norway won 6–3.<ref name=nbl/><ref name=NorgeFinland6-3>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref> However, his breakthrough for Norway was in a game against Sweden on 18 September 1960, where Jensen and his Brann teammate Rolf Birger Pedersen, charmed the entire country with their magnificent football and shy appearance.<ref name=Staalesen>Template:Cite news</ref> Norway won the game 3–1.<ref name=NorgeSverige3-1>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref>

Jensen remained a regular in the Norway side throughout the early 1960s, and on 7 November 1963, following a game against Scotland, he became the youngest-ever player to receive the Gold Watch for having played 25 senior international games. However, due to the Norwegian FA's self-imposed "amateur rule", Jensen became ineligible for the national team when he joined Hearts in 1964, and did not play for his country again until 1969, when the amateur rule was lifted. In total, Jensen played 31 international games for Norway, and scored five goals, earning his 31st and final cap in a match against Hungary on 27 October 1971.

Outside footballEdit

Roald Jensen married Eva Sofie Jetmundsen on 15 July 1967.<ref name=nbl/> Before his comeback for Brann in 1971, Jensen worked for Fiskernes Bank in Bergen.<ref name=BA/> After he retired from football, he continued to work in Bergen's banking and insurance sector.<ref name=nbl/>

Jensen played for Brann's various old-boys' teams. He died of heart failure on 6 October 1987, while on the football field training with Brann's old-boys' team Gamlekara.<ref name= snl>Template:Cite encyclopedia</ref> Thousands attended his funeral in Fyllingsdalen's church.<ref name=BA/> In 1990 and 1991, Jensen's son Sondre Jensen made five appearances for SK Brann.<ref>Nielsen, pp. 124, 243–244</ref> He is the father-in-law of the Norwegian football manager and former player Roy Wassberg, and the grandfatherfather of the current player Niklas Jensen Wassberg.<ref>Template:Cite news</ref>

A bronze statue of Kniksen made by the Norwegian sculptor Per Ung was installed outside Brann Stadion in 1995.<ref name=bbl560>Template:Cite encyclopedia</ref> In 2008, a large area outside the two new stands at Brann Stadion was named "Kniksens plass" after Roald Jensen.<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}Template:Dead link</ref> This also became SK Brann's new address.<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref>

The Kniksen awardEdit

{{#invoke:Labelled list hatnote|labelledList|Main article|Main articles|Main page|Main pages}} In Roald Jensen's honour, the Kniksen award is given to Norwegian football players after each football season. The award is handed out by Norsk Toppfotball, and has been awarded annually since 1990.<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }} Template:Dead link</ref> There are separate awards for best goalkeeper, defender, midfielder, striker, manager, and referee.<ref>Template:Cite news</ref> It is recognized as Norwegian football's most prestigious award.<ref name=nbl/>

Career statisticsEdit

Appearances and goals by club, season and competition
Club Season League National cup League cup Europe Total
Division Apps Goals Apps Goals Apps Goals Apps Goals Apps Goals
Brann 1959–60 Hovedserien 14 8 2 1 16 9
1960–61 Landsdelsserien 12 12 4 3 16 15
1961–62 Hovedserien 30 24 10 7 40 31
1963 1. divisjon 18 10 4 6 22 16
1964 16 3 4 5 20 8
Total 90 57 24 22 0 0 0 0 114 69
Heart of Midlothian 1964–65 Scottish Division One 15 3 3 0 18 3
1965–66 5 0 0 0 4 0 9 0
1966–67 7 0 5 1 12 1
1967–68 15 5 6 3 1 1 22 9
1968–69 22 7 2 0 2 0 26 7
1969–70 5 3 0 0 5 3
1970–71 5 1 1 0 4 1 10 2
Total 74 19 17 4 11 2 0 0 102 25
Brann 1971 1. divisjon 9 2 0 0 9 2
1972 10 3 4 0 14 3
1973 21 4 5 1 4 1 30 6
Total 40 9 9 1 0 0 4 1 53 11
Career total 204 85 50 27 11 2 4 1 269 115

NotesEdit

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ReferencesEdit

External linksEdit

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