Full name Klas Inge Ingesson Name Klas Ingesson 1975–1986 Odeshogs IK Weight 88 kg | Place of death Odeshog, Sweden Height 1.90 m Place of birth Odeshog, Sweden Role Footballer | |
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Date of birth (1968-08-20)20 August 1968 Date of death 29 October 2014(2014-10-29) (aged 46) Died October 29, 2014, Odeshog, Sweden Spouse Veronica Ingesson (m. ?–2014) Children David Ingesson, Martin Ingesson |
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Klas Inge "Klabbe" Ingesson (20 August 1968 – 29 October 2014) was a Swedish footballer and manager. He spent most of his career as a midfielder in Europe, mainly in Sweden, Belgium, Netherlands, England, Italy and France. Ingesson represented the Sweden national team on 57 occasions, including the 1990 and 1994 FIFA World Cup, as well as the 1992 European Championship. He was the manager of IF Elfsborg from 2013 until his death in October 2014.
Contents
- Rip fuck cancer klas ingesson shot down a big tree with one super football shot
- Klas ingesson 1968 2014 we will always remember you
- Playing career
- Coaching career
- Personal life
- International goals
- Club
- International
- References

Klas ingesson 1968 2014 we will always remember you
Playing career

He played for IFK Göteborg in Sweden, KV Mechelen in Belgium, PSV Eindhoven in the Netherlands, Sheffield Wednesday in England, Bari, Bologna and Lecce in Italy, and Marseille in France.

At Sheffield Wednesday, he encountered players "who went straight to the pub after training but still able to run like wild animals come Saturday".
Coaching career

On 30 September 2013, Ingesson was appointed manager of IF Elfsborg.
Personal life

After retiring from playing Ingesson became a lumberjack, and also appeared as a presenter on the Swedish TV programme Farlig Fritid ("Dangerous Leisures").
On 14 May 2009, Ingesson announced that he had been diagnosed with multiple myeloma. The treatment was at the start said to be going "in the right direction". Ingesson fully recovered and, on December 2010, made a football comeback by accepting an offer to guide the IF Elfsborg under-21 youth team. On 8 January 2013, Ingesson revealed that the myeloma had returned, and that he would have a stem cell transplant, as the two previous autologous (i.e. of his own stem cells) transplants had been unsuccessful.
On 29 October 2014, Ingesson died of the effects of multiple myeloma.
He was married and had two children.